Every human is a free agent. Each has free choice. He can revel
in unbridled passion; he can elect to live, as do the majority,
by drawing to himself indiscriminate amounts of both high and
low desire substance — or he can follow the spiritual path.
Since the time of Atlantis, when he received the link of mind,
man has had the opportunity to focus the powers of spirit. But
unfortunately he used it for gratifying his desire nature. Mind
is a creative agent. Wherever it is focused, there will its powers
manifest. Early humanity proved this to be true when, by closing
his mind to spirit and opening it to sensual desire, man became
adept in evil magic that eventually destroyed the entire Atlantean
civilization, including the very continent itself.
God is Spirit, eternal, all good. He can be reached and known
through spiritual attainment. Man was created in the image and
likeness of God. But by linking his mind with desire instead of
uniting it with spirit, he fell from his high estate. He may rise
again, however, by following the teachings of wisdom and striving
against evil-the existence of which has been permitted that man
may exercise free will and thus cultivate discrimination. Sorrow,
pain and evil are part of a beneficent plan, the ultimate goal
of which is perfection.
Inherently, man is a free, intelligent being. That he may become
fully conscious of his divine creative power, he must learn to
discriminate between right and wrong, good and evil, and exercise
his indwelling Godhood by right choices. His present heritage
of disease, poverty, and death is the result of his having violated
cosmic law. As he brings his life into conformity with that law
he will rise above these limitations. It is no longer considered
an indication of spirituality to be weak and ailing, to be poverty-stricken
or miserable. "All that the Father hath is mine," declared
the Christ, and in these words He revealed the plenitude that
is man's when he lives true to Divine Law.
We have all known fear in some form. Fear is a powerful negative
emotion that acts adversely on the entire human organism. Fear
has a primeval origin. "Fear came into the world with the
dawn of life, and man, as well as every other living creature,
has inherited it down through all the ages of existence,"
writes the psychologist Stanley G. Hall.
"The brain of man is divided into two parts, the old and
the new, the cerebellum and the cerebrum. The latter, the seat
of intellect, is the new brain. The former, the cerebellum, is
the old brain. Here are stored all of man's primitive and animal
instincts, of which fear is one. Fear paralyzes the intellect
and awakens and unleashes all the dormant powers of the old brain,
which explains why it is not possible to tell what a person may
do when he is thoroughly frightened. This accounts for the animal-like
action under fear-sometimes, in excesses, he becomes insane and
sometimes even dies."
While their desire natures were strong and their minds were weak,
men could only be governed by fear. The Ten Commandments was their
foremost manual of religion, whose keynote was expressed in the
motto "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom,"
for the word fear, as used in the Bible, also implies awe. By
this time, however, humanity should have completed the religious
fear cycle but many have not done so.
Fear is the chief deterrent to an aspirant's ability to serve
on the inner planes as a conscious Invisible Helper. Not infrequently
it bars entrance to the place or person most in need of help,
and tends to draw a serving ego back into its body. In treading
the upward path, every spirit must pass through the lowest regions
of the desire world (Purgatory), where human and subhuman spirits
of the most undesirable nature are congregated to await cleansing
and correction prior to liberation. They include the earthbound,
the suicides whose natural term of life has not yet expired, and
elementals of various types. Only the fearless can enter this
realm and remain immune to all its influences.
Fear arises from a false sense of separateness. To the degree
that we realize our essential unity with God-of whom we are a
part and in whom we literally live, and move and have our being-are
we free from fear. Being one in consciousness with God (good)
identifies us with the whole, thus leaving nothing in separateness
from which evil can come. Contemplation of positive qualities
of character, together with a persistent cultivation of confidence
and courage, will ultimately lead to the conquest of all fear.
Soul attributes of faith and love are represented by John and
Peter, the two foremost disciples. The noblest healing recorded
in the New Testament is accomplished in their presence. Cultivation
of faith and love is of the utmost importance. If we persist in
our efforts to develop these virtues in the face of fear and discouragement,
the day will come when we will know beyond all question that "perfect
love casts out fear," and reveals the secret door opening
upon liberation.
Conscience may be defined as the voice of the soul; and soul is
the product of evolution, the fruitage of an ego's journey assimilating
experience through many incarnations. Primitive man was virtually
void of conscience. The growth of conscience is continuous from
incarnation to incarnation. The older and richer the soul development
of an individual, the clearer the voice of conscience and the
more readily he listens and acts upon its guidance. Knowing this,
occultists look with compassion rather than censure on younger
and less evolved individuals.
Conscience is acquired through suffering incident to purgatorial
processes following physical death. The deeper the impress of
sin, the more severe must be the cleansing measures. Hence, the
stronger and clearer will be the conscience related thereto; and
the more insistent will be its warning voice when, in future lives,
the individual is tempted to repeat the wrongdoing. For this reason,
St. Paul declared that "the greater the sinner the greater
the saint."
Mind is the most important servant of spirit. When man learns
to disengage it from the shackles of desire and to unite it wholly
with the spirit, then will he have the key to the kingdom and
will realize the fulfillment of the Master's promise: "Whatsoever
ye shall ask of the Father in My name, He will give to you."
It was by the power of His name (mind linked with spirit) that
the disciples were able to accomplish so-called miracles. For
this reason Paul taught his followers that the first step toward
spiritual development is the Christing of the mind: "Let
this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus."
The brain-based mind is a comparatively recent acquisition and,
when highly trained, tends toward egotism. It is prone to be puffed
up in its own conceit. When it becomes wedded to spirit, the mind
will not be materially constrained and will demonstrate powers
far beyond anything known to academic logicians.
The supreme evolutionary task of humanity is the spiritualization
or Christing of the mind. When this occurs the mind will reflect
the eternal spirit instead of the transitory outer world as at
present. As a consequence, cosmic wisdom will irradiate human
consciousness and man will be not mere man, but superman.
The intellect represents the chief development of the conscious
mind; memory, of the subconscious; intuition, of the superconscious.
Intuition is the voice of the superconscious or spiritualized
mind. This faculty is being developed increasingly as mind becomes
a more perfect channel for the working of spirit. Intuition is
sometimes referred to as the voice of the soul, and also as man's
sixth sense. This faculty will come into full expression during
the Aquarian Age.
The deepest esoteric instructions are never given either by word
or in writing, but are projected mentally by the Great Ones and
are received in the silence by intuitional perceptions of the
neophyte who is sufficiently sensitized to make the contact. The
subconscious mind or memory correlates with the inner forces of
the earth and may be said to relate to earth life cycles of the
immediate past and present. The conscious mind correlates with
the moon and is related to present earth experience only. The
superconscious mind correlates with the sun and produces the spiritual
illumination known as Initiation, which gives the ability to read
the cosmic records dealing with the past, present, and future.
There is a definite path of evolution for the mind and another
for the soul; nevertheless, the two lines develop simultaneously
and harmoniously. The more completely the mind becomes a channel
for the expression of spirit, the more soulful the individual
becomes. Though a person study every book dealing with spiritual
subjects, knowledge as such will but mentally stimulate him. Knowledge
in itself never produces soul growth. While a developed mentality
is necessary to soul growth, it is not of itself sufficient.
When we live a life of loving service to others, we attract into
our vital body a glorious flaming golden ether of the nature of
the Christ force. This is the spiritualized light ether. Though
we already possess a nucleus of it through the love that flows
out in service, we can attract such an abundance from the aura
of the Cosmic Christ that it is as if we breathed a golden atmosphere
pouring down from cosmic space. Within this fiery ether a celestial
blue aura appears which does not usually show outside the physical
body except in great saints and initiates. With these it may be
seen in the form of a blue sun shining around and through the
human figure at its center. This is the spiritualized reflecting
ether, the ether reflecting the Good, the True, and the Beautiful.
The mind plays a most important part in the evolution of the soul
since it is the link between spirit and body. This link enables
the spirit to work in the three-fold body and extract essence
for the three-fold soul. This soul work, therefore, can only be
accomplished through the mind. It is for this reason that many
occult textbooks refer to the mind as "The Path," and
it also accounts for Paul's statement that "To be carnally
minded is death, but to be spiritually minded is life everlasting."
Steps Of Preparation
That the mind may become a channel for spirit and nothing but
spirit necessitates prolonged and careful training. In this connection
the Rosicrucian School enumerates seven steps of special importance.
Concentration is fundamental and therefore first. Concentration
is a strictly mental exercise which aims to make the mind one-pointed,
to shut out all outer distractions at will and to hold the mind
firmly fixed upon the subject under consideration. The arduous
practice required causes many students to abandon further effort
in mental discipline.
Consequently, persistence of effort is the next requisite. This
is a quality sadly lacking in the majority of aspirants, despite
the fact that without it nothing of real value in any line of
endeavor can be accomplished. Mastery of any subject can be achieved
only by continued patience and effort.
The third quality necessary for development is discrimination.
Absence of this mental attitude has led to more disillusionment
and failure on the path than any other. Its cultivation is of
paramount importance, and yet the majority of occult students
pay but little heed to its attainment. Perhaps the most fitting
definition of discrimination is to be found in the ancient occult
admonition: Learn to know the false from the true, the real from
the unreal, the ephemeral from the eternal.
The first three steps in self-development are mental in nature;
they are tools by which the workman changes the rough ashlar (of
the mind) into the Master's perfect cube.
The four higher steps belong to the realm of spirit and are developed
after the mind has been thoroughly disciplined. The first of these
is devotion, which centers in the heart. Mind and spirit can be
united only by way of the heart, when the necessary devotion has
been awakened.
Meditation is the chief means of further renewing of the mind.
This is a spiritual process and supersedes the mental activity
of concentration. Here, less mental effort is required as the
mind has now been trained to obey the slightest impulse of spirit.
Through concentration one comes into contact with the form aspect
of matter; meditation transcends form to arrive at the soul of
things.
Contemplation is a step beyond meditation. Here mind and heart
are en rapport. Nothing relative to a subject is concealed. Past,
present, and future are as an open book.
Adoration is the final step by which the student gains at-one-ment
with the subject under consideration. In fact, adoration can lift
the spirit to the very throne of God
These four higher steps are attainable only after the student
has learned to rise in consciousness to specific degrees of development.
In adoration, an entire octave of consciousness is spanned, and
Christed consciousness, the ultimate goal of human evolution,
is attained. As each person progresses through the successive
grades in life's school of evolution, he learns his lessons via
one of two cosmic streams of consciousness-that of the head and
of the heart. Increasingly, however, he must balance the two.
This is an arduous task, requiring many lives for its completion.
Nevertheless, much may be accomplished in a single incarnation
if the student is willing to devote himself to the fulfillment
of exalted ideals.
The mind is a comparatively recent acquisition of the ego, whose
juvenile pride may tend toward arrogance and conceit. These are
characteristics that distinguish a young, inexperienced soul from
an "old" soul ripe in wisdom. Reason is the principal
faculty to be evolved during the present fifth race cycle. It
is evident that in this era man's mind is in the ascendant and
his heart has been relegated to a subsidiary status.
When the aspirant begins to live the spiritual life in earnest,
the spinal essence gradually awakens and ascends toward the head.
If the individual is temperamentally a mental type, this force
will be predominantly positive in the brain and negative in the
heart. If, on the other hand, he is a mystical or emotional type,
the reverse will be true: positive polarity in the heart, negative
in the head. The positive center represents the dynamic force
of either mind or heart and works to the detriment of the opposite
function. Thus, when a person who is centered mentally begins
occult study, he is apt to cultivate intellectual power at the
expense of his devotional nature, unless a special effort is made
to counterbalance this tendency.
The mind is separative, divisional, and disruptive in its working.
Many who have followed the mental path to the exclusion of the
heart path become coldly analytical, unable to discover the soul
wisdom which animated them for a moment at the beginning of their
quest. They become disillusioned and may turn back to materialistic
pursuits. Those who follow the heart path exclusively all too
often lack persistence, steadfastness, and discrimination to pilot
themselves along higher reaches of the path. So they too may turn
back to the ways of the world in discouragement, sometimes in
despair.
The safe way is to work toward effecting a true balance between
the two. The mentalist must learn to still his mind and listen
to the dictates of his heart. The mystic must learn to control
his emotions and heed the voice of clear reason. As this procedure
is followed, spiritual currents ascending in the body will effect
a balance of power between heart and head, and further development
of the weaker of the two will become easier to accomplish.
God is the first and Eternal Flame. Virgin Spirits (our present
humanity) are sparks of that flame. The purpose of repeated cycles
of rebirth is to fan these sparks until they become like unto
their parent flame. After being so long engrossed in the illusion
of matter, the spirit's memory of its celestial origin has become
dim. Through suffering and sorrow it rends the veil of illusion
and discovers its inherent divinity: then commences the long and
arduous journey back to its heavenly home. Once the spirit is
fully awakened no obstacle can long impede its progress. The parable
of the prodigal son becomes an actual spiritual experience. Weary
of having so long partaken of husks with the swine (living entirely
in the outer or objective world), the "spark" returns
home, where reunion with the father occasions great rejoicing,
as recounted in the parable-a parable that is applicable not only
to a single individual but to the human race as a whole.
Every activity of man sets its impress upon the psychic envelope
of the earth. This applies to thought, the spoken word, and the
physical deed. If these activities are constructive, their emanations
are absorbed by, and become a component part of, the world soul.
If, on the contrary, these activities are negative and destructive,
their emanations become dark and sinister currents that remain
in the astral realms until the ego responsible for their creation
accomplishes the task of liquidation.
It is only as we realize the full import of the preceding statement
that we begin to understand the real meaning of transmutation
and its far-reaching significance in relation to our well-being.
We are individually responsible for the reaction upon earth of
our every thought, word, and deed. Biblically, this truth is given
in Matthew's Gospel: "By thy words thou shalt be justified,
and by thy words thou shalt be condemned."
The transmutative power within man centers in the forces of imagination,
inspiration, and intuition. It is by the constructive use of the
image-building faculty united with the breath of intuition through
the voice (power) of spirit that the miracle of transmutation
may be effected-a miracle which clears our karmic sheet and thus
immeasurably accelerates our spiritual evolution.
Endowed with these powers, we make gradual progress along the
spiritual path. We learn to transform evil into good, hatred into
love, darkness into light. Transmutation is the wonder key that
opens the door to at-one-ment with that Light which is the Light
of the world. Through transmutation we reach that height that
is the supreme goal of earthly life: To "Walk in the Light as He is in the Light, and have fellowship one with another."
— Barbara Joiner
— Rays from the Rose Cross Magazine, January/February, 1996
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