by Thomas Troward
Think not that I am come to destroy the law or the prophets: I am come not to destroy but to fulfil. (Matt. 5:17)
Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone that believeth. (Rom. 10:4)
The laws of Nature are the same now as they were in the days of our rugged ancestors, but they brought out only an infinitesimal fraction of the possibilities which those laws contain; now we have brought out a good deal more, but we have by no means exhausted them, and so we continue to advance — not by contradicting natural laws but by more fully realising their capacity. Why should we not, then, apply the same method to ourselves and see whether there are no potentialities hidden away in the law of our own being which we have not as yet by any means brought to their fulfilment? We talk of a good time coming and of the ameliorating of the race; but do we reflect that the race is composed of individuals and that therefore real advance is to be made only by individual improvement, and not by Act of Parliament? If so, then the individual with whom to begin is oneself.
The preceding lectures have led us step by step to see that the Originating Spirit, which first brought the world into existence, is also the root of our own individuality, and is therefore by its inherent nature always ready to continue the creative process from this individual standpoint as soon as the necessary conditions are provided: and these conditions are thought-conditions. Then by realising the relation of Christ to the Originating Mind — the Parent Spirit or "Father" — we receive a standard of thought which is bound to act creatively bringing out all the potentialities of our hidden being.
Now the relation of Christ to the "Father" is that of the Archetypal Idea in the All-creating Mind of which I have previously spoken, and so we arrive at the conception of the Christ-idea as a universal principle, and as being an idea therefore capable of reproduction in the individual mind, thus explaining St Paul's meaning when he speaks of Christ being formed in us.
Seven is the numerical correspondence of complete manifestation because it is the combination of three and four, which respectively represent the complete working of the spiritual and material factors — involution and evolution — and thus together constitute the finished whole. Students of the Tarot will here realise the process by which the Yod of Yod becomes the Yod of He. It is for this reason that the primary or cosmic creation terminates in the rest of the Seventh day, for it can proceed no further until a fresh starting point is found. But when this fresh starting-point is found in Man realising his relation to the "Father", we start a new series; we strike the Creative Octave and the Resurrection takes place, not on the Sabbath or Seventh Day, but on the Eighth day which then becomes the first day of the new creative week.
The principle of the Resurrection is the realisation by man of his individualisation of the Spirit and his recognition of the fact that, since the Spirit is always the same Spirit, it becomes the Alpha of a new creation from his own centre of being.
This personal recognition of the Divine then affords us a new basis of Affirmation, and we need no longer trouble to go further back in order to analyse it, because we know experimentally that it is there. So now we find the starting point of the new creation ready-made for us according to the archetypal pattern in the Divine Mind itself, and therefore perfectly correctly formed. When once this truth is clearly apprehended, whether we reach it by an intellectual process or by simple intuition, we can make it our starting point and claim to have our thought permeated by the creative power of the Spirit on this basis.
But vast as is the conception thus reached, we must remember that it is still a starting point. It, indeed, transcends our previous range of ideas and so presents a culmination of the cosmic creative series which passes beyond that series and brings us to number Eight in the Octave; but on this very account it is the number One of a new creative series which is personal to the individual.
Now it is as such an external manifestation of the Divine ideal that the Christ of the Gospels is set before us. I do not wish to dogmatise, but I will only say that the more clearly we realise the nature of the creative process of the spiritual side, the more the current objections to the Gospel narrative lose their force; and it appears to me that to deny the narrative as a point-blank impossibility is to make a similar affirmation with regard to the power of the Spirit in ourselves.
You cannot affirm a principle and deny it in the same breath. If we affirm the externalising power of the Spirit in our own case, I do not see how we can logically lay down a limit for its action and say that under highly specialised conditions it could not produce highly specialised effects. It is for this reason that St John puts the question of Christ manifest in the flesh as the criterion of the whole matter (1 John 4:2). If the Spirit can create at all, then you cannot logically limit the extent or method of its working; and since the basis of our expectation of individual expansion is the limitless creative power of the Spirit, to reject the Christ of the Gospels as an impossibility is to cut away the ground from under our own feet.
It is one thing to say, "I do not understand why the Spirit should have worked in that way" — that is merely an honest statement of our present stage of knowledge. We may even go to the lengths of saying that we do not feel convinced that it did work in that way — that is a true confession of our intellectual difficulty. But certainly those who are professedly relying on the power of the Spirit to produce external results cannot say that it does not possess that power, or possesses it only in a limited degree; the position is logically self-destructive.
What we should do, therefore, is to suspend judgment and follow the light as far as we can see it; and by-and-by it will become clearer to us. There are, it appears to me, occult heights in the doctrine of Christ designed by the Supreme Wisdom to counteract corresponding occult depths in the Mystery of darkness. I do not think it is at all necessary, or even possible, for us to scale these heights or fathom those depths, with our present infantile intelligence. But if we realise how completely the Law of our being receives its fulfilment in Christ as far as we know that Law, may we not well conceive that there are yet deeper phases of that Law the existence of which we can only faintly surmise by intuition? The fringe of the veil is occasionally lifted for some of us, but that momentary glance is enough to show us that there are powers and mysteries beyond our present conception.