Contents List:Paradox and ResolutionAll-originating Spirit Deliverance from Evil Self-contemplation Belief National Application |
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How to reconcile these apparent opposites, therefore, seems to be the problem which he here sets before us. Its solution is to be found in that principle which I have endeavoured to elucidate throughout these lectures, the specialising of universal law. Opinions may differ as to whether the Bible narrative of the birth of Christ is to be taken literally or symbolically, but as to the spiritual principle involved there can, I think, be no difference of opinion. It is that of the specialisation by the individual of the generic relation of the soul to the Infinite Spirit from which it proceeds. The relation itself is universal and results from the very nature of the creative process, but the law of the universal relation admits of particular specialisation exactly in the same way as all other natural laws — it is simply applying to the supreme Law of Life the same method by which we have learned to make iron float, that is to say by a fuller recognition of what the Law is in itself. Whatever other meanings we may apply to the name Messiah, it undoubtedly stands for the absolutely perfect manifestation in the individual of all the infinite possibilities of the Principle of Life.
Now it was because this grand ideal is the basis on which the Hebrew nationality was founded that Jesus made this statement. This foundation had been lamentably misconceived by the Jewish people; but nevertheless, however imperfectly, they still held by it; and from them this ideal has spread throughout the Christian world. Here also it continues to be lamentably misconceived; nevertheless it is still retained, and only needs to be recognised in its true light as a universal principle, instead of an unintelligible dogma, to become the salvation of the world. Hence, as affording the medium through which this supreme ideal has been preserved and spread, it is true that "Salvation is of the Jews".
Their fundamental idea was right but their apprehension of it was wrong — that is why the Master at the same time sweeps away the national worship of the temple and preserves the national idea of the Messiah; and this is equally true of the Christian world at the present day. If salvation is anything real it must have its cause in some law, and if there is a law it must be founded upon some universal principle which we must seek if we would understand this teaching of the Master's.
The material form stands in the same relation to Spirit that the image projected on the screen stands to the slide in the projector. If we wish to change the exhibited subject we do not manipulate the reflection on the screen, but we alter the slide; and in like manner, when we come to realise the true nature of the creative process, we learn that the exterior things are to be changed by a change of the interior spiritual attitude.
Our spiritual attitude will always be determined by our conception of our relation to God or Infinite Spirit; and so when we begin to see that this relation is one of absolute reciprocity — that it is the self-recognition of Infinite Spirit from our own centre of consciousness — then we find that the whole Secret of Life consists in simple reliance upon the All-creating Spirit as consciously identifying itself with us. It has, so to say, awakened to a new mode of self-recognition peculiar to ourselves, in which we individually form the centre of its creative energy.
In all this there is no place for the consideration of outward conditions, whether of body or circumstances, for they are only effects and not the cause; and therefore when we reach this standpoint we cease to take them into our consideration. Instead we employ the method of self-contemplation, knowing that this is the creative method, and so we contemplate ourselves as allied to the infinite Love and Wisdom of the Divine Spirit which will take form through our conscious thought, and so act creatively as a Special Providence entirely devoted to guarding, guiding, providing for, and illuminating us.
The whole thing is perfectly natural when seen from a clear recognition of what the creative working of the Spirit must be in itself; and when it is realised in this perfectly natural manner, all strain and effort to compel its action ceases: we are at one with the All-creating Power which has now found a new centre in ourselves from which to continue its creative work to more perfect manifestation than could be attained through the unspecialised generic conditions of the merely cosmic order.
Then, too, however great may be the mystery, the removal and cleansing away of all sin follows as an essential part of this realisation of new life; and it is in this sense that we may read all that the Bible tells us of this aspect of the subject. The principle of it is Love; for when we are reunited to the Parent Spirit in mutual confidence and love, what room is there for any remembrance of our past failures?
The leadership resulting from such a national self-recognition will not be based upon conquest and compulsion, but will come naturally. Other nations will enquire the reason for the phenomenal success and prosperity of the favoured people, and finding this reason in a universal law, they will begin to apply the same law in the same manner, and thus the same results will spread from country to country until at last the whole earth will be full of the glory of the Lord.
And such a nation, or rather company of nations, exists. To trace its present development from its ancient beginnings is far beyond the scope of this volume, and still more to speculate upon its further growth; but to my readers on both sides of the Atlantic I may say that this people is the Anglo-Celtic race throughout the world. I write these lines upon the historic hill of Tara; this will convey a hint to many of my readers. At some further time I may enlarge upon this subject; but at present my aim is merely to suggest some lines of thought arising from the Master's saying that "Salvation is of the Jews".