The Writings of Annie Besant
Annie
Besant
(1847
-1933)
Mysticism
by
Annie Besant
First published in 1925
In the early centuries of
Christianity, as we know from the writings of many of the Fathers, and more
surely by the Occult Records,there
existed in the bosom of the Christian Church the venerable institution of the
Mysteries, in which the purified met superhuman Instructors, and learned from
the lips of the Holy Ones the secrets of the 'Kingdom of Heaven'. After the
Christ had thrown off His physical body, He taught His disciples for many
years, coming to them in His glorified subtle body, until those who knew Him in
the flesh had passed away.
So long as the Christian
Mysteries endured, Jesus appeared at them from time to time, and His chief
disciples were constantly present at them. So long as this state of things continued,the exoteric and the
esoteric teachings of Christianity ran side by side in perfect accord,and the mysteries supplied to the high places in the
Church men who were true teachers for the mass of believers, being themselves
deeply instructed in the "hidden things of God", and able to speak
with the authority which comes from direct knowledge They, like their Master,
"taught as having authority and not as the scribes".
But after the
disappearance of the Mysteries, the state of affairs slowly altered for the
worse, and a divergence between the exoteric and esoteric teachings showed
itself ever increasingly until a wide gulf yawned between them, and the mass of
the faithful, standing on the exoteric side, lost sight of the
esoteric wisdom. More and more did the letter take the place of the
spirit, the form of the life, and there began the strife between the Priest and
the Mystic that has ever since been waged in the Christian Church.
The Priest is ever the
guardian of the exoteric, the recipient of the faith once delivered to the
saints, the officiant of the sacraments, the
custodian of the outer order,the transmitter of the
traditions, becoming more authoritative from age to age. His to repeat
accurately the sacred formulæ ; his to watch over a
changeless orthodoxy; his to be the articulate voice of the Church;
his to hand on the unaltered record. Great and noble is his task, and
invaluable his services to the evolving masses of the populace. It is he who
consecrates their birth, sanctions their marriage,hallows their death; he consoles them in their
sorrows and purifies their joys; he stands by the bedside of the sick and the
dying, and gilds the clouds of mortality with the sun of an immortal hope. He
brings into sordid lives the one gleam of poetry and of colour that they known;
he enlarges their narrow horizon with the vistas of a radiant future; he
gladdens the mother with the vision of the Immortal Babe; he saves the
desperate youth with the tenderness of the celestial Mother; he raises before
the eyes of the sorrowful the crucifix that tells of a sorrow that embraces and
consoles their grief; he breathes into the ear of the dying the pledge of the
Easter resurrection,
How could Humanity tread
the earlier stages of its journey without the Priesthood that directs, rebukes,
and comforts; the universality of the office tells of the universality of the
need.
Far other is the Mystic,
the lonely dweller on the mountain-side, climbing in advance of his race,
without help from the outer world, listening ever for the faint whisper of the
God within. Humblest of men as he faces the depths of Divinity around im and the unsounded abysses of the Divinity within, he
seems arrogant as he withstands the edits of external authority, and rebel as
he bows not his neck to the yoke of ecclesiastical order. With his visions and his
dreams and his ecstasies,with his gropings
in the dark and his flashes from a light supernal that dazzles more than it
illuminates, with his sudden irrational exaltations and his equally sudden and
unreasoning depressions, what has he to oppose to the clear-cut doctrines and
the imperial authority of the exoteric creed? Only an unalterable conviction
which he can neither justify nor explain; a certainty which leaves him
stuttering when he seeks to expound it, but remains unfaltering in face of all
rebuke and al reprobation. What can the Priest do with this rebel, who places
his visions above all scriptures, and asserts an inalienable liberty in the
face of the demand for obedience? He has no use for him, no place for him; he
disturbs with his curb less fantasies the settled order of thehousehold
of faith. Hence a continued struggle, in which the Priest for a awhile seems to conquer, but form which the Mystic emerges
victor in the end.
The combat seems an
unequal one, since the Priest has behind him the strength of a splendid
tradition, of a centuried history, of a changeless
authority, and the Mystic stands alone, unfriended.
But it is not so unequal as it seems; for the Mystic draws his strength from
That which gives birth to all religions, and he
bathes in the waters that regenerate, in the flood of Eternity. So
in the ever-recurring conflict, the Priest conquers in the world material, and
is defeated in the world spiritual; and the Mystic, rebuked, persecuted,
crushed, while dwelling in the body;, becomes the Saint after the body has
dropped from him, and becomes a voice of the Church that silenced him, a stone
in the walls that imprisoned.
In the Roman Catholic
Church this combat has been waged century after century, with the same result
continually repeated. Teresa, rebuked and humbled by her confessor, arises as
S. Teresa for unborn generations. Many a man and many a women, regarded
askance, treated with scorn by their contemporaries, become the cynosures of
countless millions of eyes, eyes of the faithful, descendants of the faithful
who decried. And on the whole it is as well that it should be so, until the
stern training of old is re-established; else would every dreamer be taken as a
Mystic, and every hysteric as a Revealer. Only the true Mystic can walk unblenching through the fire of rebuke, "even in hell
can whisper, 'I have known'". Moreover,r the Roman Catholic Church alone has preserved a
systematic training within the 'religious life', a real preparation for the
occult life, ever recognised in theory even if
challenged and suspected in practice.
Hence has she so many
Saints, and such grace and tenderness of spiritual beauty, that one is fain to
pardon her the cruelties of her Priesthood for the sake of the rich streams of
spiritual life poured by her Mystics over the arid deserts of the outer world.
And one can understand, while reprobating, the fierceness with
which she guarded the
ground that made such growths of saintliness possible, and made her deem the
superstition and bigotry of the masses but a small price to pay for the keeping
sacred from profane touch the inner seeds which flowered out into the world as
the Saints
In Protestantism there
has been no systematic training, and hence no soil in which the rare flower
might readily root itself and grow. Few and far between are the Mystics in the
Protestant community, though Jacob Boehme rises,
splendid, gigantic, as though to show that even the absence of all training
cannot stifle the Divinity of the Spirit which is Man.More
than any other phase of christianity does
Protestantism need the presence of Mystics in its midst, the touch of the
living Spirit to save it from the arid letter. But this is is
a subject that needs separate treatment, which elsewhere I hope to give.
Theosophy is the reassertion of Mysticism within the bosom of very
living religion, the affirmation of the reality of the mystic state of consciousness
and of the value of its products. In the midst of a scholarly and critical
generation, it reproclaims the superiority of the
knowledge which is drawn from the direct experience of the spiritual world,
and, facing undaunted the splendour of the
accumulated results of research, historical and scientific, facing undaunted
the new and menacing Priesthood of Science and of Criticism, it affirms he
greater splendour of the open vision, and the royalty
of the Kingdom into which may pass 'the little child' alone.
The primary experience
of Mysticism is direct communion with the unseen, the recognition of the Gods
without by the God within, the touching of invisible realities, the passing
with opened eyes into the worlds beyond the veil. It substitutes experience for
authority, knowledge for faith, and it finds its guarantee in the
'common-sense' of all Mystics, the identity of the experiences of all who
traverse the grounds untrodden by the profane.
The results of mystic
experiences show themselves in a method of interpretation applied to all
doctrines and to all scriptures, a method which justifies itself by the light
it throws on obscurities rather than by reasoned arguments. It is, in all ages,
the method of the Illuminati.
An example will show the
method better than efforts at explanation. Let us take the doctrine of the
Atonement. The Mystic sees in this Christian doctrine one of the ways in which
is told the ancient but ever new story of the unfolding of the
human Spirit into self-conscious union with God. He sees the
Atonement wrought by the unfolding of the Christ in man as the reflection in
the human consciousness of the second Aspect in the Divine Consciousness,
gradually shining out into clearness and beauty. As the Christ in man matures so
is the atonement wrought, and it is completed when the Son, rising above
separation, knows himself as one with Humanity and one with God, and in that
knowledge becomes a veritable Saviour, a true
Mediator between God and Man, uniting both in His own person, and thus making
them one. The Mystic cares not to argue about the dead-letter meaning of any
dogma; he sees the heart of it by the light of his own experience, and to him
its true value lies in its inner content, not in its outer history.
So also with Scripture. It may, or may not, have an outer accuracy as history; its
value lies in its exposition of the facts of the spiritual world. Whether a
physical
But the spiritual
in thus reading the
Scriptures; for S.Paul in Galatians iv., has thus
dealt with the story of Abraham, Sarah, Hagar, Isaac and Ishmael; and all the
early Fathers of the Church sought the inner meanings and care little for the
outer words.
For the educated
Christian of today, who would not cut himself wholly off from the old moorings,
this method of interpretation is vital, and only by the direct knowledge gained
in the mystic state of consciousness can he preserve his religion amid the
changes brought about by modern research.
The Higher Criticism is
undermining all his authorities; subtly, but in deadly fashion, its burrowing's have taken the ground away beneath their feet;
and only a thin crust remains, which at any moment may give way, and let the
whole structure crash down into irretrievable ruin. The Church can no longer be
built on historical authority; it must build itself on the rock of experience,
if it would survive the tempest which roars around it. Mysticism can give it
the surest certainty in all the world, the certainty of mystic experience
continually renewed.
The Christ within is the
only guarantee of the Christ without - but no further guarantee is needed.
Because the Christ lives undeveloped in every human Spirit, the Christ
developed is a historical fact; and those in whom the mystic Christ is
developing can look across the gulf of centuries and recognise
the historical Christ; nay, can transcend the limitations of the physical, and
know Him in His living reality as surely, and more fully, than His disciples
knew Him when He walked by the lake of Gennesaret.
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