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V. Recapitulação
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Promulgação e Reconhecimento
(p. 163)
CHAPTER VI
THE 
EXEMPLIFICATION
THIS
chapter will 
be devoted to some examples of the recovered Gnosis, bearing chiefly upon the 
supreme doctrine of Regeneration. As with all else received by the Seeress, they 
are the product of intuitional memory regained under divine illumination 
occurring mostly in sleep. And here I will take occasion to state explicitly and 
positively, that the states, whether of sleep or of trance, in which her faculty 
was exercised, were all natural and spontaneous, being induced by the Spirit 
itself; and that in no case were artificial means employed by either of us, 
whether drugs, mesmerism, hypnotism, crystal-gazing, or any other of the devices 
ordinarily used to induce abnormal states of consciousness or promote 
enhancement of faculty. Our work was to be a real work, done not only by us but 
in us, and we had from the first a profound instinctive distrust of results 
obtained by such artificial stimulation.
Nor was any 
change even of a word over made in the teachings received. They came one and all 
in the finished perfection in which they are put forth, coming down as the holy 
city from the heaven of the upper and the within, and incapable of improvement. 
The following are the examples proposed: –
(p. 164)
(1) Concerning Holy Writ.
All Scriptures which are the true 
Word of God, have a dual interpretation, the intellectual and the intuitional, 
the apparent and. the hidden.
For nothing can came forth from God 
save that which is fruitful.
As is the nature of God, so is the 
Word of God's mouth.
The letter alone is barren; the 
spirit and the letter give life.
But that Scripture is the more 
excellent, which is exceeding fruitful and brings forth abundant signification.
For God is able to say many things 
in one, as the perfect ovary contains many seeds in its chalice.
Therefore there are in the 
Scriptures of God's Word certain writings which, as richly yielding trees, bear 
more abundantly than others in the self-same holy garden.
And one of the most excellent is the 
history of the generation of the heavens and the earth.
For therein is contained in order a 
genealogy, which has four heads, as a stream divided into four branches, a word 
exceeding rich.
And the first of these generations 
is that of the Gods.
The second is that of the kingdom of 
heaven.
The third is that of the visible 
world.
And the fourth is that of the 
(2) Concerning the Mystery of Redemption.
            
All things in heaven and in earth are of God, both the invisible and the 
visible.
            
Such as is the invisible, is the visible also, for there is no boundary line 
betwixt spirit and matter.
Matter is spirit made exteriorly 
cognisable by the force of the Divine Word.
And when God shall resume all things 
by love, the material shall be resolved into the spiritual, and there shall be a 
new heaven and a new earth.
Not that matter shall be destroyed, 
for it came forth from God, and is of God indestructible and eternal.
But it shall be indrawn and resolved 
into its true self.
(p. 165)
It shall put off corruption, and 
remain incorruptible.
It shall put off mortality, and 
remain immortal.
So that nothing be lost of the 
Divine substance.
It was material entity: it shall be 
spiritual entity.
For there is nothing which can go 
out from the presence of God.
This is the doctrine of the 
resurrection of the dead: that is, the transfiguration of the body.
For the body, which is matter, is 
but the manifestation of spirit: and the Word of God shall transmute it into its 
inner being.
The will of God is the alchemic 
crucible: and the dross which is cast therein is matter.
And the dross shall become pure 
gold, seven times refined; even perfect spirit.
It shall leave behind it nothing: 
but shall be transformed into the Divine image.
For it is not a new substance: but 
its alchemic polarity is changed, and it is converted.
But except it were gold in its true 
nature, it could not be resumed into the aspect of gold.
And except matter were spirit, it 
could not revert to spirit.
To make gold, the alchemist must 
have gold.
But he knows that to be gold which 
others take to be dross.
Cast thyself into the will of God, 
and thou shalt become as God.
For thou art God, if thy will be the 
Divine Will.
This is the great secret: it is the 
mystery of Redemption.
(3) Concerning Sin and Death.
As is the outer so is the inner: He 
that worketh is One. As the small is, so is the great: there is one law. Nothing 
is small and nothing is great in the Divine Economy.
(p. 166)
            
If thou wouldst understand the method of the world's corruption, and the 
condition to which sin hath reduced the work of God,
Meditate upon the aspect of a 
corpse; and consider the method of the putrefaction of its tissues and humours.
For the secret of death is the same, 
whether of the outer or of the inner.
The body dieth when the central will 
of its system no longer bindeth in obedience the elements of its substance.
Every cell is a living entity, 
whether of vegetable or of animal potency.
In the healthy body every cell is 
polarised in subjection to the central will, the Adonai of the physical system.
Health, therefore, is order, 
obedience, and government.
But wherever disease is, there is 
disunion, rebellion, and insubordination.
And the deeper the seat of the 
confusion, the more dangerous the malady, and the harder to quell it.
That which is superficial may be 
more easily healed; or, if need be, the disorderly elements may be rooted out, 
and the body shall be whole and at unity again.
But if the disobedient molecules 
corrupt each other continually, and the perversity spread, and the rebellious 
tracts multiply their elements; the whole body shall fall into dissolution, 
which is death.
For the central will that should 
dominate all the kingdom of the body, is no longer obeyed; and every element is 
become its own ruler, and hath a divergent will of its own.
So that the poles of the cells 
incline in divers directions; and the binding power which is the life of the 
body, is dissolved and destroyed.
And when dissolution is complete, 
then follow corruption and putrefaction.
Now, that which is true of the 
physical, is true likewise of its prototype.
The whole world is full of revolt; 
and every element hath a will divergent from God.
(p. 167)
Whereas there ought to be but one 
will, attracting and ruling the whole man.
But there is no longer Brotherhood 
among you; nor order, nor mutual sustenance.
Every cell is its own arbiter; and 
every member is become a sect.
Ye are not bound one to another: ye 
have confounded your offices, and abandoned your functions.
Ye have reversed the direction of 
your magnetic currents: ye are fallen into confusion, and have given place to 
the spirit of misrule.
Your wills are many and diverse; and 
every one of you is an anarchy.
A house that is divided against 
itself, falleth.
O wretched man; who shall deliver 
you from this body of Death?
(4) Concerning the Twelve Grates of Regeneration.
Now, the 
There is a power by means of which 
the Outer may be absorbed into the Inner.
There is a power by means of which 
Matter may be ingested into its original Substance.
He who possesses this power is 
Christ, and He has the devil under foot.
For He reduces chaos to order, and 
indraws the external to the centre.
He has learnt that Matter is 
illusion, and that Spirit alone is real.
He has found His own Central Point; 
and all power is given unto Him in heaven and on earth.
Now, the Central Point is the number 
Thirteen: it is the number of the Marriage of the Son of God.
And all the members of the microcosm 
are bidden to the banquet of the marriage.
(p. 168)
But if there chance to be even one 
among them which has not on a wedding garment,
Such a one is a Traitor, and the 
microcosm is found divided against itself.
And that it may be wholly 
regenerate, it is necessary that Judas be cast out.
Now the members of the microcosm are 
Twelve: of the Senses three, of the Mind three, of the Heart three, and of the 
Conscience three.
For of the Body there are four 
elements; and the sign of the four is Sense, in the which are three Gates,
The gate of the Eye, the gate of the 
Ear, and the gate of the Touch. (1)
Renounce vanity, and be poor: 
renounce praise, and be humble: renounce luxury, and be chaste.
Offer unto God a pure oblation: let 
the fire of the altar search thee, and prove thy fortitude.
Cleanse thy sight, thine hands, and 
thy feet: carry the censer of thy worship into the courts of the Lord; and let 
thy vows be unto the Most High.
And for the magnetic man 
(2) there are four elements: and the covering of the four 
is mind, in the which are three gates;
The gate of desire, the gate of 
labour, and the gate of illumination.
Renounce the world, and aspire 
heavenward: labour not for the meat which perishes, but ask of God thy daily 
bread: beware of wandering doctrines, and let the Word of the Lord be thy light.
Also of the soul there are four 
elements: and the seat of the four is the heart, whereof likewise there are 
three gates;
(p. 169)
The gate of obedience, the gate of 
prayer, and the gate of discernment.
Renounce thine own will, and let the 
law of God only be within thee: renounce doubt: pray always and faint not: be 
pure of heart also, and thou shalt see God.
And within the soul is the Spirit: 
and the Spirit is One, yet has it likewise three elements.
And these are the gates of the 
oracle of God, which is the ark of the covenant;
The rod, the host 
(1), and the law:
The force which solves, and 
transmutes, and divines: the bread of heaven which is the substance of all 
things and the food of angels; the table of the law, which is the will of God, 
written with the finger of the Lord.
If these three be within thy spirit, 
then shall the Spirit of God be within thee.
And the glory shall be upon the 
propitiatory, in the holy place of thy prayer.
These are the twelve gates of 
regeneration: through which if a man enter he shall have right to the tree of 
life. For the number of that Tree is Thirteen.
It may happen to a man to have 
three, to another five, to another seven, to another ten.
But until a man have twelve, he is 
not master over the last enemy.
(5) Concerning the Passage of the Soul. (1)
            
Evoi, Father lacchos, Lord God of 
            
Upon whose walls are the forms of every creature: of every beast of the earth, 
and of every fowl of the air;
            
The lynx, and the lion, and the bull: the ibis and the serpent: the scorpion and 
every flying thing.
And the columns thereof are human 
shapes; having the heads of eagles and the hoofs of the ox.
(p. 170)
All these are of thy kingdom: they 
are the chambers of ordeal, and the houses of the initiation of the soul.
For the soul passeth from form to 
form; and the mansions of her pilgrimage are manifold.
Thou callest her from the deep, and 
from the secret places of the earth; from the dust of the ground, and from the 
herb of the field.
Thou coverest her nakedness with an 
apron of fig-leaves; thou clothest her with the skins of beasts.
Thou art from of old, O soul of man; 
yea, thou art from the everlasting.
Thou puttest off thy bodies as 
raiment; and as vesture dost thou fold them up.
They perish, but thou remainest: the 
wind rendeth and scattereth them; and the place of them shall no more be known.
For the wind is the Spirit of God in 
man, which bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but 
canst not tell whence it cometh, nor whither it shall go.
Even so is the spirit of man, which 
cometh from afar off and tarrieth not, but passeth away to a place thou knowest 
not.
(6) Concerning the Mystic Exodus. (1)
Evoi, lacchos, Lord of the Sphinx; 
who linkest the lowest to the highest; the loins of the wild beast to the head 
and breast of the woman.
Thou holdest the chalice of 
divination: all the forms of nature are reflected therein.
Thou turnest man to destruction: 
then thou sayest, Come again, ye children of my hand.
Yea, blessed and holy art thou, O 
Master of Earth: Lord of the cross and the tree of salvation.
Vine of God, whose blood 
redeemeth; bread of heaven, broken on the altar of death.
(p. 171)
There is corn in 
For in the kingdom of the Body, thou 
shalt eat the bread of thine initiation.
But beware lest thou become subject 
to the flesh, and a bond-slave in the land of thy sojourn.
Serve not the idols of 
For they will bow thy neck to their 
yoke; they will bitterly oppress the Israel of God.
An evil time shall come upon thee; 
and the Lord shall smite 
Thy body shall be broken on the 
wheel of God; thy flesh shall see trouble and the worm.
Thy house shall be smitten with 
grievous plagues; blood, and pestilence, and great darkness; fire shall devour 
thy goods; and thou shalt be a prey to the locust and creeping thing.
Thy glory shall be brought down to 
the dust; hail and storm shall smite thine harvest; yea, thy beloved and thy 
first-born shall the hand of the Lord destroy;
Until the body let the soul go free; 
that she may serve the Lord God.
Arise in the night, O soul, and fly, 
lest thou be consumed in 
The angel of the understanding shall 
know thee for his elect, if thou offer unto God a reasonable faith.
Savour thy reason with learning, 
with labour, and with obedience.
Let the rod of thy desire be in thy 
right hand: put the sandals of Hermes on thy feet; and gird thy loins with 
strength.
Then shalt thou pass through the 
waters of cleansing, which is the first death in the body.
The waters shall be a wall unto thee 
on thy right hand and on thy left.
(p. 172)
And Hermes the Redeemer shall go 
before thee; for he is thy cloud of darkness by day, and thy pillar of fire by 
night.
All the horsemen of 
These shall pursue thee, O soul, 
that fliest; and shall seek to bring thee back into bondage.
Fly for thy life; fear not the deep; 
stretch out thy rod over the sea; and lift thy desire unto God.
Thou hast learnt wisdom in 
Thou hast enriched thyself in the 
body; but the body shall not hold thee; neither shall the waters of the deep 
swallow thee up.
Thou shalt wash thy robes in the sea 
of regeneration; the blood of atonement shall redeem thee to God.
This is thy chrism and anointing, O 
soul; this is the first death; thou art the 
Who hath redeemed thee from the 
dominion of the body; and hath called thee from the grave, and from the house of 
bondage,
Unto the way of the cross, and to 
the path in the midst of the wilderness;
Where are the adder and the serpent, 
the mirage and the burning sand.
For the feet of the saint are set in 
the way of the desert.
But be thou of good courage, and 
fail thou not; then shall thy raiment endure, and thy sandals shall not wax old 
upon thee.
And thy desire shall heal thy 
diseases; it shall bring streams for thee out of the stony rock; it shall lead 
thee to 
Evoi, Father lacchos, Jehovah-Nissi; (1) Lord of the garden and of the vineyard;
(p. 173)
Initiator and lawgiver; God of the 
cloud and of the mount.
Evoi, Father lacchos; out of 
To vindicate 
the suppressed mysteries of the pre-Christian churches by disclosing them as the 
true origines of 
Christianity, and to replace the false doctrine of the exclusive divinity of one 
man by the true doctrine of the potential divinity of all men, – these are among 
the foremost objects of the New Gospel of Interpretation. And it is especially 
in order to reinforce the last named, that it has restored the following hymn in 
celebration of the supreme results of regeneration, which formed part of the 
ritual of the greater mysteries of the Greeks. It is addressed to the first of 
the Holy Seven, the Spirit of Wisdom, as represented by his "angel," the angel 
of the sun, even "that light which Adonai created on the first day," "whose name 
is, in the Hebrew, Uriel, and in the Greek, Phoibos, the Bright One of God." 
Breathing both the Spirit and the letter of the Bible, from Genesis to the 
Apocalypse, the hymns, of which this is one, indicate unmistakably the identity 
in source and substance of the Hebrew and the Christian with the other sacred 
mysteries of antiquity, and the derivation of the later
(p. 174)
through the earlier from 
their common source in the world celestial when once again they have been 
restored. And they supply also the motive which led the Christians to destroy 
the second Alexandrian library, showing that motive to have been the desire to 
conceal, first, the derivation of the Christian presentment from its 
predecessors, and next, the perversion of their doctrine in the interests of an 
unscrupulous sacerdocy.
Taken in 
connection with its fellow-hymns, similarly recovered, to others of the "Holy 
Seven,” the hymn to Phoibos (1) throws a flood of 
light on the creative week of Genesis, showing it to be no mere proem to 
Scripture, or concerned with the world physical merely, but an integral portion 
of Scripture, being an epitome of eternal verities ever in process, and 
appertaining both to Creation and to Redemption. The Hymn to Her who is 
mystically the fourth, but really the third of the Gods, the "Spirit of Counsel" 
of Isaiah, is especially notable for its solution of the problem of the 
inversion of the order of the third and fourth days of creation. These hymns, 
moreover, show indubitably that the order of the solar system was no secret to 
the hierophants of the sacred mysteries of antiquity.
(7) Hymn to Phoibos, the First of the Gods.
"Strong art thou and adorable, 
Phoibos Apollo, who bearest life and healing on thy wings, who crownest the year 
with thy bounty, and givest the spirit of thy divinity to the fruits and 
precious things of all the worlds.
Where were the bread of the 
initiation of the Sons of God, except thou bring the corn to ear; or the wine of 
their mystical chalice, except thou bless the vintage?
(p.175)
Many are the angels who serve in the 
courts of the spheres of heaven: but thou, Master of Light and of Life, art 
followed by the Christs of God.
And thy sign is the sign of the Son 
of Man in heaven, and of the Just made perfect;
Whose path is as a shining light, 
shining more and more unto the innermost glory of the day of the Lord God.
Thy banner is blood-red, and thy 
symbol is a milk-white lamb, and thy crown is of pure gold.
They who reign with thee are the 
Hierophants of the celestial mysteries; for their will is the will of God, and 
they know as they are known.
These are the sons of the innermost 
sphere; the Saviours of men, the Anointed of God.
And their name is Christ Jesus, in 
the day of their initiation.
And before them every knee shall 
bow, of things in heaven and of things on earth.
They are come out of great 
tribulation, and are set down for ever at the right hand of God.
And the Lamb, which is in the midst 
of the seven spheres, shall give them to drink of the river of living water.
And they shall eat of the tree of 
life, which is in the centre of the garden of the 
These are thine, O Mighty Master of Light; and 
this is the dominion which the Word of God appointed thee in the beginning:
In the day when God created the 
light of all the worlds, and divided the light from the darkness.
And God called the light Phoibos, 
and the darkness God called Python.
Now the darkness was before the 
light, as the night forerunneth the dawn.
These are the evening and the 
morning of the first cycle of the Mysteries.
(p. 176)
And the glory of that cycle is as 
the glory of seven days; and they who dwell therein are seven times refined;
Who have purged the garment of the 
flesh in the living waters;
And have transmuted both body and 
soul into spirit, and are become pure virgins.
For they were constrained by love to 
abandon the outer elements, and to seek the innermost which is undivided, even 
the Wisdom of God.
And wisdom and love are one.
In view of 
the restoration of the Gods to recognition by the New Gospel of Interpretation, 
it must be explained that the doctrines of Monotheism and Polytheism are not 
necessarily incompatible. This has already been shown in Chapter IV., in the 
utterance commencing – "In the bosom of the Eternal were all the Gods 
comprehended, as the seven spirits of the prism contained in the Invisible 
Light." For as light is one though its rays are seven and each ray is light, so 
is God one though His spirits are seven and each spirit is God.
And yet 
further. The deities recognised under various names or by various peoples are 
not necessarily different Gods, but may be either the same God or different 
modes or aspects of the same God. Notably is this the case with the Gods of the 
Hebrews, the Greeks, and the Christians. For while by the term Elohim is denoted 
the two principles, masculine and feminine, of Force and Substance, which 
constitute Original Being, by Jehovah or Yahveh, Adonai and Shaddai, is denoted 
the resultant of the interaction of these two principles as Father and Mother, 
who is called therefore their word, expression, and Son. By the
(p. 177)
Holy Ghost is denoted the 
same two principles in activity, having procession from the "Father-Mother" 
through the "Son," to be the constituent principles of creation, being Deity 
dynamic as distinguished from Deity static. By the Seven Spirits of God – as by 
the seven great Gods of the Greeks, – are denoted the seven potencies into which 
Deity differentiates on emerging as Holy Ghost from the prism constituted of 
Father, Mother, and Son, which are to each other as the force, substance, and 
phenomenon of which every manifest entity consists. For "Every entity that is 
manifest, is manifest by the evolution of its trinity.” And by Christ is denoted 
the ultimate issue of such procession of Deity into manifestation, namely, 
divinity individuated by means of its passage through matter, and elaborated by 
cooperation of the Seven Spirits of God, into a perfected spiritual Ego, who is at once God and man, and 
subsists under two modes – the micro-cosmic or individual, and the macrocosmic 
or universal, and who is always in process of increase, because, in 
manifestation, "the Father is greater than the Son;" and "the manifest never 
exhausts the unmanifest."
Now the 
process of the Christ is by regeneration, and of this, as has been said, 
reincarnation is the condition. The New Gospel of Interpretation contains an 
utterance of Jesus on this subject which will fitly conclude this series of 
examples. It was recovered by "Mary" under illumination early in 1880, and 
consequently when we had not fully come to realise the actuality of the doctrine 
and the possibility of the recovery of the memories of past lives. Hence
(p. 178)
she sought from her 
illuminators confirmation of the genuineness of the experience, when she was 
distinctly and positively assured that the incident had actually occurred, and 
that she had borne part in it, though no record of it survives. Such is the 
extrinsic testimony on which it rests. We found the intrinsic no less 
satisfactory, whether as regards the substance or the form.
(8) Concerning the previous lives of Jesus, and 
Reincarnation.
This morning between sleeping and 
waking I saw myself, together with many other persons, walking with Jesus in the 
fields round about 
(p. 179)
already have I taken the form of woman. But 
there are three conditions under which the soul returns to the man's form; and 
they are these: –
            
"1st. When the work which the Spirit proposes to accomplish is of a nature 
unsuitable to the female form.
            
"2nd. When the Spirit has failed to acquire, in the degree necessary to 
perfection, certain special attributes of the male character.
            
"3rd. When the Spirit has transgressed, and gone back in the path of perfection, 
by degrading the womanhood it had attained.
            
"In the first of these cases the return to the male form is outward and 
superficial only. This is my case. I am a woman in all save the body. But had My 
body been a woman's, I could not have led the life necessary to the work I have 
to perform. I could not have trod the rough ways of the earth, nor have gone 
about from city to city preaching, nor have fasted on the mountains, nor have 
fulfilled My mission of poverty and labour. Therefore am I – a woman – clothed 
in a man's body that I may be enabled to do the work set before Me.
            
"The second case is that of a soul who, having been a woman perhaps many times, 
has acquired more aptly and readily the higher qualities of womanhood than the 
lower qualities of manhood. Such a soul is lacking in energy, in resoluteness, 
in that particular attribute of the Spirit which the prophet ascribes to the 
Lord when he says, 'The Lord is a Man of war. ' Therefore the soul is put back 
into a man's form to acquire the qualities yet lacking.
            
"The third case is that of the backslider, who, having nearly attained 
perfection, – perhaps even touched it, – degrades and soils his white robe, and 
is put back into the lower form again. These are the common cases; for there are 
few women who are worthy to be women". (1)
(p. 180)
(9) Concerning the "Work of Power."
            
You have asked me if the Work of Power is a difficult one, and if it is open to 
all.
            
It is open to all potentially and eventually, but not actually and in the 
present. In order to regain power and the resurrection, a man must be a 
Hierarch; that is to say, he must have attained the magical age of thirty-three. This age is attained by having accomplished 
the Twelve Labours, passed the Twelve Gates, overcome the Five Senses, and 
obtained dominion over the Four Spirits of the elements. He must have been born 
Immaculate, baptised with Water and Fire, tempted in the Wilderness, crucified 
and buried. He must have borne Five Wounds on the Cross, and he must have 
answered the riddle of the Sphinx. When this is accomplished he is free of 
matter, and will never again have a phenomenal body.
            
Who shall attain to this perfection? The Man who is without fear and without 
concupiscence; who has courage to be absolutely poor and absolutely chaste. When 
it is all one to you whether you have gold or whether you have none, whether you 
have a house and lands or whether you have them not, whether you have worldly 
reputation or whether you are an outcast, – then you are voluntarily poor. It is 
not necessary to have nothing, but it is necessary to care for nothing. When it 
is all one to you whether you have a wife or husband, or whether you are 
celibate, then you are free from concupiscence. It is not necessary to be a 
virgin; it is necessary to set no value on the flesh. There is nothing so 
difficult to attain as this equilibrium. Who is he who can part with his goods 
without regret? Who is he who is never consumed by the desires of the flesh? But 
when you have ceased both to wish to retain and to burn, then you have the 
remedy in your own hands, and the remedy is a hard and a sharp one, and a 
terrible ordeal. Nevertheless, be not afraid. Deny, the five senses, and above 
all the taste and the touch. The power is within you if you will to attain it. 
The Two Seats
(p. 181)
are vacant at the Celestial Table, if you 
will put on Christ. Eat no dead thing. Drink no fermented drink. Make living 
elements of all the elements of your body. Mortify the members of earth. Take 
your food full of life, and let not the touch of death pass upon it. You 
understand me, but you shrink. Remember that without self-immolation, there is 
no power over death. Deny the touch. Seek no bodily pleasure in sexual 
communion; let desire be magnetic and soulic. If you indulge the body, you 
perpetuate the body, and the end of the body is corruption. You understand me 
again, but you shrink. Remember that without self-denial and restraint there is 
no power over death. Deny the taste first, and it will become easier to deny the 
touch. For to be a virgin is the crown of discipline. I have shown you the 
excellent way, and it is the Via Dolorosa. Judge 
whether the resurrection be worth the passion; whether the kingdom be worth the 
obedience; whether the power be worth the suffering. When the time of your 
calling comes, you will no longer hesitate.
When a man has attained power over 
his body, the process of ordeal is no longer necessary. The Initiate is under a 
vow; the Hierarch is free. Jesus, therefore, came eating and drinking; for all 
things were lawful to Him. He had undergone, and had freed His will. For the 
object of the trial and the vow is polarisation. When the fixed is volatilised, 
the Magian is free. But before Christ was Christ He was subject; and His 
initiation lasted thirty years. All things are lawful to the Hierarch; for he 
knows the nature and value of all. (1)
This chapter may appropriately terminate with, a few remarks in reply to the 
inevitable question,
(p. 182)
why our country and 
language were selected as the place and tongue of the new revelation in 
preference to all others.
It is, as we 
were enabled to see, because the British people are recognised in the Celestial 
world, as possessing that peculiar quality of soul which, in spite of their many 
and grievous limitations, has made them to be the foremost witness among the 
nations to God and the Conscience, in such wise as to constitute them the 
counterpart of Israel in the modern world. Others besides ourselves have 
recognised this characteristic. Said Milton, speaking of a crisis which, 
momentous as it was, pales in presence of that which now is, seeing that 
Religion itself as Religion was not menaced then as in our time –
"Now once again, by all concurrence of signs, and by the general instinct 
of devout and holy men, as they daily and solemnly express their thoughts, God 
is beginning to devise some new and great period in His Church, even to the 
reforming of Reformation itself. What does He then, but address Himself to His 
servants, and – as His manner is – first to His Englishmen.”
To which we may add in reference to the present, 
"And having by the hands of His Intellectualists, beaten down the false 
interpretation of His holy Word, accomplishing the work of destruction, is about 
by the hands of His Intuitionalists, to establish the true interpretation, 
accomplishing the work of re-construction."
Nor are 
there wanting specific historical facts pointing in the same direction. To 
(p. 183)
letter of Scripture from 
suppression and virtual extinction at the hands of an order bent only on 
exalting itself at whatever cost to truth and humanity. Meanwhile, for three 
centuries and a half – period suggestive of the mystical "time, times, and half 
a time," – 
            
Moreover, as Mistress of the Sea, the especial symbol of the Soul, she has a 
prescriptive claim to be the vehicle of the latest and crowning message to 
earth, of which the Soul herself is at once the source, the subject, and the 
object.
            
Nor are the universality of her language and the grandeur of her literature 
elements to be left out of consideration. All things point to her language as 
destined to become, practically, the language of the world; and hence its 
peculiar fitness to be the vehicle of that "eternal gospel" which it is declared 
should, at the end of the age, be proclaimed "unto them that dwell on the earth, 
even unto every nation, and tribe, and tongue, and people."
FOOTNOTES
(168:1) Taste and smell being 
modes of touch. E.M.
(168:2) I.e., the astral and 
mental part of man, which is accounted a person or system in itself. E.M.
(169: 1) The Sacramental bread called by the 
Hebrews "showbread."
(170:1) See note 
on p. 122. ante.
(172:1) The names Nyssa, Nysa, 
Nysas, and Nissi are identical with each other, and also with Sinai, Sion, and 
those of other sacred mounts. For they all are names for the Mount of 
Regeneration, the mount or "holy hill" of the Lord, within the man, to be on 
which is to be in the Spirit. The river Hiddekel has the like import. It is the 
river of the soul, herself fluidic and called Maria (waters), which, as the 
receptacle of the divine nucleus, winds about and encompasses the Spirit. Thus 
Daniel is said to be "on Hiddekel" when under divine illumination. (Life A.K. Vol. I. p. 459.)
(179:1). A.K. was distinctly and 
positively assured that the incident then shown to her was one that actually 
occurred, and that she had borne part of it though no record of it survives. 
S.H.H.
(181:1) This instruction is 
taken from Life A.K. Vol. I. pp. 424-425.
Seções: Índice Geral   
Seção Atual: 
Índice   
Índice da Obra   
Anterior: Capítulo 
V. Recapitulação
Seguinte: Capítulo VII. 
Promulgação e Reconhecimento