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YULE AND NOEL
The Birthday of Humanity
Could any statement fall on the
mind of the general reader with greater astonishment and incredulity than
the assertion here and now to be made that while everybody has celebrated
the great festival of Christmas year after year for some seventeen
centuries, nobody truly and profoundly knows what it means? It is
questionable whether a single person could be found today who would be
able to give a sound and supportable elucidation of the significance of
the traditional rites and celebratory customs connected with the annual
observance of the solstitial holiday. In millions of homes the head of the
household, with suppressed anticipation of delight, drags into the house a
green pine tree and in happy mood labors late into the night of December
twenty-fourth to decorate it with shining baubles and gifts. Yet it is
safe to say that not in centuries has a single one of these celebrants
entertained the remotest idea of the origin and inner meaning of his
customary procedure. It is done because it has become fixed in the
communal mind as traditional routine. Few even pause to wonder how or why
the several usages have come to prevail, and would be surprised if some
one raised the question. Now and again a newspaper article will venture to
relate the origin of one or another customary feature, but cloaks the
account in uncertainty and conjecture. The symbolism of the pine tree, the
mistletoe and the Yule log traces back, it will say, to Celtic or Nordic
provenance, but as to vouchsafing any authentic intelligence as to the
inner significance of the rites mentioned, it makes little pretence at
knowledge. It is necessary to add that in such attempts to throw some
light on ancient customs connected with the festival most of the
explanation advanced falls wide of the mark of truth.
If question was asked why the
Christmas pine tree is trimmed with bright objects, or why a gold star is
usually hung atop the highest branch, there would be complete innocence
and a blank stare. If it was inquired why the two strongly contrasted
colors of red and green were universally accepted as traditionally
appropriate to the festival, similar default of knowledge would be
encountered. Even the practice of presenting the Yuletide gifts to family
members and friends is not too clear to the average person, although there
is a hazy impression that it somehow is connected with the sentiment of
God's great gift of his Son to redeem mankind. It would be asking far too
much explicit question why the Norse and the Anglo-Saxons at an earlier
time used to drag in and burn the Yule log on the old-time hearth, and why
they scattered parched wheat upon the doorstep or the hearth-stone of the
house. Equally vain would it be to ask why they suspended a twig of
mistletoe under which lovers might steal a kiss. And what the significance
of the candle set in the window to send its tiny gleam abroad in the dark
night of December? Perhaps some one might venture the explanation that it
symbolized the light brought to the world by the birth of the Christ, to
shed his benignant rays upon a benighted humanity.
IS CHRISTMAS A CHRISTIAN
FESTIVAL?
For centuries in Western
countries Christmas has been proclaimed to be a purely Christian
celebration, commemorating the birth of the Christ, the Savior of mankind,
in ancient Judea. Yet so stolid and unthinking are the masses that it has
hardly ever entered the brain of one in millions that practically nothing
connected with the observance is in any way distinctly Christian except
the one item of the birth of Jesus of Nazareth. The Christian religion has
over these many centuries berated and flouted the Pagan world and its
religions. Yet the odd truth is that here in its most colorful festival of
the year the Christian world is found perpetuating the celebratory rites
and traditional practices of that same Pagan system that it traduces.
Encyclopedias and apologetic writing in the Christian world have to be
content to say that this is due to the fact that as Christianity spread
over the northern Teutonic and Nordic lands of Europe, it insensibly
commingled its own ideas with the ineradicable customs of the new converts
in those countries. Instead of ousting completely the religious routine
and addictions of the peoples it had newly won over, it had to be
satisfied to make a blending of its basic Christology with the ritual
usages of the nations it overspread without uprooting these from their
native hold on these people. In short it graciously condescended to allow
its Pagan converts to continue undisturbed in the grooves of hereditary
custom, aiming the while to read a Christian meaning into those survivals
of the olden time and such early religions as the Druidic.
This is the common belief, the
general understanding. How far it falls short of the truth will constitute
the astounding revelation of
this brochure. So far from its being true that Christianity captured
Paganism in its Christmas institution, the fact of history is that as
regards the mode of the Christmas celebration, it was Paganism that
captured Christianity. For the astounding truth about the matter is that
the entire body of meaning foisted upon the festival by Christianity has
missed the mark of true significance by many a mile, while for a
comprehension of the primordial motives expressed in and by the ritual and
symbolical customs and rites, we have to go back to the mysteries of
occult Pagan formulations. To the substantiation of this epochal
pronouncement the present essay will be dedicated.
This declaration virtually
asserts that Christmas finds its true and more potent spiritual
significance for us when treated as a Pagan rather than as a Christian
ordination. The inferences from this deduction are not dodged. They will
be openly accepted and confirmed in their general correctness. The claim
is here advanced that not through Christian but through Pagan forms of
celebration and channels of understanding does this great solstitial
ceremony derive its highest moving and uplifting moral and spiritual
power. Christianity has diverted the true original meaning off into
dead-end by-paths. This has happened because it has lost the underlying
sense of the Pagan formulations. The sad result is that nobody in
Christian lands has the dimmest conception of the true significance of the
striking rituals and symbols that still prevail to mark this as the most
cherished festival of the Christian year. This is a strange and anomalous
phenomenon indeed.
CHRISTMAS ON MARCH 25.
In the first place there is the
matter of the date, the year, month and day of the anniversary and the
celebration. In all Christian understanding the assumption is that
Christmas commemorates the birth of the infant Jesus at a given place and
hour. It is perhaps well enough known that the exact time of this event is
not a matter of historical record, and therefore the anniversary character
of the celebration is hardly any longer considered. It is kept in the dark
background of silence because to agitate it opens the door to scores of
pertinent questions for which religionists have no authentic answers. The
twenty-fifth day of December is accepted now as a token date of the
birth, though few even pause to wonder any more what led to the selection
of this date, if it is not to be held to be the actual birthday of the
Galilean Messiah.
In the case of a festival of
such importance and prominence as Christmas, it is a thing of no light
insignificance that the Christian Church keeps from its people the simple
and singular fact that the early Christians celebrated the birth of their
Savior for over the first three and a half centuries on March 25.
It is to be questioned whether its clergy are generally aware of this fact
definitely and succinctly. It would involve the revelation of their
faith's early kinship with Paganism. It is therefore kept from publicity.
But the words of the decree issued by the Pope of Christendom, Julian II,
in the year 345 A.D., are still to be read, and they inform us that in
that year he decreed that henceforth it was fitting that the followers of
the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, should unite with the followers of
Mithra and of Bacchus in celebrating the rebirth of the deity under
solar symbolism at the winter solstice! Here again it is historically
established that even the day and date of the Christmas event was not an
original Christian institution, but was an accommodation of Christian
practice to Pagan observance. In this same decree it is logically
established that the date is not set as an anniversary commemoration,
since the only consideration governing its selection is astrological
symbolism! No pretence is made that it is to be regarded as the natal day
of the Son of God in human body.
Surely it is of first
importance to inquire why, before Pope Julian's decree, Christian practice
had set the celebration of the Savior's birth on March 25. Here, too, the
dominant motives are found to be primarily astrological. March brings the
vernal equinox, and the most moving dramatic rituals of the ancient Pagan
religion were consummated on or about March 21, the date of the sun's
crossing northward over the equatorial meridian. Annually at this epoch
every allegorical representation of the aeonial cycle of soul's
involvement in matter and body came to final stage and to victory with the
sun's ascent out of the darkness of winter, typifying the soul's
resurrection out from under the thraldom of "death" in mortal bodies. This
was in fact the final and climactic act in the drama of the birth of the
Son of God from out its material womb of flesh. Hence it came to be
regarded in Pagan modes of pictorializing spiritual processes as the true
birth of spirit, the conception having taken place back on September 21
and the "quickening" from "death" having occurred on December 21,--all in
zodiacal symbolism.
As the advent of the human
child from the mother's womb is as virtually a resurrection as any readily
conceivable, so the resurrection symboled by the passing over the line of
division between heaven (spirit) and earth (matter) by the sun on March 21
could just as permissibly be classified as a birth. Every birth is a
resurrection, every resurrection a new birth. It requires no special
genius to poetize the vernal equinox as the birthday of the sun of spring,
and, following solar symbolism, the birthday of the spiritual or deific
"sun" in the constitution of man. Hence on the pattern of nature symbolism
March 21 was held to be the birthday of the Messiah. From the first the
Christians had joined with the Pagans in commemorating at the equinox of
spring a festival called Lady's Day, outwardly in honor of nature's
rebirth from the universal Mother Earth, esoterically in token of the
rebirth of "dead" spiritual consciousness according to the inner teachings
of the Mysteries. The Christians thus celebrated it for almost three and a
half centuries, an exceptional item of no slight historical significance.
The statement to this effect is made by Clement of Alexandria and others
of the early Christian writers. It is confirmed by the Julian decree. It
can be affirmed, then, that the Christian celebration of the festival on
December 25 dates from the year 345 A.D.
But why the twenty-fifth days
of March and December, and not the twenty-first (or twenty-second)? Here
is a question which, as far as general knowledge goes, has found no
authoritative answer.
The reason is to be found, no
doubt, in the peculiarity of ancient celebratory custom. It is in fact the
same reason which prescribed the mythical "three days" in which the Son of
God lay in the tomb between death and resurrection. "As Jonas was three
days and nights in the belly of the whale, so must the Son of Man be three
days in the bowels of the earth." These three "days" of the incarnational
immersion of spirit in the three kingdoms of matter, mineral, vegetable
and ani-mal, were held to be of such major significance in the ritualism
of archaic religion that many of the more important festivals
commemorating the soul's crucial experiences in the flesh were instituted
as three-day ceremonies, the first day marking the entry of soul into
matter's domain, and the third day consummating its rising out of that
realm of "death." In Old Testament prophecies, it was again and again
stated that we would rise out of the tomb of "death" in these physical
bodies "on the third day." As Hosea (6:2) has it: "Come let us
return unto the Lord: for he will bind us up. After two days will he
revive us: in the third day he will raise us up, and we shall live in his
sight." After spending three "days and nights," or periods of incubation
and release, in the three lower kingdoms of nature, spirit-soul would
awaken from its aeonial submergence in the dark unconsciousness of matter
and come to its birth into more expanded being in the mind and heart of
mankind. So the Gospel allegory represented the Christ as emerging from
the boat and walking forth on the water (the body is seven-eighths water!)
to save his disciples from sinking in the sea "in the fourth watch of the
night." Incarnation has always been symboled as the night-time and the
winter-time of the soul, its light and life, like the sun's, going "dead"
in the coldness and darkness of matter.
Hence at all the four cardinal
points of the zodiac, June, September, December and March, the great
ceremonial festivals were set at three days length, beginning on the
twenty-first or twenty-second of the month, and culminating three days
later on the twenty-fifth, or "after three days."
It has been indicated that the
early Christians who commemorated the Savior's birth on March twenty-fifth
were not in reality totally misconceiving the significance of the festival
appropriate to that date. Even more cogently than Christmas, Easter is
the birthday of the Christ grade of sentient being. The distinction
between the commemorative values of the two dates is to be found in the
allegorical picturing of the Christ's development at the two emblematic
seasons. On December twenty-fifth the Christ is born as an infant. Not
having been here before, he then makes his first appearance in the life of
animal humanity, or has his first awakening in the womb of body. As a
new-born power he is yet the undeveloped potential of Christliness, the
babe in swaddling clothes, the princeling, the king-to-be. He is
germinally, seminally, the King of Glory.
But in March he has become a
full-grown deity, the king on his throne wielding all the fulness of his
divine prerogative in the life of man. The Christ-child has matured into
fulness of the stature of the nature of God, the infant deity has deployed
into expression the total possibility of his deific genius. To summarize
it tersely, he is in December the Christ awakened in the womb of
matter; in March he is the Christ awakened out of the womb of
matter. In one he is the babe; in the other the man-Christ, exercising
complete lordship over the physical life of his body.
Indeed, in the true sense of a
birth, Christmas is less the birth-time than it is the time of what was
called the "quickening." St. Paul in particular uses this word to intimate
the rise in consciousness of the dynamic potencies of the Christ nature.
This was a natural form of typism drawn from the structure of zodiacal
symbology that was universally used in the esoteric science of the ancient
day. Likening the descent of the soul into matter to the falling direction
and decreasing power of the sun from June to December, the symbologists of
old figured the birth of the divine sun-of-soul at the December solstice,
following upon its conception in the cosmic mind at the June solstice.
Descending from the June point of generation in God-mind, it entered into
matter at the September equinox, which would signalize its physical
conception in Mother Nature's womb. From September 21 on to March it
endured its embodiment in matter, its period of incubation or gestation
preparatory to its ultimate birth at Easter. But from September on down to
December it plunged deeper and deeper into the darkness of bodily
"imprisonment." It lost daily to the powers of matter, growing more inert,
the spiritual awareness sinking into a sleep or coma as it was
progressively submerged under the dominance of the flesh. In this its
deepest immersion in matter all ancient allegorism depicted the Christos
as lying inert in "death." From this aeonial "death" its resurrection
would come at Easter, its preliminary quickening at Christmas.
The significant item of this
dramatism is that at the December solstice the sun-of-soul halts its
descent and stands for a time balanced and equilibrated with the powers of
matter. The inertia of matter, offering resistance to the energies of
spirit, brings the downward movement of soul into matter to a full stop,
and for the period of the solstice holds it immovable in its embrace. It
is at this point and in this stabilized condition that the soul of the
spiritual energy which has gone "dead" in matter is suddenly "quickened"
out of its torpid state and feels the first touch of its awakening to
birth for a new cycle of growth. Having "descended into hell," (as the
creed has it) he now awakes to an incipient awareness of his position and
the consciousness of his new-born strength. That which lay buried in the
tomb of "death" is now quickened in its womb of new birth.
And as a mother-to-be suddenly feels the stirring of the embryonic babe
within her, so Mother Matter feels the same stirring of new-born mind and
the Christly impulse within her domain. As St. Paul so strikingly puts it,
"All the creation groans and travails in pain until now, waiting for the
manifestation of the Sons of God."
Christmas at the winter
solstice then memorializes this quickening of the foetal Christ within the
heart, mind and soul of humanity. It stages a festival of rejoicing at the
knowledge that in the circuit of alternate involution and evolution, the
deific solar power of Christliness, making its round of descent into the
body and return, has ended the long period of its lifeless insensibility
as mere seed of divinity in the soil of mortal body, is now quickened out
of its spell of "death" and awakened to the glorious conquest of life in a
new cycle of growth. The season thus commemorates the birth to activity of
the Christ-mind in the nature and body of mankind. It is to be remembered
always that it is only the birth of that Christ-mind, the deific
power in its infancy, in its first unsure reachings and gropings amidst
the strong elemental surges of the irrational and passional nature of the
flesh. But it is no longer lifeless, inert, speechless, dumb and blind, as
ancient symbolism pictured it in this condition. It is awakened to catch
the sense of events and the significance of experience. It is ready to
respond in ever increasing intelligence to the impacts of environment and
sensuous life, and drain out of them their moral value for its perfection.
This delineation is of crucial
importance for general comprehension and for its psychological
beneficence, because a very faulty conception of the "birth of Christ" and
the "coming of Messiah" has widely ingrained the bland assumption that by
the alleged historical event of Bethlehem birth the Christ influence has
indeed been injected into the body and soul of human life. All ancient
presupposition that centered upon the Messianic fulfilment contemplated
the immediate spiritualization and transfiguration of the world's elan and
morale upon this postulated advent of the only-born Son of God. This
opinion has altered but little in the succeeding time to the present.
Vague Christian belief credits this "birth of Christ" with bringing the
first true light to shine in heathen darkness, and credulously propagates
the legend that the world has been elevated to higher level of
righteousness and spirituality as a result of this event of two thousand
years ago.
THE ADVENT AT THE SOLSTICE
A more competent envisagement
of the symbolic intimations, however, accentuates the thesis that what is
celebrated at Christmas is but the first awakening of that Christ power
that slept within the confines of the mortal nature until the turn of the
cycle at the solstitial point of evolution. In the first chapter of I
Samuel it is said of Hannah, who, like Sarah and Elizabeth, was to
bear the Christ-child in her old age, that "at the turn of the year she
bore her son." Mother Nature gives birth to the Messianic consciousness at
the turn of the cycle of the aeonial "year," where involution comes to a
halt and after the period of solstitial motionlessness swings around as on
a pivot and takes initial new direction upward toward evolution. But human
fancy has not been sharp enough to preserve the subtle distinction between
the occult sense of the soul's "quickening" out of its antecedent "death"
and its "birth" as an active power in the world. What might be called a
confusion of tropes has come in to befuddle common understanding. There
are several senses in which the "quickening" may be conceived as the
Christ's "birth." It is by no means inappropriate to think of the cosmic
event signalized by the Christmas allegorism as the birth of the Christ,
if one is schooled to moderate the conception with the knowledge that the
Christ motivation is under Yuletide symbolism conceived as only at the
inception of its objective kingship in history, and that only the lives of
humans individually and collectively will set the Prince of Peace on the
throne of human life in the world.
As said, all expectation of
Messiah's coming in the ancient world envisaged the immediate
transfiguration of humanity by divine grace and the near beatification of
world history by the cosmic event. How egregiously fallacious and
irrational this high anticipation has been can now be seen in historical
retrospect from the present. Not only did the proclaimed birth of Christ
by the Christian movement not make the slightest appreciable change in the
tone and character of mundane history at the time (indeed it seems not
even to have been heard of for close to two hundred years after its
declared incidence), but the record of history for the two thousand years
since the great divine oblation, and more particularly as manifested in
and among the nations blessed with the message of that Redeemer, is one
whose blackness and shocking inhumanity exceeds anything of the kind in
all world annals of the past. History in effect enforces the conclusion
that the coming of Messiah in the form of a historical birth, so far from
inaugurating in the world an epoch of light, peace and charity among
nations, has been followed by the long night of what the historians have
seen fit to designate the "Dark Ages." If Messiah had truly come in the
Bethlehem event and come in the commonly accepted sense, as having brought
by his personal presence the benison of divine grace, light and truth to
the world, his long-heralded, breathlessly-awaited and
celestially-proclaimed advent has culminated as the world's supreme
disappointment.
The Christian thesis of the
Savior's historical birth in Judea assumedly in the year 1 A.D. is
challenged and jeopardized by several considerations that are glaring
enough to be crucial for the whole future of the faith of the West. When
the Church Fathers settled upon the date of the Bethlehem birth as the
year 1 of a new dispensation, and inaugurated a new calendar reckoning
with that year, they were without benefit of certain historical data that
have come to light from authentic historical record since that time.
Two facts stand out as proving
the fixed date to be erroneous,--assuming that there was the birth of a di-vine
personage about whose life the Gospels were elaborated. One is the
discovered date of the death of Herod, Tetrarch of Galilee, in the year 4
B.C. The other is the recorded time of the rulership of "Cyrenius,"
governor in Syria when the Roman tax was levied which took Mary and Joseph
to Bethlehem, so that the divine birth, heralded in Scripture, might occur
at that village to fulfil ancient prophecy. This time is found, on
certified governmental record of Syrian history, to have been between the
years 13 and 11 B.C. Herod and Cyrenius (found to be written Quirinus in
the Roman records) were both mentioned (by Matthew) as reigning
when Jesus was born. The date set for the birth is therefore found to be
at least four years too late to have included Herod's effort to destroy
the infant Christ by the (now generally admitted unhistorical)
"Slaughter of the Innocents," and some twelve or thirteen years too late
to have transpired "when Cyrenius was governor in Syria." It is notable
that even a Catholic publicist, in an article in the Sunday American
Weekly magazine early in 1947, conceded that the Bethlehem birth must
be placed at least as early as 7 or 8 B.C.
With these two enforced
corrections a host of other minor, though still important, conclusions and
speculations that have become officially accepted as Christian history
must perforce be thrown out, being confused by the two known dates. Indeed
some of the disclaimers reach beyond minor items and put in jeopardy some
of the basic claims on which the entire fabric of Christian historization
rests. The frankness of Church leadership in facing the implications of
these emendations has not been open and sincere. It is deemed best to let
the disclosures pass with as little publicity as possible.
Having engrafted so much Pagan
usage upon its own tree, it is little wonder that Christianity has evolved
and preserved so little of the meaning of these extraneous and exotic
customs which most of the northern countries of Europe, and their
descendant populations in the Americas, have persisted in featuring in the
celebration of Christmas. It has felt that it can condescendingly tolerate
the admixture of Pagan "foibles" that cling like barnacles to its Nativity
commemoration, without imperiling the fundamental strength and hold of the
festival on its own communicants. It can afford to remain unconcerned
about expounding the recondite significance underrunning the Pagan
accoutrements that have been superimposed on the occasion, as to do so in
any notable manner would be to lend gratuitous importance and enhancement
to Pagan formulations.
And this covert apprehension
and subterfuge is by no means groundless. Indeed the revelation of the
true esoteric magnificence of the spiritual and theological conceptions
adumbrated and allegorized by the Nordic-Teutonic-Celtic-Saxon festival
usages will be seen to present a definite challenge to the whole
authenticity of the Christian system, not so much as presenting the light
and beauty of a rival or opponent religion, as in lending to the Christian
revelation the representations of the meanings of its own
celebratory elements, which it has lost or never known and published. In
fact the startling asseveration can be made that the medley of Pagan
ritual forms connected with Christmas carries a truer and more
illuminating message of the inner significance of the gala day than do the
distinctly Christian elucidations. This line of pursuit indeed runs so
deep into the context of Christmas dramatism and symbolism as to come
close to demonstrating that there is nothing in the celebration that is
exclusively Christian at all, every single item being traceable to Pagan
origins. Such a flat and drastic statement will be severely challenged.
The present essay will stand as an answer to that challenge.
THE ANCIENT LINEAGE OF
CHRISTMAS
The fundamental theses
underlying the solstitial festival of deific rebirth trace back primarily
to ancient Judaism, and back of that to the archaic Egyptian theurgical
science. Ubiquitous in Egypt's religious systematism was the theme of the
coming of Messiah. Horus, the central Christ figure in the texts, was
described as "he who ever comes," "he who comes regularly and
continuously," or who comes periodically. In some of the hymns he is
hailed as "The Comer! The Comer!" Isis, the goddess mother and queen of
heaven, entreats him to come and lift her out of her desolation.
What becomes indubitably clear
from searching study of these old texts is that the Messianic "coming"
they refer to is the advent into the evolving life of humanity on this
earth plane of a form, grade or degree of consciousness which was not
generable in the order of nature itself, but was the flowering to maturity
of the conscious potential inherent in a seed of divine mind implanted in
the natural order from above. As any mother has to receive the
seminal essence of a new birth and mature it to its generation, so the
maternal order of nature, the material world, had to be impregnated at a
point of readiness in its evolution with the seed of a divine grade of
mind, give it birth and rear it to its maturity. Its reception in utero
would be signalized zodiacally at the September date, its birth at the
December period and its rearing and growth completed at the March
consummation. But in the salient features of the symbolism its birth would
be allocated to the December solstice. Christmas would celebrate the
emergence of the divine order of conscious mind in the human race, the
inception of the human grade of being to crown the former pure animal
level of subconscious and instinctive existence. It marked the entry of
mind, reason, and the whole vast potential of the activity of thought into
human motivation, installing the intellect as king over human action. The
interior meaning of Christmas can never be realistically grasped until it
is understood that it celebrates the coming of mind as King over the lower
instincts, appetencies and passions of the primitive animal stage of
biological evolution. The Christmas advent of the Prince of Peace would
eventuate finally in the Easter crowning of the King of Love, for mind was
to be glorified in the end by the sweet aura and radiant light of divine
Love.
Of infinite significance it is
to know that in all the antecedent and "prophetic" literature and
religious ritual stemming into Judaism and Christianity from the venerable
lore of old Egypt, the constructions dealing with the Messianic coming
indubitably refer to this advent of the new higher dispensation that would
supervene on earth from the birth of the thinking principle in human
action, and just as indubitably can not be taken to refer to the physical
birth of any personalized Christ or Messiah. Study of the ancient field of
religious literature reveals no prevalence of the notion that Messiah
would come on earth in the form of a human babe and man-Christ until about
the second and third centuries of the Christian era, and then
predominantly only in the region around the Eastern end of the
Mediterranean Sea. Tersely, it can be stated as verifiable truth that the
conception of the Christ-Messiah as a human being of flesh and blood had
not been extant in the ancient world until it took form in the degenerate
philosophical period of the early Christian centuries. From the heyday of
Greek philosophical brilliance in Plato's age some five hundred years
before this there had ensued a tragic de-cline and decay in spiritual
wisdom, which Sir Gilbert Murray has famously characterized by his phrase
"the failure of nerve" on the part of the Greek mind. And it was at the
very lowest ebb of the philosophical spirit that a phenomenon occurred
which cast the shadow of ignorance that deepened into the "Dark Ages" of
Medieval Europe. It was at this epoch that the conception of Christos-Messiah
as a principle of higher consciousness was transmogrified into the form of
a man-God Savior, the Christ as principle turned into the Christ as a
man. This was the supreme tragedy of human cultural history. It
generated and released the frenzy that was to burn the Alexandrian
library, murder Hypatia and Bruno, close up the Platonic Academies and end
the benignant light of an archaic spiritual wisdom older than ancient
Egypt.
Fully five thousand years
before a Hebrew maid Mary nursed an infant of Nazareth the haloed Madonna
and the Child were extant in Egypt as Isis holding her infant Horus. On
the walls of the temple of Luxor, at a date as early as 1700 B.C. there
were carved four scenes which have been reproduced in the Gospels as
first-century Christian history. The first scene depicts a group of angels
on a cloud making the annunciation of the coming of the Messiah King to a
band of shepherds in the fields. The second represents a single angel
announcing to a young maiden that she is to be the mother of this coming
King. A third pictures the Nativity scene, with the two animals, the ox
and the ass, present. And the fourth shows three noblemen kneeling before
a babe and offering gifts. How we are expected to accept the thesis that
ancient Egyptian dramatic and symbolic representation of man's
evolutionary history turned into factual history in the year 1 A.D. has
not been made clear to any reasoning mind. One must go deeply into the
study of this remote background of the Judaeo-Christian Scriptural
literature to be impressed with the pivotal significance of findings such
as these, for they are multitudinous and staggering in their implications.
The setting of the sun or a
star in the west had been for long centuries the symbol of the descent of
soul into incarnation as similarly the alternate rising of sun or star in
the east at morning had allegorized the resurrection or rebirth of soul
out of its burial in the dark cave of fleshly body. The three stars in the
hunter's belt in the constellation of Orion had been from remote times
denominated the "Three Kings" who attended the birth of the coming Lord.
The figure of the Christ born among animals, or exposed to be saved by
animals in a stable or a cave, was common at a very early period. The
symbolism of midnight, winter and the solstice was universally prevalent
as depicting the period of the Christ-birth in the depth of the "dead"
condition of soul buried down under bodily inertia. One is safe in saying
that not a feature of the traditional forms of celebration of Christmas is
missing in the ancient background of our religion. And as one canvasses
these identities and correspondences between Gospel narrative and
antecedent allegorism, there grows the conviction of the non-historicity
and from that the ridiculousness of the Gospel accounts of the birth of
the Christ when taken as assumed occurrence in objective history. The
supremely beautiful scenario of the angelic heralding of the birth of
Christ in Luke's Gospel becomes traduced into unacceptable reality
if taken as history. The singular fact of ostensible "history" that Jesus
was born just six months after his forerunner John the Baptist can be
given rational--and most sensationally enlightening significance only in
reference to the symbolism of the zodiacal chart. That Elizabeth, the
mother of John, gave birth to her son in
her old age, as did both Sarah
and Hannah bear their sons Isaac and Samuel, carries a significance that
has not been properly envisaged. The reference to the zodiacal sign of
Aries, the Ram, in the items of the Christ featured as the "Lamb of God"
and the shepherds with their flocks in Christmas pageantry, has been
entirely overlooked, as have also the obvious Piscean implications of the
Christ's twelve disciples chosen as "fishermen," and the Greek
characterization of the early Christians as "little fishes" and the Christ
figure himself as Ichthys, the Fish Avatar of deity. In the precession of
the equinoxes the sun was entering the sign of Pisces, the Fishes, about
the time of the founding of Christianity, and we are quite ignorant today
as to the concern of ancient religious interest with both astrological and
natural symbolic representation. To interpret ancient Scriptures solely
from the historical point of reference and ignore the poetic, figurative
and emblematic, will contort their cryptic esoteric significance into
gross caricature of real meaning.
Then there is the item of the
name of the location of the Gospel birth. One is now in position to say
that if the divine babe's birthplace had been localized in Patagonia,
Lapland, Alaska or Siberia, or London or New York, he would still have
been truly born in "Bethlehem." Because it is as clear as anything well
can be that the name, Bethlehem, carries no possible reference to the
village of that name in Palestine. What then does Bethlehem mean? The
Hebrew dictionary tells us that the word is made up of beth,
meaning "house," and lehem meaning "bread." It therefore means
"house of bread," and is a cryptic designation of the human body.
Where else can the Christ consciousness be born but in the human body and
its brain? As the "Red Sea" in both Old and New Testament symbolism is a
glyph for the human body blood (since it is actually sea water and is
red!), so the "Bethlehem" house of bread is a semantic veil for the human
body. In the archaic zodiacal symbolism the sign of Virgo, the Virgin
Mother, was poetized as the house of bread--from the fact that in it was
the great star, Spica, the head of wheat, symbol of the divine bread
coming down from heaven--while just six months across from it was the sign
of Pisces, the Fishes. The Sages of antiquity portrayed Virgo as the
mother of the first or natural man and Pisces as the Mother of the second
Adam or the Christ. How astonishingly significant it must be, then, to
note that in the "miracle" of the feeding of the five thousand the two
foods given were the emblems of these two houses of the zodiac, Virgo and
Pisces, the one the Mother of John, the forerunner, the other the mother
of Jesus, just six months later! At least two of the ancient goddesses in
religious dramatism were styled "Fish-mothers" of divinity, Atergatis and
Semiramis. The semantic relevance of the mermaid in ancient mythology is
connected with this area of reference.
THE RED AND THE GREEN
Having woven again the threads
of connection of the great festival with its primal sources in ancient
symbolic science, the way is clear to delineate as lucidly as possible the
basic significations of the various rites, modes and symbols of the
customary celebration. The explanation of the meaning of the two vividly
contrasting colors which stand as the "theme colors" of Christmas, red and
green, seems the most proper item with which to begin the exegesis. And
the basic rationale underneath these colors will itself formulate the
essential ground-scheme for the interpretation of most of the other
symbolic features.
No treatise can dissertate upon
such a matter as the birth of the Christ without blue-printing a chart of
the interrelation of the several diverse but interlocked natures which
enter into the constitution of man, the human-divine composite. The
true--but long lost--bases of sound religious philosophy are to be located
in the realm of anthropology. Religious experience is a phenomenon
transpiring within the elements of human nature. It is, so to say, a
psychosomatic ferment amongst the sensual, emotional, intellectual and
spiritual components of man's compound existence.
Most graphically described, man
is, in Plato's analysis, half god and half animal; a god by virtue of his
mind, an animal by virtue of his body. He is a god inhabiting the body of
an animal. He is thus fabricated out of four separate natures, which are
interfused and interrelated in one organism. He is in toto a
combination in one physical form of four organic entifications of being or
consciousness, the physical, the emotional, the mental and the spiritual,
each functioning in and through its own distinct body, which in each case
is composed of matter in a state of atomic texture and organization
consonant with its degree of fineness or coarseness in the evolutionary
scale. These four bodies are maintained in communal relation to each other
within the confines of the outer physical frame by the play of affinities
and atomic energizations that life and nature readily, if mysteriously,
succeed in regulating, the finer bodies interpenetrating and animating the
coarser. Their diversity of structure is seen as a matter of the
differences in frequency, wave-length and other modes of vibration of the
four grades of matter composing them.
The two coarser and, in the
evolutionary sense, lower bodies and their activated types of
consciousness constitute what ancient arcane science denominated the
lower, or natural man, called in Pauline Christianity the first Adam, or
the "man of the earth, earthy," while the two finer and higher ones
composed the "spiritual man," the second Adam, Paul's "Lord from heaven."
The first two, symboled respectively by earth and water, united to form
man physical; the second two, emblemed by air and fire, constituted man
spiritual. The four united man earthly with heavenly man. When the Bible
poetically says that heaven and earth have kissed each other, it refers to
the union of the two natures in the body and life of mankind.
Man's complete constitution,
then, consisted of four natures so conjoined as to make him a dual
creature, with a material body composed of earth and water, and a
spiritual body composed of air (Latin spiritus means "air") and
fire, with the former housing the latter, but being animated and ensouled
by it. As religion is the relation between man's physical-animal nature
and that of this indwelling god within him, the gist of all meanings
presented in the Scriptures and theology relates to
the interplay between these two
co-tenants of the physical body, the psyche and the soul.
This analysis prepares the
ground for the explication of the red and green colors so vividly flaunted
in the Yule display. The strongly contrasting yet complementary green
leaves and red berries of the holly branch are not only beautiful to the
sense, but stand as mentally cogent types of the two natures in man. Green
is the universal color of nature on this planet, at least in the vegetable
realm. It therefore symbolizes the first or natural man, the man whose
life, like that of green leafage, is drawn up out of the earth. On the
other side red typifies the second Adam, or man spiritual, because the
age-old and invariable symbol of spirit universal throughout the world was
fire; and red is the common color of fire. The red stands for the
fiery essence of divine spirit, the soul of man.
The Christmas message that is
mutely but eloquently spoken by the holly sprig is indeed a moving sermon.
It bespeaks the life, history and composition of the human soul, for it
presents in dumb pantomime the growth of man natural as the green stem and
its leaves, and then the generation out of these raw natural elements of
man spiritual, as the fiery red product flowing at the summit. The
colorful holly branch thus depicts man's potential divine spirit as the
beautiful flower and fruit of a physical growth in the natural order.
Man can gaze upon the holly
tree and see his own life-drama mirrored in outline and in miniature, or
as the analogue of all natural process. His body is the growth and
evolution of a rudimentary nucleus of life over a long period. It is his
natural self, grown under the order of the world of nature and the
operation of natural law. But in the fulness of time, it, too, bears its
glorious fruit at the topmost reach of its "green" body, which in the case
of man is the head. And this fruit of the tree of life when fully ripened,
were it visible to all human eyes, would be seen flashing out in the form
of a radiant crown of ineffable spiritual beauty efflorescent in the
purest of colors.
In both nature and in man the
first or natural order of creation gives birth at its apex to the second
or spiritual man. The physical creation, the "mother," labors to generate
her son, the conscious creation, the Logos. As the spiritual body or
bodies in which this spiritual consciousness is instrumentalized are
constituted of the glowing radiance of solar light, the color of fire is
the most apt earthly symbolic representation of their nature. The world of
green nature bears on its top branch the bright red of the spirit. If one
can imaginatively see all this in the holly, or the poinsettia, or the
barberry, one will find these emblematic objects the mental goad to
realizations of the most potent cathartic virtue. They unite the mental
and the emotional through the subtle power of an aesthetic dynamism. They
portray vividly the birth of the Christ in man as the burgeoning of red
fire of spirit at the top of the green stem of the natural bodily life.
Here we have the basis of the
old English legend of the blossoming of the thorntree at Glastonberry at
Christmas. It is symbolism. The tree of nature, here the thornbush, is
proclaimed to put forth its bloom at the winter solstice, as precisely at
this point in the cycle where involution (the soul's descent) turns into
evolution (the soul's reascent), the Christ-child of noetic consciousness
is born. The thornbush was in all likelihood chosen as carrying on the Old
Testament allegory of the thornbush of Exodus aflame with divine
fire.
With the tree introduced as
typograph of man's natural self, the elucidation comes to the Christmas
pine tree. And well may the German folksong carol its adoration of the
firtree's perennial greenness!
O Tannenbaum! O Tannenbaum! (O
fir-tree! O fir-tree!
Wie green sind deine Blaetter!
How green are thy leaves!)
For here nature is green, not
only for the seasonal cycle of summer, but all the year round. The life of
nature, preparatory as it always is to the birth of consciousness, is in
its essence everlasting. Matter is indestructible, though its forms of
manifestation may continually change. The root essence of material
substance is imperishable. It is always a potency, latent during the
alternate periods of non-manifestation, active during the opposite cycles
of spirit's waking existence.
Perhaps fancy will not stray
too far afield into whimsicality when it likens the darker shades of the
pine's winter green or former years' growth to the dullness of matter in
the inactive or latent state, while seeing in the brighter shades of the
green of the summer's new growth an emblem of the more radiant
energization of matter when ensouled by bright spirit in the cycles of
manifestation. In the temperate and frigid zones nature has provided a
type of the eternality of life and matter in never-fading greenness of the
northern pine. Symbol of the immortality of life, it brings into the
Christmas ritual much the same significance as the green of the holly. It
represents outdoor or wild nature, thus again typifying the first or
natural man in the human constitution.
THE GOD DOMESTICATES THE ANIMAL
But for Yuletide ceremonialism
the pine is cut down and brought in and set up in human habitations. What
can this betoken other than the bringing of the natural man within the
pale and the aura of the influence of the god-nature in the human being?
In the life of the human when body is ensouled by the more potent dynamic
of spiritual consciousness, the external bodily nature is in the full
sense of the word being domesticated by the divine Self that is from
above. The implanted heavenly grade of mind, as it develops, takes the
natural under its care and tutelage and labors patiently to transmute its
norm of consciousness from crude animal instinct to intelligence and
reason. The wild animal nature is being tamed and transformed by the
impacts upon it of the influences of "the Lord from heaven," whose ruling
motivations are those of benevolence and love-wisdom. In the Old Testament
it was Esau, and in the New it was John the Baptist, both of whom stood as
the type figure of the first or natural man, who lived in the wilds of
external nature. Untamed wild brutish nature is to be tamed and gradually
changed into the likeness of its spiritual tutor. In the transfer of a
product of outdoor nature into the human dwelling there is signalized the
bringing of the "wild beast" segment of man's dual composition under the
influence of the divine-human grade of mind and subjecting it to the
impact of the forces that will in time convert it from brute to human.
Eventually superhuman glory awaits it.
But the semantic dramatism does
not stop with the bringing of the green pine into the home. When the outer
man is brought within the radiation of the soul's more uplifting powers,
it does not long remain bleak and bare in its greenness. It becomes in the
transforming process lighted up with divine glories. The crowning of the
human-animal with supernal grandeur of bright spirit is dramatized by the
decoration of the green branches of the tree with glittering objects. Not
only is the product of raw nature introduced into the human domicile; it
is bedizened with every sort of tinsel and gaudy brilliance. And atop its
central bough is hung the great gold star!
If the mind of the ordinary
householder who trims the Yule tree could have any full measure of the
deeper significance of this bright decking of the Christmas pine as an
evolutionary transaction within the range of his own nature, no ritual in
all the year's round of festivals could possibly engender a more dynamic
exaltation of his spirit than this task of the late hours of Christmas
eve. For it poetizes with aesthetic beauty the drama of the inner life of
man himself. It enacts in reality the living processes by which man's own
bodily organism, itself a tree of natural growth, lights up within its own
organic structure a series of glowing centers of glinting radiance, which
the Hindus have called chakras, or "wheels." They are described as
saucer-like in shape and of a coruscating brilliance, as they shine within
the watery confines of the body. When the ancient Sages speak of the
soul's coming to earth to "kindle a flame within the tomb of the body;"
and the Egyptian books announce its coming to generate "a burning within
the sea," they are not indulging in extravagant flings of fancy, but are
pictorializing actual processes that ensue upon the spirit's transfiguring
operation within the physical body.
In fact it is to be understood
that deity enters the stable of the animal-human body at its birth, and as
its latent powers of divinity unfold their capabilities into activity and
work their magical effect upon the physical organism, it succeeds finally
in lighting up twelve lamps of a radiance never seen on land or sea, which
shine within the orbit of the branches of the tree of man's life. In a
word, one may say that the physical tree of man's body is lighted up with
the fires of divinity at the extremity of the twelve branches of his
development.
In the Kabalistic literature of
the Hebrews there is the great Sephirothal Tree, with the three higher and
the seven lower lights enkindled upon its ten distinct branches of
radiation. And this cosmical tree is but the macrocosmic replica of what
is repeated in miniature in the human microcosm. The mighty work of great
Deity is to cause light to shine out of the abysmal darkness. If that
Power can generate in fish living in deep-sea darkness a light that makes
their world clear to vision, so it can cause the lights of spiritual
intelligence to glow within the divinized body of man. Humanity is to
generate twelve divine lights upon the branches of its tree of life. This
is set forth with explicit exactness in the last chapter in the Christian
Bible, Revelation 22, where it is said that the tree of life shall
bear twelve manner of fruits upon its branches, and its leaves shall be
for the healing of the nations.
Again a striking passage from
the Bible, in the language of St. Paul, says that "God who hath caused the
light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts; but we have this
treasure in earthen vessels." We hold it in these physical bodies of ours.
The bright ornaments on the Christmas fir-tree do indeed symbolize our
possession of the twelve "treasures of light," which are deity's immortal
gift to animal man within the scope of the Christmas ritualism.
And the power that will cause
these twelve lights to glow upon the branches of the organic human tree is
just that spirit of good-will, love and fellowship that is denominated the
"Christmas spirit." As the transfiguring grace of the lower power lights
up the human countenance, so in positive physical reality will the rule of
brotherhood and charity in the conscious life of mankind generate these
twelve beacons of the divine love-light in evolving human nature. The
birth of the Christos in the consciousness of humanity will cause the
collective tree of human nature to be miraculously trimmed with lights
that will illumine the pathway of world history ever more brilliantly unto
the day of man's deification. "I will clothe thee with light as with a
garment," says the God of the Old Testament. He might have paraphrased it:
"I will trim the twelve branches of your nature tree with the lights of
the Christ-born radiance of love. "For 'Christmas' means 'Christ-birth.'"
The mas is from the Egyptian mes "to be born." Mess-iah
means the "(new) born Iah" (Jah), or Jehovah,--God.
And God might have added: "I
will crown your tree of brilliance with the super-bright Star atop the
central branch." Yes; for the twelve branch lights are the lesser lights,
and the great light of the Christ consciousness glows in supreme glory in
the center of all. On the Mount of Transfiguration, as recounted in the
early Gnostic-Christian work, the Pistis Sophia, Jesus, seated in
the midst of the twelve disciples, is transfigured with supernal
brightness in their center. St. Paul says that we are all members of one
spiritual body, of which Christ is the head. The divine splendor shines
out in full power in the head, where the spark and fire of godlike
intelligence glows like a living flame. The end and consummation of man's
growth comes with this deific glorification in his head. A living flame
bursts forth in form like the petals of a fiery lotus, so that the
ancients called it "the thousand-petaled lotus in the head" of divinized
man. This is the pure beauteous flame of divine love and compassion which
has its glorious birth in the head of man the human, and is the bright
Bethlehem star whose rise in the east heralds indeed the birth of the
savior of the world. If this bright star of the morning is not brought to
shining in human hearts the Christ is not born in the world. Where can the
Christ-mind be given birth if not in the human minds and hearts? Could ten
thousand Christs of Nazareth implement Christliness in the world if its
gracious spirit did not govern the lives of mortals? Not until all
Christendom makes that which the Bethlehem birth beautifully symbolizes a
living reality in the daily run of its world-life will the Christmas tree
of humanity be decked with its twelve lights and its topmost Star in
anything but empty form.
Instead of the gold star on the
topmost limb, ancient ingenuity also devised the figure of the one branch
of the tree that put forth golden leaves--the Golden Bough. This was used
to symbolize the Christos nature, whose golden light of spiritual splendor
become the glorious end product of the whole natural creation, which, St.
Paul says, groans and travails in the pains of parturition until it
manifests the Sons of God, or the Christ. It is a most significant fact
that in many tongues the word for "gold" is the same as the word for
"light." In the Hebrew "light" is aor, in French "gold" is or,
in Latin aurum, giving us the English ore. The Egyptian
Hor-us is the golden light of the divine Christ grade of
brilliance. That his name for centuries was Iusa before it was Horus,
bespeaks again the direct source of the later name, Jesus.
Greek and Roman mythologies
made the golden bough the passport in the hands of the heroes who would
adventure into the dark depths of the Stygian "underworld," whose
mislocation by the scholars for centuries has thrown all exegetical effort
sadly awry of true comprehension and interpretation. Not only was it the
hero's passport of entry into the nether world of Sheol, Amenta, Hades and
hell, but it was his necessary exit-permit from those same umbrageous
grots and caverns where the shades of the "dead" flitted about in the
darksome recesses of semi-night. His possession of the powers symbolized
by the bough of spiritual gold alone guaranteed his emergence in safety
from this underrealm of fleshly dusk.
THE YULE-LOG AND THE MISTLETOE
In much the same broad
significance as the pine tree comes the symbolism of the Yule Log. As the
log again portrays outdoor nature, its ritual treatment within the house
differs only in form from that of the green pine by the brightness of the
ornaments. In the case of the log the "fire" is actually produced, as the
wooed is placed directly on the hearth and burned. Here the emblemism of
being "consumed in the fire" is introduced. All Bible students are
familiar with this figure of the lower, coarser elements of man's
composition, the dross and the chaff, being cast into the fiery furnace
and utterly consumed. This carries the significance here. The log of wood,
creation of the natural world, speaks of the natural man with all his
gross propensities springing from the carnal nature. Under so many names
and figures in the old Scriptures these are to be defeated, routed and
slain by the sword of the spirit of God. The "animal" was to be burned
upon the four-square altar of the doubly-dual nature of man. In this world
of mingled soul and body fires, flames of pure spiritual consciousness
being smudged by lurid flames of the sensual instincts, the mightier
potency of the diviner flame conquers in the end and coarse matter is
burned out, leaving the flame clear and beauteous. The Egyptians called
the body wherein these two fires contend for mastery "the crucible of the
great house of flame." Again they denominated the earth, or the earthy
body of man, "the Pool of the Double Fire." The chaff is cast into the
fiery furnace of earthly passion and consumed. The burning of the Yule log
on the hearth in the old days
stands as beautiful typism of
this great segment of the festival's meaning.
Then there is the strong
suggestive symbolism of its being burned on the hearth in the home
of humans. It is obvious that the word "hearth" is closely connected with
"heart." The hearth well represents in the house the innermost holy of
holies of the sacred temple of religion. It is in the deepest mind and
soul of the human that this conversion of the lower elements of his nature
into the all-consuming fire of redeeming love takes place. The hearth of
old times was the center and, so to say, the altar of the family life.
Fitting and impressive it is, then, that the Yule log be laid upon the
hearth and in the very heart of the home be lighted up and transformed
into the type of spiritual and deific essence.
High up on the great oak grew
the mistletoe, so uniquely employed by the Druids--whose name is derived
from the Greek word meaning "oak"--as a symbol of the divine elevation of
the soul in man. Its semantic import stems from the fact that it is a
parasite and grows aloft on the branches of its host. Of most pertinent
significance it is that it does not draw its sustenance directly from the
earth, but secondarily lives upon a growth that does extract its strength
and nutriment of energy transmuted from earthly elements, in combination
with the vital essences it can abstract from the air, the sun and the
rain.
From these basic data the plant
becomes an apt figure of the Christos. For the Christ-self grows high up
on the tree of the natural life, and likewise must draw its sustenance
from what the nature-growth has drawn up from earth and converted into
forms of nourishment for its rootage and support. This phase of the
imagery will glow more brilliantly in the light of the candle sym-bol. But
it shines out clearly here as well. The Christ nature can not evolve and
blossom to mature loveliness unless sustained from below by the products
of the life of the physical organism. It is, in a strictly symbolic sense
also a parasite, living on the physical body of its host. The divine plan
countenances this interdependence of host and guest on the successive
planes of nature. A lower material organism must play host to a higher
life energy, while the latter on its part ensouls the form that sustains
it in the dual relationship.
The idea of lovers kissing
under the mistletoe sprig accentuates the conception that the birth of the
Christ follows upon the union of the two lovers in man's nature, the
spirit-soul and the body-soul. The mistletoe suggests the Christ, born
high up on the evolutionary tree of life, subsisting upon that tree's
natural elements, and generated by the union of the "female" physical
components of the tree's life derived from the soil with the "male"
spiritual principles of the air and the sun. On our planet there is no
life generable without the union of these four elements. The mistletoe
symbolizes this union of the human and divine, or male and female,
elements, the "kissing" or commingling of which bring the Christ to his
birth.
THE PARCHED WHEAT
A Nordic custom of the
Christmas celebration that has fallen into desuetude was that of
sprinkling wheat on the doorstep outside the house or upon the hearth
inside, or of parching wheat in the fire of the Yule log. It should need
no dissertation to elucidate the significance of wheat and its edible
product, bread, in religious literature. John, Paul, the Christ figure
himself and many another allegorist of the spiritual life have made wheat
and bread the great central symbol of the divine soul in man. "This is
that bread which came down from heaven, that if a man eat of it he shall
hunger no more." The Christos says that his (spiritual) body is the bread
of life, broken into pieces that all may eat of it, and that all who will
eat of it shall have eternal life.
But the allegorical genius of
the ancients pictured the unground and unbaked grain as the "raw" or
undeveloped germ of future Christhood, the seed of divinity that had to
undergo planting in the soil of human nature, initial "death" in that dark
underworld, then germination, growth and eventual ripening of its manifold
harvest in the perfected product. This process wrote the history of the
youthful Sons of God as they first descended into incarnation, being
planted in the ground of human life, "dying" as divinities to be reborn as
men, regaining their Paradise through growth and evolution, and returning
to the Father's house as victors over the world and the power of matter.
These pure "virgin souls" (for they were named in India Kumaras,
meaning "virgin youths," "celibate young men," since they were children of
God, born of his eternal mind, not yet ever wedded to material bodies and
now in their first descent into bodily life) were likened to the raw wheat
grain, needing to be ground, mealed, baked and made nourishing for man. So
St. Paul says: "And that which thou sowest, thou sowest not that body
which shall be, but bare grain, it may chance of wheat, or of some
other grain: But God giveth it a body as it hath pleased him, and to every
seed his own body." This is to remind us that God does not plant in our
nature the full-grown tree of the Christ consciousness, but only its seed
potential. Failure to recognize this true element in religious ideology
has led to untold fanaticism and dementia.
This "bare grain" of
inexperienced and undeveloped divinity is to suffer maceration, to be
refined, then mixed with "water," then baked and finally eaten by man for
his eternal nutriment. Have we sufficient analogical skill to see that the
grinding, the milling, the flouring of the raw grain is just the breaking
up of the unity of Christhood on its own high level, as it is fragmented
in its division and partition amongst the bodies of mortals, and its
crushing between the good and evil of the rough human experience undergone
in its life as the ensouling principle in mortal bodies? The Christ
himself in the drama says that we must eat his "body which is broken for
you."
In the apocryphal Epistle of
Ignatius to the Romans there is found one of the most striking
analogical depictions of this process in all Christian literature, in the
passage in which the soul, speaking, says: "For I am the wheat of God; and
I shall be ground between the teeth of the wild beasts that I may be found
the pure bread of Christ." Ground between the teeth of the wild animals
indeed is its fate, for the allegory refers to these animal bodies of ours
within whose constitution it makes its earthly sojourn. The bare wheat
grain is the descending virgin soul of divinity; the animals are these
bodies of ours; the grinding is the crushing and bruising between the
upper and the nether millstone of our dual nature; the water that cements
the flour into cake form is the watery nature of the body; the fire that
bakes the cakes is the double fire of heavenly flames of love and the
murky flares of the "earthly, sensual, devilish" lower self that rage
within us; and the "pure bread of Christ" is the finally perfected and
fully nourishing cake of the divine soul glorified. God plants the wheat
grains of his generated children in the soil of humanity, and looks to see
the milling and the cake-baking take place in the "crucible of the great
house of flame." The Egyptian Book of the Dead tells of the soul
being "moistened with water and roasted with fire in the underworld." And
the underworld, let mystified scholars be enlightened at last, is this
world of ours.
A shorter symbol, or analogue,
that quite well carried the same broad meaning was the parching of the raw
wheat grains. Parched wheat is itself a tasty and nutritious edible. So
that to scatter wheat about the door, or to parch it on the hearth,
especially in the flames of the Yule log, was to dramatize faithfully the
purifying and divinizing experience of the soul in the progress of its
development of the Christ nature through life in the flesh.
THE CANDLE IN THE WINDOW
And the candle with its
encircling halo of mystical radiance--what is its message of beauty and
significance? More wonderfully even than the pine tree and the Yule
hearth-fire and the holly does this enlightening symbol of the
Christ-birth announce its meaning for the intelligence of thinking man.
Here is the flame that connotes the fire of deific being in the mortal
constitution. It is attached to and holds its connection with the body of
animal tallow by means of the wick, tipped by flame at its top, but
immersed deeply in a body of animal derivation below. The wick corresponds
to the animal soul, or psyche, which in the human organism is the
connecting principle between spirit-soul and physical body. Then there is
the solid body of oil-rich material from the animal world. The candle thus
constitutes an almost exact reduplication of the organization of the three
bodies in man.
The power of spirit,
represented by the flame, is imparted to the wick by the energies of
intelligence in an order of conscious being far transcending the physical
world. From the wick it is brought into relation with the tallow,
typifying the lower world. In the meeting of these two, flame and tallow,
takes place the physical-chemical operation that should speak in voluble
tones to the mystical sense of mankind. By the power inherent in its
nature the flame is able to act upon the tallow so as to change its state
from solid to liquid, then from liquid to gaseous, and in this form
convert it, transmute it, into the essence of its own magically powerful
nature. Thus it continues to feed upon the strength of the elements below
it in the structure and so perpetuates its existence in the manifest
world.
The parallel with man's life is
perfect. The flame of divine spirit at the summit of his nature
communicates itself through the intermediary wick of the human-animal soul
to the elements of the animal-body itself. These it continues to refine
and sublimate through its efficacious contact with their more sluggish
nature, until in the end it converts them "into the likeness of its own
glorious body," as St. Paul phrases it. It is the fire of divinity within
us that, while drawing its own nourishment and prolonging its own
existence in the body by feeding upon the lower elements of the physical,
is at the same time lifting that body into its upper kingdom by its power
of transubstantiation, a mystery that must be thought of in the terms of a
spiritual alchemy. The flame of spirit-soul feeds upon the subordinate
elements of man the natural, the while it converts them into the
similitude of its own transcendent life. Such is the grandiloquent message
of the Christmas candle in the window or above the altar, proclaiming
silently, but beautifully the birth of the Christos.
The philosophical moral of this
elucidation is all too likely to be missed by those "spiritual" cultists
of the present day who most need to be impressed with what the wondrous
analogue has to teach them in correction of their overweening laudation of
"spirit" and corresponding derogation of "matter." One who has ever deeply
reflected on the candle flame as he sees it replenished, refueled by the
contribution of baser matter to its maintenance can never again join the
blatant chorus of philosophical condemnation of matter. Without matter to
feed its life, spirit could not for a moment maintain its connection with
living experience in the world, and its own evolution would be at a
standstill. All too much of unschooled philosophy has berated matter,
decried spirit's alliance with it and characterized the soul's relation to
it as its sin and fall into degradation. Orthodox theology has tainted its
systematism with the same allegation of the "fall" into matter and
generation.
But all this is simply an
unbalanced and unintelligent mishandling of subtle elements of the old
cosmic dramas. Soul's linkage with matter in incarnation is the natural
and wholly salutary and beneficent planting of a seed in its proper soil.
Without the union of seed and soil there can be no new growth. The human
body and its sensuous life provide the fertile soil; the unit of soul
consciousness is the divine seed. Spirit must be able to relate itself to
matter so as to be able to draw upon the sustaining power of the energy in
the atom if it is to establish itself anew in a cycle of growth.
It is time the endless prattle
of ages against what early Christian doctrinism called "the malignancy of
matter" be silenced by the fuller understanding of the eternal role of
benignant purpose which matter plays in the cosmic evolutionary economy.
God produced his material creation, sun, moon, stars, earth, animals,
vegetation, man; and pronounced it good. Only erring half-taught
religionists have pronounced it evil. The religion that has implanted the
universal idea that man was born in sin because the soul came to share the
life of the flesh has projected a most baleful influence into the stream
of human ideology. Man's life would rise many grades in the scale of
dignity and happiness if he would cease to despise his body. Of a surety
his flesh is not to dominate him. But it is to be honored for the
indispensable and noble service which it performs together with the soul.
A sound philosophy will not heap contumely on the flesh, the handmaid of
the soul.
THE STAR IN THE EAST
The star of Bethlehem and the
three Magi it guided across the Arabian desert! Are they to be taken as
historical actualities? Hardly. Many Christian writers no longer view them
in this light. They are classed as legend and poetry. They constitute
another of those splendid allegories of the ascent of bright spirit from
out the region of material night to regain celestial glory. "We have seen
his star in the east and are come to worship him." So spake the
three "Wise Men" from the East at the birth of Christos.
The Messiah comes not as a
single unit of consciousness, but as a threefold power. It is
Spirit-Soul-Mind; three in one, yet one in three. He comes, so to say, and
his advent brings his three aspects to manifestation; or he comes as
these three. Spirit, as manifest in the flesh, is ever a trinity of
faculties. Its lowest facet, the only one that comes immediately into the
brain consciousness, is Mind. Above that stands Soul, and still higher is
Spirit. As these three rays of his power may be said to constitute his
coming in three forms, they are said to accompany him to earth. And as
their combined development is what in reality brings him here, they are
said to come to pay homage to him. They combine to consummate his
greatness and completeness. In the Gospel allegory this relation to him
came out as "worship."
As to the star--what is it? Can
it be taken astronomically? Again and most emphatically, no! Even staid
astronomers, deluded by the commonly assumed historicity of the Gospel
story, have childishly gone on record as affirming that "somewhere near"
the time of Jesus' birth there was an exceptional and rare conjunction of
five of the planets. Only a few years ago we witnessed the interesting
spectacle of five of the planets closely bunched in the western sky of
evening. The phenomenon brought no birth of divinity, with the most savage
of all wars going on at the time. The guileless astronomers had overlooked
the statement in Matthew's Gospel that made their guessing weird
and preposterous. "Now the star came and stood over the place where the
young child was." Let us picture Jupiter--itself some hundred times larger
than the earth,--Saturn, Mars, Neptune and Uranus, all crowding in the
heavens directly above the tiny stable in Bethlehem village! It is not to
be overlooked that such irrationality is only one instance of the havoc
that religious infatuation and hypnotization can work in otherwise capable
minds.
The Star of Bethlehem is the
bright radiance of the divine soul shining in the innermost recesses of
evolving human minds, and rising with man as he emerges, symbolically on
the east, from out the dark night of his immersion in matter and body. As
it grows to its adult state the soul becomes a shining star of bright ray
in the human head. When it shines forth there arises the gleam of its
manifestations as the three "spiritual magicians." The bursting out of the
light of this triple star upon infant humanity, as the race begins to
incorporate Christly principle in its action, is naturally pictured as
bringing the three Mages or Sages of wisdom to the earthly cradle where,
all meanly wrapped in swaddling clothes of earthly flesh, he lies pictured
as the infant at the beginning of his career to redeem animal man to
divinity. Their offering of gifts of incense, sweet myrrh and gold
betokened their contribution to his unified completeness. Gold emblems the
highest life of spirit; incense is the sweet odor of balsam treated with
fire, the symbol of nature transmuted by soul; and myrrh is the
sweet-savored vegetable that typifies the natural contribution to the life
of spirit.
Somewhat akin in significance
to the red holly berry and the poinsettia was the red rose of Christmas
symbolism. Pictured on the cross at the junction of the two arms, it
emblemed the Christ-birth as the product of spirit and matter "crossed" in
the life of man. Like the Glastonbury thornbush it, too, was legendarily
asserted to bloom at midnight of Christmas Eve. As the "tree" of the cross
on which the Christ was crucified was dramatized as the far-descended
branch of the tree of life in the Garden of Eden, so the Christmas rose on
the cross was supposed to have blossomed forth in December as a stem from
Jesse's ancient rod of divinity. As a sixteenth century German carol puts
it:
I know a rose-tree spring
Forth from an ancient root,
As men of old were singing.
From Jesse came the shoot
That bore a blossom bright
Amid the cold of winter,
When half-spent was the night.
By ancient symbolic reckoning
the solstitial period in December marked the half-way point in the "night"
of the soul's incarnation. And it was precisely at this point, also by
symbolic connotations, that the Christ principle ended its sleep of
"death" in matter and was quickened to a new birth. The Christ was the red
rose flowering at midnight in the solstice of "winter." As Jesse was the
father of David this Christ-rose was in the other tradition of Jewry to be
the Messiah "born of David's line" in the city of "Bethlehem."
"CAROL, BROTHERS, CAROL"
The carols of Christmas must
have their due place in the exposition. These musical ballads that
thousands of throats send throbbing in sincere joyousness up to the
rafters of churches embody man's most blithesome expression of his
Christmas spirit. Many are magnificent beyond words. If all those who sing
could catch the faintest true conception of the awesome burden of the
profounder esoteric significance of the sonorous phrases chorused at the
Yuletide, their hearts and minds would fairly palpitate with the
overmastering realization of the grandeur of the human-divine epic hidden
in these majestic runes.
A Christmas Eve service in an
Episcopalian Church attended by the present writer in 1953 opened with the
tenor solo sung before the processional. The program announced that it was
considered to be the oldest known Christmas carol, dating away back of the
fifth century. It was sung in Latin and simply hailed the Christ, son of
the Virgin Mary. But the first four words suddenly struck the mind with
the most acute realization of their profounder significance. They were as
follows: "A solis natus carine . . ." Referring to the Christ,
these words said that he was "born on the hinge of the sun." The
astonishing circumstance here was that if this was truly a Christian
carol, it could be interpreted in clear meaning only by Pagan formulas!
For Christianity knows nothing of the symbolism of the Christmas dating in
relation to the winter solstice, or the fact that this dating allocates
the divine birth to the conditions of the balance between soul and body,
when soul, having reached the nadir of its descent into matter, slowly
turns and pivots, as it were, on the hinge of the solstice to begin
its upward path of return to heaven. The December solstice is the hinge on
which descending soul swings around at the nadir; the June solstice is
likewise the hinge of the sun at its upper turn. But the Christ is born in
the "winter."
What is perhaps the most
salient feature accentuated in the carols generally has been little noted.
It is the oft-repeated linking of heaven and earth together in the
jubilee, to stress mightily the fact that both hemispheres of life were
beneficiaries of the great gift of Christhood to the world of men. The
first verse of the fine old hymn, Joy to the World, well
exemplifies this feature:
Joy to the world, the Lord is
come!
Let earth receive her king!
Let every heart prepare him
room
And heaven and nature sing!
Heaven and earth are exhorted
to sing together. We must ask why heaven is to join in rejoicing over the
advent of divinity to this planet. Here we come back to the holly, the
pine tree and the Yule log. Both nature on the one side and consciousness
on the other were to be blessed by the descent of Messiah to earth.
Nature, in the form and person of her top-most product, man physical, was
to receive as her honored guest the spark of celestial fire, which under
her tutelage would eventually elevate the natural man to the order and
rank of divine intelligence. Nature was to have the germinal potential of
soul implanted in her bosom, and only this tie gave it the chance to rise
in the scale of developing being. It was indeed the great aeonial occasion
for nature's rejoicing. She was to be elevated from blind instinct to
mind.
As to heaven, it was the grand
cosmic opportunity for those citizens of heaven, those deific mind-born
Sons of God, to link their potential capabilities with the gen-erative
powers of matter and nature in human bodies, and thus achieve a new birth
and further growth in the eternal advance. For both heaven's sons and
nature's creation it was equally the grand event of all the ages. Well
indeed might man and nature unite to celebrate the high festival. It meant
a nearer approach to godhood for both, and full apotheosization for those
already at the threshold of divinity. It was God's gift to them of a new
reach and range of life that would in the event lift each to a higher
kingdom of being, an expanded dimension of consciousness. If this is not
the due occasion for both heaven and nature to rejoice, then creation
furnishes no adequate ground for jubilation.
This analysis underlies the
reason why the Christ's advent was proclaimed from heaven to men on earth.
It rang from the skies. "Heaven's arches rang" with the exultant shouts of
the celestial hosts, and "earth gave back the sound" from its plains
below. Earth sent back to heaven the echo of its joyous halleluiahs,
resounding throughout the empyrean. The hosts of the twelve legions of
angels, sons of the God-Mind, who were preparing to migrate downward to
our planet, would in the round of the aeon return rejoicing, victors over
"death," having burst asunder the bars and gates of this lower "hell." It
was the festal day of all the earth and no less the gala day for the
angelic hosts above. The festival would lack its true import unless both
men and angels alike realized its meaning in both spheres of being. For
the event meant a new heaven for spirits of light and a new earth
brightened with heavenly glory for men.
So angels in the clouds of
heaven announced the coming to shepherds abiding in the fields, keeping
watch over their flocks by night. As the Messiah coming in this era of the
zodiacal cycle was to come in the sign of Aries, the Ram, when he was to
be heralded as the Lamb of God, slain from the foundation of the world,
inevitably the drama personified these humans who were to domesticate and
care for this tender Lamb in its infancy as "shepherds." So the
annunciation was made to shepherds in the fields, in the night and winter
of incarnation. It is said that no sheep are ever watched out in the
fields of Palestine or Syria at night later than October of each year.
Hence the allegorical character of the story is confirmed by its obvious
non-historicity.
The pageantry of snowy winter
attending the Messiah's birth is of course altogether Northern and
astrological symbolism. It depicts the winter solstice and the Northern
winter with its snow and all its poetic incitements. But the true sense of
all this has been lost. The iciness of the season is the outward arctic
symbol of the cold deadness of the soul when it has gone to its torpid
sleep of inertness, its "hibernation" under nature's chilling spell and
lies wrapped in unconsciousness, like the wheat grains in winter's soil,
until awakened to new life and regeneration by April's strengthening sun.
At the solstice the sun stands
still for a period of about ten days, neither losing nor gaining in its
light. Here is the astrological symbol of spirit's equalized relation with
matter, when it is weighed in the scales of the exact balance or
equilibration between the forces of soul and body. Humanity at its present
state stands at precisely this point of stabilization between the powers
of soul and those of sense. In this close relation the opportunity is
afforded to both these elements to consummate their interlocking and their
"marriage" and produce the Christ-child as their offspring. Thus the
solstice of winter is the zodiacal portraiture of every aspect of the
relation of soul to body, out of which the Christos is to have its new
generation.
Like the sun of late December,
the unit of soul-mind has gone as far down the scale into matter's depths
as it can go. There it stands, held fast by the equilibrated powers of
matter. The two conflict and war with each other until their
reconciliation is effected through the intermediary offices of the Christ
as its power evolves. And the final at-one-ment is achieved as the two
learn to synchronize their natures. With the harmony thus established
comes the peace on earth and good-will among men that the angels announced
to the shepherds.
But the horrid scroll of
history since the first century belies any historical reference to the
meaning of Messiah's coming at a given epoch in a given personality, and
sets the seal of truth on the hypothesis that the Gospel story is the
dramatic representation of man's total evolution to divinity, a goal which
is yet to be achieved in anything like its fulness. It is far better to
know that Messiah has not yet come--in the final sense of an overt event
in objective history--than to cherish the common belief that he has come,
and that succeeding history has displayed more in human savagery than any
age before it. If what has eventuated in history since the divine event
fulfills the meaning of Messiah's birth, there is little about which to
sing halleluiahs and bedeck the hall with holly. The hope of humanity is
in the realization that the Christ is yet to come, and to come not in any
manger bed or chamber of luxury, but to reign as King of Love in the lives
of individuals and in the statecraft of the nations. To proclaim that
Messiah has come--and left the world groveling in brutish lust for
butchery--would be to crush man's spirit in despair.
The failure of two thousand
"blithe Noels" to bring the Christly spirit to birth in the world is
easily accounted for. Taken as overt historical event occurring personally
to one man, and not understood as the implanta-tion of the "bare grain" of
the future growth of godliness in all hearts, the mighty cathartic and
transforming force of the accolade to infant deity went out from
all hearts and dissipated itself upon the imagined figure of this one
alleged personage, when it was intended that it should go inward to
work its benign efficacy upon all souls. The Christ was objectively
heralded but not subjectively received. He was hailed out there in
history, but not welcomed into the inn of each heart. Homage was lavished
upon his physical personality, when his spiritual body should have been
sacrificially eaten and psychically assimilated. The enormous collective
stream of psychic adoration doubtless focused over the mythical stable in
Bethlehem and formed a veritable Shekinah there. And there it is
reanimated and reinforced year after year at Christmas. But, if the
quality and character of Western history be a competent criterion,
evidently there it stays. Bethlehem receives a vast emotional inundation;
somehow the rest of the world is left without beatitude. The Yule greeting
goes out voluminously to Judea; all too obviously it does not return to
the senders. It is spent outwardly upon a supposed historical event, and
apparently exhausted in the spending. The vast psychic outpouring
is wasted upon the symbol, when the symbol, its majestic connotation
converted into the realities of love and brotherhood, should generate the
wondrous leaven of universal charity and send it pulsing through all the
hearts in the world.
The historization of the drama
and the beautiful allegory swallowed up the spiritual efficacy of the
annual ritual, and therefore simply failed to carry home to any minds the
pivotal truth on which its beneficent leavening of humanity entirely
depended. The nub of the great sweeping significance was the cardinal
truth that unless the Christ be born, loved, reared and exalted as ruler
in the conscious life of every individual mortal, his birth has not been
brought to pass. One birth in Bethlehem is not enough to leaven the world.
All men must be reborn, and only in this collective rebirth is the
Christos born. If he is not reborn in each heart, he has had his birth
nowhere. He can not be born outside of human hearts, minds and
consciences. What good could one man's divine love do in a world rankling
with the petty selfishness of individuals and the unrelenting animosity of
nations? Christos will be born, Messiah will come, when Love reigns in the
human breast, and humanity will be born as it gives birth to the King of
Love. Philips Brooks in his touching O Little Town of Bethlehem
pleads that the spirit of Christos
Be born in us today.
If Christmas does not implant
the spirit of divine love ever more deeply in all souls, it is celebrated
in vain. And never will the festival of gladness generate its high
cathartic power to spiritualize the race until, instead of the physical
birth of one babe in the impossible Bethlehem story (taken as history),
the anniversary at the solstice speaks volubly to every intelligent human
of the birth within the area of his own consciousness of the soul of
divine graciousness and compassion.
BETHLEHEM AND BETHANY
Bethlehem itself is hardly to
be taken geographically in connection with the event. Scholars have been
unconscionably slow to derive any central significance from the etymology
of the town name. Beth-lehem means, as any Hebrew knows, "the house
of bread." This was an emblematic designation of the house of Virgo, the
Virgin in the Zodiac. The wheat symbolized by the great star Spica in that
house of the heavens emblemed the Christ coming as the divine bread to be
eaten mystically by all souls. (See the author's The Lost Light for
a full and revealing elaboration of this entire theme.) Indeed it could be
affirmed that the ancient books would have proclaimed the Christ-birth as
"occurring" in Bethlehem even if no such town had stood on the map; or
rather they would have seen to it that a town appropriately located
according to some semantic scheme would have been given the name of
Bethlehem. (That the name of this particular town is to be accounted for
in this way is indeed fairly probable, for this was the ancient religious
custom.) For some thousands of years the venerable documents of Egypt
allocated the Messianic birth to the town of Annu (Anu) in the Nile
valley. In Annu, the books stated, Christ had gone to his "death" and
there he would be born again. And it is a breath-taking discovery in
Comparative Religion study that Anu is in one passage described as the
"place of multiplying bread."
This Egyptian background can
not be discounted as the genuine source of the "miracle" in which Jesus
feeds the five thousand enhungered gathering by multiplying the
loaves and fishes. The Greeks named Anu Heliopolis, the "city of the sun,"
the spiritual city where the sun of divine soul went to its "death" and
had its resurrection. Anu in the Egyptian system was the place of
increasing the divine bread of eternal life! And this "city" is finally
the human body itself, where soul first goes to its "death," then has
its glorious resurrection. Likewise this "city" is Beth-lehem, the
house of bread, when the zodiacal symbolism is transferred from Egyptian
to Hebrew name and type. Egypt had proclaimed the solstitial birth of the
Son of God ages before it became the current legend in Hebrew hands.
What little there is to
Christmas that can be claimed as distinctively Christian is itself marred
by misguided comprehension of its relevance and quite erroneous
application of its symbolism. It is almost a wholly Pagan festival that we
celebrate. The dire tragedy is that we no longer have the perspicacity to
discern in it the transcendent glory of the original Pagan significations.
The gala-day of all human-divine history goes off as a mere anniversary
celebration in the spirit of a worldly carnival. That few observe it in
the exalted appreciation of its profound mystical values bespeaks the
depths of our philosophical failure and the decay of our culture.
YULE
AND NOEL
It remains to build up the
structure of the two familiar names attached closely to the Christmas
gaiety. They are Yule and Noel. Nowhere has there been seen
any scholar's derivation of Yule from its obvious philological
sources. It almost incontestably springs from the ancient Egyptian name of
Deity, IU, meaning "(the Deity) who comes," and the Hebrew EL,
"God." Its total rendering would then read: "The Deity that comes as
God," or, more simply, "the coming God." The Egyptians many times called
Horus, or Iusa, "he who comes regularly and continually," and in hymns he
is hailed and appealed to as "The Comer!" IU is the verb meaning
"to come." In course of Nordic and Anglic transmission, the IU
became YU and the EL more phonetically conjoined to it as
LE, giving us in the end YULE. As the Divinity under zodiacal
symbolism "came" at the winter solstice, the late December period became
designated as the Yuletide and its festival "the Yule."
As to Noel, adopted as
the French name for Christmas, the same terminal el unites here
with the Greek root of all words meaning divine knowledge, the primal root
of the Greek verb gignosko, "to know," and the no in the
English word "know." No is the Greek stem meaning the divine
noetic mind of God, or in essence and potentiality the mind of the
Christ. The Greek word for "mind" is itself Nous, meaning of course
the cosmic Mind. Noel would then mean "the mind of God," as
manifested in his Son or Sons born on earth. The birthday of the Christly
principle was allocated to the winter solstice. When, therefore, choirs
chant joyously "Sing We All Noel!", the import is that we mortals can in
this festive celebration exult in the birth or initial advent of that same
mind which was also in Christ into the scope of our conscious life. And
certainly earth offers nothing more worthy of rhapsodic song from mortal
lips than this event. If we fail to rise to ecstatic joy over the
contemplation of this crucial episode in our racial history, we are
"stocks and stones, and worse than senseless things" indeed.
So potent, however, is a
symbolic ritual that, even though the millions who enact the annual
ceremonials and go to the considerable labor and sacrifice of presenting
the round of gifts year after year have little or no real conception of
the explicit meaning of their activities, they still catch something of
the inexplicable impressiveness of the occasion. In spite of the fact that
the meaning escapes the individual celebrant as a commemoration of an
evolutionary crisis and the end and beginning of distinct epochs, and
adumbrates a spiritual transformation that he can consummate for himself,
still the sheer beauty of the symbolism and imagery of the memorial,
standing in their purely external form, reaches deeply into the psychic
consciousness and stirs there profound intimations of human brother-hood
and the love emotion. For a few short hours on December twenty-fourth and
twenty-fifth the Christian world is brought to some measure of realization
of the loveliness of charity and fraternity. Worldly cares, anxieties and
concerns of the daily struggle are forgotten for an interlude, while
elders enter into the glee of childhood elated over engaging toys. A brief
foretaste of what it would be to live in a world of amity and heartfelt
good-will is enjoyed, a bit wonderingly. But all too quickly the glow of
humanism fades, the carols give way to the prevalent decadent "pep music,"
and the daily interests and the tone of secularity crowd out the new-born
Christ spirit from the heart.
Christmas is the salvation to a
large extent of what true Christian spirit is extant. Its anticipatory
eager-
ness and the momentary touch of
fellowship engendered by it keep the soul of brotherhood from threatened
extinction in the modern world of science and engrossment in the
externalities of existence.
But it is the earnest
presentment of this essay that if to the external beauty of the Yuletide
ritualism there was added the full intellectual apprehension of the
precise symbolic significance of all the conventional customs perpetuated
in beautiful traditional fashion every year, there would be released from
out the subliminal depths of man's divine subconscious potential such a
flood of Christly love, born of beauty and understanding combined, as
would sweep Christianity into the hearts and minds of the age. This would
come because it would touch and bestir in man's deeper nature the latent
powers of the Christ consciousness themselves. With their awakening would
come the birth and later the adult development of the Christ mind. It
would bring the spiritualization of the world, the apotheosization of
humanity.
The force of ritual is powerful
in its sheer outward performance. Even when its forms and movements are
without rational appeal, they stir the soul to feelings of beauty. But if
there was added the still more potent force that would flow in powerfully
from the mind's clear grasp of the symbolic intimations of the rites, the
operation would lift the very soul to moments of ineffable exaltation.
This is precisely the psychological element lacking in the festival's
annual incidence, the one factor requisite to make it the efficacious
channel of spiritual purgation and uplift.
The mind is unquestionably the
central dynamo of all psychological energizations. But merely outward
feelings sensually excited by pageantry, no matter how beautiful in
themselves, can not bestir the soul's deepest sensibilities as profoundly
and as lastingly as can the logical cognitions of understanding.
Philosophy is the mother of understanding and that in turn of affectional
states, and these set the norm and tenor of individual stability and
psychic integration, the health of the mind carrying the health of the
body with it.
Instead of being merely a
periodic recurrence of gifting and a happy time for children, with a few
carols thrown in, Christmas could be the occasion of a veritable annual
re-baptism of the conscious mind in a flood of supernal benignancy
released from the hovering Oversoul of divinity, the immanent-transcendent
God within man, that would constitute a periodical cathartic purification
of the soul and a dynamic regeneration of the spirit in the body. It
carries an ordination of ancient wisdom designed to utilize astronomical
features of the season to impress upon human understanding the
significance for man himself of all that which the outer natural phenomena
can adumbrate for him of the interrelation of soul-consciousness and
mundane body.
Like the winter sun, his own
sun-soul has gone down into the underworld of material darkness and lies
"dead" and inert in that cave of earth. The solstice tells him that for
the period of the human evolution that soul of his is bound in with matter
in a state of stabilization, or equilibration of its energies. For a long
time--pictured by the ten days of the solstice--that soul, a divine unit
in its own right--will wage an even battle with the elemental powers of
this plane of existence. But slowly the cycle will swing around past its
solstice, the soul will begin to gain on the inertia of matter and the
sluggish inhibitions of body; and finally it will have put all material
powers under its feet, and emerge victor over "death" and the "grave."
ANGELIC SONGS ARE RINGING
These ennobling truths the
seasonal festival will impress upon human intellection with ever more
realistic cogency; until the tree, the holly, the lights and star, the
candle, the cradled babe, the carols and the organ will release such a
tide of sweeping realizations in man's psychic realm as will cause his
heart to throb in thrilled ecstasy, with access of a more than joyous
sense of brotherhood of mortals linked together in the bonds of cosmic
beneficence. A choir marching past him in a church aisle, with each singer
carrying a lighted candle, and pouring out the strains of
Hark! The Herald Angels Sing,
Glory to the New-Born King.
will lift the psyche close to
the level where truly the song of angelic voices m |