In the modern thought of the Western world, we find Reincarnation
attracting much attention. The Western philosophies for the past hundred
years have been approaching the subject with a new degree of attention
and consideration and during the past twenty years there has been a
marvellous awakening of Western public interest in the doctrine. At the
present time the American and European magazines contain poems and stories
based on Reincarnation and many novels have been written around it and
plays even have been based upon the general doctrine and have received
marked attention on the part of the public. The idea seems to have
caught the public fancy and the people are eager for more of it.
This present revival of attention has been brought about largely by the
renewed interest on the part of the Western world toward the general
subject of occultism, mysticism, comparative religion, oriental
philosophy, etc., in their many phases and forms. The World's Parliament of
Religions, held at the World's Fair in Chicago, in 1863, did much to
attract the attention of the American public to the subject of the Oriental
Philosophies in which Reincarnation plays such a prominent part. But
perhaps, the prime factor in this reawakened Western interest in the
subject is the work and teachings of the Theosophical Society, founded by
Madame Blavatsky some thirty years ago and which has since been
continued by her followers and several successors. But, whatever may be the
cause, the idea of Reincarnation seems destined to play an important
part in the religious and philosophical thought of the West for some time
to come. Signs of it appear on every side - the subject cannot be
ignored by the modern student of religion and philosophy. Whether accepted
or not, it must be recognized and examined.
But the forms of the doctrine, or theory, regarding Reincarnation, vary
almost as much in the Modern West as in the various Eastern countries
at present and in the past. We find all phases of the subject
attracting attention and drawing followers to its support. Here we find the
influence of the Hindu thought, principally through the medium or channel
of Theosophy, or of the Yogi Philosophy - and there we find the
influence of the Grecian or Egyptian philosophical conceptions manifesting
principally through the medium of a number of occult orders and
organizations, whose work is performed quietly and with little recognition on the
part of the general public, the policy being to attract the 'elect few'
rather than the curious crowd - and again we find quite a number pf
persons in America and Europe, believing in Reincarnation because they are
attracted by the philosophy of the Neo-Platonists, or the Gnostics of
the Early Christian Church and favoring Reincarnation as a proper part
of the Christian Religion and who while remaining in the bosom of the
Church interpret the teachings by the light of the doctrine of Rebirth,
as did many of the early Christians, as we have seen.
The Theosophical conception and interpretation appeals to a great
number of Western Reincarnationists, by reason of its wide circulation and
dissemination, as well as by the fact that it has formulated a detailed
theory and doctrine and besides claims the benefit of athoritative
instruction on the doctrine from Adepts and Masters who have passed to a
higher plane of existence. We think it proper to give in some little
detail an account of the general teachings of Theosophy on this point, the
reader being referred to the general Theosophical literature for more
extended information regarding this special teaching.
Theosophy teaches that the human soul is a composite entity, consisting
of several principles, sheaths of vehicles, similar to those mentioned
by us in our account of Hindu Reincarnation. The Theosophical books
state these principles as follows: (1) The Body, or Rupa; (2) Vitality,
or Prana-Jiva; (3)Astral Body, or Linga-Sharira; 94) Animal Soul, or
Kama-Rupa; (5) Human Soul, or Manas; (6) Spiritual Soul, or Buddhi; (7)
Spirit, or Atma. Of these seven principles, the last or higher Three
namely, the Atma, Buddhi and Manas, compose the higher Trinity of the Soul
- the part of man which persists; while tthe lower Four principles
namely, Rupa, Prana-Jiva, Linga-Sharira and Kama-Rupa respectively, are the
lower principles, which perish after the passing out of the higher
principles at death. At Death the higher principles, or Triad, lives on,
while the lower principles of Quarternary dissolve and separate from
each other and finally disintegrate, along the lines of a process
resembling chemical action.
Theosophy teaches that there is a great stream of Egos, or Monads,
which originally emanated from a source of Being and which are persuing a
spiral journey around a chain of seven globes, including the earth,
called the Planetary Chain. The Life Wave of Monads reaches Globe A, and
goes through a series of evolutionary life on it and then passes on to
Globe B and so on until Globe G is reached, when after a continued life
there the Life Wave returns to Globe A, but not in a circle, but rather
in a spiral, that is, on a higher plane of activity and the round
begins once more. There are seven Races to be lived through on each globe,
many incarnations in each - each Race having seven sub-races and each
sub-race having seven branches. The progress of the Life Wave is
illustrated by the symbol of the seven-coil spiral, sweeping with a wider
curve at each coil, each coil however, being divided into a minor
seven-coil spiral and so on. It is taught that the human soul is now on its
fourth great round-visit to the Earth and is in about the middle of the
fifth Race of that round. The total number of incarnations necessary
for each round is quite large and the teaching is that none can escape
them except by special merit and development. Btween each incarnation
there is a period of rest in the Heaven World, or Devachan, where the
soul reaps the experiences of the past life and prepares for the next
step. The period of rest varies with the degree of attainment gained by
the soul, the higher degree the longer the rest. The average time
between incarnations is estimated at about fifteen hundred years. Devachan
is thus a kind of temporary Heaven, from whence the soul must again pass
in time for a rebirth, according to its merits or demerits. Thus
accordingly, each soul has lived in a variety of bodies, even during the
present round - having successively incarnated as a savage, a barbarian, a
semi-civilized man, a native of India, Egypt, Chaldea, Greece and many
other lands, in different ages, filling all kinds of positions and
places in life, tasting of poverty and riches, of pleasure and pain - all
ever leading toward higher things. The doctrine enunciated by Theosophy
is complicated and intricate and we can do no more than to barely
mention the same at this place.
Another Western form of the Oriental Teachings, known as the 'Yogi
Philosophy,' numbers quite a large number of earnest students in this
country and in Europe and has a large circle of influence, although it has
never crystallized into an organization, the work being done quietly and
the teachings spread by the sale of popular books on the subject issued
at nominal prices. It is based on the Inner Teachings of the Hindu
Philosophy and is Eclectic in nature, deriving its inspiration from the
several great teachers, philosophies and schools, rather than implicitly
following any one of them. Briefly stated this Western school of Yogi
Philosophy teaches that the Universe is an emanation from, or mental
creation of, the Absolute whose Creative Will flows out in an outpouring
of mental energy, descending from a condition above Mind, downward
through Mind, Physical Energy and Matter, in a grand Involution or
'infolding' of the divine energy into material forms and states. This
Involution is followed by an Evolution, or unfoldment, the material forms
advancing in the scale of evolution, accompanied by a corresponding
Spiritual Evolution, or Unfoldment of the Individual Centres or Units of Being,
created or emanated as above stated. The course of Evolution or
rather, that phase of it with which the present human race on earth is
concerned, has now reached a point about midway in the scale of Spiritual
Evolution and the future will lead the race on and on, to higher states of
being, on this earth and on other spheres, until it reaches a point
incomprehensible to the mind of a man of today and then still on and on,
until finally the souls will pass into the plane of the Absolute, there
to exist in a state impossible of present comprehension and
transcending not only the understanding but also the imagination of the mind of
man as we know him.
The Yogi Philsophy teaches that the soul will reincarnate on earth
until it is fitted to pass on to higher planes of being and that many
people are now entering into a stage which will terminate the unconscious
reincarnation and which enables them to inarnate consciously in the
future without loss of memory. It teaches that instead of a retributive
Karma, there is a Law of Spiritual Cause and Effect, operating largely
along the lines of Desire and what has been called the 'Law of
Attraction,' by which 'like attracts like,' in persons, environments, conditions,
etc. As we have stated, the Yogi Philosophy follows closely the lines
of certain phases of the Hindu philosophies from which it is derived,
it being however, rather an 'eclectic' system rather than an exact
reproduction of that branch of philosophy favored by certain schools of
Hindus and known by a similar name, as mentioned in our chapter on 'The
Hindus' - that is to say, instead of accepting the teachings of any
particular Hindu school in their entirety, the Western school of the Yogi
Philosophy has adopted the policy of 'Eclecticism,' that is, a system
following the policy of selection, choosing from several sources or
systems, rather than a blind following of some particular school, cult or
teacher.
The Yogi Philosophy teaches that man is a seven-fold entity, consisting
of the following principles, or divisions: 1.The Physical Body. 2.
The Astral Body. 3. Prana, or Vital Force. 4. The Instinctive Mind. 5.
The Intellect. 6. The Spiritual Mind. 7. Spirit. Of these, the first
four principles belong to the lower part of the being, while the latter
three are the higher principles which persist and Reincarnate. Man
however, is gradually evolving on to the plane of the Spiritual Mind and
will in time pass beyond the plane of Intellect, which he will then
class along with Instinct as a lower form of mentality, he then using his
Intuition habitually and ordinarily, just as the ignorant man his
Instinct-Intellect and the animal its Instinct alone. In many points the
Yogi Philosophy resembles the Vedanta and in others it agrees with
Theosophy, although it departs from the latter in some of the details of
doctrine regarding the process of Reincarnation and particularly in its
conception of the meaning and operation of the Law of Karma.
There are many persons in the West who hold firmly to Reincarnation, to
whom the Hindu conceptions, even in the Western form of their
presentation, do not appeal and who naturally incline toward the Greek
conception and form of the doctrine. A large number of these people are
generally classed among th 'Spiritualists,' although strictly speaking they do
not fit into that classification, for they hold that the so-called
'Spirit World is not a place of permanent abode, but rather a resting place
between incarnations. These people prefer the name 'Spiritists,' for
they hold that man is essentially a spiritual being - that the Spirit is
the Real Man - and that that which we call Man is but a temporary stage
in the development and evolution of the individual Spirit. The
Spiritists hold that the individual Spirit emanated from the Great Spirit of
the Universe (called by one name or another) at some distant period in
the past and has risen to its present state of Man, through and by a
series of repeated incarnations, first in the form of the lowly forms of
life and then through the higher forms of animal life, until now it has
reached the stage of human life, from whence it will pass on and on, to
higher and still higher planes - to forms and states as much higher
than the human state that man is above the earthworm. The Spiritists hold
that man will reincarnate in earthly human bodies, only until the
Spirit learns its lessons and develops sufficiently to pass on to the next
plane higher. They hold that the planets and the countless fixed stars
or suns, are but stages of abode for the evolving Spirit and that
beyond the Universe as we know it there are millions of others - in fact,
that the number of Universes is infinite. The keynote of this doctrine
may be stated as 'Eternal Progression' toward the Divine Spirit. The
Spiritists do not insist upon any particular theory regarding the
constitution of the soul - some of them speak merely of 'soul and body,' while
others hold to the seven-fold being - the general idea being that this
is unimportant, as the essential Spirit is after all the Real Self and
it matters little about the number or names of its temporary garments
or vehicles of expression.
Still another class of Reincarnationists in the Western World incline
rather more toward the Grecian and Egyptian forms of the doctrine, than
the Hindu - the ideas of the Neo-Platonists which had such a powerful
effect upon the early Christian Church, or rather among the 'elect few'
among the early Fathers of the Church, seeming to have sprung into
renewed activity among this class. These people, as we have said in the
beginning of this chapter, are rather inclined to group themselves into
small organizations or secret orders, rather than to form popular cults.
They follow the examples of the ancients in this respect, preferring
the 'few elect' to the curious general public who merely wish to 'taste
or nibble' at the Truth. Many of these organizations are not known to
the public, as they studiously avoid publicity or advertisement and
trust to the Law of Attraction to 'bring their own to them - and them to
their own.' The teachings of this class vary in interpretation and as
many of them maintain secrecy by pledges or oaths, it is not possible to
give their teachings in detail.
But generally speaking, they base their doctrines on the general
principle that Man's present condition is due to the 'Descent of Spirit,' in
the nature of 'The Fall of Man,' ocurring some time in the far distant
past. They hold that Man was originally 'Spirit Pure and Free,' from
which blissful state he was enticed by the glamour of Material Life and
he accordingly fell from his higher state, lower and lower until he was
sunken deep into the mire of Matter. From this lowly state he then
began to work up, or evolve, having in the deep recesses of his soul a
glimmer of remembrance of his former state, which dim light is constantly
urging him on and on, toward his former estate, in spite of his
frequent stumbling into the mire in his attempts to rise above it. This
teaching holds to a theory and doctrine very similar to that of the
'Spiritists' just mentioned, except that while the latter, in common with the
majority of Reincarnationists, hold that the evolution of the Soul is in
the direction of advancement and greater expression, similar to the
growth of a child, these 'secret order' people hold forcibly and earnestly
to the idea that evolution is merely a 'Returning of the Prodigal' to
his 'Father's Mansion' - the parable of the Prodigal Son and that of the
Expulsion from Eden, being held as veiled allegories of their teaching.
In the above view, the present state of existence - this Earthly Life -
is one of a series of Hells, in the great Hell of Matter, from which
Man is creeping up slowly but surely. According to this idea, the Earth
is but midway in the scale, there being depths of Materiality almost
impossible of belief and on the other hand, heights of heavenly bliss
equally incapable of understanding. This is about all that we can say
regarding this form of the doctrine, without violating certain confidences
that have been reposed in us. We fear that we have said too much as
its is, but inasmuch as one would have been able to 'read between the
lines' to understand fully, we trust that those who have favored us with
these confidences will pardon us.
There is still another class of believers in Reincarnation, of which
even the general public is not fully aware, for this class does not have
much to say regarding its beliefs. I allude to those in the ranks of
the orthodox Christian Church, who have outgrown the ordinary doctrines
and who, while adhering firmly to the fundamental Christian Doctrines
and while clinging closely to the Teachings of Jesus the Christ, still
find the idea of Rebirth a doctrine that appeals to their souls and
minds as closer to their 'highest conceptions of immortality' than the
ordinary teachings of 'the resurrection of the body,' or the vague
doctrines that are taking its place. These Christian Reincarnationists find
nothing in the doctrine of Reincarnation antagonistic to their Faith and
nothing in their Faith antagonistic to the doctrine of Reincarnation.
They do not use the term Reincarnation usually, but prefer the term
'Rebirth' as more closely expressing their thought; besides which the
former term has a suggestion of 'pagan and heathen' origin which is
distasteful to them. These people are inclined toward Rebirth for the reason
that it 'gives the soul Another Chance to Redeem Itself' - other
chances to perfect itself to enter the Heavenly Realms. They do not hold to
an idea of endless reincarnation for all, their idea being that the
soul that is prepared to enter heaven passes on there at once, having
learned enough and earned enough merit in the few lives it has lived on
earth - while the unprepared, undeveloped and unfit, are bound to come
back and back again until they have attained Perfection sufficient to
enable them to advance to the Heaven World.
A large number of Christian Reincarnationists, if I may call them by
that name, hold that Heaven is a place of Eternal Progression, rather
than a fixed state or place - that there is no standing still in Heaven or
Earth - that 'In my Father's House are Many Mansions.' To the
majority, this idea of Progression in the Higher Planes seems to be a natural
accompaniment to the Spiritual Progression that leads to the Higher
Planes, or Heaven. At any rate, the two ideas seem always to have run
together in the human mind when the general subject has been under
consideration, whether in past time or present; whether among Christians or
'pagans and heathen.' There seems to be an intuitive recognition of the
the connection of the two ideas. And on the other hand, there seems to
be a close connection between the several views of 'special creation'
of the soul before both - the single earth-life - and the eternity of
reward or punishment in a state or place lacking progression or change.
Human thought on the subject seems to divide itself into two distinct
and opposing groups.
There are quite a number of Christian preachers and members of the
orthodox churches, who are taking an interest in this doctrine of Rebirth
and Eternal Progression here and hereafter. It is being considered by
many whose church associates do not suspect them of being other than
strictly orthodox in their views. Some day there will be a 'breaking out'
of this idea in the churches, when the believers in the doctrine grow
in numbers and influence. It will not surprise careful observers to see
the Church once more accepting the doctrine of Rebirth and reinstating
the doctrine of Pre-existence - returning to two of its original
truths, long since discarded by order of the Councils. Prof. Bowen has said:
"It seems to me that a firm and well-grounded faith in the doctrine of
Christian Metempsychosis might help to regenerate the world. For it
would be a faith not hedged round with many of the difficulties and
objections which beset other forms of doctrine and it offers distinct and
pungent motives for trying to lead a more Christian life and for loving
and helping our brother-man." And as James Freeman Clarke has said: "It
would be curious if we should find science and philosophy taking up
again the old theory of metempsychosis, remodelling it to suite our
present modes of religious and scientific thought and launching it again on
the wide ocean of human belief. But stranger things have happened in
the history of human opinion."
So as we have said, there is a great variety of shades of belief in the
Western world regarding Reincarnation today and the student will have
no difficulty in finding just the shade of opinion best suited to his
taste, temperament and training or experience. Vary as they do in detail
and theory, there is still the same fundamental and basic truth of the
One Source - the One Life - and Reincarnation, reaching ever toward
perfection and divinity. It seems impossible to disguise the doctrine so
as to change its basic qualities - it will always show its original
shape. And so it is with the varying opinions of the Western thought
regarding it - the various cults advocating some form of its doctrine - the
original doctrine may be learned and understood in spite of the
fanciful dressings bestowed upon it. "The Truth is One - Men call it by many
names."
It may be of interest to Western readers to mention that some of the
teachers of Occultism and Reincarnation hold that the present revival of
interest on the subject in the Western world is due to the fact that in
Europe and America, more and particularly the latter, there is
occurring a reincarnating of the souls of many persons who lived from fifteen
hundred to two thousand years ago and who were then believers in the
doctrine. According to this view, those who are now attracted toward the
Hindu form of the doctrine formerly lived as natives of India; those
who favour the Grecian idea, lived in ancient Greece; others favor the
Egyptian idea, for similar reasons; while the revival of Neo-Platonism,
Gnosticism and general Mysticism, among the present-day Christians is
accounted for by the fact that the early Christians are now reincarnating
in the Western world, having been reborn as Christians according to the
Law of Karmic Attraction. In this manner the advocates of the doctrine
offer the present revival as another proof of their teachings.