Scientific Materialism
Present-day scientific materialism
presents a great challenge to spiritual truth-seekers the world over. The
purpose of this pamphlet is to discuss the major alternatives to
materialism which are available to present-day spiritual aspirants.
Scientific materialism is based on the
premise that nothing can be known except that which is observed through
the Eve senses or measured by machines. Thus, materialism recognizes only
the Physical World and its laws. It originates from the theories of
Charles Darwin, Auguste Comte, Herbert Spencer, Sigmund Freud, Karl Marx,
and Friedrich Engels, among others.
These theories hold that man, as well
as all life-forms that exist on our planet, are the result of chemical
forces which interacted in a haphazard manner. Thus, man is an accidental
end-result, without any real purpose for existence. Man's survival as a
psychological organism requires balance between the inner forces, which
surge from the unconscious, and the outer forces, which impinge from
social and environmental sources. Although he must try to gratify his
inner urges without provoking a threat from without, he has no direct
control over either the inner or the outer forces.
The solution to the human dilemma,
according to the logical implications of materialism, is to control the
inner urges through such things as drugs and behavior modification and to
control the outer forces through direct manipulation of political, social,
and economic structures.
With this concept of man, there is no
individual responsibility because, at any particular point in time, man is
merely the result of factors over which he has no control. As an example,
man's behavior often is blamed on "genetics" or "education" or "poverty."
In this theory, man does not have an individual free will for which he can
be held responsible; he simply reacts to the inner and outer stimuli which
he perceives. If responsibility for man's destiny is placed on social
institutions, rather than on man himself, the intrinsic worth of the
individual ado is denied.
As the materialistic view has grown
stronger and stronger, especially in the Western World, there has been a
corresponding increase in the number of people who reject it. They have
grown disillusioned at the over-mechanized, over- intellectualized,
de-humanized society which has resulted from materialistic thought.
These truth-seekers perceive an
intrinsic worth and integrity in the individual human being -- something
of a transcendental nature. They feel that people possess an individual
free will which is not merely a response to social or biological stimuli
but an independent assertion of the identity of the individual. Also, they
perceive that the Physical World is not all that exists -- that beyond
outer appearances he inner readies which are the cause of what expresses
itself outwardly.
Liberal and Conservative
Churches
Where can the group of truth-seekers go
to find confirmation for their beliefs? Many go to the churches in hopes
of encountering a spiritual answer for their inquiries. Some find solace
there, but some do not. Of those who leave the churches, many do so
because they And in them the same materialistic philosophy which they are
trying to avoid, even though it may be clothed with the appearance of
spirituality.
In particular, there are two trends in
churches today which are likely to exemplify materialistic thought. One
such trend is "liberal." "Liberal" churches attempt to "accommodate"
themselves to the times by embracing the scientific, materialistic view of
man. To them, salvation is collective rather than individual and is
achieved by establishing a "Heaven-on-Earth" through social, economic, or
political reform. They seem to have forgotten Christ's statement, "My
kingdom is not of this world." (John 18:36)
The other major trend is
"conservative." "Conservative" churches are likely to place a literal,
historic, and anthropomorphic interpretation on what are really spiritual
experiences and cosmic symbols. While insisting on the physical reality of
things such as Jonah's whale, they fail to perceive the spiritual reality
behind such accounts. Thus, they interpret the Bible in the same way that
scientific materialism interprets the Physical World: through the five
senses.
In addition, most churches limit their
concept of man to one short life on Earth. The decisions he makes here
will affect his existence for all eternity. Thus, one can understand why
there are spiritual truth-seekers who feel impelled to search
elsewhere.
Two Alternatives
In the world today, there are two major
alternatives to materialism. One is through the wisdom of the East; the
other is through the wisdom of the West, or esoteric Christianity.
It may surprise some that there really
are Wisdom Teachings in the West. They may have thought that the popular,
exoteric churches were all that Christianity had to offer. Yet all major
world religions have had their deeper mystery teachings, and Christianity
is no exception.
There are very basic differences in the
Eastern and Western approaches to materialism. According to the Eastern
approach, the aspirant strives for direct spiritual enlightenment through
meditative exercises. The goal is to attain illumination in the shortest
time possible. In order to lead a meditative life, it becomes necessary to
withdraw from the material world, at least to a certain extent. Therefore,
non-Eastern people who espouse Eastern ideals often join an ashram or form
a community in which part of their time may be spent in experiencing an
awareness of God in all things.
Western Wisdom teaches an altogether
different approach to materialism. In the West, where materialism has
reached its greatest strength, there has developed a rational approach to
the world which has brought about great advances in understanding and
using it. The advent of scientific thought in the West brought to an end
the ignorance and superstition of the Middle Ages which caused untold
misery and suffering. Therefore, Western Wisdom does not shy away from
scientific discoveries and materiality. Rather, it would use them for
spiritual purposes. In other words, whereas the Eastern approach
advocates, explicitly or implicitly, the withdrawal from the material
world, the Western Wisdom advocates work in and with the material world
for the purpose of spiritualizing it. Its motto is "Be ye in the world,
but not of it."
Man, as a Spirit, has as his present
field of activity the Physical World, and has as his instrument a physical
body. These are not conditions to be shunned or avoided, for they are the
results of the efforts of an all-wise Creator. They are to be used so that
man, the Spirit, can learn to become a divine creative intelligence as is
his Heavenly Father, able to create on all levels of existence.
Having mentioned briefly the basic way
in which the Eastern and Western philosophies differ in regard to
materialism, let us consider other differences in these
philosophies.
Concept of Christ
The crucial way in which the two
philosophies differ is in their concept of the Christ. Many Oriental
teachings are silent on the subject. Some Eastern philosophies, especially
those which are promulgated in the West, acknowledge Jesus as a great
Teacher who attained Christ-consciousness, or enlightenment, similar to
that attained by Krishna or Buddha. They teach that devotion to Jesus, to
the exclusion of other great Teachers, unnecessarily limits an aspirant to
truth. If truth is universal, then Teachers throughout history are equally
worthy of study. In fact, the more widely one studies from different
sources, the more likely one is to arrive at a fuller understanding of the
truth.
The concept presented above indicates a
lack of understanding regarding the spiritual evolution of our planet. It
is quite possible to arrive at certain conclusions but, if one does not
consider all the factors involved, no matter how logical the conclusions
may sound, they will be erroneous because relevant factors have been left
out.
The factor left out in the Eastern
philosophies is the Christ. Christ was not the man Jesus; He is not merely
a lofty state of consciousness or an abstract concept. Christ is a divine,
self-conscious Being, the highest Initiate of the archangelic life-wave.
He is a representative of the Godhead: the "Word" which "was made flesh
and dwelt among us." (John 1:14) His incarnation in the body of
Jesus was totally unique in the history of the world. It enabled humanity
to overcome the Physical World, transmute the physical body, and
eventually conquer death itself.
Christ, Regent of the Earth
Christ's entrance into the Earth at the
time of the Crucifixion made Him the Regent of the Earth. This event was
the most important spiritual impulse in the evolution of our planet.
Previous to the coming of Christ, the Regent of the Moon, Jehovah, had
guided our planet from without. He took the spiritual solar forces and
reflected them indirectly to Earth, because mankind was not yet able to
withstand the direct spiritual rays from the Sun. He did so by giving
mankind tribal, national, and race religions, which include Buddhism,
Hinduism, Shintoism, Taoism, Confucianism, Zoroastrianism, and all other
Oriental religions. At the coming of the Christ, mankind was given the
first direct spiritual impulse from the Sun. Ever since, the Christ Spirit
incarnates into our planet at the Autumn Equinox each year, is "born" in
the center of the Earth at Christmas, and "dies" and is "resurrected" into
the higher worlds at Easter, bringing an increasingly stronger spiritual
impulse from the Sun, the Source of all life and light in our solar
system. Such all- important cosmic events are too important to be ignored
by any philosophy which claims to lead men to God.
Only through the solar forces brought
by the Christ can we hope to enter into the etherealized condition of the
Epoch to come. Even Eastern people, after passing through a stage of
materialism, eventually must take the next step in their spiritual
development and respond to the higher spiritual vibrations of the
Christ.
The concept of Oriental teachings
concerning the Christ is deficient. It is to be expected that the Mystery
Teaching of Christianity present a higher concept of the Christ than
teachings from Eastern sources.
Not only is there a serious discrepancy
between Eastern and Western approaches concerning the central impulse of
human development, but also the methods of spiritual attainment are quite
different.
The Wedding Garment
In the first place, the Western
Teaching stresses physical action as a method of spiritualizing the higher
bodies of the individual. Every action in harmony with the Christ impulse
causes growth in the spiritual bodies. For the Westerner, it is only
through orderly, systematic work for the Christ in the material world that
he builds what Christ called "the Wedding Garment" in one of his parables
(Matt. 22:11) or what Paul called "soma psuchicon" or "soul body."
Meditation, dietary changes, and chanting may sensitize Western bodies to
the spiritual worlds, but only work in materiality will cause the soul
body to grow. It is essential that the soul body be built if we are to
pass into the etherealized Epoch to come. Otherwise our future development
will be retarded and we will become stragglers in evolution.
Spiritual Exercises
In the second place, there are great
differences in the type of exercises given for spiritual development. It
is important that a distinction be made between the two approaches,
because the brain organization is different in Eastern and Western bodies.
The Eastern brain is especially adapted for metaphysical thought, because
the ethers of the etheric body are as yet loosely interwoven with the
physical body and are, therefore, passively receptive to spiritual
impacts. However, the lack of tight organization causes difficulty for the
individual Easterner in coping with and mastering the external world. On
the other hand, the Westerner has a brain organization well-suited for
work in the objective, material world. Because the ethers are closely
interwoven in the Westerner's brain, the Eastern methods of development
tend to derange the Westerner's faculties instead of spiritualizing
them.
Bodily positions which cause etheric
currents to course in specific directions may be detrimental to a
Westerner, but the most harmful discipline for a Westerner to undertake is
breathing exercises. Breathing exercises can cause severe reactions: from
susceptibility to infectious diseases in some, to insanity and even death
in others. Attempts to raise the spiritual spinal fire and open the sense
centers, or chakras, are difficult for Westerners and would have severely
deleterious results should they be accomplished without adequate
development of the spiritual bodies. The safest exercises for Westerners
are those given by the Mystery School relative to the Christian
religion.
Rebirth
Another major difference is the Western
and Eastern views of reincarnation, or rebirth. The Western students of
the Mysteries agree with their Eastern counterparts that human beings are
reborn from age to age in different bodies under varying circumstances.
The point of difference seems to be the purpose behind the fact of
rebirth. The goal in the East is to escape from the wheel of reincarnation
by reaching a state of Nirvana, or enlightenment. This state is attained
by withdrawal from the material world and dedication to the elimination of
desires and actions. The idea is that by refraining from every new cause,
there eventually will be no more future karma to pay off and, therefore,
no reason to return to physical existence. It is for this reason that the
Eastern aspirant adapts a passive and disinterested attitude toward
life.
The Western aspirant, in contrast, sees
material life as a school of experience which must be mastered if he is to
become a creator like his Heavenly Father. Christ said, "He that believeth
on me, the works that I do shall he do also; and greater works than these
shall he do.." (John 14:12). Rather than trying to be liberated
from the cycle of rebirth, the Western aspirant uses his sojourn in the
material world to the greatest spiritual advantage possible. Thus, he
builds the soul body and, in time, after having learned all the lessons
the material world has to offer, he becomes an Adept and rises above the
Law of Rebirth. However, even in that exalted state, he does not shirk his
duty to his younger brothers, but assumes a physical body with which to
serve them. Even the Christ "took upon himself the form of a servant and
was made in the likeness of man." (Phil. 2:7) Service in our
present environment is the shortest, safest, and most joyful road to
God.
Law of Cause and Effect
The Eastern philosophies emphasize the
fact of karma, that is, the Law of Cause and Effect. Each act we perform
generates causes which later come back to us. If we have committed evil in
past lives, we must "pay off" this evil in a later life by experiencing
evil ourselves. This is why Easterners lead lives of asceticism.
The Bible acknowledges this Law.
"Whatsoever a man soweth, so also shall he reap." (Gal. 6:7) The
Christ, however, fulfilled and superseded this Law with a new one: the Law
of Grace. The Law of Grace affirms that we do not have to suffer the
consequences of our former acts if we so repent of them that we would
never commit them again. We then come under grace through repentance and
are "forgiven for our sins." The forgiveness of sins, rather than the
painful and laborious expiation of them, is unique to Western
Teachings.
Master or Friend
Another great difference in the two
approaches is that the Mystery School for the Christian religion does not
have masters or gurus. The Western pupils have no master. The Christ said,
"Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his
friends. Henceforth I call you not servants; for the servant knoweth not
what his lord doeth: but I have called you friends; for all things that I
have heard of my Father I have made known unto you." (John
15:14,16) There is a tremendous difference between the position of a
servant and that of a friend. The servant without any question obeys the
commands of his master, as the Oriental pupil obeys the commands of his
guru. However, the word "friend" implies equality.
Developing Self-reliance
Rather than remain dependent on outside
sources, Western pupils must stand alone and rely on their own inner
forces. As a result, they develop self-reliance, independence, and
self-determination. If we are to become creators in our own right, we
cannot afford to lean on others. We must develop our own will-power, so
that we can apply it to help and heal others. Only someone who is strong
himself can hope to help others.
Both Eastern and Western spiritual
aspirants must confront the widespread growth of materialism, but the
Christian Mystery School teaches that Western methods are best for Western
people. Furthermore, it teaches that the Western approach eventually must
be embraced by the Easterner. In the book, The
Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception, Max Heindel states that esoteric
Christianity is destined to be the world- religion:
"Buddha, great, grand, and sublime, may
be the Light of Asia, but Christ will yet be acknowledged the Light of the
World. As the Sun outshines the brightest star in the heavens, dispels
every vestige of darkness and gives life and light to all beings, so, in a
not too distant future, will the true religion of Christ supersede and
obliterate all other religions to the eternal benefit of mankind."
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