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LUCIFER
TO THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY, GREETING!
[Lucifer,
Vol. I, No. 4, December, 1887, pp. 242-251] MY
LORD PRIMATE OF ALL ENGLAND,
We make use of an open letter to your Grace as a vehicle to convey to
you, and through you, to the clergy to their flocks, and to Christians
generally who regard us as the enemies of Christ a brief
statement of the position which Theosophy occupies in regard to Christianity,
as we believe that the time for making that statement has arrived.
Your Grace is no doubt aware that Theosophy is
not a religion, but a philosophy at once religious and scientific; and
that the chief work, so far, of the Theosophical Society has been to revive
in each religion its own animating spirit, by encouraging and help in
a enquiry into the true significance of its doctrines and observances.
Theosophists know, that the deeper one penetrates into the meaning of
the dogmas and ceremoniel of all religions, the greater becomes their
apparent underlying similarity, until finally a perception of their fundamental
unity is reached. This common ground is no other than Theosophy
the Secret Doctrine of the ages; which, diluted and disguised to suit
the capacity of the multittide, and the requirements of the time, has
formed the living kernel of all religions. The Theosophical Society has
branches respectively composed of Buddhists, Hindoos, Mohammedans, Parsees,
Christians and Freethinkers, who work together as brethren on the common
ground of Theosophy; and it is precisely because Theosophy is not a religion,
nor can for the multitude supply the place of a religion, that the success
of the Society has been so great, not merely as regards its growing membership
and extending influence, but also in respect to the performance of the
work it has undertaken the revival of spirituality in religion,
and the cultivation of the sentiment of BROTHERHOOD
among men.
We Theosophists believe that a religion is a
natural incident in the life of man in his present stage of development;
and that although, in rare cases, individuals may be born without the
religious sentiment, a community must have a religion, that is to say,
a uniting bond under penalty of social decay and material annihilation.
We believe that no religious doctrine can be more than an attempt to picture
to our present limited understandings, in the terms of our terrestrial
experiences, great cosmical and spiritual truths, which in our normal
state of consciousness we vaguely sense, rather than actually perceive
and comprehend; and a revelation, if it is to reveal anything, must necessarily
conform to the same earthbound requirements of the human intellect. In
our estimation, therefore, no religion can be absolutely true, and none
can be absolutely false. A religion is true in. proportion as it supplies
the spiritual, moral and intellectual needs of the time, and helps the
development of mankind in these respects. It is false in proportion as
it hinders that development, and offends the spiritual, moral and intellectual
portion of man's nature. And the transcendentally spiritual ideas of the
ruling powers of the Universe entertained by an Oriental sage would be
as false a religion for the African savage as the grovelling fetishism
of the latter would be for the sage, although both views must necessarily
be true in degree, for both represent the highest ideas attainable by
the respective individuals of the same cosmico-spiritual facts, which
can never be known in their reality by man while he remains but man.
Theosophists, therefore, are respecters of all
the religions, and for the religious ethics of Jesus they have profound
admiration. It could not be otherwise, for these teachings which have
come down to us are the same as those of Theosophy. So far, therefore,
as modern Christianity makes good its claim to be the practical
religion taught by Jesus, Theosophists are with it heart and hand. So
far as it goes contrary to those ethics pure and simple, Theosophists
are its opponents. Any Christian can, if he will, compare the Sermon on
the Mount with the dogmas of his church, and the spirit that breathes
in it, with the principles that animate this Christian civilisation and
govern his own life; and then he will be able to judge for himself how
far the religion of Jesus enters into his Christianity, and how far, therefore,
he and Theosophists are agreed. But professing Christians, especially
the clergy, shrink from making this comparison. Like merchants who fear
to find themselves bankrupt, they seem to dread the discovery of a discrepancy
in their accounts which could not be made good by placing material assets
as a set-off to spiritual liabilities. The comparison between the teachings
of Jesus and the doctrines of the churches has, however frequently been
made and often with great learning and critical acumen both
by those who would abolish Christianity and those who would reform it;
and the aggregate result of these comparisons, as your Grace must be well
aware, goes to prove that in almost every point the doctrines of the churches
and the practices of Christians are in direct opposition to the teachings
of Jesus.
We are accustomed to say to the Buddhist, the
Mohammedan, the Hindoo, or the Parsee: The road to Theosophy lies,
for you, through your own religion." We say this because those creeds
possess a deeply philosophical and esoteric meaning, explanatory of the
allegories under which they are presented to the people; but we cannot
say the same thing to Christians. The successors of the Apostles never
recorded the secret doctrine of Jesus the "mysteries
of the kingdom of heaven" which it was given to them (his
apostles) alone to know. [Mark, iv, 11; Matthew,
xiii, 11; Luke, viii, 10.] These have been suppressed, made
away with, destroyed. What have come down upon the stream of time are
the maxims, the parables, the allegories and the fables which Jesus expressly
intended for the spiritually deaf and blind to be revealed later to the
world, and which modern Christianity either takes all literally, or interprets
according to the fancies of the Fathers of the secular church. In both
cases they are like cut flowers: they are severed from the plant on which
they grew, and from the root whence that plant drew its life. Were we,
therefore, to encourage Christians, as we do the votaries of other creeds,
to study their own religion for themselves, the consequence would be,
not a knowledge of the meaning of its mysteries, but either the revival
of mediaeval superstition and intolerance, accompanied by a formidable
outbreak of mere lip-prayer and preaching such as resulted in the
formation of the 239 Protestant sects of England alone or else
a great increase of scepticism, for Christianity has no esoteric foundation
known to those who profess it. For even you, my Lord Primate of England,
must be painfully aware that you know absolutely no more of those "mysteries
of the kingdom of heaven" which Jesus taught his disciples, than
does the humblest and most illiterate member of your church.
It is easily understood, therefore, that Theosophists
have nothing to say against the policy of the Roman Catholic Church in
forbidding, or of the Protestant churches in discouraging, any such private
enquiry into the meaning of the "Christian" dogmas as would
correspond to the esoteric study of other religions. With their present
ideas and knowledge, professing Christians are not prepared to undertake
a critical examination of their faith, with a promise of good results.
Its inevitable effect would be to paralyze rather than stimulate their
dormant religious sentiments; for biblical criticism and comparative mythology
have proved conclusively to those, at least, who have no vested
interests, spiritual or temporal, in the maintenance of orthodoxy
that the Christian religion, as it now exists, is composed of the husks
of Judaism, the shreds of paganism, and the ill-digested remains of gnosticism
and neo-platonism. This curious conglomerate which gradually formed itself
round the recorded sayings (----) of Jesus, has, efter the lapse of ages,
now begun to disintegrate, and to crumble away from the pure and precious
gems of Theosophic truth which it has so long overlain and hidden, but
could neither disfigure nor destroy. Theosophy not only rescues these
precious gems from the fate that threatens the rubbish in which they have
been so long embedded, but saves that rubbish itself from utter condemnation;
for it shows that the result of biblical criticism is far from being the
ultimate analysis of Christianity, as each of the pieces which compose
the curious mosaics of the Churches once belonged to a religion which
had an esoteric meaning. It is only when these pieces are restored to
the places they originally occupied that their hidden significance can
be perceived, and the real meaning of the dogmas of Christianity understood.
To do all this, however, requires a knowledge of the Secret Doctrine as
it exists in the esoteric foundation of other religions; and this knowledge
is not in the hands of the Clergy, for the Church has hidden, and since
lost, the keys.
Your Grace will now understand why it is that
the Theosophical Society has taken for one of its three "objects
" the study of those Eastern religions and philosophies, which shed
such a flood of light upon the inner meaning of Christianity; and you
will, we hope, also perceive that in so doing, we are acting not as the
enemies, but as the friends of the religion taught by Jesus of
true Christianity, in fact. For it is only through the study of those
religions and philosophies that Christians can ever arrive at an understanding
of their own beliefs, or see the hidden meaning of the parables and allegories
which the Nazarene told to the spiritual cripples of Judea, and by taking
which, either as matters of fact or as matters of fansy, the Churches
have brought the teachings themselves into ridicule and contempt, and
Christianity into serious danger of complete collapse, undermined as it
is by historical criticism and mythological research, besides being broken
by the sledge-hammer of modern science.
Ought Theosophists themselves, then, to be regarded
by Christians as their enemies, because they believe that orthodox Christianity
is, on the whole, opposed to the religion of Jesus; and because they have
the courage to tell the Churches that they are traitors to the MASTER
they profess to revere and serve? Far from it, indeed. Theosophists know
that the same spirit that animated the words of Jesus lies latent in the
hearts of Christians, as it does naturally in all men's hearts. Their
fundamental tenet is the Brotherhood of Man, the ultimate realisation
of which is alone made possible by that which was known long before the
days of Jesus as "the Christ spirit." This spirit is even now
potentially present in all men, and it will be developed into activity
when human beings are no longer prevented from understanding, appreciating
and sympathising with one another by the barriers of strife and hatred
erected by priests and princes. We know that Christians in their lives
frequently rise above the level of their Christianity. All Churches contain
many noble, self-sacrificing, and virtuous men and women, eager to do
good in their generation according to their fights and opportunities,
and full of aspirations to higher things than those of earth followers
of Jesus in spite of their Christianity. For such as these Theosophists
feel the deepest sympathy; for only a Theosophist, or else a person of
your Grace's delicate sensibility and great theological learning, can
justly appreciate the tremendous difficulties with which the tender plant
of natural piety has to contend, as it forces its root into the uncongenial
soil of our Christian civilization, and fries to blossom in the cold and
arid atmosphere of theology. How hard, for instance, must it not be to
"love" such a God a that depicted in a well-known passage by
Herbert Spencer:
The cruelty of a Fijian god who, represented as devouring
the souls of the dead, may be supposed to inflict torture during the
process, is small compared with the cruelty of a god who condemns men
to tortures which are eternal
.. The visiting on Adam's descendents
through hundreds of generations dreadful penalties for a small transgression
which they did not commit; the damning of all men who do not avail themselves
of an alleged mode of obtaining forgiveness, which most men have never
heard of; and the effecting a reconciliation by sacrificing a son who
was perfectly innocent, to satisfy the assumed necessity for a propitiatory
victim; are modes of action which, ascribed to a human ruler, would
call forth expressions of abhorrence. . . ["Religion:
A Retrospect and Prospect," in the Nineteenth Century Vol.
XV, No. 83, January 1884.]
Your Grace will say, no doubt, that Jesus never taught the worship of
such a god as that. Even so say we Theosophists. Yet that is the very
god whose worship is officially conducted in Canterbury Cathedral, by
you, my Lord Primate of England; and your Grace will surely agree with
us that there must indeed be a divine spark of religious intuition in
the hearts of men, that enable them to resist so well as they do, the
deadly action of such poisonous theology.
If your Grace, from your high pinnacle, will
cast your eyes around, you will behold a Christian civilization in which
a frantic and merciless battle of man against man is not only the distinguishing
feature, but the acknowledged principle. It is an accepted scientific
and economic axiom to-day, that all progress is achieved through the struggle
for existence and the survival of the fittest; and the fittest to survive
in this Christian civilization are not those who are possessed of the
qualities that are recognised by the morality of every age to be the best
not the generous, the pious, the noble-hearted, the forgiving,
the humble, the truthful, the honest, and the kind but those who
are strongest in selfishness, in craft, in hypocrisy, in brute force,
in false pretence, in unscrupulousness, in cruelty, and in avarice. The
spiritual and the altruistic are "the weak," whom the "laws"
that govern the universe give as food to the egoistic and material
"the strong." That "might is right" is the only legitimate
conclusion, the last word of the l9th century ethics, for the world has
become one huge battlefield, on which "the fittest" descend
like vultures to teer out the eyes and the hearts of those who have fallen
in the fight. Does religion put a stop to the battle? Do the churches
drive away the vultures, or comfort the wounded and the dying? Religion
does not weigh a feather in the world at large to-day, when worldly
advantage and selfish pleasures are put in the other scale; and the churches
are powerless to revivify the religious sentiment among men, because their
ideas, their knowledge, their methods, and their arguments are those of
the Dark Ages. My Lord Primate, your Christianity is five hundred years
behind the times.
So long as men disputed whether this god or that
god was the true one, or whether the soul went to this place or that one
after death, you, the clergy, understood the question, and had arguments
at hand to influence opinion by syllogism or torture, as the case
might require; but now it is the existence of any such being as God, at
all, or of any kind of immortal spirit, that is questioned or denied.
Science invents new theories of the Universe which contemptuously ignore
the existence of any god; moralists establish theories of ethics and social
life in which the non-existence of a future life is taken for granted;
in physics, in psychology, in law, in medicine, the one thing needful
in order to entitle any teacher to a hearing is that no reference whatever
should be contained in his ideas either to a Providence, or to a soul.
The world is being rapidly brotight to the conviction that god is a mythical
conception, which has no foundation in fact, or place in Nature; and that
the immortal part of man is the silly dream of ignorant savages, perpetuated
by the lies and tricks of priests, who reap a harvess by cultivating the
fears of men that their mythical God will torture their imaginary souls
to all eternity, in a fabulous Hell. In the face of all these tinings
the clergy stand in this age dumb and powerless. The only answer which
the Church knew how to make to such "objections " as these,
were the rack and the faggot; and she cannot use that system of
logic now.
It is plain that if the God and the soul taught
by the churches be imaginary entities, then the Christian salvation and
damnation are mere delusions of the mind, produced by the hypnotic process
of assertion and suggestion on a magnificent scale, acting cumulatively
on generations of mild "hysteriacs." What answer have you to
such a theory of the Christian religion, except a repetition of assertions
and suggestions ? What ways have you of bringing men back to their old
beliefs but by reviving their old habits? "Build more churches, say
more prayers, establish more missions, and your faith in damnation and
salvation will be revived, and a renewed belief in God and the soul will
be the necessary result." That is the policy of the churches, and
their only answer to agnosticism and materialism. But your Grace must
know that to meet the attacks of modern science and criticism with such
weapons as assertion and habit, is 1ike going forth against magazine guns,
armed with boomerangs and leather shields. While, however, the progress
of ideas and the increase of knowledge are undermining the popular theology,
every discovery of science, every new conception of European advanced
thought, brings the l9th century mind nearer to the ideas of the Divine
and the Spiritual, known to all esoteric religions and to Theosophy.
The Church claims that Christianity is the only
true religion, and this claim involves two distinct propositions namely,
that Christianity is true religion, and that there is no true religion
except Christianity. It never seems to strike Christians that God and
Spirit could possibly exist in any other form than that under which they
are presented in the doctrines of their church. The savage calls the missionary
an Atheist, because he does not carry an idol in his trunk; and the missionary,
in his turn calls everyone an Atheist who does not carry about a fetish
in his mind; and neither savage nor Christian ever seem to suspect that
there may be a higher idea than their own of the great hidden power that
governs the Universe, to which the name of "God" is much more
applicable. It is doubtful whether the churches take more pains to prove
Christianity "true," or to prove that any other kind of religion
is necessarily "false"; and the evil consequences of this, their
teaching, are terrible. When people discard dogma they fancy that they
have discarded the religious sentiment also, and they conclude that religion
is a superfluity in human life a rendering to the clouds of things
that belong to earth, a waste of energy which could be more profitably
expended in the struggle for existence. The materialism of this age is,
therefore, the direct consequence of the Christian doctrine that there
is no ruling power in the Universe, and no immortal Spirit in man except
those made known in Christian dogmas. The Atheist, my Lord Primate, is
the bastard son of the Church.
But this is not all. The churches have never
taught men any other or higher reason why they should be just and kind
and true than the hope of reward and the fear of punishment, and when
they let go their belief in Divine caprice and Divine injustice the foundations
of their morality are sapped. They have not even natural morality to consciously
fall back upon, for Christianity has taught them to regard it as worthless
on account of the natural depravity of man. Therefore self-interest becomes
the only motive for conduct, and the fear of being found out, the only
deterrent from vice. And so, with regard to morality as well as to God
and the soul, Christianity pushes men off the path that leads to knowledge,
and precipitates them into the abyss of incredulity, pessimism and vice.
The last place where men would now look for help from the evils and miseries
of life is the Church because they know that the building of churches
and the repeating of litanies influence neither the powers of Nature nor
the councils of nations; because they instinctively feel that when the
churches accepted the principle of expediency they lost their power to
move the hearts of men, and can now only act on the external plane, as
the supporters of the policeman and the politician.
The function of religion is to comfort and encourage
humanity in its life-long struggle with sin and sorrow. This it can do
only by presenting mankind with noble ideals of a happier existence efter
death, and of a worthier life on earth, to be won in both cases by conscious
effort. What the world now wants is a Church that will tell it of Deity,
or the immortal principle in man, which will be at least on a level with
the ideas and knowledge of the times. Dogmatic Christianity is not suited
for a world that reasons and thinks, and only those who can throw themselves
into a mediaeval state of mind, can appreciate a Church whose religious
(as distinguished from its social and political) function is to keep God
in good humour while the laity are doing what they believe he does not
approve; to pray for charges of weather, and occasionally, to thank the
Almighty for helping to slaughter the enemy. It is not "medicine
men," but spiritual guides that the world looks for today
a "clergy" that will give it ideals as suited to the intellect
of this century, as the Christian Heaven and Hell, God and the Devil,
were to the ages of dark ignorance and superstition. Do, or can, the Christian
clergy fulfil this requirement? The misery, the crime, the vice, the selfishness,
the brutality, the lack of self-respect and self-control, that mark our
modern civilization, unite their voices in one tremendous cry, and answer
NO!
What is the meaning of the reaction against materialism,
the signs of which fill the air today? It means that the world has become
mortally sick of the dogmatism, the arrogance, the self-sufficiency, and
the spiritual blindness of modern science of that same Modern Science
which men but yesterday hailed as their deliverer from religious bigotry
and Christian superstititon, but which, like the Devil of the monkish
legends, requires, as the price of its services, the sacrifice of man's
immortal soul. And meanwhile, what are the Churches doing? The Churches
are sleeping the sweet sleep of endowments, of social and poitical influence,
while the world, the flesh, and the devil, are appropriating their watchwords,
their miracles, their arguments, and their blind faith. The Spiritualists
oh! Churches of Christ have stolen the fire from your altars
to illumine their seance rooms; the Salvationists have taken your sacramental
wine, and make themselves spiritually drunk in the streets; the Infidel
has stolen the weapons with which you vanquished him once, and triumphantly
tells you that "What you advance, has been frequently said before."
Had ever clergy so splendid an opportunity? The grapes in the vineyard
are ripe, needing only the right labourers to gather them. Were you to
give to the world some proof, on the level of the present intellectual
standard of probability, that Deity the immortal Spirit in man
have a real existence as facts in Nature, would not men hail you
as their saviour from pessimism and despair, from the maddening and brutalizing
thought that there is no other destiny for man but an eternal blank, after
a few short years of bitter toil and sorrow? aye; as their saviours
from the panic-stricken fight for material enjoyment and worldly advancement,
which is the direct consequence of believing this mortal life to be the
be-all and end-all of existence?
But the Churches have neither the knowledge nor
the faith needed to save the world, and perhaps your Church, my Lord Primate,
least of all, with the mill-stone of £ 8,000,000 a year hung round
its neck. In vain you try to lighten the ship by casting overboard the
ballast of doctrines which your forefathers deemed vital to Christianity.
What more can your Church do now, than run before the gale with bare poles,
while the clergy feebly endeavour to putty up the gaping leaks with the
"revised version," and by their social and political deadweight
try to prevent the ship from capsizing, and its cargo of dogmas and endowments
from going to the bottom?
Who built Canterbury Cathedral, my Lord Primate?
Who invented and gave life to the great ecclesiastical organisation which
makes an Archbishop of Canterbury possible? Who laid the foundation of
the vast system of religious taxation which gives you £ 15,000 a
year and a palace? Who instituted the forms and ceremoniel, the prayers
and litanies, which, slightly altered and stripped of art and ornament,
make the liturgy of the Church of England? Who wrested from the people
the proud titles of reverend divine" and "Man of God"
which the clergy of your Church so confidently assume? Who, indeed, but
the Church of Rome! We speak in no spirit of enmity. Theosophy has seen
the rise and fall of many faiths, and will be present at the birth and
death of many more. We know that the lives of religions are subject to
law. Whether you inherited legitimately from the Church of Rome, or obtained
by violence, we leave you to settle with your enemies and with your conscience;
for mental attitude towards your Church is determined by its intrinsic
worthiness. We know that if it be unable to fulfil the true spiritual
function of a religion, it will surely be swept away, even though the
fault lie rather in its hereditary tendencies, or in its environments,
than in itself.
The Church of England, to use a homely simile,
is like a train running by the momentum it acquired before steam was shut
off. When it left the main track, it got upon a siding that leads nowhere.
The train has nearly come to a standstill, and many of the passengers
have left it for other conveyances. Those that remain are for the most
part aware that they have been depending all along upon what 1ittle steam
was left in the boiler when the fires of Rome were withdrawn from under
it They suspect that they may be only playing at train now; but the engineer
keeps blowing his whistle and the guard goes round to examine the tickets,
and the breaksmen rattle th eir breaks, and it is not such bad fun after
all. For the carriages are warm and comfortable and the day is cold, and
so long as they are tipped all the company's servants are very obliging.
But those who know where they want to go, are not so contented.
For several centuries the Church of England has
performed the difficult feat of blowing hot and cold in two directions
at once saying to the Roman Catholics Reason! and to
the sceptics Believe! It was by adjusting the force of its
two-faced blowing that it has managed to keep itself so long from falling
off the fence. But now the fence itself is giving way. Disendowment and
disestablishment are in the air. And what does your Church urge in its
own behalf? Its usefulness. It is useful to have a number of educated,
moral, unworldly men, scattered all over the country, who prevent the
world from utterly forgetting the name of religion, and who act as centres
of benevolent work. But the question now is no longer one of repeating
prayers, and giving alms to the poor, as it was five hundred years ego.
The people have come of age, and have taken their thinking and the direction
of their social, private and even spiritual affairs into their own hands,
for they have found out that their clergy know no more about "things
of Heaven than they do themselves.
But the Church of England, it is said, has become
so liberal that all ought to support it. Truly, one can go to an excellent
imitation of the mass, or sit under a virtual Unitarian, and still be
within its fold. This beautiful tolerance, however, only means that the
Church has found it necessary to make itself an open common, where every
one can put up his own booth, and give his special performance if he will
only join in the defence of the endowments. Tolerance and liberality are
contrary to the laws of the existence of any church that believes in divine
damnation, and their appearance in the Church of England is not a sign
of renewed life, but of approaching disintegration. No less deceptive
is the energy evinced by the Church in the building of churches. If this
were a measure of religion what a pious age this would be! Never was dogma
so well housed before, though human beings may have to sleep by thousands
in the streets, and to literally starve in the shadow of our majestic
cathedrals, built in the name of Him who had not where to lay His head.
But did Jesus tell you, your Grace, that religion lay not in the hearts
of men, but in temples made with hands? You cannot convert your piety
into stone and use it in your lives; and history shows that petrifaction
of the religious sentiment is as deadly a disease as ossification of the
heart. Were churches, however, multiplied a hundred fold, and were every
clergyman to become a centre of philanthropy, it would only be substituting
the work that the poor require from their fellow men but not from their
spiritual teachers, for that which they ask and cannot obtain. It would
but bring into greater relief the spiritual barrenness of the doctrines
of the Church.
The time is approaching when the clergy will
be called upon to render an account of their stewardship. Are you prepared,
my Lord Primate, to explain to YOUR MASTER why you
have given His children stones, when they cried to you for bread? You
smile in your fancied security. The servants have kept high carnival so
long in the inner chambers of the Lord's house, that they think He will
surely never return. But He told you He would come as a thief in the night;
and lo! He is coming already in the hearts of men. He is coming to take
possession of His Father's kingdom there, where alone His kingdom is.
But you know Him not! Were the Churches themselves not carried away in
the flood of negation and materialism which has engulfed Society, they
would recognise the quickly growing germ of the Christ-spirit in the hearts
of thousands, whom they now brand as infidels and madmen. They would recognise
there the same spirit of love, of self-sacrifice, of immense pity for
the ignorance, the folly, and the sufferings of the world, which appeared
in its purity in the heart of Jesus, as it had appeared in the hearts
of other Holy Reformers in other ages; and which is the fight of all true
religion, and the lamp by which the Theosophists of all times have
endeavoured to guide their steps along the narrow path that leads to salvation
the path which is trodden by every incarnation of CHRISTOS
or the SPIRIT OF TRUTH.
And now, my Lord Primate, we have very respectfully
laid before you the principal points of difference and disagreement between
Theosophy and the Christian Churches, and told you of the oneness of Theosophy
and: the teachings of Jesus. You have heard our profession of faith, and
learned the grievances and plaints which we lay at the door of dogmatic
Christianity. We, a handful of humble individuals, possessed of neither
riches nor worldly influence, but strong in our knowledge, have united
in the hope of doing the work which you say that your MASTER
has allotted to you, but which is so sadly neglected by that wealthy and
domineering colossus the Christian Church. Will you call this presumption,
we wonder? Will you, in this land of free opinion, free speech, and free
effort, venture to accord us no other recognition than the usual anathema,
which the Church keeps in store for the reformer? Or may we hope that
the bitter reasons of experience, which that policy has afforded the Churches
in the past, will have altered the hearts and cleared the understandings
of her rulers; and that the coming year, 1888, will witness the stretching
out to us of the hand of Christians in fellowship and goodwill? This would
only be a just recognition that the comparatively small body called the
Theosophical Society is no pioneer of the Anti-Christ, no brood of the
Evil one, but the practical helper, perchance the saviour, of Christianity,
and that it is only endeavouring to do the work that Jesus, like Buddha,
and the other "sons of God" who preceded him, has commanded
all his followers to underlake, but which the Churches, having become
dogmatic, are entirely unable to accomplish.
And now, if your Grace can prove that we do injustice
to the Church of which you are the Head, or to popular Theology, we promise
to acknowledge our error publicely. But SILENCE
GIVES CONSENT.
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