The problem of death, needless to say, is founded upon the
love of life which is the deepest instinct in human nature. The determination that nothing
is lost under divine law is a recognition of science; eternal persistence in some form or
another is universally held to be a truth. Out of the welter of theories, three major
solutions have been proposed; these are well known to all thinking people. They are:
- The
strictly materialistic solution, which posits the experience and expression of
conscious life as long as the physical, tangible form exists and persists, but also
teaches that after death and the subsequent disintegration of the body there is no longer
any conscious, functioning, self-identified person. The sense of the "I," the
awareness of a personality in contradistinction to all other personalities, vanishes with
the disappearance of the form; personality is believed to be only the sumtotal of the
consciousness of the cells in the body. This theory relegates man to the same state as any
of the other forms in the three other kingdoms in nature; [401] it is based on the non-sensitivity
of the average human being to life, withdrawn from a tangible vehicle; it ignores all
evidence to the contrary and says that because we cannot see (visually) and prove
(tangibly) the persistence of the "I" or the immortal entity after death, it is
non-existent. This theory is not held by so many as it was in earlier years, particularly
during the materialistic Victorian age.
- The
theory of conditional immortality. This theory is still held by certain fundamentalist
and theologically narrow schools of thought and also by a few of the intelligentsia,
primarily those of egoistic tendency. It posits that only those who reach a particular
stage of spiritual awareness, or who accept a peculiar set of theological pronouncements,
can receive the gift of personal immortality. The highly intellectual also argue at times
that the crowning gift to humanity is a developed and cultured mind, and that those who
possess this gift are likewise endowed with eternal persistence. One school dismisses
those who are what they regard as spiritually recalcitrant or negative to the imposition
of their particular theological certainties, either to complete annihilation as in the
materialistic solution, or to a process of eternal punishment, thus at the same time
arguing for a form of immortality. Owing to the innate kindness of the human heart, very
few are vindictive or unthinking enough to regard this presentation as acceptable, and of
course among those we must class the unthinking people who escape from mental
responsibility into a blind belief in theological pronouncements. The Christian
interpretation as given by the orthodox and the fundamentalist schools proves untenable
when submitted to clear reasoning; among the arguments which negate its accuracy lies the
fact that [402] Christianity posits a long future but no past; it is likewise a future
entirely dependent upon the activities of this present life episode and accounts in no way
for the distinctions and differences which distinguish humanity. It is only tenable upon
the theory of an anthropomorphic Deity Whose will - as it works out in practice - gives a
present that has no past but only a future; the injustice of this is widely recognized,
but the inscrutable will of God must not be questioned. Millions still hold this belief,
but it is not so strongly held as it was one hundred years ago.
- The
theory of reincarnation, so familiar to all my readers, is becoming increasingly
popular in the Occident; it has always been accepted (though with many foolish additions
and interpretations) in the Orient. This teaching has been as much distorted as have the
teachings of the Christ or the Buddha or Shri Krishna by their narrow-minded and mentally
limited theologians. The basic facts of a spiritual origin, of a descent into matter, of
an ascent through the medium of constant incarnations in form until those forms are
perfect expressions of the indwelling spiritual consciousness, and of a series of
initiations at the close of the cycle of incarnation, are being more readily accepted and
acknowledged than ever before.
Such are
the major solutions of the problems of immortality and of the persistence of the human
soul; they aim to answer the eternal questioning of the human heart as to Whence, Why,
Whither and Where? Only the last of these proposed solutions offers a truly rational reply
to all of them. Its acceptance has been delayed because, ever since the time of H. P.
Blavatsky, who formulated this ancient truth for the modern world in the last quarter
[403] of the nineteenth century, it has been so unintelligently presented; it has been
handicapped owing to the fact that the Eastern races have always held it, and - from the
Western angle - they are heathen and the heathen "in their blindness bow down to wood
and stone," to quote one of your fundamentalist hymns. How curious it is to realize
that, to the man from Eastern countries, the religious people in the West do likewise, and
can be seen on their knees before the Christian altars bearing statues of the Christ, of
the Virgin Mary and of the Apostles. |