The Practice of The Presence of God
The Practice of The Presence of God
The Practice of The Presence of God
LECTURES
by Geoffrey Hodson
Contents
THE student of the history of the nations of the world discovers, in the
course of his studies, that the phenomenon of supernormal cognition
appears frequently as an accompaniment of the psychological and
cultural development of each of the great races which has preceded our
own. The peoples of India have produced, throughout the long centuries
of their evolution, a large number of illuminated men who have given
priceless treasures of philosophy to the world; have handed on to their
peoples wisdom and knowledge which they had acquired as a result of
the development of their powers of interior cognition. Many names at
once leap into the mind in this connection, such as Vyasa, Manu, Shri
Shankarâchârya, Tsong Ka-Pa, Agastya, Patanjali, and the great spiritual
teachers Gautama Buddha and Shri Krishna.
The works of Plato, Plotinus, Iamblicus, Aristotle, Proclus and the great
Pythagoras are still monuments of wisdom and knowledge concerning
the eternal verities of life. Then came the greatest of teachers and
philosophers, who had yet spoken to western ears -Jesus of Nazareth -
Who drank deeply of the Wisdom of Egypt and of Greece. The time of
His illumination came at the stage in the drama of His life known as the
Baptism. He saw with unfailing vision the truths He taught; the inner
worlds were open to His extended vision and He taught that of which He
knew. His followers -the disciples of the New Testament and the saints of
more modern times- have followed in His steps; and although their vision
has been less far reaching, less clear than His, they too learned from Him
the way of self-illumination. So, down through the ages, there has been
an unbroken line of seers who have taught of the things they saw. In
modern days, although no mighty and outstanding figure -such as
Orpheus, Hermes, Christ or Buddha- has been generally recognized
among men, thousands have testified to the possession of a power of
vision which transcends the limitations of the physical plane. The
volumes of the Society for Psychical Research, both in their London and
American branches, are filled with instances of supernormal cognition. If
there be any who, in the face of the great mass of historical evidence,
ancient and modern, still doubt the existence of that seership of which
every man is heir, let him turn to those volumes and read there the
carefully collected evidence, the scientifically-tested cases of
clairvoyance, psychometry and second sight.
What has Theosophy to say upon the subject of the inner or psychic
faculties of man? A definite place is found for these faculties in the great
system of thought, which goes by the name of the ancient wisdom.
Precise information is available concerning them, and knowledge of the
laws, by which they may be developed and used, is available to those
who care to study for themselves.
"Psychic faculties exist in embryo in every man -as also in every animal-
and will one day be unfolded into their full and complete utmost
importance if the seer is to understand what he sees. For example,
clairvoyant vision of form and color, however beautiful and interesting it
may be, is useless unless the seer also has the power to interpret his
vision and to translate it into terms of physical, waking consciousness.
Indeed, the actual seeing of form and color and the hearing of sounds is
the least important part of seership. Special powers of comprehension
and interpretation are far more valuable, and it must be admitted that the
majority of clairvoyants, lacking this faculty, are in no way illumined by the
things they see.
"There are two organs in the brain by means of which this extended
vision is made possible. They are the pituitary body and the pineal gland.
The latter is considered by medical science to be the atrophied remains
of an organ which was active in the very early days of human evolution.
That view is accepted by occult science, which adds that both these
organs have also a function to fulfill in the future, when they will be
employed as means of superphysical cognition, and says that their
development may be hastened by the application of special methods.
When psychically developed and active they give the power first to
respond to additional physical wave lengths, and later, to superphysical
vibrations.
In addition to the two glands in the physical brain there are special
organs in the three vehicles [See "The Etheric Double", "The Astral
Body", "The Mental Body" by A. E. Powell] of the personality which are
essential to the development and use of psychic faculties.
These organs are called force centres or chakrams. For a detailed study
of them and the forces by which they are made to function, the reader is
referred to the illustrated monograph by C. W. Leadbeater upon the
subject. ["The Chakrams," by C. W. Leadbeater.] Chakram is a Sanscrit
word which means a wheel and is applied to the force centres in the
human bodies because they have the appearance of spinning vortices.
They are seven in number and are situated as follows:
Muladhara (sacral)
svadhisthana (spleen)
Manipura (navel)
Anahita (cardiac)
Vishuddha (throat)
The etheric centres which correspond to the pituitary and pineal glands
appear to etheric sight as small flames. A flow of prana passes round
these centres and out at the top of the head through an embryonic
etheric Brahmarandra chakram. The Ajna chakram, as yet unvivified, is
faintly visible as an etheric tube filled with a pith-like etheric matter. Prana
flows around and through it and is discharged through the undeveloped
chakram.
The same is also true of the throat centre. Before these chakrams can
consciously be employed as sense organs, the "serpent fire" or kundalini
[See "The Chakrams," by C. W. Leadbeater.] must be aroused and, by
flowing through the proper channels, accompanied by its appropriate
"vital airs," ida and pingala, must vivify the whole seven chakrams as it
passes from the base of the spine, where it is normally stored, to the top
of the head. On reaching the pituitary and pineal centres it polarizes them
into positive and negative conditions and vivifies them into a hyper-active
state in which they interact so closely that they become one centre which
forms the heart or core of the Brahmarandra chakram which is thus
evolved as a result.
If the head is examined after kundalini has been aroused, prana is still
seen to be flowing as before, but is now accompanied by the fiery power
of kundalini. The pituitary and pineal etheric centres are "alight" and a
continuous interaction or "sparking" is taking place between them. The
main stream of kundalini passes round and through them and out through
the now-awakened Brahmarandra chakram or "Thousand-petalled
Lotus," as it is called in the East. The Ajna chakram is now more plainly
visible, together with the etheric tube which is used for purposes of
magnification and television. Kundalini also plays through the throat and
Ajna chakrams and is discharged, together with a quantity of prang, into
the air.
Although it is not part of our subject we may perhaps glance with interest
at the seven major chakrams as they appear after kundalini has been
aroused.
The solar plexus chakram reaches almost to the periphery of the astral
body; it is the receiving station for all subconscious emotional vibrations,
which are conveyed by it to the physical nerve ganglion of the same
name. Premature arousing of the etheric and astral solar plexus is
productive of both physical and emotional disorders. Physically, the
digestion is interfered with, and emotionally the sufferer is prone to be
unduly affected by the feelings of others, he tends to reproduce them
within himself without the power of self-protection, also to suffer from the
incursion of astral entities and forces which in their turn produce
nightmares, sudden panics, and, amongst other disorders, the disease
known as "claustrophobia." [Irrational fear of enclosed places.] At the
present stage of evolution it is this chakram which is the most likely to
produce ill-health through distortion of its shape, or interference with its
proper function. Students are warned against all systems of psychic
development which advise meditation on or in this centre.
Slightly above the solar plexus we see the spleen centre with its opening
at the back and slightly to the left side of the body. Before vivification its
sole function is the absorption, "digestion," assimilation and distribution of
prana. It is the vital receiving and transmitting station of the body.
Lowered vitality and nervous debility can frequently be traced to a failure
in the functioning of this chakram. After "vivification" it gives the power to
travel outside the physical body.
The next above this is the heart chakram which, in the spiritual neophyte,
is one of the main channels through which flows the power of the
intuitional worlds. This is the Mystic Rose of occult literature, the petals of
which open only after the Christ-child has been born in the heart-or only
after powers of intuition, compassion and of love have been developed to
a certain degree and are finding an expression through physical life.
Meditation in this centre is quite safe and is indeed a valuable means of
developing and expressing the above qualities.
In the centre of the head we find that the etheric counterparts of the
pituitary and pineal glands have been combined into one glowing centre.
The force of kundalini flows through and round this centre and passes out
through the Brahmarandra chakram, which is in the region of the physical
anterior fontanelle. Rising from the pituitary body the Ajna chakram can
be seen with its opening between and slightly above the eyes. The
vivification of the Ajna chakram at the etheric and astral levels, gives the
power of clairvoyance. When the Brahmarandra is fully formed, the ego
possesses the power to withdraw from and return to the physical body at
will, without a break in consciousness occurring.
I have dealt fully with this subject in my forthcoming work "The Science of
Seership" (Rider 8c Co.) and in this booklet have quoted freely from that
volume. The interested reader is directed to the larger work for more
detailed information upon the various branches of the subject touched
upon in this book.
(Signed) G. Hodson.
The vital forces and the consciousness of minerals and plants may be
discovered and studied, so that remedies may be applied which are
exactly appropriate to the nature of the disease.
The life side of nature, the hidden energies behind the mineral, the plant,
the animal and man, the divine impetus which urges for ward the
evolution of the whole may be studied and understood.
The great principles by means of which all will, ultimately, reach that
standard of perfection, which the Great Architect and Master Scientist
has planned that they should reach, may be studied. The governing laws
may be observed and taught to all the intelligent denizens of the world
which He has made.
Let us examine the claims of the spiritualist, made in support of his belief
in the continuance of life and consciousness after death, and in the
possibility of communication between the living and the dead.
There are many facts which can be adduced in support of this somewhat
drastic statement. Two or three will be sufficient to indicate reasons for
the unreliability of spiritualistic methods as a guide to the truth in this
matter.
This brings me back to the method of the occultist, for whom nothing less
than such direct personal proof is conclusive. There is a great gulf fixed
between second-hand information and first-hand knowledge. The latter,
alone, is capable of withstanding all tests and remaining unshaken.
What then is the method of the occultist? Just as the fact of three-
dimensional existence can never be demonstrated to a two-dimensional
being, so discarnate life can never be demonstrated to a being in the
flesh. If, however, we postulate that the two-dimensional being possesses
a three-dimensional extension of himself, of the existence of which he is
entirely unaware; that he is really a three-dimensional being, but, at the
present stage of his evolution, is only using two-dimensional
consciousness, while his three-dimensional power lies dormant or latent;
then it will follow that, in his normal state, he cannot possibly comprehend
three-dimensional existence; he can only observe its two-dimensional
manifestations, and these are so imperfect and partial that no conclusive
evidence can possibly arise from a study of them. There will always be
the great unknown and unknowable behind, as it were. He may attempt
to study this unknown, through the known, may learn much of interest,
even of value, but nothing conclusive can ever emerge; the real facts can
never enter his two-dimensional mind.
In the end all lessons are learned, all powers unfolded, and all knowledge
gained. Here the outgoing ceases, for there is no longer need for
experience in the flesh. New fields of evolution open up before the
perfected man; higher peaks are then to be climbed, wider powers to be
attained. For these no earthly form is needed, for "him that overcometh
will I make a pillar in the temple of my God, and he shall go no more out."
(Rev. 3:12.)
Such, briefly stated, is the field open to each and all who will take the
necessary trouble to train and perfect themselves in the development of
their interior powers. One day, all men will possess them; all life will be
lived according to the dictates of the higher knowledge which they will
place within the hand of man-then, the interior and essential unity of all
life, will be observed facts-first-hand knowledge to all men. Faith will then
be founded upon first-hand experience and be no longer blind; the facts
of religion will become recognized as fundamental realities of life. Then,
and then alone, will mankind enter the Golden Age, which has been
promised him by those seers of the past and present whose prophetic
vision revealed the coming of the millennium to man.
THE MISTRESS OF VISION
XIX
I am bound therefor.
XX
Search no more -
XXI
I do faint therefor.
XXII
Hiddenly
O seek no more!
Francis Thompson.
THE CLAIRVOYANT STUDY OF MOTHERHOOD
IN ORDER that the ideas which I am about to put forward may be more
easily understood, I propose to present a brief statement of their place in
the fundamental philosophy upon which they are based. The purpose of
human existence in the flesh -according to this philosophy- is that of
growth. As a result of repeated incarnations in human form, the immortal
Spirit, which is Man, eventually attains to a standard of perfection which
has been set for him by that Major Intelligence of which he is at once a
projection and a part.
Such is the story of the prodigal son, who is man: such is the philosophic
basis for the ideas which I am about to expound. They are not put
forward in the least as dogmatic assertions, but rather as suggestions to
provoke thought and to provide a possible explanation of many things
which are difficult of comprehension without them. They represent the
age-old teachings of the Ancient Wisdom tested and examined by the
occult researches of an unbroken succession of investigators into
nature's hidden mysteries.
The faculty used in such researches is that known in modern days -as
clairvoyance. By "clairvoyance," I do not in the least wish to imply
conditions of mediumship, trance or any of the supposed phenomena
surrounding the spiritualistic concept of psychic powers. I refer to the
positively controlled seership which is latent in every man, and is
awakened in the few. This power is capable of being developed into that
sixth-or even seventh-sense which, one day, all humanity will possess
and which, by the application of certain principles, can be aroused in
advance of the time of its normal evolution. (I have written of this subject
in The Science of Seership and must refer the interested student to that
book for further elucidation of this engrossing subject.)
We may picture, then, the opening of the life cycle-at which point the ego
is making ready to plunge, once more, down into the material worlds, in
search of knowledge and of power. Hanging below him on a glowing
golden thread are his three permanent atoms, each quiescent during the
gestatory period, but now answering to the thrill of his life, as he turns his
attention outwards to the lower worlds.
Under that impulse each becomes a magnet, and draws towards itself
material appropriate to the type of vibrations which it is emitting. By this
means, as the months of prenatal life are passing, an agglomeration of
matter is gathered around the three permanent atoms and is gradually
organized into a vehicle of consciousness -one in each of the three lower
worlds. This attraction of material appears to be governed by
electromagnetic laws, and the result of it is that each vehicle is built of
matter which is exactly appropriate to the development and needs of the
man himself. It follows, therefore, that injustice is impossible, and the
bodies with which we are equipped represent absolute justice for each
one of us.
One of the most striking results which follow the awakening of the
clairvoyant faculty, is the discovery of the fact that the human race is not
the only order of intelligences using this planet and solar system as an
evolutionary field. In addition to the growing mineral, vegetable, animal
and human consciousness, there exist many other orders of beings
evolving side by side with the known occupants of our planet and
mingling, in varying degree, with them. One such race is that called -in
the East- by the name of Devas, which means Shining Ones -so called
because the bodies of its members are built of material which is self-
luminous. These "Shining Ones" are the angels of the Christian
Scriptures, and they constitute a parallel stream of evolution, existing
side by side with the stream to which we belong, and though normally
invisible, very closely associated with ourselves.
I have not time to dwell long on this subject, but would refer those
interested to my books: The Brotherhood of Angels and of Men and The
Angelic Hosts. For our present purpose it is sufficient to say that the body
used by both the human and the angelic races is apparently taken from
the same model; for angels appear with human forms, human faces; their
expression differs from our own, however, in that their countenances are
stamped with a superhuman beauty and "other-worldliness."
The etheric and physical bodies are built by a dual process: this is partly
automatic and partly the product of the semi-intelligent activity of a
number of subordinate workers called nature-spirits. These tiny beings,
who stand on the lower rungs of the angelic adder of evolution, fulfill the
office of builder in our worlds of form as constructed by them. The
methods by which they work are so interesting that it is worth while
describing them in some detail.
At the formation of the zygote or first cell, from which the foetus develops,
and the attachment of the permanent atom, a distinctive vibration is
emitted from that composite body. This vibration belongs to the order of
sound; though not physically audible it is occultly discernible, and is seen
to produce the following effects
3. The production of an etheric form which is the mould into which the
new body is to be built.
The foundation on which the body is built, as also the planet and solar
system, is not a foundation of solid matter, but of flowing electro-magnetic
energies. Just as man reaches the standard of perfection set for him by
association with and mastery of matter, so the angelic hosts reach their
goal by association with and manipulation of these flowing energies and
forces of the solar system. In the process which I have just previously
described, we see them at work. When the eighth month is reached, a
change begins to occur in the appearance of the emotion-deva ;
gradually the semblance of a bright blue cloak is to be seen covering his
head and shoulders as he assumes more and more the likeness of the
Madonna. The astral, etheric and physical bodies are held by him within
a tender and reverent embrace: the blue mantle rests upon the mother,
and to those who can see, a vision of wondrous beauty is revealed as
this change becomes more and more marked.
That day is drawing near, and the veil which hides these inner worlds
from our eyes is already growing thinner. A wonderful opportunity is now
being offered to us all to enter these worlds; so that we may be armed
with the wider knowledge which we shall gain from them and thus render
ourselves more useful in the service of our fellow men.
THE CLAIRVOYANT STUDY OF FAIRIES, NATURE SPIRITS
AND DEVAS
You may ask, on hearing this, whether I seriously believe that there is a
basis of fact behind the folk lore of all nations of the world concerning the
existence of invisible intelligences associated with nature. My reply is
most definitely in the affirmative; and I might well base it upon the fact of
the persistence and universality of these legends and myths of all
peoples of the earth, both ancient and modern, saying that wherever
there is a persistent legend there is always a basis of truth, and arguing
that legends, myths and folk lore form the most reliable history, when
once the key to their interpretation has been discovered and applied.
Or I might draw attention to the fact that large numbers of people have
had first-hand experience of these invisible intelligences of various orders
and degrees, their evidence forming a great body of individual testimony.
I do not, however, base my answer upon these alone, but upon actual
explorations of fairyland which I myself have attempted.
By what method may such explorations be made, and how may we test
the truth or otherwise of the testimony to which I have just referred? Only
by scientific methods of investigation, and until we have, each one of us,
fitted ourselves for, and carried out, such investigations, we surely had
best withhold our opinion upon the subject, and silence well becomes us.
Let us consider first how we may investigate the kingdom of faerie, study
the little folks of nature, enter their world and discover their appearance,
habits and methods of evolution. Why are they normally invisible?
Modern science immediately provides us with two possible answers to
that question; one, "Because their vibratory rate may differ so largely
from our own that we are unable to contact them"; two, "Because they
may be occupying another dimension of space; they may be living in a
fourth, fifth, sixth or even seventh dimension."
With regard to the first of these answers, we know that there are many
rates of vibration beyond the range of our normal physical senses, and
we are witnessing the gradual extension of that range by means of
scientific instruments. The invisible X-rays, N-rays, ultra-violet, infra-red
and cosmic rays have all been detected by means of mechanical
detectors, though, as yet, there have been no instruments devised which
have picked up the fairy wave-length.
How, then, can we become conscious of the invisible fairy rays? Though,
eventually, science may succeed in developing machines of such
delicacy and refinement as to enable the operator to contact worlds and
intelligences at present invisible to us, it is more reasonable, and more
immediately practical, to assume that man possesses within himself the
means of cognition necessary to the attainment of that result.
Man himself is far from being fully developed. We have no reason for
concluding that the present five senses mark the limit of his development
of means of cognition; there may be a sixth, seventh and still higher
senses latent within man, waiting to be developed.
I am aware that it is not easy for the practical, and still less so for the
scientific mind to acknowledge the findings of clairvoyants as worthy of
recognition. The subject is, unfortunately, surrounded by an atmosphere
which is repellant to the scientific mind. But I would draw attention to the
fact that there is a type of clairvoyance which does not demand darkness,
sitting in circles, mediumship or trance for its manifestation; that man
does possess a faculty which, if developed and used, is of the utmost
value in scientific investigation. It is with this faculty-and this faculty
alone-that reliable research into the invisible worlds can be made.
If we postulate that man himself is far more than the physical body, which
we know, and that he has extensions into an infinite number of
dimensions, then we can see that it would be possible for him gradually
to develop the power to manifest in an increasing number of dimensions
of space. At this point, the two answers would seem to meet; and we
have a definition of supernormal cognition which is that it enables its
observer to see and hear upon wave lengths beyond the normal rate, and
to function in dimensions of space in which man is not yet accustomed to
live.
What does the explorer find when he steps out of the third dimension into
the fourth? What does the receiving set within his brain convey to him
when he tunes in to the wave lengths of fairyland?
Most probably the first phenomenon which will become apparent to him is
that the numbers of the inhabitants of fairyland are infinitely greater than
those of our own physical earth. The air is seen to be filled with countless
millions of beauteous beings of varying stature, power and intelligence.
The earth, now transparent to the explorer's gaze, is a densely populated
world. Lake, pool, river, stream, ocean and cloud have their appropriate
inhabitants; while a slight change in the focus of consciousness shows
that all about him is a sensation of the presence of fire, of the roaring of
flames and the near approach of the spirits of the fire. Let us with the
mind of the explorer examine these four great races of superphysical
beings in some detail. Each race is at once seen to consist of a graded
order of intelligences, with very lowly-evolved creatures at the level of the
infusoria, insect, bird, at one end of the scale of their existence, and the
most glorious and splendid spiritual intelligences, far outshining man in
power, and knowledge, at the other.
Playing on the earth round his feet, passing in and out of the tree trunks,
roots and branches, will be seen tribes of little men, known in folk lore as
brownies, kobolds, elves and pixies, closely resembling the traditional
figures which those names denote. An air of business surrounds the
brownie men. For the most part, their work is an imitation of the activities
of such primitive men as they have been able to contact and observe.
They dig and delve and frequently carry in their belts tiny tools such as
shovels, picks, axes and pincers which they materialize by thought-
power, and which last as long as their attention is focused upon them.
Their intelligence is just about at the level of the chicken; they are
actuated by a group consciousness and communicate in gruff tones,
somewhat resembling the language of the country in which they live and
practically impossible to translate. The real communication, as with all
their brethren of fairyland, is by a system of thought-transference.
Deep down in the depths of the earth, huge etheric earth creatures are to
be found. These differ, in a striking way, from all their brethren, in that
they are not beautiful according to human standards. The gnome is the
most unattractive of all the nature-spirits; his body appears to be made of
some dark brown spongy substance, resembling peat; his limbs are loose
and disproportionately long; his feet end in a point and his arms have the
appearance of a closed fist. He is thin, his face is cadaverous, his eyes
are deep sunk and slanting and upon his face is a weird and somewhat
learing grin. He is generally unclothed and may be seen in open
moorland, mountainsides and sometimes on newly-ploughed fields,
floating or drifting with loosely-hanging limbs, just above the surface of
the ground. He varies in height, from six to eight inches up to twelve or
fifteen feet according to his evolutionary standing. There would seem to
be a principle that the stature of the nature spirit increases in proportion
to his evolutionary progress, the most highly evolved angels being of
colossal stature. A height of thirty feet is not uncommon in the higher
ranks of the angelic hosts.
If we follow the race of the spirits of the earth until we reach those
standing on the higher rungs of their ladder of life, we observe the angels
of woods, fields, mounds, hills, mountains and mountain-ranges and of
vast landscapes. These have grown out of the relative uncouthness of
the nature-spirit of earth and in their angelhood or individualized state are
beautiful in the extreme; they ensoul the district which they have adopted
or of which they have been put in charge, and they labor to quicken the
evolution of the form and the unfolding of the consciousness of all things
within the area of their influence.
The nature-spirits of the sea differ some what from their fresh-water
sisters, they are more active, more vital and less definitely feminine in
appearance and character. On the whole, they are somewhat less easy
to contact and communicate with. Far out at sea huge etheric monsters
are to be seen, and, on rare occasions, glimpses may be had of the old
sea gods riding on their strange shell-like chariots, and closely
resembling the classical figures of Neptune and his court.
The large rivers, such as the Thames, the Severn and the great
continental rivers, also have their gods, who may be seen rising and
descending above and below the surface of their river homes.
The clouds, too, are peopled by a race closely resembling the water
queens and the undines, though partaking also sometimes of the
appearance of the spirits of the air.
Let the explorer in thought leap outwards from the clouds, high into the
air, and he will instantly find himself surrounded by countless hosts of
sylphs or spirits of air. Marvellously dynamic creatures these, charged to
the full with the vitality of their elements. They may be seen flying,
floating, shooting, diving, combining in large companies to perform the
aerial gambols in which they engage as they swiftly sweep down "the
long savannahs of the blue," as Francis Thompson so beautifully called
the aerial fields of space.
These, too, are of many ranks, and if he descends once more to earth
and enters some fair garden full of flowers, he will find that every plant
has its fairy attendant -the fairy of the fairy tale- the winged maiden, the
lovely fairy queen.
If he watches, he will see the fairy hover near her charge and ever and
anon descend into the very heart of the plant or clump of flowers, lose
her fairy shape and become spread out as it were, as an essence
pervading every cell of stem, leaf, tendril and of flower. In this state she is
pouring her own life forces into those of the flower, quickening its growth
beautifying and, in some measure, guiding its form and giving an added
thrill of conscious existence to the life force which is evolving within. As
thus she labors, she herself evolves, and gradually is liberated from her
joyful service to the flowers and shares the freedom of the upper air with
her elder brethren, the sylphs.
In the higher ranks of the spirits of the air we find the mighty aerial lords,
the gods of power, the angels of sound, the gandharvase of the Hindu.
These mighty ones are the external embodiment of the power of the word
of God. In their world all life is expressed in terms of sound; every being,
every form, has its appropriate sound; every idea, every thought, gives
forth its song. This world may be thought of as the kingdom of music, a
universe of harmony, the veritable apotheosis of the power of sound.
From the aerial heights, let the explorer descend deep into the centre of
the earth, where he will find raging a mighty fire, a portion of the primal
flame which forms the planet's solar heart. Amid the flames, vast fire
spirits work -for this is the laboratory of the planet, and here labors the
chemist and the physicist aspect of God. Here dwells and works
unceasingly the power of the Holy Ghost.
Every fire on earth is a reflection of the solar fire which burns within the
centre of the planet, and is but a manifestation of the fire aspect of the
solar system life.
Fire spirits exist in many grades, from the salamander of the fire on the
hearth, through the larger fire spirits of the great conflagrations, the
burning prairies and forest lands and up to the mighty fiery sun itself
where dwell the solar fire lords. Between the lowest and the highest,
countless millions of fire spirits stand, ever laboring in the service of fire.
The function of their element is to regenerate, transform and renew, ever
to produce change; to resist and destroy stagnation and to ensure a
steady and continuous growth.
Such, briefly, are four of the great races of the denizens of fairyland
whom the explorer will meet. Variations in type and appearance occur in
different parts of the world. Each country and even departments in a
country has its typical nature-spirit and angelic life.
Outside these four races, many other orders may be found. In the Bible
we are taught of the nine orders of angels, and even these do not include
them all -for they are as numerous as the sands of the seashore.
At various epochs in the history of human life, the veil which hides them
from our sight grows thin and angels walk with men. There have been
periods in each of the great civilizations of the past when communication
and co-operation between angels and men have been employed for the
fulfilment of the divine plan and for the perfecting of the civilization
concerned.
Many seers and mystics believe that we are once more approaching
such an epoch; that even now the angels are standing on the threshold of
human life, waiting to enter in. Their beauty, their power, their splendor
and their knowledge are at the disposal of those who will prepare
themselves to work with them. There is no field of humanitarian endeavor
in which their co-operation may not usefully be attained. The healers of
men, the medical scientist, the priest, the physician and the nurse, may
learn to invoke their fiery and vital energy for the healing of the sick; may
call upon the great race of healing angels, under the Archangel Raphael,
who is their head, to descend into the sickrooms, nursing homes,
hospitals and asylums of men and to flood the sufferers with their vital
energy and fill them with their healing power and love.
The horticulturist and agriculturist may gain the aid of the nature-spirit
and angel builders of form upon our planet, and by conscious co-
operation, evolve new examples of floral beauty, may develop cereals,
vegetables and fruits more nutritious and life-giving, by the angels' aid.
And so through all the fields of human life, our angel brethren will help us
if we will. Co-operation between angels and men will be one of the
keynotes of the new race. The technique of that co-operation is not
difficult to acquire. A world of wonder, joy and beauty lies open to him
who cares to enter it through the gateway of combined service in the
fulfilment of the divine plan. Such, in part, is the vision which the explorer
into fairyland will bring back with him on his return to the haunts of men.