Unless we deny the immortality of man and the existence of soul, there
are no sound arguments against the doctrine of preexistence and rebirth save
such as rest on the dictum of the church that each soul is a new creation. This
dictum can be supported only by blind dogmatism, for given a soul we must
sooner or later arrive at the theory of rebirth, because even if each soul is
new on this earth it must keep on living somewhere after passing away, and in
view of the known order of nature will have other bodies in other planets or
spheres.
Theosophy applies to the self — the thinker — the same laws which are
seen everywhere in operation throughout nature, and those are all varieties of
the great law that effects follow causes and no effect is without a cause.
The soul's immortality — believed in by the mass of humanity — demands
embodiment here or elsewhere, and to be embodied means reincarnation. If we
come to this earth for but a few years and then go to some other, the soul must
be reimbodied there as well as here, and if we have travelled from some other
world we must have had there too our proper vesture.
The powers of mind and the laws governing its motion, its attachment,
and its detachment as given in theosophical philosophy show that its
reimbodiment must be here, where it moved and worked, until such time as the
mind is able to overcome the forces which chain it to this globe. To permit the
involved entity to transfer itself to another scene of action before it had
overcome all the causes drawing it here and without its having worked out its
responsibilities to other entities in the same stream of evolution would be
unjust and contrary to the powerful occult laws and forces which continually
operate upon it.
The early Christian Fathers saw this, and taught that the soul had
fallen into matter and was obliged by the law of its nature to toil upward
again to the place from which it came. They used an old Greek hymn which ran:
Eternal Mind, thy seedling spark,
Through this thin vase of clay,
Athwart the waves of chaos dark
Emits a timorous ray.
This mind enfolding soul is sown,
Incarnate germ in earth:
In pity, blessed Lord, then own
What claims in Thee its birth.
Far forth from Thee, thou central fire,
To earth's sad bondage cast,
Let not the trembling spark expire;
Absorb thine own at last!
Through this thin vase of clay,
Athwart the waves of chaos dark
Emits a timorous ray.
This mind enfolding soul is sown,
Incarnate germ in earth:
In pity, blessed Lord, then own
What claims in Thee its birth.
Far forth from Thee, thou central fire,
To earth's sad bondage cast,
Let not the trembling spark expire;
Absorb thine own at last!
The personality of each human
Each human being has a definite character different from every other
human being, and masses of beings aggregated into nations show as wholes that
the national force and distinguishing peculiarities go to make up a definite and
separate national character.
These differences, both individual and national, are due to essential
character and not to education. Even the doctrine of the survival of the
fittest should show this, for the fitness can not come from nothing but must at
last show itself from the coming to the surface of the actual inner character.
And as both individuals and nations among those who are ahead in the struggle
with nature exhibit an immense force in their character, we must find a place
and time where the force was evolved.
These, Theosophy says, are this earth and the whole period during which
the human race has been on the planet.
So, then, while heredity has something to do with the difference in
character as to force and morale, swaying the soul and mind a little and
furnishing also the appropriate place for receiving reward and punishment, it
is not the cause for the essential nature shown by every one. But all these
differences, such as those shown by babes from birth, by adults as character
comes forth more and more, and by nations in their history, are due to long
experience gained during many lives on earth, are the outcome of the soul's own
evolution.
A survey of one short human life gives no ground for the production of
his inner nature. It is needful that each soul should have all possible
experience, and one life cannot give this even under the best conditions. It
would be folly for the Almighty to put us here for such a short time, only to
remove us just when we had begun to see the object of life and the
possibilities in it.
The mere selfish desire of a person to escape the trials and discipline
of life is not enough to set nature's laws aside, so the soul must be reborn
until it has ceased to set in motion the cause of rebirth, after having
developed character up to its possible limit as indicated by all the varieties
of human nature, when every experience has been passed through, and not until
all of truth that can be known has been acquired.
The vast disparity among men in respect to capacity compels us, if we
wish to ascribe justice to Nature or to God, to admit reincarnation and to
trace the origin of the disparity back to the past lives of the Ego. For people
are as much hindered and handicapped, abused and made the victims of seeming
injustice because of limited capacity, as they are by reason of circumstances
of birth or education.
We see the uneducated rising above circumstances of family and training,
and often those born in good families have very small capacity; but the
troubles of nations and families arise from want of capacity more than from any
other cause. And if we consider savage races only, there the seeming injustice
is enormous. For many savages have good actual brain capacity but still are
savage.
This is because the Ego in that body is still savage and undeveloped,
for in contrast to the savage there are many civilized men with small actual
brain force who are not savage in nature because the indwelling Ego has had
long experience in civilization during other lives, and being a more developed
soul has power to use the brain instrument to its highest limit.
Each man feels and knows that he has an individuality of his own, a
personal identity which bridges over not only the gaps made by sleep but also
those sometimes supervening on temporary lesions in the brain. This identity
never breaks from beginning to end of life in the normal person, and only the
persistence and eternal character of the soul will account for it.
So, ever since we began to remember, we know that our personal identity
has not failed us, no matter how bad may be our memory. This disposes of the
argument that identity depends on recollection, for the reason that if it did
depend alone on recollection we should each day have to begin over again, as we
cannot remember the events of the past in detail, and some minds remember but
little yet feel their personal identity. And as it is often seen that some who
remember the least insist as strongly as the others on their personal identity,
that persistence of feeling must come from the old and immortal soul.
One life
is not enough
Viewing life and its probable object, with all the varied experience
possible for man, one must be forced to the conclusion that a single life is
not enough for carrying out all that is intended by Nature, to say nothing of
what man himself desires to do. The scale of variety in experience is enormous.
There is a vast range of powers latent in man which we see may be
developed if opportunity be given. Knowledge infinite in scope and diversity
lies before us, and especially in these days when special investigation is the
rule. We perceive that we have high aspirations with no time to reach up to
their measure, while the great troop of passions and desires, selfish motives
and ambitions, war with us and among themselves, pursuing us even to the door
of death.
All these have to be tried, conquered, used, subdued. One life is not
enough for all this. To say that we have but one life here with such
possibilities put before us and impossible of development is to make the
universe and life a huge and cruel joke perpetrated by a powerful God who is
thus accused, by those who believe in a special creation of souls, of
triumphing and playing with puny man just because that man is small and the
creature of the Almighty.
A human life at most is seventy years; statistics reduce this to about
forty; and out of that little remainder a large part is spent in sleep and
another part in childhood. Thus in one life it is perfectly impossible to
attain to the merest fraction of what Nature evidently has in view.
We see many truths vaguely which a life gives us no time to grasp, and
especially is this so when men have to make such a struggle to live at all. Our
faculties are small or dwarfed or weak; one life gives no opportunity to alter
this; we perceive other powers latent in us that cannot possibly be brought out
in such a small space of time; and we have much more than a suspicion that the
extent of the field of truth is vastly greater than the narrow circle we are
confined to. It is not reasonable to suppose that either God or nature projects
us into a body simply to fill us with bitterness because we can have no other
opportunity here, but rather we must conclude that a series of incarnations has
led to the present condition, and that the process of coming here again and
again must go on for the purpose of affording us the opportunity needed.
The mere fact of dying is not of itself enough to bring about
development of faculties or the elimination of wrong tendency and inclination.
If we assume that upon entering heaven we at once acquire all knowledge and
purity, then that state after death is reduced to a dead level and life itself
with all its discipline is shorn of every meaning.
Some of the churches teach of a school of discipline after death where
it is impudently stated that the Apostles themselves, well known to be ignorant
men, are to be the teachers. This is absurd and devoid of any basis or reason
in the natural order. Besides, if there is to be such subsequent discipline,
why were we projected into life at all? And why after the suffering and the
error committed are we taken from the place where we did our acts?
The only solution left is in reincarnation. We come back to earth
because on it and with the beings upon it our deeds were performed; because it
is the only proper place where punishment and reward can be justly meted out;
because here is the only natural spot in which to continue the struggle toward
perfection, toward the development of the faculties we have and the destruction
of the wickedness in us. Justice to ourselves and to all other beings demands
it, for we cannot live for ourselves, and it would be unjust to permit some of
us to escape, leaving those who were participants with us to remain or to be
plunged into a hell of eternal duration.
Races
The persistence of savagery, the rise and decay of nations and
civilizations, the total extinction of nations, all demand an explanation found
nowhere but in reincarnation. Savagery remains because there are still Egos
whose experience is so limited that they are still savage; they will come up
into higher races when ready.
Races die out because the Egos have had enough of the experience that
sort of race gives. So we find the red Indian, the Hottentot, the Easter
Islanders, and others as examples of races deserted by high Egos and as they
are dying away other souls who have had no higher life in the past enter into
the bodies of the race to go on using them for the purpose of gaining such
experience as the race body will give.
A race could not possibly arise and then suddenly go out. We see that
such is not the case, but science has no explanation; it simply says that this
is the fact, that nations decay. But in this explanation no account is taken of
the inner man nor of the recondite subtle and occult laws that unite to make a
race.
Theosophy shows that the energy drawn together has to expend itself
gradually, and therefore the reproduction of bodies of the character of that
race will go on, though the Egos are not compelled to inhabit bodies of that
sort any longer than while they are of the same development as the race. Hence
a time comes when the whole mass of Egos which built up the race leaves it for
another physical environment more like themselves.
The economy of Nature will not permit the physical race to suddenly fade
away, and so in the real order of evolution other and less progressed Egos come
in and use the forms provided, keeping up the production of new bodies but less
and less in number each century. These lower Egos are not able to keep up to
the limit of the capacity of the congeries of energies left by the other Egos,
and so while the new set gains as much experience as is possible the race in
time dies out after passing through its decay.
This is the explanation of what we may call descending savagery, and no
other theory will meet the facts. It has been sometimes thought by ethnologists
that the more civilized races kill off the other, but the fact is that in
consequence of the great difference between the Egos inhabiting the old race
body and the energy of that body itself, the females begin to be sterile, and
thus slowly but surely the number of deaths exceeds the births.
China itself is in process of decay, she being now in the almost
stationary stage just before the rush downward. Great civilizations like those
of Egypt and Babylon have gone because the souls who made them have long ago
reincarnated in the great conquering nations of Europe and the present American
continents. As nations and races they have been totally reincarnated and born
again for greater and higher purposes than ever. Of all the old races the Aryan
Indian alone yet remains as the preserver of the old doctrines. It will one day
rise again to its old heights of glory.
Child
prodigies
The appearance of geniuses and great minds in families destitute of
these qualities, as well as the extinction from a family of the genius shown by
some ancestor, can only be met by the law of re-birth. Napoleon the First came
in a family wholly unlike him in power and force. Nothing in his heredity will
explain his character. He said himself, as told in the Memoirs of Prince Talleyrand,
that he was Charlemagne.
Only by assuming for him a long series of lives giving the right line of
evolution or cause for his mind and nature and force to be brought out, can we
have the slightest idea why he or any other great genius appeared at all.
Mozart when an infant could compose orchestral scores. This was not due to
heredity, for such a score is not natural, but is forced, mechanical, and
wholly conventional, yet he understood it without schooling. How?
Because he was a musician reincarnated, with a musical brain furnished
by his family and thus not impeded in his endeavors to show forth his musical
knowledge. But stronger yet is the case of Blind Tom, a negro whose family
could not by any possibility have a knowledge of the piano, a modern
instrument, so as to transmit that knowledge to the atoms of his body, yet he
had great musical power and knew the present mechanical musical scale on the
piano.
There are hundreds of examples like these among the many prodigies who
have appeared to the world's astonishment. In India there are many histories of
sages born with complete knowledge of philosophy and the like, and doubtless in
all nations the same can be met with.
This bringing back of knowledge also explains instinct, for that is no
more than recollection divisible into physical and mental memory. It is seen in
the child and the animal, and is no more than the result of previous
experience. And whether we look at the new-born babe flinging out its arms for
self-protection, or the animal with very strong instinctual power, or the bee
building a cell on the rules of geometry, it is all the effect of reincarnation
acting either in the mind or physical cell, for under what was first laid down
no atom is devoid of life, consciousness, and intelligence of its own.
In the case of the musician Bach we have proof that heredity counts for
nothing if the Ego is not advanced, for his genius was not borne down his
family line; it gradually faded out, finally leaving the family stream
entirely. So, too, the coming of idiots or vicious children to parents who are
good, pure, or highly intellectual is explained in the same way. They are cases
where heredity is set at nought by a wholly bad or deficient Ego.
Transcendent ideas
And lastly, the fact that certain inherent ideas are common to the whole
race is explained by the sages as due to recollection of such ideas, which were
implanted in the human mind at the very beginning of its evolutionary career on
this planet by those brothers and sages who learned their lessons and were
perfected in former ages long before the development of this globe began.
No explanation for inherent ideas is offered by science that will do
more than say, "they exist." These were actually taught to the mass
of Egos who are engaged in this earth's evolution; they were imprinted or
burned into their natures, and always recollected; they follow the Ego through
the long pilgrimage.
Conclusion
It has been often thought that the opposition to reincarnation has been
solely based on prejudice, when not due to a dogma which can only stand when
the mind is bound down and prevented from using its own powers. It is a doctrine
the most noble of all, and with its companion one of Karma, next to be
considered, it alone gives the basis for ethics.
There is no doubt in my mind that the founder of Christianity took it
for granted and that its present absence from that religion is the reason for
the contradiction between the professed ethics of Christian nations and their
actual practices which are so contrary to the morals given out by Jesus.
(The Ocean of Theosophy , Chapter 10)
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