A Theosophist's view of it by William Judge
A natural preliminary question is: "What is the Astral Light?"
It is a difficult question to answer; as difficult as that old one, "What
is life?"
One that can be answered at first only by illustration and analogy;
which can be guessed at perhaps best from viewing results. There are certain
phenomena, very well known to Spiritualists and to all persons of a psychical
nature, needing a hypothesis upon which we may hang our facts and thus try
them. Nearly all the phenomena found in the great record of Spiritualistic
seance rooms for the past forty years need hypotheses more reasonable than
those so far advanced, to say nothing of a classification which never yet has
been undertaken by competent hands.
Whether this classification will be done by Spiritualists themselves
seems doubtful. If ever the scientific world deigns to carefully and seriously
investigate these psychic occurrences, many theories now having their day in
the ranks of mediums and their friends will be exploded, and then, perhaps the
astral light and its place in the phenomena will be better understood.
The identity assumed so easily and quickly by a medium for an alleged
spirit calling himself John Smith, would not be admitted at once if the
function inherent in the astral light of retaining the image of John Smith for
a vast period of time were understood; and then if it were discovered, as it
could be by careful records and reports, that at the same time John Smith was
declaring himself in a room in Boston through medium A., he was also asserting
his identity in Florida, supported by identical proofs, through medium B., —
some doubt naturally would surround the question of identity. Yet, just this is
happening every day and especially in regard to alleged return of celebrated
men to mediums, good and bad alike.
It is easy to prove this as far as the great dead are concerned, but
until recording and comparison are undertaken it will never be known how often
twenty different mediums in as many separate cities have given, at one and the
same moment, messages from the one deceased person.
And this question of identification is one of the most important in all
Spiritualism. Upon it the faith of thousands is built; through assumed proofs
of identity many a doubter has become a believer in mediums. For we may see
phenomena of a purely physical sort over and over again without being convinced
of anything save the occurrence of a fact; but once we are persuaded that our dead
friend has really returned to speak with us through an entranced living person,
then all the rest comes easy; then we think that here is positive proof of life
after death.
My contention is that this important point is built upon, believed in,
and supported by flimsy proofs, and that flimsiness is due to ignorance of the
astral light, its function and operation.
Furthermore, we can find in the reported utterances of
"spirits" that there is great diversity as well as opposition in
views. But it is apparent that whenever a "spirit" enunciates
theories tending to upset preconceived ideas of Spiritualists on such points as
identification, reincarnation, the astral light and the like, the "spirit's"
opinions go for nothing.
Before me lies a pamphlet printed over 20 years ago by a medium, in
which most extraordinary views are given of cosmogony, and teaching
reincarnation, but these although given to the medium by his own trusted
"guide" have never gained a hearing among Spiritualists; and although
correct and well argued views respecting the astral light, supporting all that
the ancient East has claimed for this tenuous interpenetrating medium, have
been given by a well known "spirit," they have been ignored and lost
sight of in the mad rush after the intoxication of physical phenomena and
sentimental gushing over supposed messages from a deceased mother, sister,
brother or wife.
It is time for the leading minds in Spiritualistic ranks — among which I
can not reckon myself — to call a halt, and to devote a little of the common
sense used in daily business life to the analysis of the utterances of mediums
and the conflicting views of alleged "spirits".
Are you afraid of truth?
Do you hesitate in case it should
come in the process that your beloved dead will be removed a few steps higher,
a little beyond the reach of your degrading desire to call them back to the mud
and horror of earthly life before their cycle rolls round again?
Such a fear veils the truth and belittles your manhood. But such is the weakness, the utter emaciation, of spiritualistic
philosophy, I will venture a prophecy that even if the analysis and
classification I have spoken of should never be attempted, the proper doctrines
about these phenomena and about the "Spirit-world," would come to prevail
— not through any increase of real knowledge on the
part of the "spirits" and "controls," but just when the
leading minds in your ranks begin out of their own thinking to believe in the
true explanation.
That is to say, the best expositions given through mediums are never in
advance — save in isolated cases — of the best thought of living Spiritualists;
and this comes about, or fails to, through the action of the astral light as
affected by living beings with all their acts and thoughts.
(Cid's observation: and
that is why I am very suspicious of the statements that the "spirits"
make through the mediums, because it is a tremendous jumble that you never know how much you can really trust about it.)
Before closing these general considerations, I would like to ask how any
reasonable Spiritualist can be sure that he is hearing from a deceased friend
or relative merely because he has from a medium, who never knew the deceased
and never before met the inquirer, some circumstances known only to the
deceased or to himself?
This is the common means of proof, almost always blindly accepted. But
there are many elements of weakness in it. We may teach a parrot or an idiot
some few sentences, and if put behind a screen no one on this side can tell
whether the utterances proceed from a wise man, a fool, an animal or an
automaton. Then, again, if the proof be in the recital of some facts "long
ago forgotten, and not known to the medium," we are touching upon the memory
and its field of operation; a land as unknown as the South Pole.
The brain matter cannot hold the
facts of a lifetime; where, then, are they held, and how does the possession of
them by the medium prove anything save that fact alone?
Nor does the taking on by the medium of the exact physical conditions of
the last moments of the reporting deceased one, prove of itself identity. We
see hysterics, clairvoyants, sensitives and others in daily life, surrounded by
living men, taking on the state or condition of some living person who has just
been near and gone away. We might as well say that this proves that such a
departed living man is there present, whereas we know such is not the case.
And suppose we assume that the sensitive is also clairvoyant and we hear
him using the words, tones and thoughts of this living person, are we to
conclude that the latter is present before us in spirit? Such a conclusion is
absurd, yet not more so than the other as to the identity of that one whom we
know is really beyond the veil and whom a medium declares is speaking through
her.
(Note: Theosophy
explains that in reality the "spirits" who speak through mediums are astral entities that pose
as deceased relatives or former famous people, and use the astral light to take
the appearance and give the answers that people receive in séances.)
It is here again that the astral light comes into play, its currents
aiding the medium to produce astonishment and confusion, or wrong notions.
How much do Spiritualists really
know about vital electric currents?
Much less those swift and wonderful
currents in the astral light?
How many laws of those life currents
have been revealed to us by a consensus of reports from the
"Spirit"-world?
None
Forty years long since the first raps in Rochester, have the facts, the
theories and the contradictions been piling up, but we are as innocent as ever
of any authoritative and convincing statement of laws that will meet the facts.
It is true a hundred systems have been evolved, living a brief life, each in
their own little Pedlington, but they are not accepted, and the most of them
have been forgotten.
All of this ground has been gone over by man in ages past, with the same
struggles, the same confusion, the same heartburnings and mental ruin, and the
record of the toilsome journey has been left, showing when light at last has
broken, bringing order out of chaos. This is the record found in India, Egypt
and other older lands.
Is it meet because we are American and freemen that we should ignore
this? Should not a patient hearing be given it in order to see whether the
doctrines finally arrived at do or do not fit the greater number of facts and
offer explanation for all?
I propose to offer a few explanations hereupon, trusting that
intelligent Spiritualists will perceive a disposition to get at the truth, to
exalt man to his rightful place and to prevent a fatuous running after the
emanations of material and psychical corpses.
_ _ _
In the records of forty years of
American Spiritualism the Astral Light is not unknown; it has been referred to
by many mediums while under what is called “control,” and spirits in speaking
of it have at times detailed some of its properties. Its place in nature and
the part it plays at séances, mind reading and tests, demand for it more
attention than it has hitherto received from those who believe in the
Summerland.
The real witnesses produced for
the majority of spiritistic phenomena are these spirits, and their word must be
taken by their followers wherever possible; especially must this be so whenever
the spirits agree with a large body of evidence found in ancient and medieval
writings.
Some years ago Mrs. M. J. Hollis-Billing
gave the editor of the Journal several sittings with the spirit Jim Nolan (see
Echoes I:198-200, 354, 404-8) who delivered replies to queries prepared, and
which were published. Mrs. Billing has never been accused of fraud, and by
turning to the files of the Journal the report can be found. This spirit’s
utterances are entitled to weight.
He said, in substance, that there
is a plastic medium existing in nature called the Astral Light, in which are
pictures of persons, dead and living, and of all their thoughts, actions, and
circumstances; and that in producing what is called a materialization of a
deceased one, a magnetic mirror was constructed by the control, onto which was
reflected out of the Astral Light the face or form desired to be seen, and that
as each change was made a new picture was drawn from the Astral Light.
Although as a body — whether in
published works or in private discussion — Spiritualists have ignored the
Astral Light, it has long been recognized by Theosophists of both the present
Theosophical Society and those of two hundred years ago, while the Hindus have,
for ages, known of it and called it the Ākāśa.
What, then, is this Astral Light?
It is what is called by Éliphas
Lévi, the “plastic medium” that interpenetrates each thing and every point of space;
a medium, plane, place, state, or condition of the other, wherein is recorded
an image of every object that comes before it, an echo of every word ever
spoken, an unbroken chain of continuous pictures of all that happens here
below.
As well also are to be found in
it the shades or lemures of the departed — not their spirits but their
reliquiae, existing there until they shall pass away in natural course, and
there, floating, darting, wavering, swimming to and fro, like fishes in the
sea, are the other class of spirits, called “elementals” by the old Kabbalists,
nature spirits by others, Gnomes, Sylphs and Salamanders.
In this Astral medium is a vast
babel of sounds — the undying reverberations of uttered speech, the utterers of
which have long ago passed away; noble sentiments clothed in faultless
rhetoric; horrible discords produced by the senseless and vicious talk of all
times and persons; sweet music, the din of war, and the solemn chant from out cathedral
aisles. Every odor man ever smelled, and every sound, divine or diabolical, are
there. It is a burial ground for mummies, as it were.
The fluidic envelope passed off
by every one at death, is caught in it and there leaves its impression, even
after that envelope has itself dissipated into the various elements. Just as
the long ago dead trilobite impacted in the earliest fossiliferous strata,
leaves behind it when removed, a clear impression of itself, so that which
lodges in the Astral Light stamps there an imperishable image.
Finding, then, this Jim Nolan
agreeing with ancient records on that subject, Spiritualists are bound to
investigate along the lines indicated, or else be guilty of ignoring an
important element in the problem before them.
An intelligent reply from a thing
or influence, unseen and unknown, except by what it manifests, is not, per se,
proof of an intelligent conscious entity behind it, or of identity with a
deceased person.
An unintelligent man can learn
and repeat like a parrot a series of highly intelligent sentences. Out of the
Astral Light can be brought —resurrected so to say— either a picture of a
person or a scene, or the discourses of Plato. How then can we afford to ignore
the existence of the Astral Light or refuse to make some inevitable
conclusions?
Is it because we are afraid that the
Summerland will disappear, or that we do not wish to accept as true something
not in accord with our preconceived notions or present experience? As for me,
give me truth, no matter what it costs or what fondly loved idea it destroys.
(Religio-Philosophical Journal, July 22, 1889, and
December 24, 1887; Echoes III, p.143-146, 135-137)
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