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SPIRITUAL EXISTENCE IS IMMORTALITY |
According to divine philosophy, there are two important and
universal conditions in the world of material phenomena; one
which concerns life, the other concerning death; one relative to
existence, the other non-existence; one manifest in composition,
the other in decomposition. Some define existence as the expression
of reality or being, and non-existence as non-being, imagining
that death is annihilation. This is a mistaken idea, for total annihilation
is an impossibility. At most, composition is ever subject
to decomposition or disintegration; that is to say, existence implies
the grouping of material elements in a form or body, and non-existence
is simply the de-composing of these groupings. This is the
law of creation in its endless forms and infinite variety of expression.
Certain elements have formed the composite creature man.
This composite association of the elements in the form of a human
body is therefore subject to disintegration which we call death, but
after disintegration the elements themselves persist unchanged.
Therefore total annihilation is an impossibility, and existence can
never become non-existence. This would be equivalent to saying
that light can become darkness, which is manifestly untrue and impossible.
As existence can never become non-existence, there is
no death for man; nay, rather, man is everlasting and everliving.
The rational proof of this is that the atoms of the material elements
are transferable from one form of existence to another, from one
degree and kingdom to another, lower or higher. For example, an
atom of the soil or dust of earth may traverse the kingdoms from
mineral to man by successive incorporations into the bodies of the
organisms of those kingdoms. At one time it enters into the formation
of the mineral or rock; it is then absorbed by the vegetable
kingdom and becomes a constituent of the body and fibre of a tree;
again it is appropriated by the animal, and at a still later period
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is found in the body of man. Throughout these degrees of its
traversing the kingdoms from one form of phenomenal being to
another, it retains its atomic existence and is never annihilated
nor relegated to non-existence.
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Non-existence therefore is an expression applied to change of
form, but this transformation can never be rightly considered
annihilation, for the elements of composition are ever present and
existent as we have seen in the journey of the atom through successive
kingdoms, unimpaired; hence there is no death; life is everlasting.
So to speak, when the atom entered into the composition
of the tree, it died to the mineral kingdom, and when consumed by
the animal, it died to the vegetable kingdom, and so on until its
transference or transmutation into the kingdom of man; but
throughout its traversing it was subject to transformation and not
annihilation. Death therefore is applicable to a change or transference
from one degree or condition to another. In the mineral
realm there was a spirit of existence; in the world of plant life and
organisms it reappeared as the vegetative spirit; thence it attained
the animal spirit and finally aspired to the human spirit. These
are degrees and changes but not obliteration; and this is a rational
proof that man is everlasting, everliving. Therefore death is
only a relative term implying change. For example, we will say
that this light before me, having reappeared in another incandescent
lamp, has died in the one and lives in the other. This is not death
in reality. The perfections of the mineral are translated into
the vegetable and from thence into the animal, the virtue always
attaining a plus or superlative degree in the upward change. In
each kingdom we find the same virtues manifesting themselves
more fully, proving that the reality has been transferred from a
lower to a higher form and kingdom of being. Therefore non-existence
is only relative and absolute non-existence inconceivable.
This rose in my hand will become disintegrated and its symmetry
destroyed, but the elements of its composition remain changeless;
nothing affects their elemental integrity. They cannot become
non-existent; they are simply transferred from one state to another.
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Through his ignorance, man fears death; but the death he
shrinks from is imaginary and absolutely unreal; it is only human
imagination.
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The bestowal and grace of God have quickened the realm of
existence with life and being. For existence there is neither change
nor transformation; existence is ever existence; it can never be
translated into non-existence. It is gradation; a degree below a
higher degree is considered as non-existence. This dust beneath
our feet, as compared with our being is non-existent. When the
human body crumbles into dust we can say it has become non-existent;
therefore its dust in relation to living forms of human
being is as non-existent but in its own sphere it is existent, it has
its mineral being. Therefore it is well proved that absolute non-existence
is impossible; it is only relative.
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The purpose is this;—that the everlasting bestowal of God
vouchsafed to man is never subject to corruption. Inasmuch as
He has endowed the phenomenal world with being, it is impossible
for that world to become non-being, for it is the very genesis of
God; it is the realm of origination; it is a creational and not a
subjective world, and the bounty descending upon it is continuous
and permanent. Therefore man the highest creature of the phenomenal
world is endowed with that continuous bounty bestowed by
divine generosity without cessation. For instance, the rays of the
sun are continuous, the heat of the sun emanates from it without
cessation; no discontinuance of it is conceivable. Even so the
bestowal of God is descending upon the world of humanity, never
ceasing, continuous, forever. If we say that the bestowal of existence
ceases or falters it is equivalent to saying that the sun can exist
with cessation of its effulgence. Is this possible? Therefore the
effulgences of existence are ever-present and continuous.
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The conception of annihilation is a factor in human degradation,
a cause of human debasement and lowliness, a source of human
fear and abjection. It has been conducive to the dispersion and
weakening of human thought whereas the realization of existence
and continuity has upraised man to sublimity of ideals, established
the foundations of human progress and stimulated the development
of heavenly virtues; therefore it behoves man to abandon thoughts
of non-existence and death which are absolutely imaginary and
see himself ever living, everlasting in the divine purpose of his
creation. He must turn away from ideas which degrade the human
soul, so that day by day and hour by hour he may advance upward
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and higher to spiritual perception of the continuity of the human
reality. If he dwells upon the thought of non-existence he will
become utterly incompetent; with weakened will-power his ambition
for progress will be lessened and the acquisition of human
virtues will cease.
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Therefore you must thank God that He has bestowed upon you
the blessing of life and existence in the human kingdom. Strive
diligently to acquire virtues befitting your degree and station. Be
as lights of the world which cannot be hid and which have no setting
in horizons of darkness. Ascend to the zenith of an existence
which is never beclouded by the fears and forebodings of non-existence.
When man is not endowed with inner perception he is
not informed of these important mysteries. The retina of outer
vision though sensitive and delicate may nevertheless be a hindrance
to the inner eye which alone can perceive. The bestowals of God
which are manifest in all phenomenal life are sometimes hidden by
intervening veils of mental and mortal vision which render man
spiritually blind and incapable but when those scales are removed
and the veils rent asunder, then the great signs of God will become
visible and he will witness the eternal light filling the world. The
bestowals of God are all and always manifest. The promises of
heaven are ever present. The favors of God are all-surrounding
but should the conscious eye of the soul of man remain veiled and
darkened he will be led to deny these universal signs and remain
deprived of these manifestations of divine bounty. Therefore we
must endeavor with heart and soul in order that the veil covering
the eye of inner vision may be removed, that we may behold the
manifestations of the signs of God, discern His mysterious graces,
and realize that material blessings as compared with spiritual
bounties are as nothing. The spiritual blessings of God are greatest.
When we were in the mineral kingdom, although endowed with
certain gifts and powers, they were not to be compared with the
blessings of the human kingdom. In the matrix of the mother we
were the recipients of endowments and blessings of God, yet these
were as nothing compared to the powers and graces bestowed upon
us after birth into this human world. Likewise if we are born from
the matrix of this physical and phenomenal environment into the
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freedom and loftiness of the life and vision spiritual, we shall consider
this mortal existence and its blessings as worthless by comparison.
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In the spiritual world, the divine bestowals are infinite, for in
that realm there is neither separation nor disintegration which
characterize the world of material existence. Spiritual existence is
absolute immortality, completeness and unchangeable being. Therefore
we must thank God that He has created for us both material
blessings and spiritual bestowals. He has given us material gifts
and spiritual graces, outer sight to view the lights of the sun and
inner vision by which we may perceive the glory of God. He has
designed the outer ear to enjoy the melodies of sound and the inner
hearing wherewith we may hear the voice of our creator. We must
strive with energies of heart, soul and mind to develop and manifest
the perfections and virtues latent within the realities of the
phenomenal world, for the human reality may be compared to a
seed. If we sow the seed, a mighty tree appears from it. The
virtues of the seed are revealed in the tree; it puts forth branches,
leaves, blossoms, and produces fruits. All these virtues were hidden
and potential in the seed. Through the blessing and bounty of
cultivation these virtues became apparent. Similarly the merciful
God our creator has deposited within human realities certain virtues
latent and potential. Through education and culture, these
virtues deposited by the loving God will become apparent in the
human reality even as the unfoldment of the tree from within the
germinating seed.
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