The Necessity For Reincarnation
BY ANNIE BESANT
THIS question of Reincarnation is so large a one that in the title I have chosen I have limited the scope of our thought tonight. I do not pretend to deal with the whole of the doctrine, but with that special aspect of it: 'The Necessity for Reincarnation.' There are many questions that will arise in the mind of the listener, many questions that in one brief lecture I cannot hope to answer: why we do not all remember the past; why we do not find, in looking back, clear mental illumination on the way in which our characters have grown, our thought-powers, our moral powers have developed. Many questions of that sort will arise, but if tonight I can succeed in showing you that there is at least a good case for Reincarnation as a rational explanation of life, of human progress, of human character; if I can show you that it enables us to understand many of the problems of life; if I can show you, as I shall try to do, that science demands it now in order to complete its theory of evolution; if I can show you that it is a necessity from the moral standpoint, if we would keep our belief in divine justice and divine love in facing many of the terrible facts of human life and of human pain; if I can show you that it is a necessity for human perfection; and then if, lastly, I can show you that, with all this pressing necessity to accept it, it is not a doctrine which belongs to Eastern religions alone; if I can show you that it is a doctrine that belongs to primitive Christianity as much as to other great religions of the world; if I can show you that in Christian antiquity it took its place unchallenged for five centuries among the doctrines taught by the great doctors and bishops of the Christian Church; if I can show you that it has never quite fallen out of Christian thought, that it has never quite lost its place in Christian literature, and that its revival today is the revival of a truth partially forgotten, and not an effort to graft into the Christian faith a doctrine from an alien creed; then perhaps, having shown the necessity, I may clear away something of the confusion in the mind of the ordinary Christian, which almost makes him shrink from considering the doctrine, and in this way may do all I hope to do, stimulate your own minds to think and to judge, stimulate your own powers of thought to accept or to reject as seems to you good. For I do not hold that it is the duty of the lecturer to dogmatise, to lay down the law as to what another should think. I do not hold that it is the duty of the lecturer to do the thinking work, and then demand that the conclusion shall be accepted. The duty of the lecturer is only to put forth the truth as the truth is seen by him, leaving it to the individual reason and the individual conscience to reject or accept as seems to it good. That, then, is what I have to do, to put the case before you; you are the judges, not I.
First, then, as to the scientific necessity for Reincarnation. Now, there are two great doctrines of evolution which may be said to divide the scientific world. One of them is falling rather into the background, the other coming more and more to the front. The first is the evolutionary teaching of Charles Darwin, the second, the later teaching of Weissmann. Now, these two doctrines are both important to us; both, in order to complete them, need this teaching of Reincarnation. For under both arise certain questions to which Reincarnation gives the only answer, certain problems which remain unsolved save in the light of this ancient and universal teaching. I do not say that because the problems are unsolved by science, therefore this teaching is necessarily true; but I do say that when you find a doctrine put forward which explains problems, which explains that which science does not explain, answers difficulties that science does not answer, that then, that doctrine deserves at least a hearing in the minds of thoughtful men, in order that they may see whether there is not a possible explanation of the otherwise apparently inexplicable facts.
Darwin's Theory
Take for a moment Charles Darwin's evolutionary
teaching in the broadest possible light. Two
great points come out as dealing with the
progress of intelligence and of morality. First,
the idea that qualities are transmitted from
parent to offspring, and that by the accumulated
force of that transmission intelligence and
morality develop. As step after step is taken by
human-kind, the results of the climbing are
transmitted to the offspring, who, starting as
it were from the platform built up by the past,
are able to climb further in the present, and
transmit enriched, to their posterity, the
legacy that they receive.
Along that line human progress seems possible
and full of hope. Secondly, side by side with
that stands the doctrine of conflict, of what is
called “survival of the fittest”; of qualities
which enable some to survive, and by the
survival to hand down to their progeny those
qualities that gave them an advantage in the
struggle for existence.
Now, those two chief points - transmission of
quality from parent to offspring, survival of
the fittest, in the struggle for existence - are
two of the problems that are very, very
difficult to deal with from the ordinary
Darwinian standpoint. Transmission of qualities
I will deal with at the same time as I speak of
Weissmann; but on the second point, the question
that we are obliged to ask the Darwinian with
regard to the growth of the higher intelligence,
and especially of moral qualities, is this: It
is admitted that the qualities that are the most
purely human - compassion, love, sympathy, the
sacrifice of the strong for the protection of
the weak, the willingness to give life for the
benefit of others - these are the qualities that
we recognise as human over against the qualities
that we share with the brute. The more of these
qualities show out in man, the more human is man
considered to be, and so much is that recognised
that the late Prof. Huxley, declared, in trying
to deal with this problem, that you had to
recognise that man, a fragment of the cosmos,
set himself against the law of the cosmos; that
he advanced by self-surrender, and not by the
survival of the fittest; that he developed by
self-sacrifice, and not by the trampling of the
strong upon the weak, which was the law of
growth in the lower kingdoms of nature. And he
asked the question: How is
it that the fragment can set itself against the
whole and evolve by a law which is against the
law by which all the lower kingdoms developed?
And he answered it in a tentative way: Is it
because in man there is the same consciousness
as that which underlies the universe? Whether he
was prepared or not to answer the question in
the affirmative we cannot say, but this remains
from the mouth of the great preacher of
evolution, that the law of progress for the man
is the law of sacrifice and not the law of
struggle. But then, what does that mean? When
you are face to face with the survival of the
fittest, what does this mean? For, those who
sacrifice, themselves die out. How does
mother-love arise and grow, even in the brute
creation, among those we call the social
animals, and even among the fiercest, the beasts
of prey? How does that quality develop? How does
it increase? Clearly we see that among the
animals the mother sacrifices herself for her
helpless offspring, conquering the law of
self-preservation, the preservation of her own
life, victorious over the fear of man which is
interwoven in the nature of the brute that is
wild. The mother bird, the mother animal, will
sacrifice her own life in order to draw away her
enemy, man, from the cave or the hiding-place
where her young ones are hidden, mother-love
triumphing over even the love of life. But she
dies in the sacrifice. Those who show it most,
perish - sacrifices to maternal affection; and
if, as we must see when we look at it, the
social virtues, the human virtues, tend to kill
out their possessors and to leave the more
selfish and more brutal alive, then how can you
explain in man the growth of the spirit of
self-sacrifice, how
explain this continuing growth in the most
divine qualities which incapacitate the man for
the struggle of existence?
Now Darwinism does not really answer that
question. Attempts are made to answer it. Those
who have studied Darwinian writings know that
the question is not fully faced, is rather
evaded than answered. Reincarnation gives the
answer, that, in the continuing life, whether of
the animal or of the man, that self-sacrifice
stirs up on the side of character a new power, a
new life, a compelling strength, which comes
back over and over again to the world in ever
higher and higher manifestations; that though
the form of the mother perishes, the mother-soul
survives, and comes back time after time; those
who are such mother-souls are trained onward,
first in the brute kingdom and then in the human
kingdom, so that that which is gained by the
soul at the sacrifice of the body comes back in
the reincarnating soul to bless and to lift the
world. The persistence of the soul it is that
makes that growth in moral character possible.
Transmission of Qualities
We come to the question of transmission of
qualities that, as I said, leads us into the
view of Weissmann. Weissmann has established two
fundamental facts: first, the continuity of
physical life - fairly clear to ordinary vision,
but proved by him in a way that goes further
than any scientific thought went before him - on
the one side continuity of physical life, and we
shall see that we need, to complete it,
continuity of intellectual and moral life. And
the reason we need it along the
Weissmann line is his second fundamental fact.
Weissmann declares - and ever more and more is
that view being accepted - that mental and moral
and other acquired qualities are not transmitted
to offspring, that they can only be transmitted
when they have worked themselves slowly and by
degrees into the very fabric of the physical
body of the people concerned. Mental and moral
qualities not being transmitted - and the
evidence for this is becoming overwhelming -
where will you have the reason for human
progress, unless, side by side with the
continuity of protoplasm, you have the
continuity of an evolving, of a developing soul?
Not only is that necessary, but along with this
same theory, backed up as it is by facts of
observation, we find that the higher the
organism the greater the tendency towards
sterility, or towards a very great limiting of
the number of the offspring produced. Genius -
it is becoming almost a commonplace in science -
genius is sterile, and by that it is meant that
the genius does not tend in the first place
largely to increase the number of the race, and
secondly, that even where a genius has a child,
the child does not show the qualities of the
genius, but for the most part is commonplace,
tending even to be below the average of the
time. Now that is a subject of enormous
importance for the future. For the genius of
today ought to mark the normal level of hundreds
of years hence. The genius of today, whether the
genius of intellect or of virtue, the high-water
mark of present human progress, should show the
place to which the ocean will rise presently, as
the generations go on. If he is only a mere
sport of nature, if he is only the result of
some fortunate accident, if he is only the
outcome of some unknown
cause, then he brings us no message of hope, no
promise for the future; but if it be that in
that individual genius you are to find a soul
who by long experience has gathered the
qualities with which he was this time born; if
it be that, side by side with the continuity of
protoplasm, there is also a continuity of soul,
growing, developing, evolving, as forms grow,
develop and evolve, ah! then the genius is only
the forerunner of a greater humanity, and the
lowest child of earth may hope in future to
climb to the height of intelligence or of virtue
on which he stands. And this view of genius is
strengthened by investigation; for we notice
that genius is to be found along two special
lines - that of the genius of pure intellect or
virtue, and that of the artist that demands a
peculiar co-operation of the body. The first
asks little or nothing from physical heredity,
but you cannot have the great genius in music
unless you have with it a specialised body, a
delicacy of nervous organisation; a fineness of
touch, a keenness of ear. These physical things
are required in order that musical genius may
show itself forth at its highest. There the
co-operation of physical heredity is demanded,
and what do you find when you study the stories
of musical genius? That he is generally born in
a musical family; that for two or three
generations before the great genius, some amount
of musical talent has been marked in the family
in which he appears; and that when he, the
genius, appears, then that musical talent dies
out, and the family goes back into the ordinary
run of average people. The family flowers in the
genius; he does not hand on his genius to his
posterity.
How Reincarnation Explains
Now those problems and puzzles of heredity find
their rational explanation in the teaching of
Reincarnation; for what is it? It is the
teaching that breathed into the form is a
portion of the life of God. Like a seed, a germ,
the germinal spirit comes forth into the world
of matter, with all divine possibilities hidden
within it, as within the seed the possibilities
of the plant that gave it birth are hidden; in
that germinal spirit are all divine powers, that
man may become perfect as his Father in heaven
is perfect. But in order that that perfection
may be attained, there must be growth,
experience, evolution; in each life on earth
experience must be gathered; in the long
interval between death and rebirth the
experience gathered on the earth is woven in the
invisible worlds into the fabric of the soul;
when that germinal spirit comes back to earth,
it comes with this soul-clothings of qualities
woven out of the experience gathered in its
previous life on earth, and the innate ideas of
the child are the result of the weaving - during
the heavenly life - into quality of the
experience of the earth-life that lies behind.
When that experience is transmuted into quality,
then spirit and soul come back to earth, start
on the platform already gained by experience and
by struggle, and carryon the evolution with the
advantage of the innate qualities which are the
result of the previous life. During the new life
more experience, more struggle, material for
further growth; the weaving of that again into
higher qualities during the renewed interval
between death and rebirth. And so, on and on,
rung after rung of the ladder of progress; at
the bottom of that human ladder the lowest
savage; at the top
of that human ladder, the greatest saint and the
noblest intellect, genius built up by slow
degrees, built up by countless struggles, built
up by failure as well as victory, by evil as
well as good, the evils of the past the steps
whereon man rises into virtue, so that even in
the lowest criminal we see the promise of
divinity. He, too, shall rise where the saint is
standing, and in all the children of men God
shall at last be seen. That is the theory of
Reincarnation.
Now, let us see if it does not fit the facts
from the scientific standpoint. We see now how
the genius will have grown. He does not come
suddenly into the world with nothing behind him,
suddenly God-created. He comes with the
qualities he has gradually developed by struggle
in his past. We can understand, as we look at
him, why the children of today, born of
civilised parents, respond quickly to moral
teaching, answer to moral appeal; and why a
child of the savage, a young soul, a child-soul,
cannot respond to those teachings, no matter how
carefully you may try to instruct him. The
answer of the children of the civilised man of
today to the moral ideal, to moral precepts, is
almost immediate. The child responds to it by
nature; the child of the savage does not so. You
cannot take the savage child and lift him to the
point at which your own children are to be found
whilst still in the nursery. They have not the
power to respond. But the moment you admit the
continuing spirit, the moment you admit the
weaving into quality of experiences, that in the
character of the new-born child you can see the
results of his past, then you begin to
understand why man should have progressed, even
though Weissmann be right when he
says that
acquired qualities are not transmitted; for
those mental and moral qualities are not the
gift of the parent, they are the hard-won spoils
of victory of the individual soul; and each soul
comes to his birth into the new body with the
results of his past lives in his hand to work
with in the present. Thus this theory fills up
the gaps in the scientific one, answers the
problems that science cannot answer, and more
and more it appears, as we notice the lines of
evolution of modern science, that this theory of
Reincarnation is wanted in order to complete the
theory and to make intelligible the progress of
character and intelligence side by side with the
evolution of the form.
Soul Age
Moreover, the marks of growth that we see among
men are clear signs of a past, of difference of
soul-age, if I may use the word. Wherever you go
through nature, looking at things of the same
kind, you find them at different stages of
growth; and you constantly find in the more
developed creature marks of the past up which he
has evolved. Now, this is not only true of
bodies; it is equally true of the soul in man,
for you see, when you look at man, all stages of
intelligence, all stages of moral growth. At the
present moment in this one country, in this one
town, you could bring together thousands of men
at different stages of evolution in intelligence
and in moral capacity. How are they to be
explained ? I am not now thinking of the moral
point, to which I shall come in a moment. How
are they to be explained scientifically ? Why
these great differences ? Or why even the small
differences ? If you say 'growth',
you are on sound scientific
ground, because everywhere in nature you see
growth, differences of size, differences of
development, and these are stages of the growth
of the living creature. Why only in intelligence
and morality is this principle of growth to be
thrown on one side, as explaining differences of
state, and the principle - thrown out everywhere
by science - the theory of sudden creation, of a
sudden appearance without cause, without
antecedents, without anything to explain it, be
held to explain (if the word may be used) the
differences in the growth of intelligence and of
morality in different human beings ? Moreover,
you find in human intelligence marks of its
past, similar to the marks of the past in human
bodies; intelligence in a new body swiftly runs
over its past evolution, as all careful
observers of the unfolding of intelligence in
the child know well.
Depravity and Genius
But that brings me to the moral question. I said
that Reincarnation is a necessity morally, if we
are to keep our belief in the divine justice and
the divine love face to face with the facts of
life. Now let me take two cases, the reality of
which will be very plain to everyone of you. I
choose extreme cases in order to make the
illustration very clear. Go down into one of the
worst slums of London. Children are born into
those slums of vilest parentage; looked at from
the point of view of physical heredity, looked
at from the moral and intellectual status of
father and mother. Now you can tell one of the
children of whom I am thinking, a
child-criminal, when you see it in the cradle;
you know, as you look at
that baby form, that that child is doomed to a
life of misery and crime. You can tell it by the
shape of the head, you can tell by the whole
type of the features that that child is a
criminal child. And it is true. They are the
despair of the educator, as I know who have had
to deal with them, as all know who are brought
into touch with them. They will not respond to
moral appeal, but only to fear, most brutalising
of instructors. There is no moral answer at all;
there is no answer such as anyone of you would
find from a child in your own nursery. The child
comes into the world with the criminal taint
upon him. How is he brought up? He is brought up
in that miserable surrounding that some of you
may know, where the teachers of the child are
blows and curses, where the child is taught to
steal as you teach your child to be honest,
where he is flogged for not lying, where vice is
rewarded, where any attempt at right-doing is
punished. That is the atmosphere in which he is
brought up. He is taught to look upon society as
his enemy, the law as his tyrant, the policeman
as his foe - to have his hand turned against
society. What is the inevitable result? That he
falls into the hands of the law. The law
nowadays tries to be more merciful than it was
twenty or thirty years ago, and tries reform.
But reform is only possible where there is
something within the brain and heart to respond
to it. And I am taking the case - there are only
too many of them - where this power of response
is not found. He goes on from one crime to
another, from one imprisonment to another,
gradually developing into that shame of our
civilization - a habitual criminal. From one
stage of vice to another he proceeds, none to
help him, none to rescue
him, none to uplift him, until at last, in some
mad moment of despair, or drunkenness, or
passion, he strikes an angry blow that takes a
human life, and then human justice takes from
him the life which has slain another, and he
ends his miserable career in the quicklime of
the prison-yard. His fault? He never had a
chance. He came into the world a criminal; he
has left it a criminal. That is his life's
story.
Another child is born, and as you look on that
child in the cradle you see the stamp of genius
upon him from the birth hour; you see in the
shape of head and type of feature the splendour
of the human soul that resides within that baby
form. He is born of noble parents, who surround
him with all gentleness, and kindness, and
tenderness. He is petted and caressed into
nobility of living, as the other was beaten into
crime. Every effort he makes is encouraged; he
hears around him all words of cheer and
inspiration where the other had naught but
curses and derision. His splendid qualities grow
and expand: he becomes greater and greater as
year after year passes over his head. He is
given the very best education the land can give;
his countrymen salute his genius as the glory of
their race. On, year after year, he goes, ever
brighter and brighter, climbing higher and
higher, until at last, amid a nation's sorrow,
Westminster Abbey receives the remains of his
mortal body, and his name shines, a star in
history, which all men admire and revere. His
merit? He was born into the world a genius.
Who sent those two souls on their life's
journeys? If you say that the criminal came
newly into the world God-created, and the genius
came also newly into the
world God-created, ah! then what becomes of the
divine justice upon which the hopes of humanity
must rest? For if the one could be made straight
from his Creator's hands, why should the other
be made? If the genius in intellect can be
created, why then the idiot? If the saint can be
created, why then the criminal? I know you may
say: “These are not questions that we can
answer.” But it is these questions that drive
hundreds of noble hearts into infidelity, into a
scepticism which is really more reverent than
belief. I speak of what I know. These are the
things that made me an unbeliever for many, many
years. It was human pain and, worse than human
pain, human degradation - for human sin is worse
than human misery - it was those facts that made
me an unbeliever; for I preferred not to believe
in God rather than to believe in a supreme
injustice and the lack of love at the world's
heart. And these questions are not the questions
of the thoughtless, the indifferent and the
profligate; they are the questions of ripe
intelligences and of noble hearts. And religion
must find an answer to these questions if she is
to keep the noblest of the children of men
within her pale. There is one reason why I ask
for discussion of this question, and why it
seems to me that it is the religious teachers of
the people who are most concerned in such
problems of human life.
One Life and Many Lives
Now look at this same thing still from the
standpoint of justice and of love. Some
religious people believe that this one human
life decides the whole course of the future.
Others do not accept that view, but think that
on the other side of the
grave progress, or happiness for all, is
possible. Now if progress be admitted, then the
whole principle of Reincarnation is granted.
For, whether it be in this or in other worlds,
if progress be admitted as the law of life, the
growth of the spirit and the soul is granted.
But suppose, with the great majority in
Christendom, that men believe either that this
life decides the whole fate of the soul
hereafter, or believe that though all will pass
into bliss, this life is but one, one single
life, then how very difficult to reconcile the
facts with that. For a human soul is born into
the world in a baby's body and dies in a few
days. Another goes through a long life of sixty
or seventy years. If the first idea be accepted,
that this life decides the whole future, then it
becomes very hard for the man who lives out his
life to run the risk of eternal loss, from which
the baby, by the mere fact of his early death,
is secured. A terrible injustice that, when you
come to think of it; because none would say that
the child who dies a few hours old runs any risk
of misery hereafter. Then why should he reap the
fruit of bliss which may be forfeited by the
older man in his struggles in the world in the
course of his long life? This difference of the
length of human life becomes inseparable from
the question of justice, if you are going to
admit only this one life. And if you say that,
of what use is the life if the child, who has
only had two or three hours of it, reaches the
same everlastingness of bliss as the man who,
through a life of struggle, has won virtue and
triumphed over temptation? Does this life matter
or not ? That is the problem to be solved. If it
does not matter, and the newborn babe dying
finds eternal happiness, then it is very
hard that so many should have to
go through a life of pain and suffering and have
nothing to show for it at the end. What avails
that experience if this theory of life be true?
And when the old man dies full of wisdom, full
of the fruits of experience, full of tender
sympathy and compassion, where are those fruits
that he has won by life's experience to be
utilised? In a life of ceaseless bliss? They are
of no use in such a life. But this world has
need of them. This world wants them. And if he
can bring them back here to the service of
humanity, after the growth on the other side has
woven them into his very nature, ah! then that
long life will indeed have its fruit in human
service, and we can realise the value of the
physical life as one of the factors in the
universe. And if it be admitted that human life
has its use on the other side, then what of the
babe who is shut out from the one chance of
valuable experience, and goes through
everlastingness with a perpetual want, the want
of that one human life which others have
possessed ?
“Be Ye Perfect”
And pass again to another question, which has
always seemed to me even more important from the
standpoint of the divine life - a life of
degradation, the life of the drunkard, of the
undeveloped human soul, who simply slouches
through the world with his eyes down, with his
mind unawake, with no power to appreciate the
beauty of this wonderful world, and all the
marvelous things that are to be found within its
limits. Compare such a creature as that, whose
life is nothing more than a few bodily
sensations, a few passions, and an occasional
crude thought - compare that, his only
experience of
human life, with
the life of the cultured, thoughtful,
well-developed intelligence, who takes joy in an
beauty, in all that is gracious and fair in the
world; and ask why one should have as his only
experience of life that miserable crawling
through the slime of earth, while the other,
born, just as the first was born, with nothing
behind him, is to soar into visions of beauty
and delight, and find in his experience of the
earth so much that makes it fun and beautiful
and helpful? It is not fair, it is not right, if
we all have but the one experience. How does
Reincarnation deal with that? It tells us that
out from the bosom of the eternal Father come an
these germinal spirits that He sends into the
world of matter for their growth and
development; that all begin ignorant, helpless;
that an gradually grow upwards, developing their
inherent powers; that man is born into the world
to become perfect. Has it ever struck you to ask
what mean those wondrous words of the Christ:
“Be ye therefore perfect, as your Father in
heaven is perfect”? Think how magnificent that
ideal. And how is it to be done? Why even we,
who, according to this teaching of
Reincarnation, have climbed so high from our
earliest beginnings in this spirit life, can we
say, with our weaknesses and our follies, with
the limitations of our knowledge and of our
power, that in this one life, even starting with
all the advantages we have, we can become
perfect as God in heaven is perfect? And yet
nothing less than that is man's destiny; that,
and nothing less than that, is the word of the
Christ to His disciples. Surely He who is called
“The Truth” would not have given a command which
cannot be fulfilled. But we have this divine
perfection within us, as within the seed is the
power of the tree. And we
need but time for the fulfilling of the command,
for the growth into the splendour of the Image
in which we are made. So that from that
standpoint also this seems to be necessary. You
may say: “Yes, in other worlds”; but, then, why?
What is the sense of sending people at every
stage of growth into this one particular world?
Where did the higher ones earn their powers? In
other worlds before birth? If so, why come for
one lesson into this world, and then go on into
other worlds again? For all the varieties are
here, lowest and highest, and every step
between. And if you admit growth on the other
side, then you must explain the differences of
growth in this world - why one is dowered with
so much more than another. Is it not more
likely, more reasonable, more in accordance with
all we know of nature, that this world is a
school into which come souls, beginning in the
infant class, going on stage after stage, which
is life after life, until they reach the highest
class in the school, and then going on in the
other worlds, where other lessons are to be
learned, a vast progress of unending evolution?
But in this world certain classes have to be
passed through which cannot be passed through in
the limits of a single life. So that from that
standpoint also Reincarnation seems to be a
necessity, to say nothing of the glory and the
inspiration that it gives to human life. For if
I know, in this life of mine, that every effort
I am making, every aspiration in which I lift my
heart to God, every hope that I strive to
realise, every service that imperfectly I try to
do, is the seed of a harvest that shall have its
reaping, is the building of a faculty that
hereafter I may use in divine and human service;
if I know that, however
weak, however failing, however ignorant,
everything that I learn is mine for everlasting,
and that I shall come back again and again until
all life's lessons are learned; ah! then I shall
not break my heart because I am still ignorant,
because I am still foolish, because I am still
sinful; I shall know that although I am weak
today I shall be strong tomorrow, and that there
is not one height reached by the highest saint
which shall not also be mine in time to come,
who am climbing the same ladder that he has
climbed so long. There is the hope of evolution
brought into the life of the individual; there
the glory that Reincarnation sheds on human
life; for when I now see the downcast, the
miserable, the lowest of human kind, I can feel:
You are only my younger brother, a baby in the
school of life, where I have been for a longer
period than you; the same God lives in you that
lives in me; and I have for him the tenderness,
the compassion, that the elder brother feels for
the baby struggling on the floor. It is with no
hatred, no contempt, no derision, that I regard
him, but with the recognition of a common life
which will be unfolded in him tomorrow, as I in
years gone by struggled also where he struggles
now. There is the secret for the uplifting of
the degraded, which it seems to me that nothing
else can give; for if they do not catch this
idea, there is a sense of injustice, of
unfairness, of being flung into a world into
which they did not ask to come, into misery and
into degradation. But if it is only the
beginning of the experience of the divine life
within them, the learning of the alphabet of
life, then there is no feeling of despair nor of
anger, but perfect justice as well as perfect
love is at the heart of the world. For there
is only one explanation,
it seems to me, of love side by side with human
misery, and it is that this education is
necessary for the unfolding of the divine
powers in man. If it is not necessary, it is not
born of love. And if it be necessary, then it
cannot be escaped by any; all must go through it
or else remain forever imperfect, because they
have not had that experience in human life.
Reincarnation in Christian Teaching
Pass from the view of the necessity, and let us
ask whether this, which seems so necessary, is a
doctrine which does not belong to Christendom as
much as to any other people, to any other faith.
Now every student knows that this doctrine was
common amongst the Jews. You may read in their
books that it was the common faith of the time.
You can see it in the questions that in the
Gospels are sometimes put to the disciples and
to the Christ. Remember the words spoken, by the
Christ Himself to the disciples when they
questioned Him of John the Baptist: “If you can
receive it, this is Elijah.” Remember His answer
when they brought to Him the challenge of the
people outside “How say the scribes the Elijah
must first come?” His answer was: “He has come
already; and they understood that He spoke to
them of John the Baptist.” This is simply one
case showing the familiarity of the idea among
the Jews, just as you may find it in the
writings I refer to, that they said that all
imperfect souls had to return to the earth. Then
take, still within the limits of the Gospels
themselves, that remarkable statement about the
man born blind. “Which did sin, this man or his
parents, that he was born blind?” Ante-natal
sin. Now the answer that
was given: “Neither did this man sin nor his
parents that he was born blind”, and another
reason being given, is very significant. For if
the knowledge of the Christ had been the same as
the ordinary belief nowadays, that ante-natal
sin is impossible, the only answer would have
been: “Why ask me the foolish question whether a
man is born blind because of his sin? How could
he sin before birth?” A different reason was
given for the blindness, but not a natural
rebuke of the folly which ascribed a defect at
birth to the sin of the individual who was born.
Come away from those authoritative records of
Christianity to the writings and teachings of
those who lived in the early centuries after
Christ, and see how often in the writings of the
great Fathers of the Church this doctrine of the
pre-existence of the soul is taught. One of the
plainest teachings of it is found in the
writings of that noblest of the Fathers, Origen.
He lays it down distinctly that each person born
into the world receives a body according to his
deserts and his former actions; a very, very
clear statement. And Origen, remember, was one
of the grandest minds of which the early Church
could boast, one of the noblest and purest
characters, and he taught that doctrine
definitely and clearly. Take other great
bishops, and you will find them speaking along
the same line; for five-and-a-half centuries
after the death of Christ that was a current
doctrine of the Christian Church. And when, in
the middle of the sixth century, it was
condemned by a council, it was not condemned as
a general doctrine, but only in the form in
which Origen had put it, so that you have
absolutely no Christian authority against it.
The Roman Catholic may object to
the form into which Origen threw
it, and say that that form was condemned by a
council of the Church, but he cannot say that
the whole doctrine of Reincarnation was
condemned, for there is no such condemnation of
the doctrine known in Christian history. On the
other hand, you have it taught over and over
again by the men who received the original
deposit of the Faith. And it never quite
disappeared. Granted that it disappeared from
the authorised, the official, teachings of the
Church, it survived in many of the so-called
heretical bodies. The Albigenses taught it. Many
other bodies, through the Middle Ages and
onwards, claimed a truer tradition than that of
the Roman Church, and carried this doctrine on
as part of the primitive tradition. And when you
come down through the various Christian writers,
how often does this doctrine come to the front,
especially amongst the philosophers and poets -
the poets because of their intuitions; the
philosophers because, as Hume said, the only
doctrine of the immortality of the soul at which
the philosopher can look is a doctrine that
affirms its pre-existence. And that necessarily;
for once the philosopher allows it is necessary
for the existence of a soul that it should be
provided with a human body at birth, there
follows the probability that when death strikes
away that body, the soul will no longer be able
to exist. And one of the roots of modern
scepticism lies in this most illogical doctrine
- that a soul which is to last for ever after
death did not exist for ever before birth. Then
later, you find it appearing in a very
interesting manner in the Church of England. I
came across, some three years ago, a pamphlet
written by a clergymen of the Church of
England of the seventeenth
century, in which he laid it down as an
essential doctrine of Christianity that the soul
existed before birth, and he quoted in that
pamphlet a number of other pamphlets, - written
about the same time, putting forward the same
teaching, giving quotations from them, as well
as tracing it back through the early Fathers and
through the great Churches of Christendom. And
he, though putting forward that view, apparently
had no condemnation from his Bishop, nor from
anyone who objected to his view as being really
Christian teachings. Take the German
philosophers; you find it among them
necessarily. Take Goethe, one of those great
intuitional minds who see the truth that lies
behind the appearance of things. Or have you
forgotten that most Christian of poets,
Wordsworth, and his declaration, long before the
Theosophical Society came to disturb people's
minds in this country?
Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting
The soul that rises with us, our life's star,
Hath had elsewhere its setting,
And cometh from afar.
Not in entire forgetfulness
And not in utter nakedness
But trailing clouds of glory do we come
From God who is our home.
There you have his view: “Hath had elsewhere its setting.” Poet after poet teaches the same, poet after poet who by the light of genius sees through the veil of matter and realises by the poetic intuition the truth about the human soul. Now surely if we find this doctrine taught by the early Fathers, strongly hinted at, if nothing more - I should say asserted - by the Christ, existing in Christendom through its whole history, even though thrown aside by the official Church, reappearing again in England in the very bosom of the English Church in the seventeenth century, reaffirmed by English poets and German philosophers, is it not better to look at it as a part of the great heritage of Christendom rather than as an alien doctrine coming from other religions? It is perfectly true, of course, that every great religion of the past has taught this doctrine. It is true you find it in the Book of the Dead; that you find it in Chaldea; that you find it in the ancient teachings in China; that you find in all the Indian scriptures, and in the Buddhist scriptures; that you find it in Greece and in Rome. But it is not because of that that I am putting it forward here, in an audience gathered in a Christian land. I say to you, it is yours as much as theirs, and if you accept the doctrine of Reincarnation, do not accept it as an alien doctrine that comes from some other faith; take it as part of the great Christian revelation; take it as part of the great Christian teaching. Admit that it fell out of sight for a while under the blackness of ignorance that swept over Europe. Admit that it dropped below the surface, in times when men were not thinking of these great problems that face you today. But as you value the work that this Faith is to do in the West, the one religion which is possible in the West, for to the West it was given, do not, as you prize that Faith, put aside as alien, as heretical, a doctrine which is coming back into the Christian Church by some of its best thinkers, by some of its best teachers. Clergyman after clergyman in the Church of England has accepted it, and is beginning to teach it. Writer after writer is seeing in this the safety of Christianity from the shafts of scepticism arising from the conscience as well as from intellect. And I put it to you today for your consideration - not for your acceptance, because the belief that can be gained by listening to one brief lecture would be worthless as an intellectual conviction and useless in its bearing upon life - I ask you to think, to consider, to clear away the prejudice which looks on it as unchristian and as alien, to recognise that, if it be true, then inevitably it is part of the truth of Christianity, and that history will justify you in that statement, showing it to be part of the Faith once delivered to the Saints.
Reincarnation, Doctrine of Hope and Strength
Friends, if I speak to you on this tonight, it
is because I know what the doctrine has of hope,
of strength, of encouragement, in the face of
the difficulties in the world. I know what it
means for the heart-broken, who fall in despair
before the puzzles of life, to have the light
thrown upon it which makes life intelligible;
for the misery of intellectual unrest is one of
the worst miseries that we face in the modern
world. To be able to understand what we are, to
be able to understand whence we have come and
whither we are going, to see all through the
world one law as there is one life, to realise
that there is no partiality, no injustice, no
unfair treatment of one human soul, no unfair
treatment of one human life; that all are
growing; that all are evolving; that our elders
are only elders and not different in kind from
ourselves; that the youngest shall be as the
oldest; that man has within him the developing
spirit of his Father and shall therefore be
perfect as God is perfect; that is the hope -
nay, not the hope, the certainty - that this
doctrine gives to the human soul. And when we
have grasped it we can face the miseries, the
sorrows, the despairs of life, and know that in
the end, looking back upon this sorrowful world,
we shall say: “It was from God, it came from
God, and to God it returns.”
