only three
of the seven colours of
the solar spectrum.
Speaking generally, the
new
world gives the sensation of light, of life, of
all-pervading consciousness, of joy. . . . But to
a mind which is not prepared
the same world will give a sensation of infinite darkness and terror.
Moreover, the sensation of terror must come from the
loss of everything real,
from the disappearance of
this
world.
In order not to experience the terror of the new world, it is necessary to
know it beforehand, either emotionally - through
faith
and
love,
or
intellectually -
by reason.
And in order not to experience terror at the loss of the old world, one
should renounce it
voluntarily
beforehand, also either through faith or reason.
It is necessary to renounce voluntarily all the beautiful bright world we live
in, to admit that it is a mirage, a phantom, an unreality, deceit, illusion,
may
a.
One should become reconciled to this unreality, not be afraid of it but
rejoice in it. One should be stripped of everything. One should become
POOR
IN SPIRIT
, i.e. make oneself poor by an effort of one's spirit.
The beautiful Gospel symbol expresses the deepest philosophical truth:
Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdom
of heaven.
These words become clear only if taken in the sense of renunciation of the
material world. 'Poor in spirit' does not mean
poor in the material sense,
in
the everyday meaning of the word; and it certainly does not mean
poverty of
the spirit.
Spiritual poverty is renunciation of matter, such 'poverty' when a
man has no ground under his feet and no sky over his head.
Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests, But the Son of
man hath not where to lay his head.
This is the kind of poverty when a man is
completely alone,
because he
begins to see other people, even the most near to him, his father, his mother,
not as he saw them before, but differently, and renounces them because he
sees
real entities
towards which he strives, just as in renouncing the
phenomenal phantasm of the world he approaches that which is truly real.
The moment of transition, the terrible moment of the
loss of the old
and the
unfolding of the new
was depicted in ancient literature in an infinite number
of allegories. The purpose of the
Mysteries
was to make this transition easier.
In India, in Egypt, in Greece there existed special
preparatory
rituals,
sometimes only symbolical, sometimes
real, actually leading the soul to the very doors of the new world, and opening these
doors at the moment of
initiation.
But external rites and ceremonies could not by
themselves create initiation. The chief work had to go on
within
the soul and the mind
of man.
How then can logic help man to pass to the consciousness of this new higher world?
We have seen that
mathematics
has already found a way into this higher order of
things. Penetrating there, it first of all renounces its
fundamental axioms
of identity and
difference.
In the world of infinite and fluid magnitudes
a magnitude can be not equal to itself;
a part may be equal to the whole; and of equal magnitudes one may be infinitely
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