December 2021 Newsletter

The following articles are reproduced from the December 2021 Newsletter to members. Non-members may or may not be able to relate to the contents.

The Occult Significance of Christmas

By Geoffrey Hodson

An Extract from Sharing the Light

 

 

THE Bible stories, it has been stated, not only contain a record of historical events, they also reveal eternal truths and interior experiences and attainments of individual men and women. The central figure in the Gospel story, the Christ, mystically represents also the Divine in Nature and in man, the Christos within. The story which is told of the Christ is a universal one, being enacted within and by the Soul of every human being.

 

Christmas is a thanksgiving, and a remembrance of the birth in Palestine 2,000 years ago of Him who became known as Jesus the Christ. It is also the story of the birth of the Christ, age by age, within the human heart; it is a festival of spiritual birth, a call to the spiritual life. For humanity, the beautiful story of the Nativity describes in symbol the entry by the spiritually awakened man and woman upon the Path or way of holiness, the adoption of the selfless, dedicated, spiritual life. The Nativity of Christ represents the beginning of a new cycle, of whatever order.

 

There are three main interpretations of the Bible story — the cosmic, the Monadic and the occult or initiatory. In the cosmos, it describes the birth of a universe at the dawn of the Creative Day. In man, it describes his spiritual ascent or birth into a higher level of consciousness, and so a new and spiritual ideal of life. The festival of Christmas has been interpreted as a call to enter upon the ‘strait and narrow way’ (Matthew 7:14) which leads to life eternal. There are said to be four main keys and one clue to an understanding of the symbology used in the story of the Nativity. The four keys are: All true spiritual and intuitive perceptions first occur within oneself. Each parable dramatises experiences of the Soul. People described therein are personifications of the principles of man. All objects have a symbolical meaning. A clue is the impossibility of a physical virgin birth which is a cover or blind to turn away the profane from the great Mystery, concealing its inner meaning, and yet it is a clue which reveals the inner spiritual truth to those who can follow it. In making the impossible seem to occur, the authors arrest the attention of the student, warning him to interpret, not literally but allegorically — not as a physical event but as a spiritual revelation. The awakening to power of spiritual vision of Divine Love and Wisdom from within the Soul, is indeed the result of an immaculate conception and a virgin birth.

 

How to Interpret

 

Let us now look at the main actors in the great drama and the main objects stressed in in the story, but in order to interpret them and understand fully the meaning, we must remember that man is sevenfold — a threefold immortal, spiritual being, the Microcosmic Trinity, the Triple Self of man, manifesting through four mortal bodies of mind, emotion, vitality and flesh. Each of these seven parts of man is personified in the story of the Nativity.

 

Gabriel, the Angel of the Annunciation, represents the innermost spirit in man, the Divine Spark or Monad. The Creative Will descending from the Monad is symbolised by the lily in Gabriel’s hand. Mary represents the divine intelligence, the spiritual soul or Ego, which alone is able to hear the voice of the indwelling spirit. The Christ Child, who is ‘born’ after this inwardly fructifying power has descended, represents love and intuition. Since it is wholly spiritual, this interior ‘birth’ is indeed immaculate. These three then, Gabriel, Mary and the Christ represent the three-fold spiritual Self of man.

 

Joseph stands for the formal logical mind, and valuable though this power of the intellect may be, it cannot by itself give birth to the intuition. The tame, domesticated animals in the manger represent the emotions — purified, controlled and harmonised. When these are wild and untamed they endanger the Soul of man, but when tamed and trained they are well represented by docile domestic beasts of burden. The manger in the stable of the inn is the source of life and nutriment. It represents the Etheric Double of man, the container of the vital forces that keep the physical body alive, the latter being represented by the stable. These four then, Joseph, the animals, the manger and the stable symbolise the four-fold mortal aspect of man.

 

Other Truths

 

Let us now look at aspects of the Nativity in greater detail, and using keys of the Sacred Language, see what other truths are hidden beneath the veil of allegory and symbol. Bethlehem, where Christ was born, may be regarded as symbolical of the whole world of men, material and spiritual, and the inn the accentuation of personal material interest. It is thus correctly described as being ‘full’. Accordingly, ‘there was no room for them in the inn’ (Luke 2:7). The wondrous birth of the Christ consciousness cannot occur in the realm of the worldly mind, dominated — not unnaturally — by the pursuit of personal pleasures and the attribute of possessiveness.

 

In a deeper occult sense, then, the manger is the secret place of the Soul, where wonderful transformations occur. It is here that the birth of the Christ Child takes place.

 

Every world religion has as its heart its sanctuaries or centres of the Great Mysteries. To these, every earnest aspirant whose motive is utterly selfless, whose heart is pure, can find his or her way. There spiritual wisdom is imparted, the Soul is enlightened, its unfoldment is quickened and, when the time is ripe, the Great Initiations are bestowed. In this sense then the manger of the inn typifies a secret sanctuary, despised by the world as a resting place, yet it is there that the mystic birth occurs in the presence of the august assembly of the Adepts Who are the Shepherds of Souls, and it is there that the Wise Men come.

 

Renunciation

 

This story of the birth of the Christ Child in feebleness and poverty in the manger of a stable of an inn, symbolises the surrender of all earthly possessions and powers, for the Initiate surrenders all, lays aside all personal desires and emotions, and gives up for ever all pride of possession. Thus is taught the great lesson of renunciation. Everyone who is spiritually newborn is selfless, detached and symbolically a child. The Lord of Love himself voluntarily chose to appear in the most helpless guise, an infant, and in the humblest of all places, a stable, surrounded by domestic animals. Yet the kings of the earth, the three Wise Men of the Bible story, came to visit the Babe in the stable and to lay their treasures — gold, frankincense and myrrh — at the Christ Child’s feet. Mystically interpreted, there are present at the First Initiation Adept sponsors (the Wise Men), and there then occurs a descent of Atma, Buddhi and Manas and the powers of each — symbolised by gold, frankincense and myrrh, the gifts of the Wise Men.

 

Symbol of the Star

 

The Wise Men were led to the inn by a star. The symbol of the star has many meanings, but in the initiatory sense it represents the Atma, the spiritual will, the forthshining spiritual power of the Initiate, and the shining symbol of the world’s great King, the One Initiator on this earth, in Whose name and by Whose power all Initiations are conferred. When a candidate reaches the portals of Initiation, the Star flashes forth to indicate the approval of this great Ruler of the world under the Solar Deity, the Great One Who is in charge of evolution on this earth.

 

 

 

146th International Convention

 

This year we can all again attend the annual international convention without going to Adyar! Indeed, you can stay right at home and be in the convention which will be completely online. The 146th International Convention will be a four-day online event from 27 to 30 December 2021 with the theme Living in the Now: Challenges of the Inner Life. Each day is dedicated to regions of the world which have different time zones. This will permit Convention participants from around the globe to attend at suitable hours for them. The regions are Adyar/Asia, the Americas, and Europe/Africa. Of course, you are welcome to tune in to other time zones as you wish.

 

For detailed information of the program, go to  https://tsconvention.com/

 

Registration is required to attend the Convention. The registration fee is voluntary. However, the HQ would appreciate a contribution of USD$10 or so. Obviously higher amounts are most welcome.

 

To donate, go to: https://ts-adyar.org/content/donations

 

To register, go to: https://tsconvention.com/register-page/

 

 

Convention Program
 

Singapore Time given below
 

Day 1 27th Dec 12pm-1pm: Opening of the 146th Convention (Adyar)
            1:15pm-2:30pm: Presidential Address (Adyar)
            4pm-6pm: Youth Forum: “What are our challenges?” (Indo-Pacific Youth)
            6pm-6:30pm: Meditation (Adyar)
            7pm-9pm: Indian Section Convention I – “Look Beyond Yourself” (India)
Day 2 28th Dec 1pm-2:05pm: Lecture “Searching for Harmony”, and Meditation (Indo-Pacific)
            2:30pm-3:30pm: Lecture “Love and Unity in a time of Individualism”, and Video on China Project (Indo-Pacific)
            5pm-6:10pm: Three short talks (Europe and Africa)
            6:10pm-7pm: TOS report, and Interview on “Challenges of the Inner Life” (Europe and Africa)
            7pm-8pm: Panel discussion “Living in the Now: Challenges of the Inner Life” (Europe and Africa)
            10pm-12am Youth Forum: “Living in the now” (Europe and Africa Youth)
Day 3 29th Dec 1am-2am: Lecture “Seek Out the Way: Experiential Reflections on the Inner Life” (Americas)
            2am-3:20am: Lectures in Spanish, and Meditation (Americas)
            7am-7:55am: THEOSOPHY-SCIENCE INTERVIEW: “What does it mean to be human?” (Adyar)
            10am-11:30am Four Talks and Dance performance (Indo-Pacific)
            11:30-12pm: Theosophical Schools (Indo-Pacific)
            5pm-6:15pm BESANT LECTURE by Antonio A. Oposa, Jr. (Adyar)
Day 4 30th Dec 12am-1:10am: Symposium, and Meditation (Europe and Africa)
            1:10am-2:15am: Panel discussion, and Interview about a Theosophical book (Europe and Africa)
            3am-5am Youth Forum: “Embracing the Inner Life” (Americas Youth)
            7am-7:50am: Lecture “Theosophical Resilience and the Mind of a Master” (Americas)
            7:50am-9am: Two short lectures in Spanish, and TOS Report (Americas)
            11am-12pm: Questions & Answers (Adyar)
            12:30pm-2pm: Surendra Narayan Archives – “A Hundred Precious Years” (Adyar)
            4pm-5:30pm: Indian Section Convention II – “Look Beyond Yourself” (India)
            7:30-8:30pm: Theosophical Order of Service, International: “The Inner Side of Service” (TOS Int’l)
            10pm-11:30pm: PUBLIC LECTURE: “A Life within a Life” by Tim Boyd (Adyar)
            11:30pm-12:15am: Closing of the Convention (Adyar)
 

Season’s greetings.

May we all rejoice in the spirit of Christmas

of giving and celebrating

and

May each of you find peace and joy in the
New Year!

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