The Holy Koran of the Moorish Science Temple of America
Know Thyself And Thy Father God Allah
PREFACE
The genealogy of Jesus with eighteen years of the events, life works, and techings
in India, Europe, and Africa. These events occured before he was thirty years
of age. These secret lessons are for all of those who love Jesus and desire
to know about His life, works and teachings.
Dear readers, do not falsely use these lessons. They are for good, peace, and happiness for all those who love Jesus.
Dear mothers, teach these lessons to your little ones, that they may learn to love instead of hate.
Dear fathers, by these lessons you can set your house in order and your children will learn to love instead of hate.
The lessons of this pamphlet are not for sale, but for the sake of humanity, as I am a prophet and the servant is worthy of his hire, you can recieve this pamphlet at expenses. The reason these lessons have not been known is because the Moslems of India, Egypt and Palestine had these secrets and kept them back from the outside world, and when the time appointed by Allah they loosened the keys and [text unreadable] these secrets, and for the first time in ages have these secrets been delivered in the hands of Moslems of America. All authority and rights of publishing this pamphlet of 1927.
The industrious acts of the Moselms of northwest and southwest Africa. These are the Moabites, Hamathites, Canaanites, who were driven out of the land of Canaan, by Joshua, and recieved permission from the Pharoahs of Egyot to settle in that portion of Egypt. In later years they formed themselves kingdoms. These kingdoms are called this day Morocco, Algiers, Tunis, Tripoi, etc.
By the Prophet NOBLE DREW ALI
Chapter I
The Creation and Fall of Man
"Time never was when man was not. If life of man at any time began a time would come when it would end. The thoughts of God cannot be circumscribed. No finite mind can comprehend things infinite. All finite things are subject unto change. All finite things will cease to be, because there was a time when they were not. The bodies and the soul of men are finite things, and they will change, yea, from the finite point of view the time will come when they will be no more. But man himself is not the body, nor the soul; he is a spirit and is part of Allah. Creative Fate gave to man, to spirit-man, a soul that he might function on the plane of soul; gave him a body of the flesh, that he might function on the plane of things made manifest.
"Why did creative Fate give to spirit man a soul that he might function on the plane of soul?
"Why did creative Fate give to soul a body of the flesh that it might function on the plane of things that are made manifest?
"Hear, now, ye worlds, dominions, powers and thrones!
"Hear, now, ye cherubim, ye seraphim, ye angels and ye men!
"Hear, now, O protoplast, and earth, and plant and beast!
"Hear, now, ye creeping things of earth, ye fish that swim, ye birds that fly!
"Hear, now, ye winds that blow, ye thunders and ye lightnings of the sky!
"Hear, now, ye spirits of the fire, of water, earth, and air!
"Hear, now, O everything that is, or was, or evermore will be, for Wisdom speaks from out of the highest plane of spirit life:
"Man is a thought of Allah; all thoughts of Allah are infinite; they are not measured up by time, for things that are concerned with time begin and end.
"The thoughts of Allah are from the everlasting of the past unto the never ending days to come--And so is man, the Spirit-man.
"But man, like every other thought of Allah, was but a seed, a seed that held within itself the potencies of Allah, just as the seed of any plant of earth holds deep within itself the attributes of every part of that especial plant.
"So spirit-man, as seed of Allah, held deep within himself the attributes of every part of Allah.
"Now, seeds are perfect, yea, as perfect as the source from which they come; but they are not unfolded into life made manifest.
"The child is as perfect as the mother is.
"So man, the seed, must be deep planted in a soil that he might grow, unfold, as does the bud unfold to show the flower.
"The human seed that came forth from the heart of Allah was full ordained to be the lord of plane of soul, and of the plane of things made manifest.
"So Allah, the husbandman of every thing that is, threw forth this human seed into the soil of soul; it grew apace, and man became a living soul; and he became the lord of all the kingdom of the soul.
"Hark, now,
let every creature hear, The plane of soul is but the ether of the spirit plane
vibrating not so fast, and in the slower rhythm of this plane the essences of
life are manifest; the
perfumes and odors, the true sensations and the all of love are manifest.
"And these soul attributes become a body beautiful.
"A multitude of lessons man must learn upon the plane of soul; and here he tarries many ages until his lessons are all learned.
"Upon the
boundary of the plane of soul the ether began to vibrate slower still, and then
the essences took on a garb; the perfumes and the odors and the true sensations
and the all of love
were clothed in flesh; and man was clothed in flesh.
"Perfected man must pass through all the ways of life, and so a carnal nature was full manifest, a nature that sprang forth from fleshly things.
"Without a foe a soldier never knows his strength, and thought must be developed by the exercise of strength.
"And so this carnal nature soon became a foe that man must fight, that he might be the strength of Allah made manifest.
"Let every living thing stand still and hear!
"Man is the Lord of all the plane of manifests; of protoplast, of mineral, of plant, of beast; but he has given up his birthright, just to gratify his lower self, his carnal self.
"But man will full regain his lost estate, his heritage; but he must do it in a conflict that cannot be told in words.
"Yea, he must suffer trials and temptations manifold; but let him know that cherubim and seraphim that rule the stations of the sun, and spirits of the mighty Allah who rule the solar stars are his protectors and his guides, and they will lead to victory.
"Man will be fully saved, redeemed, perfected by the things he suffers on the plane of flesh, and on the plane of soul.
"When man has conquered carnal things his garb of flesh will then have served its purpose well and it will fall, will be no more.
"Then he will stand untrammeled on the plane of soul where he must full complete his victories.
"Unnumbered foes will stand before the man upon the plane of soul; there he must overcome, yea, overcome them every one.
"Thus hope will ever be his beacon light; there is no failure for the human soul, for Allah is leading on and victory is sure.
"Man cannot die; the spirit-man is one with Allah, and while Allah lives man cannot die.
"When man has conquered every foe upon the plane of soul the seed will have full opened out, will have unfolded in the Holy Breath.
"The garb of soul will then have served its purpose well, and man will need it never more, and it will pass and be no more.
"And man will then attain unto the blessedness of perfectness and be at one with Allah."
Chapter II:
Education of Mary and Elizabeth in Zoan, Egypt
1. THE son of Herod, Archelaus, reigned in Jerusalem. He was a selfish, cruel
king; he put to death all those who did not honor him.
2 He called in council all the wisest men and asked about the infant claimant to his throne.
3 The council said that John and Jesus both were dead; then he was satisfied.
4 Now Joseph, Mary
and their sons were down in Egypt in Zoan, and John was with
his mother in the Judean Hills.
5 Elihu and Salome sent messengers in haste to find Elizabeth and John. They found them and they brought them to Zoan.
6 Now, Mary and Elizabeth were marveling much because of their deliverance.
7 Elihu said, "It is not strange; there are no happenings; law governs all events.
8 From olden times it was ordained that you should be with us, and in this sacred school be taught."
9 Elihu and Salome took Mary and Elizabeth out to the sacred grove near by where they were wont to teach.
10 Elihu said to Mary and Elizabeth, "You may esteem yourself thrice blest, for you are chosen mothers of long promised sons,
11 Who are ordained to lay in solid rock a sure foundation stone on which the temple of the perfect man shall rest-- a temple that shall never be destroyed.
12 We measure time by cycle ages, and the gate to every age we deem a mile stone in the journey of the race.
13 An age has passed; the gate unto another age flies open at the touch of time. This is the preparation age of soul, the kingdom of Immanuel, of Allah in man;
14 And these, your sons, will be the first to tell the news, and preach the gospel of good will to men, and peace on earth.
15 A mighty work is theirs; for carnal men want not the light, they love the dark, and when the light shines in the dark they comprehend it not.
16 We call these sons Revealers of the Light; but they must have the light before they can reveal the light.
17 And you must teach your sons, and set their souls on fire with love and holy zeal, and make them conscious of their missions to the sons of men.
18 Teach them that Allah and man are one; but that through carnal thoughts and words and deeds, man tore himself away from Allah; debased himself.
19 Teach that the Holy Breath would make them one again, restoring harmony and peace;
20 That naught can make them one but Love; that Allah so loved the world that he has clothed his son in flesh that man may comprehend.
21 The only Savior of the world is love, and Jesus, son of Mary, comes to manifest that love to men.
22 Now, love cannot manifest until its way has been prepared, and naught can rend the rocks and bring down lofty hills and fill the valleys up, and thus prepare the way, but purity.
23 But purity in life men do not comprehend; and so, it, too, must come in flesh.
24 And you, Elizabeth, are blest because your son is purity made flesh, and he shall pave the way for love.
25 This age will comprehend but little of the works of Purity and Love; but not a word is lost, for in the Book of Allah's Remembrance a registry is made of every thought, and word, and deed;
26 And when the world is ready to receive, lo, Allah will sent a messenger to open up the book and copy from its sacred pages all the messages of Purity and Love.
27 Then every man of earth will read the words of life in language of his native land, and men will see the light, walk in the light and be the light.
28 And man again will be at one with Allah."
Chapter III:
Elihu's Lessons-- The Unity of Life
1. Again Elihu met his pupils in the sacred grove and said:
2 "No man
lives unto himself; for every living thing is bound by cords to every other
living thing.
3 Blessed are the pure in heart; for they will love and not demand love in return.
4 They will not do to other men what they would not have other men do unto them.
5 There are two selves; the higher and the lower self.
6 The higher self is human spirit clothed with soul, made in the form of Allah.
7 The lower self, the carnal self, the body of desires, is a reflection of the higher self, distorted by the murky ethers of the flesh.
8 The lower self is an illusion, and will pass away; the higher self is God in man, and will not pass away.
9 The higher self is the embodiment of truth reversed, and so is falsehood manifest.
10 The higher self is justice, mercy, love and right; the lower self is what the higher self is not.
11 The lower self breeds hatred, slander, lewdness, murders, theft, and everything that harms; the higher self is mother of the virtues and the harmonies of life.
12 The lower self is rich in promises, but poor in blessedness and peace; it offers pleasure, joy and satisfying gains; but gives unrest and misery and death.
13 It gives men apples that are lovely to the eye and pleasant to the smell; their cores are full of bitterness and gall.
14 If you would ask me what to study I would say, yourselves; and when you will have studied them, and then would ask me what to study next, I would reply, yourselves.
15 He who knows well his lower self, knows the illusions of the world, knows of the things that pass away; and he who knows his higher self, know Allah; knows well the things that cannot pass away.
16 Thrice blessed is the man who has made purity and love his very own; he has been ransomed from the perils of the lower self and is himself his higher self.
17 Men seek salvation from an evil that they deem a living monster of the nether world; and they have gods that are but demons in disguise; all powerful, yet full of jealousy and hate and lust;
18 Whose favors must be bought with costly sacrifice of fruits, and of the lives of birds, and animals, and human kind.
19 And yet these gods possess no ears to hear, no eyes to see, no heart to sympathize, no power to save.
20 This evil is myth; these gods are made of air, clothed with shadows of a thought.
21 The only devil from which men must be redeemed is self, the lower self. If man would find his devil he must look within; his name is self.
22 If man would find his savior he must look within; and when the demon self has been dethroned the savior, Love, will be exulted to the throne of power.
23 The David of the light is Purity, who slays the strong Goliath of the dark, and seats the savior, Love, upon the throne."
Chapter IV
Death and Burial of Elizabeth-- Matheno's Lessons --The Ministry of Death
1. WHEN John was twelve years old his mother died, and neighbors laid her body
in a tomb among her kindred in the Hebron burying ground, and near to Zacharias'
tomb.
2 And John was deeply grieved; he wept. Matheno said, "It is not well to weep because of death.
3 Death is no enemy of man; it is a friend who, when the work of life is done, just cuts the cord that binds the human boat to earth, that it may sail on smoother seas.
4 No language can describe a mother's worth, and yours was tried and true. But she was not called hence until her tasks were done.
5 The calls of death are always for the best, for we are solving problems there as well as here; and one is sure to find himself where he can solve his problems best.
6 It is but selfishness that makes one wish to call again to earth departed souls.
7 Then let your mother rest in peace. Just let her noble life be strength and inspiration unto you.
8 A crisis in your life has come, and you must have a clear conception of the work that you are called to do.
9 The sages of the ages call you harbinger. The prophets look to you and say, 'He is Elijah come again.'
10 Your mission here is that of harbinger; for you will go before Messiah's face to pave his way, and make the people ready to receive their king.
11 This readiness is purity of heart; none but the purity in heart can recognize the king.
12 To teach men to be pure in heart, you must yourself be pure in heart, and word, and deed.
13 In infancy the vow for you was made and you became a Nazarite. The razor shall not touch your face nor head, and you shall taste not wine nor fiery drinks.
14 Men need a pattern for their lives; they love to follow, not to lead.
15 The man who stands upon the corners of the paths and points the way, but does not go, is just a pointer; and a block of wood can do the same.
16 The teacher treads the way; on every span of ground he leaves his footprints clearly cut, which all can see and be assured that he, their master went that way.
17 Men comprehend the inner life by what they see and do. They come to God through ceremonies and forms.
18 And so when you would make men know that sins are washed away by purity in life, a rite symbolic may be introduced.
19 In water wash the bodies of the people who would turn away from sin and strive for purity in life.
20 This rite of cleansing is a preparation rite and they who thus are cleansed comprise the Temple of Purity.
21 And you shall say, You men of Israel, hear; Reform and wash; become the sons of purity, and you shall be forgiven.
22 This rite of cleansing and this temple are but symbolic of the cleansing of the soul by purity in life, and of the kingdom of the soul, which does not come from outward show, but is the temple within.
23 Now, you may never point the way and tell the multitudes to do what you have never done; but you must go before and show the way.
24 You are to teach that men must wash; so you must lead the way, your body must be washed, symbolic of the cleansing of the soul."
25 John said, "Why need I wait? May I not go at once and wash?"
26 Matheno said, "Tis well", and then they went down to the Jordan ford, and east of Jericho, just where the hosts of Israel crossed when first they entered Canaan, they tarried for a time.
27 Matheno taught the harbinger, and he explained to him the inner meaning of the cleansing rite and how to wash himself and how to wash the multitude.
28 And in the river Jordan John was washed; then they returned unto the wilderness.
29 Now in Engedi's hills Matheno's work was done and he and John went down to Egypt. They rested not until they reached the temple of Sakara in the valley of the Nile.
30 For many years Matheno was a master in this temple of the Brotherhood, and when he told about the life of John and of his mission to the sons of men, the Hierophant with joy received the harbinger and he was called the Brother Nazarite.
31 For eighteen years John lived and wrought within these temple gates; and here he conquered self, became a master mind and learned the duties of the harbinger.
Chapter V
After the feast. The homeward journey. The missing Jesus. The search for him. His parents find him in the temple. He goes with them to Nazareth. Symbolic meaning of carpenter's tools.
1. THE great feast of the Pasch was ended and the Nazarenes were journeying
towards their homes.
2 And they were in Samaria, and Mary said, "Where is my son?" No one had seen the boy.
3 And Joseph sought among their kindred who were on their way to Galilee; but they had seen him not.
4 Then Joseph, Mary, and a son of Zebedee, returned and sought through all Jerusalem, but they could find him not.
5. And Mary asked the guards had they seen Jesus, a little boy about twelve years old.
6 The guards replied, "Yes, he is in the temple now disputing with the doctors of the law."
7 And they went in, and found him as the guards had said.
8 And Mary said, "Why Jesus, why do you treat your parents thus? Lo, we have sought two days for you. We feared that some great harm had overtaken you."
9 And Jesus said, "Do you not know that I must be about my Father's work?"
10 But he went round and pressed the hand of every doctor of the law and said, "I trust that we meet again."
11 And then he went forth with his parents on their way to Nazareth; and when they reached their home he wrought with Joseph as a carpenter.
12 One day as he was bringing forth the tools for work he said,
13 "These tools remind me of the ones we handle in the workshop of the mind where things were made of thought and where we build up character.
14 We use the square to measure all our lines, to straighten out the crooked places of the way, and make the corners of our conduct square.
15 We use the compass to draw circles round our passions and desires to keep them in the bounds of righteousness.
16 We use the axe to cut away the knotty, useless and ungainly parts and make the character symmetrical.
17 We use the hammer to drive home the truth, and pound it in until it is a part of every part.
18 We use the plane to smooth the rough, uneven surfaces of joint, and block, and board that go to build the temple for the truth.
19 The chisel, line, the plummet and the saw all have their uses in the workshop of the mind.
20 And then this ladder with its trinity of steps, faith, hope and love; on it we climb up to the dome of purity in life.
21 And on the twelve-step ladder we ascend until we reach the pinnacle of that which life is spent to build-- the Temple of Perfected Man."
Chapter VI
Life and Works
of Jesus in India
Among the Moslems
1.A ROYAL prince of India, Ravanna of Orissa in the south, was at the Jewish
feast.
2 Ravanna was a man of wealth; and he was just, and with a band of Brahmic priests sought wisdom in the West.
3 When Jesus stood among the Jewish priests and read and spoke, Ravanna heard and was amazed.
4 And when he asked who Jesus was, from whence he came and what he was, chief Hillel said:
5 "We call this child the Day Star from on high, for he has come to bring to men a light, the light of life; to lighten up the way of men and to redeem his people, Israel.
6 And Hillel told Ravanna all about the child; about the prophecies concerning him; about the wonders of the night when he was born; about the visit of the Magian priests;
7 About the way in which he was protected from the wrath of evil men; about his flight to Egypt-land, and how he then was serving with his father as a carpenter in Nazareth.
8 Ravanna was entranced, and asked to know the way to Nazareth, that he might go and honor such a one as son of Allah.
9 And with his gorgeous train he journeyed on the way and came to Nazareth of Galilee.
10 He found the object of his search engaged in building dwellings for the sons of men.
11 And when he first saw Jesus he was climbing up a twelve step ladder, and he carried in his hands a compass, square and axe.
12 Ravanna said, "All hail, most favored son of heaven!"
13 And at the inn Ravanna made a feast for all the people of the town; and Jesus and his parents were honored guests.
14 For certain days Ravanna was a guest in Joseph's home on Marmion Way; he sought to learn the secret of the wisdom of the son; but it was all too great for him.
15 And then he asked that he might be the patron of the child; might take him to the East where he could learn the wisdom of the Brahms.
16 And Jesus longed to go that he might learn; and after many days his parents gave consent.
17 Then, with proud heart, Ravanna with his train, began the journey towards the rising sun; and after many days they crossed the Sind, and reached the province of Orissa, and the palace of the prince.
18 The Brahmic priests were glad to welcome home the prince; with favor they received the Jewish boy.
19 And Jesus was accepted as a pupil in the temple Jagannath; and here learned the Vedas and the Manic laws.
20 The Brahmic masters wondered at the clear conceptions of the child, and often were amazed when he explained to them the meaning of the laws.
CHAPTER VII
The friendship of Jesus and Lamaas.-- Jesus explains to Lamaas the meaning of truth
1. AMONG the priests of Jagannath was one who loved the Jewish boy. Lamaas Bramas
was the name by which the priest was known.
2 One day as Jesus and Lamaas walked alone in plaza Jagannath, Lamaas said, "My Jewish master, what is truth?"
3 And Jesus said, "Truth is the only thing that changes not.
4 In all the world there are two things; the one is truth; the other falsehood is; and truth is that which is, and falsehood that which seems to be.
5 Now truth is aught, and has no cause, and yet it is the cause of everything.
6 Falsehood is naught, and yet it is the manifest of aught.
7 Whatever has been made will be unmade; that which begins must end.
8 All things that can be seen by human eyes are manifests of aught, are naught, and so must pass away.
9 The things we see are but reflexes just appearing, while the ethers vibrate so and so, and when conditions change they disappear.
10 The Holy Breath is truth; is that which was, and is, and evermore shall be; it cannot change nor pass away."
11 Lamaas said, "You answer well; now, what is man?"
12 And Jesus said, "Man is the truth and falsehood strangely mixed.
13 Man is the Breath made flesh; so truth and falsehood are conjoined in him; and they strive, and naught goes down and man as truth abides."
14 Again Lamaas asked, "What do you say of power?"
15 And Jesus said, "It is a manifest; is the result of force; it is but naught; it is illusion, nothing more. Force changes not, but power changes as the ethers change.
16 Force is the will of God and is omnipotent, and power is that will in manifest, directed by the Breath.
17 There is power in the winds, a power in the waves, a power in the lightning's stroke, a power in the human arm, a power in the eye.
18 The ethers cause
there powers to be, and thought of Elohim, of angel, man, or
other thinking thing, directs the force; when it has done its work the power
is no more."
19 Again Lamaas asked, "Of understanding what have you to say?"
20 And Jesus said, "It is the rock on which man builds himself; it is the Gnosis of the aught and of the naught, of falsehood and of truth.
21 It is the knowledge of the lower self; the sensing of the powers of man himself."
22 Again Lamaas asked, "Of wisdom what have you to say?"
23 And Jesus said, "It is the consciousness that man is aught; that Allah and man are one;
24 That naught is naught; that power is but illusion; that heaven and earth and hell are not above, around, below, but in; which in the light of aught becomes the naught, and Allah is all."
25 Lamaas asked, "Pray, what is faith?"
26 And Jesus said, "Faith is the surety of the omnipotence of Allah and man; the certainty that man will reach the deific life.
27 Salvation is a ladder reaching from the heart of man to heart of Allah.
28 It has three steps; Belief is first, and this is what man thinks, perhaps, is truth.
29 And faith is next, and this is what man knows is truth.
30 Fruition is the last, and this is man himself, the truth.
31 Belief is lost in faith; and in fruition faith is lost; and man is saved when he has reached deific life; when he and Allah are one."
Chapter VIII
Jesus Reveals to the People of Their Sinful Ways
1. IN all the cities of Orissa Jesus taught. At Katak, by the river side, he
taught, and thousands of the people followed him.
2 One day a car of Jagannath was hauled along by scores of frenzied men, and Jesus said,
3 "Behold, a form without a spirit passes by; a body with no soul; a temple with no altar fires.
4 This car of Krishna is an empty thing, for Krishna is not there.
5 This car is but an idol of a people drunk on wine of carnal things.
6 God lives not in the noise of tongues; there is no way to him from any idol shrine.
7 God's meeting place with man is in the heart, and in a still small voice he speaks; and he who hears is still."
8 And all the people said, "Teach us to know the Holy One who speaks within the heart, God of the still small voice."
9 And Jesus said, "The Holy Breath cannot be seen with mortal eyes; nor can men see the Spirits of the Holy;
10 But in their image man was made, and he who looks into the face of man, looks at the image of the God who speaks within.
11 And when man honors man he honors God, and what man does for man, he does for God.
12 And you must bear in mind that when man harms in thought, or word or deed another man, he does a wrong to God.
13 If you would serve the God who speaks within the heart, just serve your near of kin, and those that are no kin, the stranger at your gates, the foe who seeks to do you harm;
14 Assist the poor, and help the weak; do harm to none, and covet not what is not yours;
15 Then, with your tongue the Holy One will speak; and he will smile behind your tears, will light your countenance with joy, and fill your hearts with peace."
16 And then the people asked, "To whom shall we bring gifts? Where shall we offer sacrifice?"
17 And Jesus said, "Our Father-- Allah asks not for needless waste of plant, of grain, of dove, of lamb.
18 That which you burn on any shrine you throw away. No blessings can attend the one who takes the food from hungry mouths to be destroyed by fire.
19 When you would offer sacrifice unto our Allah, just take your gift of grain, or meat and lay it on the table of the poor.
20 From it an incense will arise to heaven, which will return to you with blessedness.
21 Tear down your idols; they can hear you not; turn all your sacrificial altars into fuel for the flames.
22 Make human hearts your altars, and burn your sacrifices with the fire of love."
23 And all the people were entranced, and would have worshiped Jesus as a God; but Jesus said,
24 "I am your brother man just come to show to way to Allah; you shall not worship man; praise Allah, the Holy One."
CHAPTER IX
Jesus attends a feast in Behar and Here He Taught Human Equality.
1. THE fame of Jesus as a teacher spread through all the land, and people came
from near and far to hear his words of truth.
2 At Behar, on the sacred river of the Brahms, he taught for many days.
3 And Ach, a wealthy man of Behar, made a feast in honor of his guest, and he invited every one to come.
4 And many came; among them thieves, extortioners, and courtesans. And Jesus sat with them and taught; but they who followed him were much aggrieved because he sat with thieves and courtesans.
5 And they upbraided him; they said, "Rabboni, master of the wise, this day will be an evil day for you.
6 The news will spread that you consort with courtesans and thieves, and men will shun you as they shun an asp."
7 And Jesus answered them and said, "A master never screens himself for sake of reputation or of fame.
8 These are but worthless baubles of the day; they rise and sink, like empty bottles on a stream; they are illusions and will pass away;
9 They are the indices to what the thoughtless think; they are the noise that people make; and shallow men judge merit by noise.
10 Allah and all master men judge men by what they are and not by what they seem to be; not by their reputation and their fame.
11 These courtesans and thieves are children of my Father Allah; their soul are just as precious in his sight as yours, or of the Brahmic priests.
12 And they are working out the same life sums that you, who pride yourselves on your respectability and moral worth, are working out.
13 And some of them have solved much harder sums than you have solved, you men who look at them with scorn.
14 Yes, they are sinners, and confess their guilt, while you are guilty, but are shrewd enough to have polished coat to cover up your guilt.
15 Suppose you men who scorn these courtesans, these drunkards and these thieves, who know that you are pure in heart and life, that you are better far than they, stand forth that men may know just who you are.
16 The sin lies in the wish, in the desire, not in the act.
17 You covet other people's wealth; you look at charming forms, and deep within your hearts you lust for them.
18 Deceit you practice every day, and wish for gold, for honor and for fame, just for your selfish selves.
19 The man who covets is a thief, and she who lusts is courtesan. You who are none of these speak out."
20 Nobody spoke; the accusers held their peace.
21 And Jesus said, "The proof this day is all against those who have accused.
22 The pure in heart do not accuse. The vile in heart who want to cover up their guilt with holy smoke of piety are ever loathing drunkard, thief and courtesan.
23 This loathing and this scorn is mockery, for if the tinseled coat of reputation could be torn away, the loud professor would be found to revel in his lust, deceit and many forms of secret sin.
24 The man who spends his time in pulling other people's weeds can have no time to pull his own, and all the choicest flowers of life will soon be choked and die, and nothing will remain but darnel, thistles, burs."
25 And Jesus spoke a parable: he said, "Behold, a farmer had great fields of ripened grain, and when he looked he saw that blades of many stalks of wheat were bent and broken down.
26 And when he sent his reapers forth he said, 'We will not save the stalks of wheat that have the broken blades.
27 Go forth and cut and burn the stalks with broken blades.'
28 And after many days he went to measure up his grain, but not a kernel could be find.
29 And then he called the harvesters and said to them, 'Where is my grain?'
30 They answered him and said, 'We did according to your word; we gathered up and burned the stalks with broken blades, and not a stalk was left to carry to the barn.'"
31 And Jesus said, "If God saves only those who have no broken blades, who have been perfect in his sight, who will be saved?"
32 And the accusers hung their heads in shame; and Jesus went his way.
CHAPTER X
Jesus Spake on the Unity of Allah and Man to the Hindus
1. BENARES is the sacred city of the Brahms, and in Benares Jesus taught; Udraka was his host.
2 Udraka made a feast in honour of his guest, and many high born Hindu priests and scribes were there.
3 And Jesus said to them, "With much delight I speak to you concerning life-- the brotherhood of life.
4 The universal Allah is one, yet he is more than one; all things are one.
5 If you touch a fiber of a living thing you send a thrill from the center to the outer bounds of life.
6 And when you crush beneath your foot the meanest worm, you shake the throne of Allah, and cause the sword of right to tremble in its sheath.
7 The bird sings out its song for men, and men vibrate in unison to help it sing.
8 The ant constructs her home, the bee its sheltering comb, the spider weaves her web, and flowers breathe to them a spirit in their sweet perfumes that gives them strength to toil.
9 Now, men and birds and beasts and creeping things are deities, made flesh; and how dare men kill anything?
10 It is cruelty that makes the world awry. When men have learned that when they harm a living thing they harm themselves, they surely will not kill, nor cause a thing that God has made to suffer pain."
11 A lawyer said, "I pray you, Jesus, tell who is this Allah you speak about; where are his priests, his temples and his shrines?"
12 And Jesus said, "The Allah I speak about is everywhere; he cannot be compassed with walls, nor hedged about with bounds of any kind.
13 All people worship Allah, the One; but all the people see him not alike.
14 This universal Allah is wisdom, will and love.
15 All men see not the Triune Allah. One sees him as the Allah of might; another as the Allah of thought; another as the Allah of love.
16 A man's ideal is his God, and so, as man unfolds. Man's God today, tomorrow is not God.
17 The nations of the earth see Allah from different points of view, and so he does not seem the same to every one.
18 Man names the part of Allah he sees, and this to him is all of Allah; and every nation sees a part of Allah, and every nation has a name for Allah.
19 You Brahmans call him Parabrahm; in Egypt he is Thoth; and Zeus is his name in Greece; Jehovah is his Hebrew name; but everywhere he is the causeless Cause, the rootless Root from which all things have grown.
20 When men become afraid of Allah, and take him for a foe, they dress up other men in fancy garbs and call them priests.
21 And charge them to restrain the wrath of Allah by prayers; and when they fail to win his favour by their prayers, to buy him off with sacrifice of animal, or bird.
22 When man sees Allah as one with him, as Father Allah, he needs no middle man, no priest to intercede;
23 He goes straight up to him and says, 'My Father-- Allah!' and then he lays his hand in God's own hand, and all is well.
24 And this is Allah. You are, each one, a priest, just for yourself; and sacrifice of blood Allah does not want.
25 Just give your life in sacrificial service to all of life, and Allah is pleased."
26 When Jesus had thus said he stood aside; the people were amazed, but strove among themselves.
27 Some said, "He is inspired by Holy Brahm"; and others said, "He is insane"; and others said, "He is obsessed; he speaks as devils speak."
28 But Jesus tarried not. Among the guests was one, a tiller of the soil, a generous soul, a seeker after truth, who loved the words that Jesus spoke, and Jesus went with him, and in his home abode.
Chapter XI
Jesus and Barata. Together they read the sacred books.
1. AMONG the Buddhist priests was one who saw a lofty wisdom in the words that
Jesus spoke. It was Barata Arabo.
2 Together Jesus and Barata read the Jewish Psalms and Prophets; read the Vedas, the Avesta and the wisdom of Gautama.
3 And as they read and talked about the possibilities of man, Barata said,
4 "Man is the marvel of the universe. He is part of everything for he has been a living thing on every plane of life.
5 Time was when man was not; and he was bit of formless substance in the molds of time; and then a protoplast.
6 By universal law all things tend upward to a state of perfectness. The protoplast evolved, becoming worm, then reptile, bird and beast, and then at last it reached the form of man.
7 Now, man himself is mind, and mind is here to gain perfection by experience; and mind is often manifest in fleshy form, and in the form best suited to its growth. So mind may manifest as worm, or bird, or beast, or man.
8 The time will come when everything of life will be evolved unto the state of perfect man.
9 And after man is man in perfectness, he will evolve to higher forms of life."
10 And Jesus said, "Barata Arabo, who taught you this, that mind, which is the man, may manifest in flesh of beast, or bird, or creeping thing?"
11 Barata said, "From times which man remembers not our priests have told us so, and so we know."
12 And Jesus said, "Enlightened Arabo, are you a master mind and do not know that man knows naught by being told?
13 Man may believe what others say; but thus he never knows. If man would know, he must himself be what he knows.
14 Do you remember, Arabo, when you were ape, or bird, or worm?
15 Now, if you have no better proving of your plea than that the priests have told you so, you do not know; you simply guess.
16 Regard not, then, what any man has said; let us forget the flesh, and go with mind into the land of fleshless things; mind never does forget.
17 And backward through the ages master minds can trace themselves; and thus they know.
18 Time never was when man was not.
19 That which begins will have an end. If man was not, the time will come when he will not exist.
20 From God's own Record Book we read: 'The Triune God breathed forth, and seven Spirits stood before His face.' The Hebrews call these seven Spirits Elohim.
21 And these are they who, in their boundless power, created everything that is, or was.
22 These Spirits of the Triune God moved on the face of boundless space and seven ethers were, and every ether had its form of life.
23 These forms of life were but the thoughts of God, clothed in the substance of their ether planes.
24 Men call these ether planes the planes of protoplast, of earth, of plant, of beast, of man, of angel and of cherubim.
25 These planes with all their teeming thoughts of God, are never seen by eyes of man in flesh; they are composed of substance far too fine for fleshy eyes to see, and still they constitute the soul of things;
26 And with the eyes of soul all creatures see these ether planes, and all forms of life.
27 Because all forms of life on every plane are thoughts of Allah, all creatures think, and every creature is possessed of will, and, in its measure, has the power to choose,
28 And in their native planes all creatures are supplied with nourishment from the ethers of their planes.
29 And so it was with every living thing until the will became a sluggish will, and then the ethers of the protoplast, the earth, the plant, the beast, the man, began to vibrate very slow.
30 The ethers all became more dense, and all the creatures of these planes were clothed with coarser garbs, the garbs of flesh, which men can see; and thus this coarser manifest, which men call physical, appeared.
31 And this is what is called the fall of man; but man fell not alone for protoplast, and earth, and plant and beast were all included in the fall.
32 The angels and the cherubim fell not; their wills were ever strong, and so they held the ethers of their planes in harmony with Allah.
33 Now, when the ethers reached the rate of atmosphere, and all the creatures of these planes must get their food from atmosphere, the conflict came; and that which the finite man called, survival of the best, became the law,
34 The stronger ate the bodies of the weaker manifests; and here is where the carnal law of evolution had its rise.
35 And now man, in his utter shamelessness, strikes down and eats the beasts, the beast consumes the plant, the plant thrives on the earth, the earth absorbs the protoplast.
36 In yonder kingdom of the soul this carnal evolution is not known, and the great work of master minds is to restore the heritage of man, to bring him back to his estate that he has lost, when he again will live upon the ethers of his native plane.
37 The thoughts of Allah change not; the manifests of life on every plane unfold into perfection of their kind; and as the thoughts of Allah can never die, there is no death to any being of the seven ethers of the seven Spirits of the Triune Allah.
38 And so an earth is never plant; a beast, or bird, or creeping thing is never man, and man is not, and cannot be, a beast, or bird, or creeping thing.
39 The time will come when all these seven manifests will be absorbed, and man, and beast, and plant, and earth and protoplast will be redeemed."
40 Barata was amazed; the wisdom of the Jewish sage was a revelation unto him.
41 Now, Vidyapati, wisest of the Indian sages, chief of temple Kapavistu, heard Barata speak to Jesus of the origin of man, and heard the answer of the Hebrew prophet, and he said,
42 "You priests of Kapavistu, hear me speak: We stand to-day upon a crest of time. Six times ago a master soul was born who gave a glory light to man, and now a master sage stands here in temple Kapavistu.
43 This Hebrew prophet is the rising star of wisdom, deified. He brings to us a knowledge of the secrets things of Allah; and all the world will hear his words, will heed his words, and glorify his name.
44 You priests of temple Kapavistu, stay! be still and listen when he speaks; he is the Living Oracle of Allah."
45 And all the priests gave thanks, and praised the Buddha of enlightenment.
CHAPTER XII
Jesus teaches the common people at a spring. Tells them how to obtain eternal happiness.
1. IN silent meditation Jesus sat beside a flowing spring. It was a holy day, and many people of the servant caste were near the place.
2 And Jesus saw the hard drawn lines of toil on every brow, in every hand. There was no look of joy in any face. Not one of all the group could think of anything but toil.
3 And Jesus spoke to one and said, "Why are you all so sad? Have you no happiness in life?"
4 The man replied, "We scarcely know the meaning of that word. We toil to live, and hope for nothing else but toil, and bless the day when we can cease our toil and lay us down to rest in Buddha's city of the dead."
5 And Jesus' heart was stirred with pity and with love for these poor toilers, and he said,
6 "Toil should not make a person sad; men should be happiest when they toil. When hope and love are back of toil, then all of life is filled with joy and peace, and this is heaven. Do you not know that such a heaven is for you?"
7 The man replied, "Of heaven we have heard; but then it is so far away, and we must live so many lives before we can reach that place!"
8 And Jesus said, "My brother, man, your thoughts are wrong; your heaven is not far away; and it is not a place of metes and bounds, is not a country to be reached; it is a state of mind.
9 God never made a heaven for man; he never made a hell; we are creators and we make our own.
10 Now, cease to seek for heaven in the sky; just open up the windows of the hearts, and, like a flood of light, a heaven will come and bring a boundless joy; then toil will be no cruel task."
11 The people were amazed, and gathered close to hear this strange young master speak,
12 Imploring him to tell them more about the Father-God, Allah, about the heaven that men can make on earth; about the boundless joy.
13 And Jesus spoke a parable; he said, "A certain man possessed a field; the soil was hard and poor.
14 By constant toilhe scarecely could provide food to keep his family from want.
15 One day a miner who could see beneath the soil, in passing on his way, saw this poor man and his unfruitful field.
16 He called the weary toiler and he said, 'My brother, know you not that just below the surface of your barren field rich treasures lie concealed?
17 You plough and sow and reap in scanty way, and day by day you tread upon a mine of gold and precious stones.
18 This wealth lies not upon the surface of the ground; but if you will dig away the rocky soil, and delve down deep into the earth, you need no longer till the soil for naught.'
19 The man believed. 'The miner surely knows;' he said, 'and I will find the treasures hidden in my field.'
20 And then he dug away the rocky soil, and deep down in the earth he found a mine of gold."
21 And Jesus said, "The sons of men are toiling hard on desert plains, and burning sands and rocky soils; are doing what there fathers did, not dreaming they can do aught else.
22 Behold, a master comes, and tells them of a hidden wealth; that underneath the rocky soil of carnal things are treasures that no man can count;
23 That in the heart the richest gems abound; that he who wills may open the door and find them all."
24 And then the people said, "Make known to us the way that we may find the wealth that lies within the heart."
25 And Jesus opened up the way; the toilers saw another side of life, and toil became a joy.
Chapter XIII
Life and Works of Jesus in Egypt Among the Gentiles
1. Jesus with Elihu and Salome in Egypt. Tells the story of his journeys. Elihu
and Salome praise Allah. Jesus goes to the temple in Heliopolis and is received
as a pupil.
2. AND Jesus came to Egyptland and all was well. He tarried not upon the coast; he went at once to Zoan, home of Elihu and Salome, who five and twenty years before had taught his mother in their sacred school.
3 And there was joy when met these three. When last the son of Mary saw these sacred groves he was a babe;
4 And now a man grown strong by buffeting of every kind; a teacher who had stirred the multitudes in many lands.
5 And Jesus told
the aged teachers all about his life; about his journeyings in foreign lands;
about the meetings with the masters and about his kind receptions by the
multitudes.
6 Elihu and Salome
heard his story with delight; they lifted up their eyes to heaven and said,
"Our Father-God Allah, let now Thy servants go in peace, for we have seen
the glory of Allah.
7 And we have talked
with him, the messenger of love, and of the covenant of peace
on earth, good will to men.
8 Through him shall all the nations of the earth be blest; through him, Immanuel."
9 And Jesus stayed in Zoan many days; and then went forth unto the city of the sun, that men call Heliopolis, and sought admission to the temple of the sacred brotherhood.
10 The council of the brotherhood convened, and Jesus stood before the Hierophant; he answered all the questions that were asked with clearness and with power.
11 The Hierophant exclaimed, "Rabboni of the Rabbinate, why come you here? Your wisdom is the wisdom of the gods; why seek for wisdom in the halls of men?"
12 And Jesus said, "In every way of earth-life I would walk; in every hall of learning I would sit; the heights that any man has gained, these I would gain;
13 What any man
has suffered I would meet, that I may know the griefs, the
disappointments and the sore temptations of my brother man; that I may know
just how to succor those in need.
14 I pray you, brothers, let me go into your dismal crypts; and I would pass the hardest of your tests."
15 The master said, "Take then the vow of secret brotherhood." And Jesus took the vow of secret brotherhood.
16 Again the master spoke; he said, "The greatest heights are gained by those who reach the greatest depths; and you shall reach the greatest depths."
17 The guide then led the way and in the fountain Jesus bathed; and when he had been clothed in proper garb he stood again before the Hierophant.
CHAPTER XIV
John, the harbinger, returns to Hebron. Lives as a hermit in the wilds. Visits Jerusalem and speaks to the people.
1. IT came to pass when John, the son of Zacharias and Elizabeth, had finished all his studies in the Egyptian schools that he returned to Hebron, where he abode for certain days.
2 And then he sought the wilderness and made his home in David's cave where many years before, he was instructed by the Egyptian sage.
3 Some people called him Hermit of Engedi; and others said, "He is the Wild Man of the Hills."
4 He clothed himself with skins of beasts; his food was carobs, honey, nuts and fruits.
5 When John was thirty years of age he went into Jerusalem, and in the market place he sat in silence seven days.
6 The common people and the priests, the scribes and Pharisees came out in multitudes to see the silent hermit of the hills; but none were bold enough to ask him who he was.
7 But when his silent fast was done he stood forth in the midst of all and said:
8 "Behold the king has come; the prophets told of him; the wise men long have looked for him.
9 Prepare, O Israel, prepare to meet your king."
10 And that was all he said, and then he disappeared, and no one knew where he had gone.
11 And there was great unrest through all Jerusalem. The rulers heard the story of the hermit of the hills.
12 And they sent couriers forth to talk with him that they might know about the coming king; but they could find him not.
13 And after certain days he came again into the market place, and all the city came to hear him speak; he said:
14 "Be not disturbed, you rulers of the state; the coming king is no antagonist; he seeks no place on any earthly throne.
15 The eyes of men shall see it not and none can enter but the pure in heart.
16 Prepare, O Israel, prepare to meet your king."
17 Again the hermit disappeared; the people strove to follow him, but he had drawn a veil about his form and men could see him not.
18 A Jewish feast day came; Jerusalem was filled with Jews and proselytes from every part of Palestine, and John stood in the temple court and said,
19 "Prepare, O Israel, prepare to meet your king.
20 Lo, you have lived in sin; the poor cry in your streets, and you regard them not.
21 Your neighbors, who are they? You have defrauded friend and foe alike.
22 You worship Allah with voice and lip; your hearts are far away, and set on gold.
23 Your priests have bound upon the people burdens far to great to bear; they live in ease upon the hard earned wages of the poor.
24 Your lawyers, doctors, scribes are useless cumberers of the ground; they are but tumors on the body of the state;
25 They toil not neither do they spin, yet they consume the profits of your marts of trade.
26 Your rulers are adulterers, extortioners and thieves, regarding not the rights of any man;
27 And robbers ply their calling in the sacred halls; the holy temple you have sold to thieves; their dens are in the sacred places set apart for prayer.
28 Hear! hear! you people of Jerusalem! Reform; turn from your evil ways or Allah will turn from you and heathen from afar will come, and what is left of all your honor and your fame will pass in one short hour.
29 Prepare, Jerusalem, prepare to meet your king."
30 He said no more; he left the court and no one saw him go.
31 The priests, the doctors and the scribes were all in rage. They sought for John intent to do him harm. They found him not.
CHAPTER XV
Jesus goes to the wilderness for self-examination, where he remains forty days. Is subjected to three temptations. He overcomes. Returns to the camps of John and begins teaching.
1. THE harbinger had paved the way; the Logos had been introduced to men as love made manifest, and he must now begin his Christine ministry.
2 And he went forth into the wilderness to be alone with God that he might look into his inner heart, and note its strength and worthiness.
3 And with himself he talked; he said, "My lower self is strong; by many ties I am bound down to carnal life.
4 Have I the strength to overcome and give my life a willing sacrifice for men?
5 When I shall stand before the face of men, and they demand a proof of my messiahship, what will I say?"
6 And then the tempter came and said, "If you be son of Allah, command these stones to turn to bread."
7 And Jesus said, "Who is it that demands a test? It is no sign that one is son of God because he does a miracle; the devils can do mighty things.
8 Did not the Gentile magicians do great things before the Pharaohs?
9 My words and deeds in all the walks of life shall be the proof of my Messiahship."
10 And then the tempter said, "If you will go into Jerusalem, and from the temple pinnacle cast down yourself to earth, the people will believe that you are the Messiah sent from Allah.
11 This you can surely do; for did not David say, 'He gives his angels charge concerning you, and with their will they uphold lest you should fall?'"
12 And Jesus said, "I may not tempt the Lord, my God."
13 And then the tempter said, "Look forth upon the world; behold its honors and its fame! Behold its pleasures and its wealth!
14 If you will give your life for these they shall be yours."
15 But Jesus said, "Away from me all tempting thoughts. My heart is fixed; I spurn this carnal self with all its vain ambition and its pride."
16 For forty days did Jesus wrestle with his carnal self; his higher self Prevailed. He then was hungry, but his friends had found him and they ministered to him.
17 Then Jesus left the wilderness and in the consciousness of Holy Breath, he came unto the camps of John and taught.
CHAPTER XVI
Pilate's final effort to release Jesus fails. He washes his hands in feigned innocence. Delivers Jesus to the Jews for execution. The Jewish soldiers drive him to Calvary.
1. A SUPERSTITIOUS people are the Jews. They have a faith that they have borrowed
from the idol worshipers of other lands, that at the end of every year,
2 They may heap all their sins upon the head of some man set apart to bear their sins.
3 The man becomes a scapegoat for the multitudes; and they believe that when they drive him forth into the wilds, or into foreign lands, they are released from sin.
4 So every spring before the feast they chose a prisoner from the prisons of the land, and by a form their own, they fain would make him bear their sins away.
5 Among the Jewish prisoners in Jerusalem were three who were the leaders of a vile, seditious band, who had engaged in thefts and murders and rapine, and had been sentenced to be crucified.
6 Barabbas and Jezia were among the men who were to die; but Barabbas was rich and had bought of priests the boon to be scapegoat for the people at the coming feast, and he was anxiously in waiting for his hour to come.
7 Now, Pilate thought to turn this superstition to account to save the Lord, and so he went again before the Jews and said,
8 "You men of Israel, according to my custom I will release to you to-day a prisoner who shall bear you sins away.
9 This man you drive into the wilds or into foreign lands, and you have asked me to release Barabbas, who has been proven guilty of the murder of a score of men.
10 Now, hear me men, Let Jesus be released and let Barabbas pay his debt upon the cross; then you can send this Jesus to the wilds and hear no more of him."
11 At what the ruler said the people were enraged, and they began to plot to tear the Roman palace down and drive in exile Pilate, and his household and his guards.
12 When Pilate was assured that civil war would follow if he heeded not the wishes of the mob, he took a bowl of water and in the presence of the multitude he washed his hands and said,
13 "This man whom you accuse is son of the Most High Allah, and I proclaim my innocence.
14 If you would shed his blood, his blood is on your hands and not on mine."
15 And then the Jews exclaimed, "And let his blood be on our hands and on our children's hands."
16 And Pilate trembled like a leaf, in fear. Barabbas he released and as the Lord stood forth before the mob the ruler said, "Behold your king! And would you put to death your king?"
17 The Jews replied, "He is no king; we have no king but great Tiberius."
18 Now, Pilate would not give consent that Roman soldiers should imbue their hands in blood of innocence, and so the chief priests and the Pharisees took counsel what to do with Jesus, who was called the Christ.
19 Caiaphas said, "We cannot crucify this man; he must be stoned to death and nothing more."
20 And then the rabble said, "Make haste! let him be stoned." And then they led him forth toward the hill beyond the city's gates, where criminals were put to death.
21 The rabble could not wait until they reached the place of skulls. As soon as they had passed the city's gate, they rushed upon him, smote him with their hands, they spit upon him, stoned him and he fell upon the ground.
22 And one, a man of God, stood forth and said, "Isaiah said, 'He shall be bruised for our transgressions and by his stripes we shall be healed.'"
23 As Jesus lay all bruised and mangled on the ground a Pharisee called out, "Stay, stay you men! behold, the guards of Herod come and they will crucify this man."
24 And there beside the city's gate they found Barabbas's cross; and then the frenzied mob cried out, "Let him be crucified."
25 Caiaphas and the other ruling Jews came forth and gave consent.
26 And then they lifted Jesus from the ground, and at the point of swords they drove him on.
27 A man named Simon, a friend of Jesus, was a-near the scene and since the bruised and wounded Jesus could not bear his cross, they laid it on the shoulders of this man and made him bear it on to Calvary.
CHAPTER XVII
Jesus appears, fully materialized, before Apollo and the Silent Brotherhood in Greece. Appears to Claudas and Juliet on the Tiber near Rome. Appears to the priest in the Egyptian temple at Heliopolis.
1.APOLLO, with
the Silent Brotherhood of Greece, was sitting in a Delphian grove. The
Oracle had spoken loud and long.
2 The priests were in the sanctuary and as they looked the Oracle became a blaze of light; it seemed to be on fire, and all consumed.
3 The priests were filled with fear. They said, "A great disaster is to come; our gods are mad; they have destroyed our Oracle."
4 But when the flames had spent themselves, a man stood on the oracle's pedestal and said,
5 "Allah speaks to man, not by an oracle of wood and gold, but by the voice of man.
6 The gods have spoken to the Greeks, and kindred tongues, through images made by man, but Allah, the One, now speaks to man through Christ the only son, who was, and is and evermore will be.
7 This Oracle shall fail; the Living Oracle of God, the One, will never fail."
8 Apollo knew the man who spoke; he knew it was the Nazarene who once had taught the wise men in the Acropolis and had rebuked the idol worshipers upon the Athens' beach;
9 And in a moment Jesus stood before Apollo and the Silent Brotherhood, and said,
10 "Behold, for I have risen from the dead with gifts for men. I bring to you the title of your vast estate.
11 All power in heaven and earth is mine; to you I give all power in heaven and earth.
12 Go forth and teach the nations of the earth the gospel of the resurrection of the dead and of eternal life through Christ, the love of Allah made manifest to men."
13 And then he clasped Apollo's hand and said, "My human flesh was changed to higher form by love divine and I can manifest in flesh, or in the higher planes of life, at will.
14 What I can do all men can do. Go preach the gospel of the omnipotence of man."
15 Then Jesus disappeared; but Greece and Crete and all the nations heard.
16 Claudas and Juliet, his wife, lived on the Palatine in Rome and they were servants of Tiberius; but they had been in Galilee;
17 Had walked with Jesus by the sea, had heard his words and seen his power; and they believed that he was Christ made manifest.
18 Now Claudas and his wife were on the Tiber in a little boat; a storm swept from the sea, the boat was wrecked and Claudas and his wife were sinking down to death.
19 And Jesus came and took them by the hands and said, "Claudas and Juiet, arise and walk with me upon the waves."
20 And they arose and walked with him upon the waves.
21 A thousand people saw the three walk on the waves, and saw them reach the land, and they were all amazed.
22 And Jesus said, "You men of Rome, I am the resurrection and the life. They that are dead shall live, and many that shall live will never die.
23 By mouth of gods and demi-gods Allah spoke unto your fathers long ago; but now he speaks to you through perfect man.
24 He sent his son, the Christ, in human flesh, to save the world, and as I lifted from the watery grave and saved these servants of Tiberius,
25 So Christ will lift the sons and daughters of the human race, yea, every one of them, from darkness and from graves of carnal things, to light and everlasting life.
26 I am the manifest of love raised from the dead; Behold my hands, my feet, my side which carnal men have pierced.
27 Claudas and Juliet whom I have saved from death, are my ambassadors to Rome.
28 And they will point the way and preach the gospel of the Holy Breath and of the resurrection of the dead."
29 And that was all he said, but Rome and all of Italy heard.
30 The priests of Heliopolis were in their temple met to celebrate the resurrection of their brother Nazarite; they knew that he had risen from the dead.
31 The Nazarite
appeared and stood upon a sacred pedestal on which no man had
ever stood.
32 This was an honor that had been reserved for him who first would demonstrate the resurrection of the dead.
33 And Jesus was the first of all the human race to demonstrate the resurrection of the dead.
34 When Jesus stood
upon the sacred pedestal the masters stood and said, "All hail!"
The great bells of the temple rang and all the temple was ablaze with light.
35 And Jesus said, "All honor to the masters of this Temple of the Sun.
36 In flesh of man there is the essence of the resurrection of the dead. This essence, quickened by the Holy Breath, will raise the substance of the body to a higher tone,
37 And make it like the substance of the bodies of the planes above, which human eyes cannot behold.
38 There is a holy ministry in death. The essence of the body cannot be quickened by the Holy Breath until the fixed is solved; the body must disintegrate, and this is death.
39 And then upon these pliant substances Allah breathes, just as he breathed upon the chaos of the deep when worlds were formed,
40 And life springs forth from death; the carnal form is changed to form divine.
41 The will of man makes possible the action of the Holy Breath. When will of man and will of Allah are one, the resurrection is a fact.
42 In this we have the chemistry of mortal life, the ministry of death, the mystery of deific life.
43 My human life was wholly given to bring my will to tune with the deific will; when this was done my earth-tasks all were done.
44 And you, my brother, know full well the foes I had to meet; you know about my victories in Gethsemane; my trials in the courts of men; my death upon the cross.
45 You know that all my life was one great drama for the sons of men; a pattern for the sons of men. I lived to show the possibilities of man.
46 What I have done all men can do, and what I am all men shall be."
47 The masters looked; the form upon the sacred pedestal had gone, but every temple priest, and every living creature said, "Praise Allah."
CHAPTER XVIII
The Resurrection of Jesus. Pilate places the Roman seal upon the stone door of the tomb. At mid-night a company of the silent brothers march about the tomb. The soldiers are alarmed. Jesus preaches to the spirits in prison. Early Sunday morning he rises from the tomb. The soldiers are bribed by the priests to say that the disciples had stolen the body.
1. THE tomb in
which they laid the body of the Lord was in a garden, rich with flowers,
the garden of Siloam, and Joseph's home was near.
2 Before the watch began Caiaphas sent a company of priests out to the garden of Siloam that they might be assured that Jesus' body was within the tomb.
3 They rolled away the stone; they saw the body there, and then they placed the stone again before the door.
4 And Pilate sent his scribe who placed upon the stone the seal of Rome, in such a way that he who moved the stone would break the seal.
5 To break this Roman seal meant death to him who broke the seal.
6 The Jewish soldiers all were sworn to faithfulness; and then the watch began.
7 At midnight all was well, but suddenly the tomb became a blaze of light, and down the garden walk a troupe of white-clad soldiers marched in single file.
8 They came up to the tomb and marched and countermarched before the door.
9 The Jewish soldiers were alert; they thought the friends had come to steal the body of the Nazarene. The captain of the guard cried out to charge.
10 They charged; but not a white-clad soldier fell. They did not even stop; they marched and countermarched among the frightened men.
11 They stood upon the Roman seal; they did not speak ; they unsheathed not their swords; it was the Silent Brotherhood.
12 The Jewish soldiers fled in fear; they fell upon the ground.
13 They stood apart until the white-clad soldiers marched away, and then the light about the tomb grew dim.
14 Then they returned; the stone was in its place; the seal was not disturbed, and they resumed their watch.
15 Now, Jesus did not sleep within the tomb. The body is the manifest of soul; but soul is soul without its manifest.
16 And in the realm of souls, un-manifest, the Lord went forth and taught.
17 He opened up the prison doors and set the prisoners free;
18 He broke the chains of captive souls, and led the captives to the light;
19 He sat in council with the patriarchs and prophets of the olden times;
20 The masters of all times and climes he met, and in the great assemblies he stood forth and told the story of his life on earth, and of his death in sacrifice for man,
21 And of his promises to clothe himself again in garb of flesh and walk with his disciples, just to prove the possibilities of man;
22 To give to them the key of life, of death, and of the resurrection of the dead.
23 In council all the masters sat and talked about the revelations of the coming age,
24 When she, the Holy Breath, shall fill the earth and air with holy breath, and open up the way of man to perfectness and endless life.
25 The garden of Siloam was silent on the Sabbath day; the Jewish soldiers watched and no one else approached the tomb; but on the following night the scene was changed.
26 At midnight every Jewish soldier heard a voice which said, "Adon Mashich Cumi," which meant, "Lord Christ arise."
27 And they supposed again that friends of Jesus were alert, were coming up to take the body of their Lord away.
28 The soldiers were alert with swords unsheathed and drawn, and then they heard the words again.
29 It seemed as though the voice was everywhere, and yet they saw no man.
30 The soldiers blanched with fear, and still to flee meant death for cowardice, and so they stood and watched.
31 Again, and this was just before the sun arose, the heavens blazed with light, a distant thunder seemed to herald forth a coming storm;
32 And then the earth began to quake and in the rays of light they saw a form descend from heaven. They said, "Behold an angel comes."
33 And then they heard again, "Adon Mashich Cumi."
34 And then the white-robed form tramped on the Roman seal and then he tore it into shreds; he took the mighty stone in hand as though it were a pebble from the brook, and cast it to the side.
35 And Jesus opened up his eyes and said, "All hail the rising sun; the coming of the day of righteousness!"
36 And then he folded up his burial gown, his head bands and his coverings and laid them all aside.
37 He rose, and for a moment stood beside the white-robed form.
38 The weaker soldiers fell upon the ground, and hid their faces in their hands; the stronger stood and watched.
39 They saw the body of the Nazarene transmute; they saw it change from mortal to immortal form, and then it disappeared.
40 The soldiers heard a voice from somewhere; yea, from everywhere, it said,
41 "Peace, peace on earth; good will to men."
42 They looked, the tomb was empty and the Lord had risen as he said.
43 The soldiers hastened to Jerusalem, and to the priests, and said,
44 "Behold, the Nazarene has risen as he said; the tomb is empty and the body of the man is gone; we know not where it is." And then they told about the wonders of the night.
45 Caiaphas called a council of the Jews; he said, "The news must not go forth that Jesus has arisen from the dead;
46 For if it does all men will say, He is the son of God, and all our testimonies will be proven false."
47 And then they called the hundred soldiers in and said to them,
48 "You know not where the body of the Nazarene is resting now, so if you will go forth and say that his disciples came and stole the body while you slept,
49 Each one of you shall have a silver piece, and we will make it right with Pilate for breaking of the Roman seal."
50 The soldiers did as they were paid to do.
CHAPTER XIX
Jesus appears, fully materialised, to the eastern sages in the palace of Prince Ravanna in India. To the magian priests in Persia. The three wise men speak in praise of the personality of the Nazarene.
1.RAVANNA, prince
of India, gave a feast. His palace in Orissa was the place where
men of thought from all the farther East were wont to meet.
2 Ravanna was the prince with whom child Jesus went to India many years ago.
3 The feast was made in honor of the wise men of the East.
4 Among the guests were Meng-ste, Vidyapati and Lamaas.
5 The wise men sat about the table talking of the needs of India and the world.
6 The door unot the banquet hall was in the east; a vacant chair was at the table to the east.
7 And as the wise men talked a stranger entered, unannounced, and raising up his hands in benediction said, "All hail!"
8 A halo rested on his head, and light, unlike the light of sun, filled all the room.
9 The wise men rose and bowed their heads and said, "All hail!"
10 And Jesus sat down in the vacant chair; and then the wise men knew it was the Hebrew prophet who had come.
11 And Jesus said, "Behold, for I am risen from the dead. Look at my hands, my feet, my side.
12 The Roman soldiers pierced my hands and feet with nails; and then one pierced my heart.
13 They put me in a tomb, and then I wrestled with the conqueror of men. I conquered death, I stamped upon him and arose;
14 Brought immortality to light and painted on the walls of time a rainbow for the sons of men; and what I did all men shall do.
15 This gospel of the resurrection of the dead is not confined to Jew and Greek; it is the heritage of every man of every time and clime; and I am here a demonstration of the power of man."
16 Then he arose and pressed the hand of every man and of the royal host, and said,
17 "Behold, I am not myth made of the fleeting winds, for I am flesh and bone and brawn; but I can cross the borderland at will."
18 And then they talked together there a long, long time. The Jesus said,
19 "I go my way, but you shall go to all the world and preach the gospel of the omnipotence of men, the power of truth, the resurrection of the dead;