Advanced Study Group of Spiritism

http://www.geae.inf.br
Founded on October 15th 1992
The Spiritist Messenger - Monthly Electronic Report of   the GEAE Group 
GEAE 6th year - Number 21 - distributed: November 1999
    "Unshakable faith is only that which can face reason face to face in every Humankind epoch." 
                                                                                                                                           Allan Kardec 
 
CONTENT
 EDITORIAL      
   
            The numbers of GEAE. Commemorating the 7th   
            birthday.   
 
 TEXT   
              
            Spiritism easily explained. (Outline of Spirit     
            teachings- Part IV)   
           Allan Kardec   
 
 ARTICLE
    
           The Career of Allan Kardec (Part II)   
           Steve Hume (NAS - UK)   
   
 SHOWCASE   
   
           Centro Italiano Studi Spiritici Allan Kardec   
           Stefano (Italy)   
 
 SPIRIT WORD
               
           Evil and its remedy   
           Saint Augustin (France, 1863)   
 
 
EDITORIAL

THE NUMBERS OF GEAE. COMMEMORATING THE 7TH BIRTHDAY

GEAE bulletin 367 (distributed on October) marked the 7th birthday  of the group. Founded in 1992, the group has about 3600 participants today divided into two groups : the  GEAE  report  in  Portuguese  and  "The Spiritist Messenger". The group has confirmed the  usefulness  of  the internet as a dynamical instrument of information exchange and has used the net in the broadest sense of the word. Today one can say that  the net is a reality for millions of people around the  world  -  a  quite different  situation   in  1992 - and  its   increase  will  surely continue.

During theses years, GEAE has proved that a movement of people  around a given idea - in our case, the Spiritualist  movement  -  can  profit very much from the dynamics of a well establish  information  web.  In the future, one hopes the net will also serve as an extensive  way  of information exchange between the  terrestrial  plane  and  the  spirit world  as  several  messages  dictated  to  Brazilian   mediums   have predicted. GEAE has partially fulfilled the prophecy since many  spirit messages (coming from different Spiritist groups) have been  published during the years. Fresh spirit information (serving both  general  and private interests) could be delivered at  an  incredible  velocity  if integrated to virtual Spiritist groups, paving  the  way  to  a  world spirit web (medium groups around the world would constitute the  first electronic providers of spirit information).

We strongly suggest people to send  GEAE  their  questions,  comments, histories and cases in order to initiate a movement along these  lines and to make GEAE an even more dynamical group.

The reality of the Spiritualist principles must show its face.

Happy birthday to GEAE and much peace,

GEAE Editors

Spiritist Messenger participation list:
 
Austria (at)
Australia (au)
Belgium (be)
Brazil (br)
Canada (ca)
Colombia (co)
1
7
1
116
5
1
 
France (fr) 
Germany (de) 
Holland (nl)
India (in)
New Zealand (nz) 
Norwegian (no) 
1
6
1
1
2
1
 
 
Oman (om)
Peru (pe) 
Portugal (pt)
South Africa (za)
Spain (es)
 United Kingdom (uk)
2
1
7
2
1
19
 
 
USA (edu) 
USA (com)
USA (gov)
USA (net)
USA (org)
USA (us)
32
161
2
61
3
1
Total - 435 members in 24 domains.

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TEXT

SPIRITISM EASILY EXPLAINED (OUTLINE OF  SPIRIT  TEACHINGS- PART IV)
Allan Kardec

2. Outline of spirit teachings

1. God is the supreme intelligence, the first cause of all the things. God  is   eternal,   infinite,   unique,   immaterial,   all-powerful, sovereignly  just  and  good.  He  has  to  be  infinite  in  all  his perfections since, if we could suppose imperfectness of  even  one  of his attributes, he would not be God.

2. God created matter which constitutes the worlds.  He  also  created intelligent beings called spirits which are in charge of these  worlds according to the creation's immutable laws. Such laws are  perfect  by nature. By improving themselves the spirits approach God.

3. Strictly speaking the spirit  is  the  intelligent  principle,  its deepest nature is unknown. It is immaterial to us because it bears  no resemblance to what we call matter.

4. The spirits are  individual  beings  housed  in  a  weightless  and ethereal envelope called perispirit, a kind of fluid body  similar  in form to the human's body. They  inhabit  the  space  and  fly  quickly
through it. The spirits constitute the invisible world.

5. The spirit's origin and way of creation are unknown, we only  known that they are created simple and ignorant, that is, without  knowledge of good and evil. However they are equally capable to everything since God, in his justice, could not free some from the  work  reserved  for others in order to reach perfection. Initially they remain in  a  kind of infancy, without their own will and perfect consciousness of  their existence.

6. When ideas and free-will are developed in the  spirits,  God  tells them: ''You can reckon on supreme happiness provided that you  acquire the lacking knowledge and fulfill the duties I impose  upon  you.  You should work for your upgrading, that is your aim and you will reach it by  following  the  laws  sculpted  on  you  own   consciences''.   As consequence of their free-will some spirits take  the  shortest  route which is the good while others take the longest one which is the evil.

7. God did not create the evil. He  established  the  laws  which  are always good because he is good. The spirits would have been completely happy had they faithfully observed the law since the  beginning.  But, being free to make choices, the spirits have not properly obeyed  them so that evil come as a consequence of this  unwillingness. One can then say that good corresponds to everything which is  in  accordance  with God's law while evil is everything which opposes it.

8. In order to cooperate in the material worlds as agents of a  divine power, the spirits temporarily have  a  material  body.  By  the  work required  in  their  corporeal  lives,  the  spirits   improve   their intelligence and, by observing God's  law,  they  acquire  the  merits which will lead them to eternal happiness.

9. The incarnation was not initially  imposed  on  the  spirits  as  a punishment. It is rather necessary for the  spirits'  improvement  and for the fulfillment of God's works. Everyone has to submit to  it,  no matter if one takes the evil or the good path. Only those who take the good path will improve quickly, they do not delay to arrive at the end in less painful conditions.

10. Imbodied spirits constitute the mankind. It is not  restricted  to the earth only but instead it inhabits all the worlds in space.

11. Human soul is an imbodied spirit. In order to help humans, God has given them the animals whose intelligence and character are  according to their needs.

12. The spirit's improvement is a consequence of its  own  effort.  It can not acquire all the intellectual and moral  qualities  which  will bring it to the end in only one existence. It reaches its goal through a series of several lives. In each one of  them  the  spirit  walks  a little further in the path of progress.

13. In each corporeal existence the spirit has to  fulfill  a  mission proportional to its degree of development. The rougher and  harder  it is, the greater the spirit's merit in fulfilling  it.  Each  existence is, therefore, a test which leads the spirit to the end. It depends on the spirit's will to shorten it,  by  working  harder  for  its  moral improvement, in much the same way a laborer's will shortens the number of his working days.

14. When an existence is poorly used, the spirit does not profit  from it, and it has to begin again a new life under more  or  less  painful conditions, as consequence of the spirit's unwillingness and bad will. In the same sense, in our life, we may be obliged to do tomorrow  what was left to do yesterday and do again what was not well done.

15. Spiritual life  is  the  normal  spirit's  life:  it  is  eternal. Corporeal life is transitory and it is just a moment in eternity.

16. During the intervals of its lives,  the  spirit  is  errant.  This state has no definite duration. In it  the  spirit  is  happy  or  sad according to the good or bad use of  its  previous  life.  The  spirit studies the causes which quickened or delayed its progress, and  takes proper decisions which it will try to put into practice  in  its  next incarnation.  It  also  chooses  the  most  adequate  tests  for   its improvement. Sometimes, however, the spirit makes a mistake and falls, not fulfilling as a man the decisions it has taken as a spirit.

17. The guilty spirit is punished  through  moral  sufferings  in  the spirit world and physical penalties during  its  corporeal  life.  Its afflictions are consequence of its faults, that is, of  its  violation of God's law. These sorrows constitute both an atonement for the  past and a test for the future. In this way the proud can have  a  life  of humiliations, the tyrant a servant life and the wealthy  oppressor  an incarnation in misery.

18. There are  proper  worlds  to  the  several  spirit's  advancement degrees, in which life exists under  different  conditions.  The  less advanced the spirit is, the weightier and more material is  its  body. In so far as the spirit  purifies  itself,  it  goes  to  morally  and physically superior worlds. The earth is not the first nor the last of these worlds but only one of the less developed ones.

19. The guilty spirits are incarnated in less  advanced  worlds  where they atone for their faults through material life difficulties.  These worlds constitute the true purgatory. It depends on the spirit to  get out of them working on its moral progress. The earth is a world o this kind.

20. Being sovereignly just and good, God does not punish his creatures to endless penalties as a consequence of their  limited  mistakes.  He provides correction and evil  repair  for  them  at  any  moment.  God forgives but also waits for regret, repair and return to good in  such a way that punishment is proportional to the  spirit's  insistence  in the evil. Consequently penalties would be eternal only for  those  who forever remained on the evil side. As soon as a sigh of regret appears in the guilty heart, God  holds  out  his  mercy.  Therefore,  eternal punishments should be understood in relative sense only and not in  an absolute one.

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ARTICLE

THE CAREER OF ALLAN KARDEC (PART II)
Steve Hume

http://www.noahsark.clara.net

http://www.noahsarksoc.freeserve.co.uk

http://home.freeuk.net/noahsark

The book attained a wide readership from all classes  of  society.[28] Some  were  attracted  to  the  spirits'  statements  in  relation  to scientific matters and it is  astonishing  how  few  of  the  spirits' 'scientific' statements appear anachronistic today. In fact,  some  of the answers to  Rivail's  questions  could  be  interpreted  as  being remarkably ahead of their time. One such example was Rivail's question 'Does an absolute void exist in any part of space?' which received the reply:- 'No, there is no void. What appears like  a  void  to  you  is occupied by matter in a state in which it escapes the action  of  your senses and of your instruments.'[29]  This  statement  (given  in  the1850's), to the effect that seemingly empty space is  really  full  of matter, has only received confirmation quite recently by the discovery of what is termed the 'quantum  vacuum',[30]  and  was  given  shortly after the spirits had also casually announced that '...what you term a molecule [or, perhaps, 'particle' or 'atom'] is still  very  far  from being the elementary molecule'.[31] This latter scientific fact  would not be confirmed until J.J. Thomson  discovered  the  electron  almost half a century later. However, The Spirits' Book drew most converts to Spiritism from the ranks of the French working  classes,[32]  perhaps for the simple reason that the spirits had nothing good to  say  about the inequity that was, and still is, inherent  in  human  society.  In fact, the Spiritist attitude towards this may  is  summed  up  in  the spirits' answer to Rivail's question 'Which amongst the vices, may  be regarded as the root of  the  others?',  which  received  the  reply:- 'Selfishness,  as  we  have  repeatedly  told  you;  for  it  is  from selfishness   that   everything   evil   proceeds.   Study   all   the vices...Combat them as you will, you will never succeed in extirpating them until, attacking the evil in its root,  you  have  destroyed  the selfishness which is their cause. Let all your  efforts  tend  towards this end; for selfishness is the veritable  social  gangrene.  Whoever would make, even in his earthly  life,  some  approach  towards  moral excellence, must root out every selfish feeling from  his  heart,  for selfishness is  incompatible  with  justice,  love,  and  charity;  it neutralises every good quality.'[33]

This meant that the Spiritist ethos became  anchored  on  the  central principle of charity, not only in relation to material goods, but also to just about everything else, including the practice  of  mediumship. But  the  Kardec  spirits  also  denounced  sexism,  racism,   capital punishment, slavery and every  other  form  of  social  injustice  and prejudice as being contrary to Divine Law; but recommended freedom  of thought, freedom of conscience, equality  and  tolerance.  In  effect, what was being advocated was a program of social reform, framed within a 'spiritual'  context,  that  was  light-years  ahead  of  the  pious conservatism  of  the  Catholic  Church.  The  foregoing  point   also represents  what  is  perhaps  the  greatest  difference  between  the portrayal of Spirit life given by the Kardec spirits and  the  account given by others since. Rivail only seems to have  been  interested  in the great moral and scientific concerns of the human race  and  framed his questions accordingly. So The Spirits' Book contains no mention of Spirit houses etc. that are a familiar feature of  the  literature  of Spiritualism. The subject matter is almost wholly oriented towards the effect that moral behaviour has upon the individual, both on Earth and in the hereafter.

Encouraged by the success of The  Spirits'  Book,  Rivail  decided  to start a monthly journal. Unable to obtain financial backing  for  this venture he sought the advice of his guides through the  mediumship  of Miss E. Dufaux and was told that he should fund  the  journal  himself and not worry about the consequences.[34] Accordingly, the first issue of La Revue Spirit appeared  on  January  1  1858  and,  as  with  The Spirits' Book, its success surpassed Rivail's  expectations.  He  also founded The Parisian Society of Psychologic Studies. But his work  for Spiritism had only just begun. He published The Mediums' Book in  1861 which dealt solely with the Spirits' views on the development and uses of mediumship itself. For this and the other works that would  follow, he used even more mediums than for The Spirits' Book but the  employed the same method of presentation i.e., his questions  followed  by  the spirits' answers which were  supplemented  by  his  own  comments  and observations.

Rivail quickly became regarded as the foremost authority on mediumship in France and was held in awe in by the Spiritists in his home town of Lyon, so much so that, in 1862, he had to plead with them not to waste money on honouring him with a lavish banquet as they had done the year before.[35] Anna Blackwell mentions that he was constantly visited  by those 'of high rank in the social, literary, artistic, and  scientific worlds' and he was summoned by the Emperor Napoleon III, several times to answer questions about the  doctrines  of  Spiritism.[36]  But,  of course, the rapid rise of Spiritism did little to  endear  Rivail,  or Spiritists in general, to certain sections of the French Establishment and even some Spiritists who came  to  resent  his  influence  on  the movement. This opposition, particularly from the Church, could  hardly have come as any surprise to Rivail, but one would imagine  that  that  rom within Spiritism would have been particularly distressing to him. In fact, he had been warned of both, and much  else  besides,  by  the spirits in 1856, before he had any idea that he would  become  such  a prominent champion of the Spiritist cause:[37] 'Terrible hates will be incited against you; implacable enemies will plot your  downfall.  You will be exposed to calumny and treachery, even  from  those  who  seem most dedicated to you.  Your  best  works  will  be  contradicted  and banned.'[38]

The communication was given, appropriately enough as it transpired, by a communicator who called himself the 'Spirit of Truth'.  Predictably, the Catholic church, both in France and  elsewhere,  was  particularly eager to discredit both  Spiritism  and  Rivail.  David  J.  Hess,  in Spirits and Scientists: Ideology,  Spiritism  and  Brazilian  Culture, mentions a number of actions taken  by  the  Church  against  the  new movement which it regarded  as  being  worse  than  Protestantism.[39] Before the publication of The Spirits' Book in 1856, the Holy  Office, under Pope Pius IX, had prohibited  mediumship  and  'other  analogous superstitions' as 'heretical, scandalous, and contrary to the  honesty of customs'. But in 1861 the Bishop  of  Barcelona  took  more  direct action. He ordered an auto-da-fe (act of the faith) known as the Edict of Barcelona, against three-hundred Spiritist books, including many by Rivail, that were confiscated and burnt in  public.[40]  However,  the Bishop's actions did nothing more than stir up French nationalism  and contribute to the further growth  of  Spiritism  in  both  France  and Spain. Hess adds that when the Bishop died nine months afterwards, his repentant spirit manifested through several French mediums begging for Rivail's forgiveness which was, apparently, granted.  In  France,  the dean of the Faculty  of  Theology  of  Lyons  began  public  education courses against Spiritism and Mesmerism  in  1864  and  Spiritism  was widely branded as a form of demon worship in writings by clergymen.

Rivail accused the Church  of  deliberately  inciting  hatred  against Spiritists:- 'From the pulpit, we Spiritists have been called  enemies of society and public order...In some places, Spiritists were censured to the point of being persecuted and injured on the streets, while the faithful were forbidden to hire Spiritists and were  warned  to  avoid them as they would avoid the plague. Women were  advised  to  separate from their husbands...Charity  has  been  refused  to  the  needy  and workers  have  lost  their  livelihoods,  just   because   they   were Spiritists. Blind men have even been discharged, against  their  will, from  some  hospitals  because   they   would   not   renounce   their beliefs.'[41]

As with Spiritualism in America and Britain, certain sections  of  the French scientific establishment also reacted  with  hostility  to  the spread of Spiritism. Hess mentions that a Dr Dechambre,  a  member  of the Academy of Medicine, published a critique of the movement in 1859, and also cites reports of insanity,  allegedly  caused  by  Spiritism, that had started to circulate by 1863.[42] There  was  even  a  French equivalent to the theory, which originated  in  America,  that  spirit raps were produced by the cracking of the knee  and  toe  joints.  The French variation on  this  theme  was  presented  to  the  Academy  of Medicine by a surgeon, M. Jobert, who attributed the noises to skilful cracking of the short tendon of the muscle of the instep.[43] However, in accordance with the spirit prediction just mentioned,  Rivail  also faced bitter opposition from within Spiritism itself. Writing  of  the accuracy of the 'Spirit of Truth's'  warning  eleven  years  later  he complained:- 'The Societe  Spirite  de  Paris  (Spiritist  Society  of Paris) has been a continuous focus of intrigues, devised by those  who declared loyalty and friendship to me, but who slandered  me  in  my absence. They said that those who favoured my work  were  paid  by  me with money I received from Spiritism.'[44] I  have  already  mentioned above that Rivail's endorsement of the doctrine of  reincarnation  had caused a  certain  amount of friction  with the followers of the mesmerist, Alphonse Cahagnet and it is easy to  imagine  that  the prominence he had achieved so rapidly in the Spiritist movement would excite jealousy in others. After all, few human endeavours, even those supposedly dedicated to 'spiritual' motives, are free from rivalry and controversy. It would appear that, far from being grateful  to  Rivail for the wider exposure and support that he had gained  for  Spiritism, some Spiritists resented his influence.

It would not be unreasonable to assume that, in Rivail's case, a  fair amount of this acrimony was the result of the way in which  he  viewed mediumship. As we have already seen, he appears to have  come  to  the Spiritist movement as a  relatively  disinterested  outsider  with  no emotional attachment to any particular idea about the subject. Once he had reached the conclusion that the communications were,  indeed,  the work of discarnate entities he may therefore have been more suited  to judging these objectively  than  some  individual  mediums  and  their followers who, then as now, must have been occasionally prone to  what could be termed 'My Guide Knows Better Than Your Guide Syndrome'.

I have given an outline of the way in which Rivail judged the worth of spirit statements of a philosophical nature above. But he also adopted criteria for deciding whether or not a communicator was likely  to  be the person that they were claiming to be.[45] Working according to the famous principle of 'like attracts like' on the basis that every human being has some imperfection in their moral  nature,  he  took  it  for granted that even the best mediums (especially writing mediums) could,at some point in their careers, fall prey to spirit personalities  who would try to lead the medium astray by borrowing  some  revered  name, thus flattering the medium's vanity to gain acceptance  for  the  most ridiculous statements. In cases such as this, where good  evidence  of identity, as such, might be difficult  or  impossible  to  obtain,  he recommended that the communication be judged on  whether  or  not  the sentiments expressed, and the manner  of  their  expression,  were  in general accordance with what one would  expect  from  the  personality concerned. And, even if this condition was met, he only  accepted  (at best) the 'moral probability'  that  the  identity  was  correct.  The Mediums' Book, published in 1861, as the  title  suggests,  is  wholly concerned with mediumship itself. It is  really  a  handbook  for  the development and proper use of the gift that  is,  ostensibly,  written from the communicating spirits' point of view; needless to  say  these were all claimed to be highly advanced personalities, some well-known, others anonymous. The material for The Mediums' Book, and  the  others which followed, was drawn largely from automatic  writing  mediums  at Rivail's 'Parisian  Society  For  Psychologic  Studies'  but  it  also included the work of others who sent communications from elsewhere  in France and abroad. [46] As with The Spirits' Book, Rivail claimed to be presenting a view on the various subjects dealt  with  that  could  be considered authoritative because it was drawn from a wide  variety  of independent sources that broadly agreed with each  other...a  sort  of consensus of opinion amongst 'advanced' spirits.

Every conceivable aspect  of  every  type  of  mediumship  and  spirit manifestation is dealt with in The Mediums'  Book  (even  charlatanism receives a chapter of its own) but Rivail devoted special space to the effect that the moral characters and  preconceived  ideas  of  mediums themselves may  have  upon  the  ability  of  spirits  to  communicate effectively. He identified twenty-six considerations  that  should  be taken into account in judging the worth  of  communications  and  gave examples of some that could not reasonably be attributed to the author claimed.[47] A good example is the following:- 'Go forward,  children, march forward with elated hearts, full of faith; the road  you  follow is a beautiful one...'[48]

This communication, which continued in similar platitudinous  vein  at some length, was signed with the name  'Napoleon',  and  it  drew  the following comment from Rivail:-  'If  ever  there  were  a  grave  and serious man, Napoleon, while living, was such an one;  his  brief  and concise style of utterance is known to all, and he must have strangely degenerated since his death, if he could have dictated a communication so verbose and ridiculous as this...'.[49]

This attitude must surely have offended certain mediums and  Spiritist groups who were in the habit of accepting communications such as  this at face value. The fact that  Rivail  referred  to  such  people  with barely  veiled  despair  in  a  chapter  on  the  dangers  of   Spirit obsession,[50] indicates that he was only too aware  of  the  ridicule that they were capable of  provoking  from  ever  eager  critics.  His reference to 'enemies' of Spiritism  'those  who  pretend  to  be  its friends in order to injure it underhandedly'  and  the  recommendation that Spiritist societies be kept small because 'such persons  find  it far more  easy  to  pursue  their  aim  of  sowing  discord  in  large assemblies than in little groups of which all the members are known to each other',[51] also suggests that he was worried that  the  movement contained  people  who  he  considered  to be wrongly motivated. Nonetheless, The  Mediums' Bookcomplemented  The   Spirits'   Book perfectly  in  that  it  provided  a  sound  guide  through  the  many difficulties that can arise during  the  practice  of  mediumship.  It would be joined in 1864 by The Gospel  According  to  Spiritism  which contained the spirit teachers' comments on  the  New  Testament.  This trio of books is regarded  by  Spiritists  as  being  the  cornerstone around which the modern movement has been built. However, Rivail would publish two further major works under the name  'Kardec':  Heaven  and Hell (1864) which was based upon the spirits' comments about the  real nature of these as mental/spiritual states; and Genesis  (1867)  which showed 'the concordance of the spiritist theory with  the  discoveries of modern science and with the general tenor of the Mosaic  record  as explained by spirits'.[52]  He  also  published  two  short  treatises entitled 'What is Spiritism' (1859)  and  'Spiritism  Reduced  to  its Simplest Expression' (1860) which was a dialogue  between  Rivail  and three critics of Spiritism...'The  Critic',  'The  Sceptic'  and  'The Priest'.

In 1867, with the publication of Genesis, Rivail completed the  series of books that today are regarded  by  the  more  evangelically  minded Spiritists as comprising 'the third revelation' of God  to  humankind, the first being the  teachings  of  Moses  and  the  second  those  of Jesus.[53] However, Rivail himself would probably have balked at  this as he had merely claimed that Spiritism, or the  modern  explosion  of spirit communication, was the third revelation. But,  as  with  almost every other aspect of the 'Kardec' teachings this idea  had  come  not from himself, but from the Spirit communicators, one of whom expressed it most succinctly in  The  Gospel  According  to  Spiritism:-  'Moses showed humanity the way; Jesus continued  this  work;  Spiritism  will finish it.'[54]

Rivail himself wrote of this aspect of Spiritism:- 'The Law of the Old Testament was personified in Moses:  that  of  the  New  Testament  in Christ. Spiritism is then the third revelation of God's law. But it is personified by no one because it represents teaching given, not by Man but by the Spirits who are the Voices of Heaven, to all parts  of  the world through the co-operation of  innumerable  intermediaries.  In  a manner of speaking, it is  the  collective  work  formed  by  all  the Spirits who bring enlightenment to all mankind by offering  the  means of  understanding  their  world  and  the  destiny  that  awaits  each individual on their return to the spiritual world.'[55]

References

[28] David J. Hess, ibid., p.62.
[29] Allan  Kardec  (b),  The  Spirits' Book (London: Psychic  Press Ltd, 1975),  p.13.
[30] Robert  Mathews writing in Focus magazine, December 1997, pp.10-11.
[31] Allan  Kardec (b), p.12.
[32] See 5.
[33] Allan Kardec  (b),  p.354.
[34] Allan  Kardec (a), p.196.
[35] See 6.
[36] Anna  Blackwell,  ibid.,  p.17.
[37] Allan Kardec (a), pp.196-197.
[38] Allan  Kardec  (a),  p.197.
[39] David  J. Hess, ibid., pp.67-68.
[40] Allan Kardec (a), p.100.
[41] Allan  Kardec (a), p.99.
[42] David J. Hess, ibid., pp.77-78.
[43] Allan  Kardec  (c), The Mediums' Book (London: Psychic Press Ltd, 1977),  p.35.
[44] Allan Kardec (a), pp.197-198.
[45] Allan Kardec  (c),  pp.296-318.
[46] Allan Kardec (c), translator's note by Anna  Blackwell,  p.417.
[47] See  8.
[48] Allan  Kardec  (c),  p.441.
[49] See  11.
[50] Allan  Kardec  (c), pp.277-295.
[51] Allan  Kardec   (c),   p.407.
[52] Anna   Blackwell, ibid.,p.15.
[53] David J. Hess, ibid., p.18.
[54] Allan Kardec (d),  The Gospel According to Spiritism (London: The Headquarters Publishing Co.
Ltd, 1987), p.28.
[55] Allan Kardec (d), p.25.

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 SHOWCASE

CENTRO ITALIANO STUDI SPIRITICI ALLAN KARDEC
Stefano (Italy)

I'm writing you from Italy. The center of our group is  mentionned  in your information  about  spiritist  groups,  but  we  have  recently  a web site and a new e-mail address. So here's to you:

The group is CISSAK in AOSTA (Italy)

http://users.iol.it/sbisbi/cissak/index.htm

e-mail:sbisbi@iol.it

Thank you very much.

God bless you
Stefano

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SPIRIT WORD
EVIL AND ITS REMEDY
 
19. Is the Earth a place of enjoyment and  a paradise of delights? Does the voice of the prophet no longer  reecho  in  your  ears?  Did  He  not proclaim there would be weeping and gnashing of teeth for those who were  born  into this valley of pain? So then, all who live  here  must  expect  bitter tears and  suffering,  and  no matter  how acute or  how  deep  the  pain, lift up your eyes to Heaven and offer  thanks  to  the Lord  for  wishing to test you! ... Oh mankind! Can  you  not recognize the  power  of  our Lord except when He cures the sores  of your bodies,  and  crowns  your days with beauty and fortune? Can  you  not recognize His love except He adorns you with all the glories,  and  restores  the  brilliance  and whiteness? You should imitate the one who was given  as  the  example. Having reached the final degree of  abjection and misery, while  laying upon a dung heap, he said to God, "Lord, I have known all the delights of opulence and You have reduced me  to  the most absolute misery;  thank  you,  thank  you,  my  Lord,  for wishing to  test your servant!"   How   long  will  your  eyes  remain fixed upon the horizon limited by death? When will  your soul  finally decide to launch itself  beyond the limits of the tomb?  But  even  if  you  suffer and cry  the  whole   of  this  life,  what  is  that  compared  to the eternal glory  reserved for  those  who  suffer  their trials with  faith,  love,  and resignation? Seek  consolation  for  your ills in the future which  God will  prepare for you,  and search  for   the  causes in the past.  And you, who  have  suffered  the  most, consider yourselves the blessed of this Earth.

As discarnates, when floating in space, you  chose  your  own  trials, judging yourselves sufficiently strong  to  support them. Why then do  you  complain  now? You asked for riches and glory because you wished  to hold fight with temptation and overcome it. You asked to fight with body and soul against both  moral and physical  evil, knowing that the harder the trial the  greater   and  more  glorious  the victory; that as long  as you have triumphed, despite the fact of your  body  ending up on a dung  heap at  death,  it  will  release  a  soul  of  radiant  whiteness  purified by the baptism of atonement and suffering.

What remedy can be prescribed for those attacked by  cruel  obsessions and mortifying evils? There is but one infallible way: through  faith, which is the appeal to Heaven. If at the moment of  highest  poignancy in your suffering you intone hymns to the Lord, then the angel at your bedside will show you the sign of salvation and the  place  which  you will one day occupy... Faith is the only sure remedy for suffering. It will always show the  infinite  horizon  before which the  few  cloudy  days  of the present will vanish. Therefore, do not ask  what  is  the  remedy  for ulcer or sore, temptation or trial. Remind  yourselves that those who believe are strengthened through  the remedy  of  faith, and those who doubt of its efficiency, be it even for an instant, will  be  immediately   punished  because  they  will  quickly  feel the pungent anguishes of affliction.

The Lord has put His seal upon all those who believe  in  Him. Christ told you that it was possible to move mountains by faith alone, and  I tell you that he who suffers, yet has faith to uphold him, will remain under the protection of the Lord and will suffer no more. The  moments of greatest pain  will  become  the  first  happy  notes  of  eternity.  The soul will detach itself from the body in such a manner that, while the  later is still writhing in convulsions, it will  be  gliding into  the  celestial  regions, singing  hymns  of gratitude and glory to the Lord together with  the  angels.   Fortunate are  those who suffer and weep! Happy be their souls because God  will heap them with blessings.

Saint Augustin (Paris, 1863).
In: "The Gospel according to Spiritism", Chapter 5,  "Blessed  are  the afflicted", trans. by J Duncan (1987). 'The entire proceeds  of  this book are donated  to  the  ALLAN  KARDEC  STUDY  GROUP,  a  non-profit  organization whose workers are all voluntary, which has  been  set  up for the purpose of the dissemination of the SPIRITISM DOCTRINE,  based on the lines of the codification by Allan Kardec.'
 
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