Year 14 Number 70 2006 January 15th, 2006

"Unshakable faith is only that which can face reason face to face in every Humankind epoch." 
Allan Kardec


 ° EDITORIAL
 A New Year Started
 ° ARTICLES
Reflection on Life's Priorities
 
 ° THE CODIFICATION
Aim of Incarnation
   
 ° ELECTRONIC BOOKS
Life and Destiny - PART 1st, CHAPTER I: The Evolution of Thought
   
 ° SPIRIT MESSAGES
Small Good Acts Can Eventually Change a World!
   
 ° UPCOMING EVENTS
American Association of Electronic Voice Phenomena - 2006 Conference
Parafest 2006 - Paranormal, Spiritual and Psychic Awareness Festival UK
 
 
 ° EDITORIAL

Dear Readers,

A new year has started, and for Spiritists, it means that we should reflect and try to take better measures in accomplishing our mission in this lifetime by trying to be a better person than we were last year, to get rid of bad habits, or vices, etc. that we know in our hearts are wrong and only delay our moral and spiritual progression in our quest towards relative perfection.

For Spiritists, the Spiritist Doctrine is like a manual, explaining to us how to morally and spiritually evolve. We need to study the books on Spiritism, contemplate on its sublime precepts, and try to put into practice what we have read.

Throughout this year, let us make more of an effort in paying attention to every detail, and analyzing our intimate actions and thoughts, to see if we are behaving in accordance to what we have learned. Let’s try be able to say we are at least a little bit more advanced at the end of this material existence, than when we first incarnated into this world.

We have an eternity to evolve, but there is no reason for us to postpone the true happiness that comes when our heart is filled with unconditional love and peace, and our soul no longer must reincarnate again.

Spiritual Blessings and Inner Peace for All in this New Year!

Much peace
 
The GEAE Editors

Back to Content

 ° ARTICLES

REFLECTION ON LIFE’S PRIORITIES

Jacqueline Benenati

We worry too much about unimportant things and not enough of the important ones. We complain that we need “more time” but if we had it, would we do more, instead of taking time to rest, reflect, pray, and/ or interact with our families or each other? Even our children are caught up in this confusion.

Most of our lives are primarily concerned with material things. There are jobs, houses, cars, relationships, marriages, etc. When these are achieved, we worry about getting more or keeping what we have amassed. We are judged by how much “stuff” we have or lack.

In the latter part of our lives, most of us realize that they are very few true and precious things. But, these too can only be held onto in the material life and not the spiritual one. As the saying goes, “we can’t take it with us.”

The one thing that remains constant in your life is your spirituality. Hopefully, it grows, blossoms and stays with you. It sustains you, uplifts you, comforts you and brings you closer with the one everlasting presence that will always be there when all else fails – God.       


Article reproduced from the November 2005 Newsletter of The Spiritist Society of Florida

Back to Content

 ° THE CODIFICATION

THE SPIRITS' BOOK

CHAPTER II


INCARNATION OF SPIRITS

1. AIM OF INCARNATION

132. What is the aim of the incarnation of spirits.?

"It is a necessity imposed on them by God, as the means of attaining perfection. For some of them it is an expiation; for others, a mission. In order to attain perfection, it is necessary for them to undergo all the vicissitudes of corporeal existence. It is the experience acquired by expiation that constitutes its usefulness. Incarnation has also another aim-viz., that of fitting the spirit to perform his share in the work of creation; for which purpose he is made to assume a corporeal apparatus in harmony with the material state of each world into which he is sent, and by means of which he is enabled to accomplish the special work, in connection with that world which has been appointed to him by the divine ordering. He is thus made to contribute his quota towards the general weal, while achieving his own advancement."

The action of corporeal beings is necessary to the carrying on of the work of the universe ; but God in His wisdom has willed that this action should furnish them with the means of progress and of advancement towards Himself. And thus, through an admirable law of His providence, all things are linked together, and solidarity is established between all the realms of nature.

133. Is incarnation necessary for the spirits who, from the beginning, have followed the right road?

"All are created simple and ignorant; they gain instruction in the struggles and tribulations of corporeal life. God, being just, could not make some of them happy, without trouble and withotlt exertion, and consequently without merit."

- But it so, 'what do spirits gain by' having followed the right road, since they' are not thereby exempted from the pains of corporeal life?

"They arrive more quickly at the goal. And besides, the sufferings of life are often a consequence of the imperfection of the spirit; therefore, the fewer his imperfections, the less will be his sufferings. He who is neither envious, jealous, avaricious, nor ambitious, will not have to undergo the torments which are a consequence of those defects."

Back to Content

 ° ELECTRONIC BOOKS

LIFE AND DESTINY

BY

LEON DENIS

AUTHOR OF ‘APRÈS LA MORT,’ ‘JEANNE D’ARC-MÉDIUM’

‘CHRISTIANISME ET SPIRITISME,’ ‘DANS L’INVISIBLE’

‘LA GRANDE ÉNIGME,’ ‘POURQUOI LA VIE?’

‘L’AU-DELÀ ET LA SURVIVANCE DE L’ÉTRE’

TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH BY

ELLA WHEELER WILCOX

LONDON GAY & HANCOCK LTD.

1919

This book is out of print indefinitely. 

1st Electronic Edition by 

the Spiritist Group of New York (SGNY)
and the Advanced Study Group of Spiritism (GEAE)
 
2002

PART FIRST

THE PROBLEM OF LIFE 


CHAPTER I

 THE EVOLUTION OF THOUGHT

We have said that one law regulates the evolution of thought, as it regulates the physical evolution of beings and worlds. The comprehension of the universe is developed with the progress of the human mind. This general conception of the universe and of life has been expressed in a thousand fashions, under a thousand diverse forms in the past. It is expressed in larger terms today, and will be amplified in the measure that humanity climbs the pathway of ascension. 

Science enlarges without cessation its field of exploration. Every day, by the aid of powerful instruments of observation and analysis, science discovers new aspects of matter, of force, and of life. But that which those instruments record, the soul of man discovered long ago, for the flight of thought precedes always and surpasses the methods of positive science. The instruments know nothing, and are nothing, without the human will to direct them.

Science is uncertain and changeable; it continually reconstructs itself. Its methods, its theories, its calculations, arrived at with great trouble, crumble before a more attentive observation, or a more profound deduction, to give place to other theories which are no more definite.3 The theory of the undividable atom, for instance, which for two thousand years was the base of chemistry and physical science, is now qualified and considered mere romance by our most eminent scientists. Many analogous mistakes have demonstrated the weakness of the scientific mind in the past. That mind will never attain to reality but by lifting itself above the image of material facts toward the realms of Cause and Law. 

It is in this fashion that science has been able to determine the immutable principles of logic and mathematics. But it is not the same in the other orders of research. The scientist too often carries his prejudices, his personal tendencies, and his habits of routine into the domain of psychic research. This is particularly true of France, where there are indeed few scientists with the courage and the enlightenment sufficient to enable them to follow a pathway already traced by brilliant minds of other nations. 

Despite these facts, the human spirit advances step by step toward an understanding of itself and the universe. Our ideas of force and matter are modified each day, and human personality reveals itself under unexpected aspects. In the face of so much phenomena established by experimentation, in face of accumulated testimonials from all quarters, no clear-seeing intelligent mind can deny the proof of the survival of the soul, or elude the moral consequences and responsibility, which follow that fact. That which we say of science, can be equally said of the philosophies and the religions, which succeeded one another down the centuries. They constitute so many steps or stations pursued by humanity still in its infancy - steps leading up toward spiritual planes, growing more vast and elevated at each turn. 

The diverse beliefs of humanity are but the gradual development of the divine ideal reflected in the thoughts with more and more purity and brightness as the mind develops in refinement. The belief and the understanding of a period of time represent the measure of truth which men of that epoch can seize and comprehend, until the development of their faculties and their consciences enables them to perceive a higher form and a more intense radiation of the truth. 

Seen from this point of view, even early fetishism explains itself, despite its bloody rites. It is the first babbling of the infantine soul, striving to spell the divine language, and to give in forms appropriates to its own mental state its vague, confused, rudimentary conception of a superior world. Paganism represents a more elevated conception, though exceedingly anthropomorphic. The pagan gods are all men, with the same passions and weaknesses; but even here the ideal of something higher is found. It brings a ray of eternal beauty to fertilize the world. 

Still higher is the Christian idea of sacrifice and renunciation. Greek paganism was the religion of radiant nature! Christianity is that of suffering humanity, a religion of tombs and crypts and catacombs, born from the persecution and the sorrow it has suffered, and keeping the imprint of its origin.

Christianity should be regarded as the greatest effort attempted by the invisible world to communicate ostensibly with our humanity. According to Fred Myers, it is the first authentic message from the Beyond. The pagan religions were, to be sure, rich with occult phenomena of all kinds and in facts of divination. But the appearance of the materialized Christ after death constitutes the most powerful manifestation to which man has given testimony; it was the signal of an entry of spirits upon the world’s stage. We are witnessing today a new advent of the invisible world into history. Isolated manifestations from the Beyond now indicate a tendency to become frequent and universal. A way is being established between the two worlds, which at first was a mere bridle path, then a narrow road, but which enlarges and widens and promises to become a large, sure route. Christianity has for its point of departure phenomena similar to that, which in our day constitute the proofs in the domain of psychical research: facts revealed through the influence and actions of a spiritual country of souls. Through these facts, and only through them, do we behold a pathway opening into infinity, and hope is born in anguished hearts, and humanity is reconciled with death. 

The religions have opposed a barrier against violent passions and the barbarity of iron ages, and they have engraved clearly on the conscience of man the idea of morality. 

The aesthetic part of religion has produced beautiful works in all domains of art, and aided largely in the revelation of art and beauty through the centuries. Greek art created marvels, Christian art attained sublimity in the Gothic cathedrals which lift themselves like bibles of stone under the heavens, with their proud sculptured towers, their imposing naves, which multiply the vibrations of the organ and the sacred chants, their lofty arches, from which floods of light ripple down on frescoes and statues, and then rest there as if exhausted. 

The fault of religion is not an aesthetic fault; it is the fault of logic. Religion is shut by the churches in walls of dogmas, and compelled to stand in rigid forms. Movement is the law of life, and the Church renders thought immobile, instead of inspiring it to flight. 

It is the nature of man to exhaust all forms of an idea, and to carry it to extremes before allowing it to take its normal course of evolution. Every religious truth affirmed by an innovator is weakened and altered by its followers, who are almost always incapable of maintaining the height to which the master rose. The doctrine becomes, therefore, abused and distorted, and little by little creates counter-currents of skepticism and negation. Faith is succeeded by incredulity; materialism gets in its work, and only when materialism has shown its utter powerlessness in creating social order does the rebirth of idealism become possible. From the dawn of Christianity there have been divers currents of thought. Opposing ideas have crowded against one another in the bed of the newborn religion. Schisms and conflicts succeeded, in the midst of which the thought of Christ has been veiled with obscurity. True Christianity is the law of love and of liberty. The churches have it one of fear and dogmatism. From that has come the gradual weaning of ‘thinkers’ from the churches, and the weakening of religious feeling in many lands. And the inevitable result has been discord and discontent in the human family. Out of this discontent has come a crisis; in spite of all appearances of the death of faith, faith is not dead, but is being transformed and renewed. The doubt of today prepares the path for the conviction of tomorrow. An intelligent faith will govern the future and permeate all races. Humanity, still young and divided by the necessities of territory, climate, and distance, has nevertheless commenced to think for itself. Above the antagonism of politics and religions, groups of intellectual minds are formed; men pursued by the same problems, agonized by the same cares, inspired by the same invisible world, labor at a common work, and arrive at the same conclusions. Little by little the elements of psychical research are producing a universal faith all over the world. Numberless testimonials indicate the trend of human thought toward this glorious end. A higher spirituality is already here; religion is now the scientific effort of humanity to communicate with the spirit eternal and divine. Sir Oliver Lodge, the famous scientist of the University of Birmingham, and Maxwell, Attorney General in the Court of Appeals, Paris, both have declared the coming of a new religion of freedom and spirituality. 

In the measure that thought ripens, missionaries of all orders awaken religious ideals in the breast of humanity. We are now witnessing one of these revivals, grander and more profound than any which have preceded. This new religious movement has not only men for interpreters, it has inspiring spirits, invisible helpers of space, who exercise their powers on all the surface on the globe and in all domains of thought at one time. Everywhere this new spirituality appears, and naturally the question arises, ‘What is this new power? Is it science or religion?’

O human minds! Do you imagine that thought must sternly follow the ruts by the wheels of centuries?

Until now, all intellectual domains have been separated by walls and barriers - science on one side, religion on the other. Philosophy and metaphysics have been bristling with impenetrable thorns. In the domain of the soul, as in the domain of the universe, all is simple, vast, profound, but the system divined by man rendered it complicated, restricted, and divided. Religion has ripened in a somber cavern of dogmas and mysteries: science has been imprisoned in the lowest cellars of matter: that is neither true religion nor true science. We must lift ourselves above these arbitrary classifications to comprehend and reconcile the two with clear vision. 

Do we not today, in even the elementary study of science, which relates to worlds in space, feel a sentiment of enthusiasm and admiration, which is almost religious? Read the great works of astronomers and mathematicians of genius; they will say to you that the universe is a prodigy of wisdom, harmony, beauty, and that already in the penetration of superior laws is realized the service of science, art, religion, and the vision of God through His works. Lifted to this height, study becomes contemplation, and thought is changed to prayer. The serious study of spiritism accentuates and develops this feeling and gives the mind a clearer and more precise understanding. On the experimental side it is only a science, but the aim of this research is to plunge into invisible regions and to lift oneself to the eternal sciences, from whence flow all life and force. This unites man with the Divine Power, and his study becomes a doctrine, a religious philosophy. It is the most powerful tie, which can bind humanity together, and it is, too, the voice of spirits delivered from the flesh calling to spirits still imprisoned in the body, and between them establishing a veritable communion. 

We must not regard it, however, as a religion in the narrow acceptation of that word. The dogmas of established creeds and the new doctrine do not agree; it is open to all seekers; the spirit of free criticism and examination controls and presides at its investigations. 

Dogmas, creeds, priests, and clergymen are nevertheless necessary to the world now, and will be for some time to come. Many young and timid souls in their journey through earth are unable to find their way or understand their own needs without direction.

The new spirituality, based on research and its proofs of life beyond the grave, addresses itself particularly to evolved souls who wish to find for themselves the solution of the grand problems, and to formulate their own creed. It offers to them a conception, an interpretation of truth and universal law, based on experience, upon reason, and upon the teachings of heavenly spirits. Add to that the revelations of duties and responsibilities, and you have a solid foundation for your instinct of justice. Then add to that the moral force, the satisfaction of the heart, the joy of finding again the loved being that you believed dead. To the proof of their survival is joined the certitude of joining them, and to live with them lives unencumbered, lives of ascending happiness and progress.

So in this research, the most obscure problems become radiant with light. The Beyond opens, the divine side of things is revealed; by the force of its teachings, sooner or later, the human soul mounts, and from its high altitude it sees that all the different theories, contradictory and hostile in appearance, are but various aspects of one truth. The majestic laws of the universe, for the enlightened souls are united in one single law of intelligent conscientious force, the source of thought and action; and by that law all the worlds and all beings are bound in one powerful verity, associated in one harmony, led toward one goal. The day will come when all the little system of narrow thought will be melted into one vast synthesis, embracing all the kingdoms of the mind. Sciences, philosophies, religions, today divided, will be joined together on this great light of life, the splendid radiance of the spirit, in this reign of knowledge. In this magnificent accord, science will furnish precision and method in the order of facts: philosophy, the vigor of logic and deduction: poetry, the radiation of its light and the magic of its color. Religion will add the qualities of sentiment and elevated aestheticism. So will be realized the beauty and force in the verity of thought. So will the human soul set toward the highest summits while maintaining the relation of equilibrium necessary to regulate the rhythmic march of intellect and conscience in their ascension toward the conquest of the good and true.

Physical research affirms and demonstrates the action of soul upon soul at all distances, without the aid of physical organs, and this order of fact is not made less positive by opposition and ridicule. The phenomena of telepathy and suggestion, of the transmission of thought observed and promoted everywhere today by millions, confirm these revelations. The experience of such eminent men as F. Colavida, and E. Marta, of Colonel de Rochas, and my own experiences, establish the fact that not only memory of the smallest details of life, even to childhood’s hours, are remembered by the disembodied spirits, but those of anterior lives are engraved in the hidden recesses of the soul. An entire past, veiled in a waking state, reappears and lives again in a trance condition. Colonel de Rochas speaks of this in his book Successive Lives, and this subject will be specially dealt with farther on. Modern spiritual research cannot be considered as a purely metaphysical conception, as was the doctrine of the early spirituality. It now presents itself in quite another character and responds to the demands of an educated generation and to the school of rational criticism - a school rendered definite by the exaggerations of an agonizing and sickly mysticism. 

To believe does not suffice for today - we want to know! No philosophical or moral conception has a chance of success if it does not lean on demonstration at once logical, mathematical, and positive, and if besides it is not crowned by the satisfying sanction of our ideas of justice. Leibnitz has said, ‘If some one would write mathematically of philosophy and morality, nothing could prevent its being done with exactness. This’ he adds, ‘has been rarely attempted, and more rarely has succeeded.’

We might here remark, that in Allan Kardec’s Book of Spirits, this has been done in a masterly manner. That book is the result of immense labor, classification, coordination, elimination, and gives only the messages from the spirit world, which the author was able to prove authentic beyond question. All the others were discarded. 

This work of Allan Kardec is not ended; it continues since his death. Already we possess a powerful synthesis; the large lines were traced by Allan Kardec, and have been developed by the interpreters of his thought with the collaboration of the invisible world. 

Each one brings a grain of sand to the common edifice, and the foundations are strengthened every day by scientific experimentation, while its towers reach higher and higher. For myself, I can say that I have been favored by teachings of spiritual guides, and that they have never failed me or misled me, during forty years. Their revelation have been of a particularly didactic character in the course of the last eight years. I have written fully of this in a former work, In the Invisible.

A rule scrupulously observed by Allan Kardec is that of presenting all his conclusions and ideas in a manner easily comprehended by any reader. That is why we purpose to adopt here the terms and method utilized by Allan Kardec, while adding to our own work the developments of fifty years of research and experimentation which have flowed by since the appearance of his works. Facts are nothing without reason, which analyses them and discovers the underlying law. Phenomena are transitory; the certitude that they give us is not enduring. History demonstrates this. During centuries, men believed (and many still believe) that the sun rises. To intellectual minds it was given to discover the movement of the earth, not grasped by the senses. What has become of the greater part of the old beliefs of science and chemistry? Our scientific men seem now only positive of the Law of Gravitation. In consequence, the methods I use in this work are observations of facts, their generalization, and search for the law governing them; and the rational deduction, which, beyond the fugitive and changing aspect of phenomena, perceives the permanent cause, which produces it. 

In the study of spiritual phenomena there are two things to consider - a revelation from the spirit world, and a human discovery, that is to say, one part from invisible realms, essentially educative in itself, and the other a personal and human confirmation that pursues it with the laws of logic and reason. 

Until now, we have had in this study only personal systems and individual revelations. Today there are thousands of voices the realm of the dead, which speak to earth. The invisible world enters into action, and eminent spirits, agents from beyond, are recognized by the beauty and power of their teachings. The great geniuses of space, impelled by divine impulse, have come to guide us to radiant summits. Is not this a grander dispensation than ever was ours in the past? The methods and the results are equally remarkable. 

Personal revelation is always fallible. All the individual theories whether of Aristotle, of Thomas Aquinas, of Kant, of Descartes, or of Spinoza, are necessarily influenced by the opinions, tendencies, and prejudices of the revealer, and by the times and condition in which they are received. One might say the same of all religious doctrines. The revelations of impersonal spirits are free from the greater part of these influences; no man, no Church, no nation has the power to stifle them. They defy all inquisitions, and we have seen the most hostile minds brought to a new viewpoint by the power of their manifestations, and souls moved to the depths of their being by appeals and exhortations from the dear dead who urged them to become instruments of spiritual propaganda. Friends and relatives bring to doubting minds proofs unquestionable and irrefutable of their identity, and in this way spread the great truths of life without end over the earth. There seems to be a majestic accord in all the voices, which are simultaneously lifter to make a skeptical society listen to the good news of the survival of the soul, and to the explanation of the problems of life and sorrow. 

This revelation has penetrated into the heart of family and society. The multiplication of the sources of this revelation, and its diffusion, constitutes a permanent basis for this science, which renders sterile all opposition and intrigues. Spiritual truth, if extinguished for a moment by falsification, is illumined again soon at a hundred other points. In this immense movement of spiritual revelation, souls are obeying orders from on high; they act under a plan traced in advance, and which unrolls and amplifies with majesty. An invisible council presides in the bosom of space; it is composed of great spirits of all races and all religions, and souls of the spiritual elite who have lived on earth according to the law of love and sacrifice. Their powerful influence unites earth with heaven by rays of light on which mount the prayers of the fervent and on which descends inspiration for mortals.

Certain students of spiritual revelations are puzzled by the contradictory nature of many communications. There are, for instance, spirits who affirm the law of successive lives, and others who deny it. This subject will be more thoroughly examined in later chapters of this volume. 

Like all new doctrines, this modern spiritual revelation has met with criticism and objections: its followers have been called hasty in their assertions, and accused of building hurriedly on a foundation of phenomena, a frail and premature system of philosophy. 

There are always the skeptics, and the indifferent, and the laggards to attack every new movement. No progress would be possible in the world if pioneers awaited the cooperation of laggards.  It is amusing to hear such minds attempt to criticize men like Allan Kardec, who gave years of laborious research to his study before giving it to the world; or such brilliant scientists as Frederick Myers, the eminent professor of Cambridge, author of The Survival of Human Personality; or Sir Olive Lodge, the world-famous scientist and Member of the Academy, who stands bravely forth as the leader of this philosophy today. 

In face of such appreciations, the recriminations of lesser minds fall through their own weakness.

To what can we attribute an aversion to a belief in communication with our dead? It must be because this belief and its teachings impose a moral responsibility of thought and action, which becomes very troublesome to many minds incapable of grasping, and indifferent to, an intellectual philosophy. In his Survival of Human Personality Professor Frederick Myers says, "For every conscientious seeker, psychical research leads logically to vast syntheses of philosophy and religion: the observations and experiences it brings open the door to a revelation."

It is evident that the day when such relations are established with the world of spirits by the force of events, the problem of life and destiny will also be established under new aspects. At no epoch of history has man been able to flee from the great problems of life, of death, of sorrow. Despite his incapability to solve them, they have without cessation haunted him, returning each time with more force as he attempted to escape them, gliding into all the events of his life, and knocking at the doors of his conscience. And when a new source of knowledge, of consolation, and moral force with vast horizons of thought open to the mind, how can he remain indifferent? And does it not indeed appeal to all of us? Is it not our future, our tomorrow, which is in question? Why this torment, this anguish, which has besieged the human heart across the centuries - this confused intuition of a better world, longed for and desired - this anxiety, that God and Justice should exist in a larger and more satisfying measure? Is there not in this desire - in this need - of the thought to probe the great mystery, one of the most beautiful privileges of human existence? Is it not therein lies the dignity and reason of being in this life? And each time that man has failed to recognize this privilege and has renounced turning his eyes Beyond, refused to direct his thought toward a higher life, and has circumscribed his horizon to earth, has he not seen the miseries of mortals aggravated, the burden grow heavier upon the shoulders of the unfortunate, despair and suicide multiply, and society descend toward anarchy and decadence?

* * * 

It is claimed by our opponents that the spiritual philosophy is inconsistent, and that the communications come frequently from the mind of the mediums, or from those present, and who have formed their ideas upon this subject. But how can our critics explain the fact that in my own group, three mediums through whom I have made investigations gave descriptions of the worlds beyond, utterly at variance with the teachings of the church in which they were reared! All their ideas and views, when not in trance state, differed radically from their statements made when under control. The main statements made by mediums entirely unknown to one another, and scattered over the whole earth, are curiously consistent regarding the realms attained by the soul after death. 

It is true, however, that there are as many orders of minds in the Beyond as there are here. There are infinite degrees of beings climbing the ladder that leads from earth to the higher heavens. The noble and the vulgar are to be encountered there as here. Yet sometimes the vulgar souls, in describing their moral situation and their impressions of the Beyond, furnish us with precious material for determining the conditions, which exist in that world. The prudent experimenter learns how to separate the gold from the dross in studying psychical phenomena. Truth does not always reach us nude, and the invisible helpers leave to our reason and perseverance the work of developing fully that which they give us in part. Meanwhile the utmost precaution should be taken, and continual control exercised. Fraud, conscious and unconscious, is to be encountered in these realms of research, and we must demand absolute proofs of identity, and never depart from righteous methods in our dealings with mediums and psychics. 

When the authenticity of the communication is assured, we should again analyze them, with severe judgment applying the principle of scientific philosophy, and accept only those, which can be convincingly established as incontrovertible. Besides the possibility of fraud employed by mediums, there are occult dangers to be encountered in this study. All those who experiment in these realms know there are two orders of spiritualism. One, practiced at haphazard without method and without devotion of thought, attracting from space light and mocking spirits, which are numerous in the earth vicinity. The other, serious and reverent, practiced with caution and given respectful attention, which puts the student en rapport with advanced spirits who are desirous of comforting and enlightening those who call them with a fervent heart. That is known as the ‘Communion of Saints’ by the religious. 

Again we are asked, ‘How can the communications which come from superior spirits be distinguished from others? To this question there is but one answer. How can we distinguish between the good and bad books of authors long deceased? How distinguish a noble, elevating language from that which is banal and vulgar? We have only one law by which to measure the quality of thoughts, whether they come from our world or the other. We can judge mediumistic messages, above all, by their moral force and effect. If they purify and uplift the character and conscience, it is the surest criterion of their source; in our communications with the Invisibles, there were signs of recognition to distinguish the good from the bad spirits. 

Sensitive psychics recognize quickly the approach of good spirits by the agreeable fragrance, which precedes the approach; while an odor difficult to endure surrounds evil visitors from the unseen realms. 

There are spirits, which employ a certain musical note to distinguish their arrival. (That eminent author, Stainton M. Moses, mentions this in his book Annals of Psychic Science.). One of our mediums announced the coming of her control as a ‘blue spirit’; brilliant radiations and harmonious vibrations accompanied this spirit. That which persuades and convinces us in our search for spiritual truths, more than all else, are the conversations established between friends and relatives who have preceded us into the world of space. When incontestable proofs of their identity assure us of their presence, when the old-time intimacy and confidence is newly established between us, the revelations obtained under these conditions take on a most suggestive character. Before them the last hesitations of skepticism vanish, to give place to ecstatic emotions of the heart. Can we resist, when the companions of our youth and our virility, who one by one have departed, leaving us solitary and desolate, return with a thousand proofs of their identity; incidents meaningless to strangers, but moving to us? When they advise, counsel, and console us, the coldest and most skeptical cannot resist their influence. We have proof of this in the conversations of Professor Hyslop, the American professor, with his father, brother, and uncle. Then add to these the pages written feverishly in half obscurity by mediums incapable of comprehending their beauty or value, but where splendor of style is allied to profundity of ideas. And again add impassioned discourses, such as we have heard in our study group, discourses pronounced by the organs of a simple and modest medium of honest character, who discussed the eternal enigma of the world and the laws which regulate the spiritual life. Those who had the privilege of attending these reunions know well what a penetrating influence they exerted upon all. In spite of the skeptical tendency of our generation, there are accents and forms of language and heights of eloquence, which cannot be resisted. The most prejudiced are obliged to recognize the incontestable mark of moral superiority. Before those spirits who descended for a moment into our obscure world to glorify it with their rays of genius, criticism hesitates and becomes silent. During eight years we received, here in Tours, messages of this order. They touched on all the great problems, all the important questions of moral philosophy, and comprise several volumes of manuscripts. It is the résumé of this work, too long and too involved to publish entirely, which I wish to present here. 

Jerome de Prague, my friend, my guide of the present and the past, the magnanimous spirit who directed the first flights of my infantile intelligence in the far off ages, is the author. How many other eminent spirits have thus spread their teachings over the world, in the intimacy of various groups, almost always anonymously, revealing themselves only by the high value of their conceptions. 

It has been given to me to lift some of the veils, which hide the true personalities. But I must guard their secrets, for the choice spirits are particular in this respect, and wish to remain unknown; the celebrated names which one often finds attached to empty and fleet communications are but a decoy. By all this details I wish to demonstrate one thing - this work is not exclusively mine, but rather the reflection of a higher thought which I seek to interpret. I have considered it a duty to endow my earthly brothers with these teachings, a worthy work of itself. Whatever one may think of the revelation of spirits, I am not ready to admit that because our universities teach immense systems of metaphysics, built by human thought, that we should regard as negligible, and reject the principles divulged by the noble intelligences of space. Though we love the human masters of reason and knowledge, it is not an excuse for disdaining the superhuman masters, who represent a higher and more serious knowledge. The spirit of man, limited by the flesh, deprived of the fullness of his perceptions and his resources, cannot attain by mortal powers alone a full acquaintance with the invisible world and its laws. The circle in which our life and thoughts struggle is restricted, our point of view limited, the insufficiency of the ideas we acquire render all generalization impossible, or improbable; we must have guides to penetrate the unknown domain and its laws. It is by the collaboration of the eminent thinkers of the two worlds - the two humanities - that the highest truths are attained, or at least perceived, and the noblest principles established. Better and surer than our earthly masters, those of Space know how to present to us the problem of life and the mystery of the soul, and how to aid us to realize the grandeur of our future. There is another question presented to us, and a new objection made by the critics. In presence of the infinite variety of communications received from the Invisible Realms, and the liberty given each mind to interpret them according to will, what, asks the questioner, becomes of the verity of doctrine, this powerful verity which has produced the force and the grandeur, and assured the devotion of sacerdotal religions? We have said that spiritism is not a dogma - it is not an orthodox sect. It is a living philosophy, open to every mind, and which progresses in evolving. It imposes nothing, it ‘proposes’, and what it offers leans upon facts of experience and moral proofs. 

It excludes no other beliefs, but lifts itself above them all, and embraces them in vaster formulae, higher and more extended expressions of truth. Superior intelligences open the way; they reveal eternal principles, which each one of us adopts and assimilates in the measure of his comprehension, following the degree of development attained by his faculties in his succession of lives. 

Generally the verity of doctrine is only obtained by the price of blind and passive submission to an ensemble of principles fixed in a rigid mould. It is the petrification of thought, the divorce of religion from science, which does not know how to exist without liberty and movement. This immobility, this fixed rigidity of dogma, deprives religion of all the benefits of evolution of thought; in considering itself as the only source of truth, it arrives at proscribing all which is outside of itself, and so ripens in a tomb, where it would carry all with it, all the intellectual life and genius of the human race. The greatest solicitude of the spiritual world is to prevent the funereal consequences of orthodoxy; its revelation is a free and sincere exposition of doctrines which are not unchanging, but which constitute new stations in the climb toward infinite and eternal truth. Every one has the right to analyze those principles, and they require no anchor but that of the conscience and reason, yet in adopting them one should conform his life and perform the duties, which are the result. Those who fail to do this cannot be considered serious. Allan Kardec always tells us to be on guard against a dogmatic and sectarian attitude. Constantly in his works he warns us against the unfortunate methods, which undermine other religions. Psychic research is a neutral territory where we meet one another and clasp hands with all. No more dogmas! No more mysteries! Open our hearts to all the whispers of the Spirit, draw from all the sources of the past and present; let us say that in every doctrine there are portions of truth, but that no one contains it all! For truth in its plenitude is vaster than the human spirit. It is only in the accord of sincere hearts and disinterested minds we can realize harmony of thought, and the conquest of the greatest sum of truth possible for man to assimilate on earth in this human history. A day will come when all will comprehend; there is no antithesis between science and religion, there is only misunderstanding. The antithesis is between science and orthodoxy. In bringing near to us the sacred doctrines of the Orient, touching the verity of the world and the evolution of life, the recent discoveries of science prove this fact. That is why we affirm that in pursuing their parallel march upon the grand route of the centuries, science and faith will meet one day forcibly, for their aim is identical, and they will finish by a reciprocal penetration. Science will analyze religion, will become the synthesis. In them the world of facts and the world of cause will unite. The true terms of intelligence, human and divine, will become one. The veil of the invisible will be torn away, the divine work will appear to all eyes in its majestic splendor.

The allusions that we have made to ancient doctrines might suggest another criticism, viz. that the teachings of spiritism are not entirely new. No, certainly they are not! In every age of humanity rays of light have flashed upon the pathway of thought, and the requisite truths have appeared to sages and seekers. Always men of genius, as well as psychics and clairvoyants, have received revelations from Beyond appropriate to the needs of human evolution. It is scarcely probable that the first men could have arrived of themselves, and through their own resources only, to an idea of law and a form of early civilization. 

Consciously, or otherwise, the communication between earth and space has always existed. So we find easily in the doctrines of the past the greater part of the principle brought into full light by the teachings of spiritism. But these principles, understood by a few, have never penetrated the soul of the masses. Their revelations were spasmodic, in the form of isolated communications, and were usually regarded as miracles. But after twenty or thirty centuries of silent gestation, the critical mind of man has developed, and reason has grasped a concept of the highest laws. Spiritual phenomena, with all the instruction belonging to them, reappear to guide a hesitating society along the arduous way of progress. 

It is always in the troubled hours of history that the grandest conceptions form in the breast of humanity. For there the old doctrines, with their voices enfeebled by age, and the philosophies, with their abstract language, no longer suffice to console the afflicted, to raise the courage of the crushed, and to lead souls to the summits. Nevertheless, they contain latent forces, and the light of their hearts can be reanimated. We do not partake of the views of those who, in this domain, seek to demolish rather than to restore; this would be wrong. Wisdom consists in gathering the portions of eternal life and the moral truths they contain, while casting away the superficial and useless, which the ages and the passion of men have added. 

This work of discernment, of sorting, of renovation, who can accomplish? Men are badly prepared for it. In spite of the imperious wavering of the hour, in spite of the moral decadence of out time, no voice of authority is lifted, either in the sanctuary or the academy, to say the strong and grand words for which the world waits. The impulsion could only come from on high - it has come! All those who have studied the past with attention, know there is a plan in the drama of the centuries. 

The divine thought manifests itself in different fashions, and the revelation gradually unfolds in a thousand manners, following the needs of society. When the hour of a new dispensation arrives, the Invisible World comes out of its silence; in all parts of the earth flow communications from the departed, bringing elements of a doctrine which give a foundation for the religions and the philosophies of two humanities. 

The aim of psychical research is not to destroy, but to verify - to renew, to complete. It separates in the domain of faith that which is living and that, which is dead. It gathers and assembles, from the numerous systems by which until now, the conscience of humanity has been enclosed, the relative truths that they contain, and unites them with the order of truth proclaimed by itself. In brief, this new spiritism attaches to the human soul, still weak and uncertain, the powerful wings of wide space, and by this means elevates it to the height where it can embrace the vast harmony of laws and worlds, and at the same time obtain a clear vision of its destiny. 

And that destiny it finds incomparably superior to anything, which has been murmured to it by the dogmas of the Middle Age and the theories of other times. It is an immense future of evolution, which opens for it, and leads it from sphere to sphere, from light to light, toward a goal always more beautiful, always more fully illumined with rays of justice and love. 

3 Professor Richet says: ‘Science has ever been a series of errors and approximations, constantly in a state of evolution, constantly overturning themselves, and changing more quickly than they form.’

 
 
Next: CHAPTER II - THE PROBLEM OF LIFE


Back to Content


 ° SPIRIT MESSAGES

Small Good Acts Can Eventually Change a World!

Spirit communication received by Yvonne Limoges

You see so much hate, violence, and poverty and you may think that the earth is beyond help, but if each one of you across the planet put their part, and take personal responsibility for the assistance and progression of themselves and others on this planet, this world will evolve faster into a happier place for all.

Many people are getting more involved in helping others but in small groups and in small ways, but this is not always brought to the forefront in the news. Nevertheless, just as one brick at a time can build a large bridge, each good solitary act builds into a large worldwide movement that leads earth and its people towards a better future, and that is what is happening.

When there is change, the new, clashes with the old established ways, and there seems to be chaos and turmoil, but it is only through this process that progress is made.

There have been many deaths lately in many catastrophes, but as Spiritists, you know that each life has its appointed time, and all spirits are atoning and expiating for their past lives on this planet. The faster this is accomplished, the sooner these souls can progress to a happier state of affairs. Their future lifetimes will be so much better!

The Spiritist view of Progress is so different than the materialist or those who do not have belief in reincarnation. Those who don’t believe we have more than one lifetime believe that death is a tragedy, but it truly is a liberty! It is a freedom and release from your imperfect pasts!

So remember, you are not alone; there is a Divine Plan. The good spirits are assisting mankind on its way to a more pleasant world, even though you may not perceive it. But, have faith in the All Perfect Creator and His Messengers, for your world is slowly changing for the better!   
                           

                                         
Back to Content


 ° UPCOMING EVENTS

The American Association of Electronic Voice Phenomena
presents:


2006 Conference - Life After Death: The Evidence

June 8, 9 and 10, 2006

Information: http://aaevp.com/conference/aaevp_conference.html

 
Back to Content

Parafest 2006
 
Paranormal ,Spiritual and Psychic Awareness Festival UK

 
A Beacon of Light

Location:  Chilford Hall, Linton nr Cambridge
Date :       commencing Friday Evening 27th October 2006
                  & Saturday 28th October 2006.

Information: http://www.parafest2006.com/

 Back to Content


GRUPO DE ESTUDOS AVANÇADOS ESPÍRITAS

ADVANCED STUDY GROUP OF SPIRITISM

Electronic weekly report in Portuguese - Boletim do GEAE

Monthly English report: "The Spiritist Messenger"


The Spiritist Messenger is sent by email to GEAE subscribers

(Free) subscriptions http://www.geae.inf.br/
Send your comments to editor-en@geae.inf.br

To cancel the subscription send an e-mail to editor-en@geae.inf.br
or to inscricao-en@geae.inf.br with the subject "unsubscribe"

Editorial Council - editor-en@geae.inf.br

Collection in Portuguese (Boletim do GEAE)

Collection in English (The Spiritist Messenger

Collection in Spanish (El Mensajero Espírita)