New Age
Spirituality: The roots of the New Age Movement Ð Part IBy Michael Rogge
The New Age movement
is hardly novel! Its philosophy is rooted in ancient traditions, often based on
mystical experiences, each within a different context.
Anthropologically, there have
always been (wo)men within "primitive" societies who were looked upon
as possessing special knowledge and power. Medicine men, or shamans, had undergone
a spontaneous catharsis, or were initiated and felt called upon to maintain
contact with the spirit world for the clan.
When communities became more
complex and organized there was little place for these loners. Society began to
specialize, people realized and felt drawn to form groups, guilds, or
societies, to ensure continuance and growing perfection. Contact with the
spirit world was given into the hands of organized religion, which also
provided an established answer to questions about the unknown and the Highest
Power.
People who felt endowed with
special powers could hardly adapt themselves to the corset of established
faith. They went underground. Yet they endeavoured to contact kindred spirits
and pupils willing to follow in their footsteps to pass on the work.
Esoteric tradition became handed
down in spiritual groups, communes, or fraternities. Their mutual devotion
resulted in a high degree of perfection comparable to the guilds of craftsmen.
In their mystical experiences they beheld a spiritual reality that could hardly
be reconciled with the dogmatic representation given by the churches. When
passing on their experiences, they had to exercise extreme caution, lest being
accused of heresy. Yet knowledgeable minds would understand their veiled
writings, symbolic representations, or even gestures.
In spite of all hindrances and
opposition, hidden (occult) spiritual tradition reached unknown shores! One of
them being Europe, where interest in ancient traditions was revived at various
times.
Interest in these traditions
alternated. After periods of decline, often as a result of cultural and
political conditions, a growing need for revival of old almost forgotten values
followed. The occult tradition seems so tremendously powerful that it cannot be
suppressed. It develops in cycles of flourishing and decline - each renaissance
with a fresh approach, adapted to the spirit of the times.
Renewed interest in these
spiritual, religious and magical traditions had a tremendous impact on the
minds of man. The latest revival in a popularized form is that of the New Age movement
in the late sixties.
The following is a brief sketch
of its origins, divided in the following chapters:
Part One:
á Grecian
mysteries and philosophy
á The
Christian myth
á Gnosticism
á Jewish
mysticism and the Kabbalah
á Alchemy
á The
Renaissance
á Freemasonry
á The
Rosicrucians
á The age
of Enlightenment
á Mesmerism
and the French Revolution
Part two:
á The
Oriental Renaissance
á Spiritualism
á Theosophy
á Krishnamurti
á The
Fourth Way
á New Age -
a rediscovery
European traditions
Grecian mysteries and
philosophy / Christianity
The 7th to 5th centuries B.C. are
characterized by a remarkable global birth of religio-philosophical ways of
thought of astounding profoundness: Lao-tse and Kung-Fu-tse (Confucius) in
China, Buddha and Mahavira in India, Zarathustra in Persia, the prophets in
Palestine and the philosophers of Greece. An attempt was undertaken by all
these great sages to transcend the old myths and superstitions of their time
and present an in-depth approach. An abstract, mystical way of seeing and
experiencing reality was being paved.
Some of these wisdom traditions
became embodied in Greek culture. Western European man learnt of their world of
thought through contacts with the Middle East and in particular Latin
translations of Greek philosophical works. The Greeks set them also on the
trail of Egyptian culture and religion. Knowledge about this great civilisation
came to the Occident indirectly however in its Greek version. Actual contact
with Egypt did not exist.
The Greeks, in their syncretistic
turn of mind, absorbed in their philosophy the essence of religious traditions
that reached them from other cultures through trade or wars. Egyptian
initiation rites, Thracian orphic mysteries and other ritual and cult practices
were amongst the many that were adopted readily.
God Hermes Trismegistus(=thrice
great) was considered by them to be identical with the ancient Egyptian God of
wisdom Thoth. Modern research has shown,
however, that the Egyptian magical and mystical works attributed to Hermes were
written in the second and third centuries A.D. These ideas became known as the Hermetic
philosophy. Its most important work is the second and third centuries A.D. These
ideas became known as the Hermetic philosophy. Its most important work is the
Corpus Hermeticum, a compilation of fifteen texts on astrology, alchemy,
theosophy and theurgy.
The Christian myth
Of the mystery school traditions
Christianity had the most impact on the West. The originally pure Jewish sect
would have gone into oblivion after the Romans destroyed Jerusalem and most of
its inhabitants in 70 AD were it not that it had struck root in adapted form in
Jewish and Gentile communities in diaspora.
On the basis of the few documents
that have survived from later centuries scholars take it that a myth struck
root around the Jewish wisdom teacher Joshua (in Greek Jesus). The Christianity
that became of it had absorbed popular pagan religious beliefs.The qualities
attributed to Jesus are a reflection of those of the gods revered at the time.
Godman Osiris-Dionysus for instance, was considered a Son of God and was born
to a virgin on the 25th of December before three shepherds.
Gnosticism
Gnosticism originated in Egypt.
The neo-platonic Gnostic school of Alexandria became its centre in the first
century A.D. From it sprung Christian, Gentile and Jewish gnosticism. The
latter survived in the Jewish Kabbalah.
The various Gnostic sects
played an important part in early Christianity and the formation of the
gospels. Their influence and tradition were suppressed when the Jesus myth had
struck root. Faith became fused with the ruling power when emperor Constantine
made Christianity a state religion in the 4th century A.D. and placed himself
virtually at its head.
Gnosticism remained a source of
inspiration, however, for the few who knew of its ideas, which were kept
secret. At the centre was the belief that the seen and unseen world is the
manifestation of the One Divine Being. Gnostic texts concern the fall of man
from the divine to the material world. The spark of divine light imprisoned in
man is to be set free so that it may return to the Kingdom of God. Gnosis,
intuitive knowledge, is said to rank over analytical knowledge. It was to be
obtained by various initiations. Use of hallucinogens may have played a part in
obtaining mystical experiences.
Gnosticism influenced many
heretical West-European sects, such as the Kathars in the
Middle Ages, who were fiercely persecuted, and mystics as Jacob
Boehme (1575-1624).
In the eighth and ninth centuries
A.D. Baghdad had become the great intellectual centre of Arabic studies.
Scientific and philosophical books were disseminated through the Moorish
emirate of Cordoba, Spain. The universities of Granada and Saragossa made
translations available of the great Greek classical works from Arabic into
Latin.
Jewish mysticism and the
Kabbalah
Another tradition that reached
the Occident was that of Jewish mysticism. Their esoteric doctrine the 'Kabbalah'
(meaning: tradition) appeared in Jewish mystic circles in Spain and Southern
France in the 12th century. Its oldest part, the Sefer Jetsira, was
written between the third and sixth century.
According to this belief God gave
a second revelation to Moses together with the Law. It explained the secret
meaning of the Law. This revelation is said to have been passed on down the
ages by initiates. Kabbalistic studies in the Hebrew scriptures developed in a
theosophical mystique and sometimes in a sort of unintended religious magic.
Shortly before the expulsion of
the Jews from Spain in 1492 Pico della Mirandola in Florence conceived a
Christian version of the Kabbalah. He associated the Kabbalistic truths with
those of Greek Hermeticism. Thus an amalgamy was introduced between the
tradition attributed to the Greek Hermes Trismegistus and Jewish mysticism
purportedly descending from Moses.
Alchemy
The name 'alchemy' is derived
from the Arabic el-kimya, Khem being the name for Egypt
where it was practised even before the Christian era. It blended with the magic
and mysticism of the legendary Greek Hermes Trismegistos which became known as
the Hermetic philosophy.
In the fourth century A.D.
alchemy evolved to its historical form. Its tradition reached Europe through
Muslim alchemists in Spain in the twelfth century.
Mediaeval Alchemy
contained Gnostic elements. In its popularized form it is considered the art of
mutation of metals. Yet, it went deeper than that. It issued from the
assumption that matter is alive and may grow. With the right rituals matter
could be influenced to transmute into higher forms.
Under the cover of
semi-scientific experiments its practitioners followed a secret tradition.
Thus, in its mystical sense alchemy was not a search for the philosophers
stone, the transmutation of metals into gold. Its deeper
aspect was the search for purification of the soul, the mystical transmutation
of the mind necessary for obtaining direct divine knowledge.
There were genuine and false
alchemists in medieval times. Amongst them were noblemen and common people,
clergymen and laymen, Jews and Christians, scientists and simple artisans,
philosophers and illiterates, doctors and magiciens, in short from all classes
of society. They wandered through Europe from one place to another. They felt
themselves cosmopolitans and as such held close relationships with one another.
They had their secret societies, with signs and passwords. It was an oral
tradition principally, from ear to ear - mouth to mouth. All that was written
down was disguised in order to give the impression that it concerned chemical
experiments only.
In spite of their being
persecuted more and more they kept practising their art secretly. Nevertheless
their ideas had an indirect influence on society.
Paracelsus
One of the leading exponents of
alchemy became the Swiss Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim, called Paracelsus
(1493-1541). Isaac Newton, at the risk of ending his life at the stake,
conducted the greater part of his life alchemical experiments.
The Renaissance
The Renaissance movement of the
15th and 16th centuries was born out of a disenchantment with the Mediaeval
philosophical and theological way of thinking. A return to the source of
knowledge of the distant past was being advocated.
Although the Renaissance movement
is usually known for its influence on art and literature, in recent years it is
realized that it was also accompanied by a renewed interest in the study of old
occult Neoplatonic and Hermetic traditions.
Around 1450 a Platonic Academy
was founded in Florence. In 1471 a Latin translation of the recently
rediscovered Greek Corpus Hermeticum (see above) appeared. The
translation aroused renewed interest in the Hermetic philosophy of the Greeks
and went through many editions
The magical mystery religion of
ancient Egypt, being the oldest civilisation one had any knowledge of,
exercised a great fascination over the Renaissance men. The mysterious
hieroglyphs were considered to be symbols of hidden knowledge revealed by God
to men that could not be passed on in words. Symbols and gestures became means
of conveying truths and values. The cosmos was seen as an organic unity. It was
peopled by a hierarchy of spirits which exercised all kinds of influences and
sympathies. The practice of magic became a holy quest, a search for knowledge,
not through the intellect, but by revelation to the pure in mind.
Freemasonry
The influence of the fresh
interest in wisdom traditions in the wake of the Italian Renaissance movement
also found its expression in Freemasonry, which became organised in lodges
around 1600 in Scotland.
Modern Freemasonry springs from
the Medieval stonemasons who wandered from one town to the other looking for
assignments to build a church, or even a cathedral, which required enormous
skill, intellectual and organizational talents. Guilds were set up in order to
guard the secrets of their craft.
The prestige of the architects,
whose edifices were an object of great admiration, was high. Being a member of
the guild was considered a privelege and had to be earned. Members recognized
each other not only by passwords, but also by their devotion and philosophy
which was laid down in the so called Old Charges. The
earliest version of this credo of the Freemasons, dates back to 1400. Later
versions circulated in the 16th century.
The Old Charges embody the
Hermetic quest for the lost wisdom of the ancients. The Freemasons placed
emphasis on morality and the study of geometry.
Ancient Egyptian knowledge and
the masters behind the great architectural design of the lost Temple of
biblical king Solomon were in high esteem and a source of inspiration for the
development of masonic creativity. Master mason Hiram of this temple, murdered
because he would not reveal masonic secrets, was a source of inspiration.
Masons felt also akin to the
revered building guilds of ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome. The amazing
architectural skill of the ancient builders was attributed to supernatural
powers. With great devotion their treatises on geometry and mathematics were
being studied when they became available.
These craftsmen belonged to the
"operative" side of Freemasonry. Later members of the upper classes
were admitted as well to Masonic lodges. Their pursuit of occult and spiritual
sciences, may have been responsible for the development of a
"speculative" side.
The aspiration of Freemasons for
more freedom of thought, political and religious reform, made it paramount that
the activities were conducted in utmost secrecy. Eventually the
"operative" elements would disappear.
In Scotland William
Schaw (1550 - 1602) is considered to be the brain behind the
re-organisation of the mason guild. In Great Britain Elias
Ahmole (1617-1692) was the forerunner. In the diary of this
astrologer is a record of his initiation in 1646 into Freemasonry, which
already counted many members then, none of them being stonemason by profession
by that time.
The
Rosicrucians
Associated with these traditions
is the Rosicrucian movement which appeared in the seventeenth
century. They should not be mistaken for the modern Rosicrucian groups, which
have no direct connection with the ancient movement.
At the basis of their emergence
is the publication in 1614 of a pamphlet, named Fama (of the
Fraternity of the Meritorious Order of the Rosy Cross) addressed to the learned
in general and the governors of Europe. Its author is presumably Johann
Valentin Andraea (1586-1654), a young German Lutheran pastor. It purported to
be a message from certain adepts concerned for the condition of mankind. In
truth it is thought that its source was a brotherhood of disappointed Lutherans
who were not satisfied with the results of hundred years of Reformation.
In the Fama it was
proposed that all learned men throughout the world should join forces towards
the establishment of a synthesis of science. Behind this effort stood allegedly
an illuminated brotherhood - the children of light, who had been initiated in
the mysteries of the Grand Order. This "BrŸderschaft der Theosophen"
was said to be founded by Christian Rosencreutz (1378-1484), who had become an
initiate during his travels in the Middle East in the fifteenth century. He
founded a brotherhood which was supposed to have operated in secret ever since.
The pamphlets of the Order of the
Rosy Cross were probably inspired by Hermetic and NeoPlatonic scriptures which
circulated at the time. The Faerie Queene of Neoplatonist Edmund
Spenser, and published in 1590 concerns an English knight 'Red Cross'. The
Rosicrucian philosophy also contained elements found in freemasonry and
alchemistic writings such as the conception: "As above, so below" -
signifying that man mirrors the whole universe. Other ideas are reminiscent of
those of the great alchemist Paracelsus (see photo)
The Rosicrucian manifesto created
quite a stir in European circles. Although many applied for initiation there
are no records of the brotherhood having survived long. By 1623 the German
Rosicrucian movement was crushed under the weight of the Counter-Reformation
led by the Jesuits. The occult Renaissance had come to an end. The tide of
witch-hunts had begun.
The
Age of Enlightenment
The grip of fundamentalist
Christianity weakened in the course of the following decades. The
weltanschauung of European man was ever broadening out. The world seas were
being explored and contact made with other cultures. The increasing population
in an expanding and more demanding society called for inventive skills.
European civilization struck root. Man of genius contributed to its culture.
Exploring nature with an intelligent mind became a coveted pursuit. A new kind
of philosophy emerged, distinct from the Christian world-view of medieval
theologians.
The Age of Enlightenment can be
said to have begun in 1687 by the publication of Isaac Newton's; Philosophiae
naturalis principia mathematica (Mathemetical Principles of
Natural philosophy). It was the basis of exploring nature in an objective
manner. The best minds dedicated themselves to this critical pursuit: Galilei,
Robert Boyle, RenŽ Descartes, Francis Bacon. Diderot began publishing
instalments of his famous EncyclopŽdie in 1751.
Alchemy was still considered a scientific pursuit and is being described in the
encyclopedia in quite favourable terms.
The idea of freedom of thought
emerged. Holland attracted many persecuted Jewish, Huguenot and other refugees
for its liberal religious views. Spinoza in Amsterdam contributed to biblical
scholarship. For the first time critical notes were placed behind biblical
texts. Stripping the Bible of its holy mystery had become common place by the
18th century. Critical deism attacked and downgraded conventional Christianity.
Voltaire, Rousseau, Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin are rated among the
deists.
The esoteric tradition had less
to fear now.
Mesmerism
and the French Revolution
Towards the end of the eighteenth
century new scientific discoveries and inventions had captured the public's
mind. Specifically experiments with electricity gave fuel to the most amazing
and weird theories involving flu•dum, ether or phlogiston to explain its
wonderful properties. It is nowadays generally hushed up that the great minds
of that era, like Isac Newton, believed in heretical notions that would
nowadays relegate a scientist to oblivion by the academic community.
In the eighties of the 18th
century an Austrian spirit healer, Franz Anton Mesmer
(1733-1815), excerted an enormous influence on the beau monde as well the
general public of France. Ten years before the outbreak of the French
revolution his ideas captured the imagination. He attributed his healing power
to manipulating a flu•dum: animal magnetism. He
worked with trance-induced states on subjects called somnambules.
His occultism became generally
accepted, except for the members of the scientific community with whom he
always was at war.
Other occult brotherhoods like
Freemasonry, Rosicrucians, Kabbalists, Swedenborgians and alchemists thrived,
as did spiritualism. The healing aspect receded in the background,
communication with spirits of the deceased, work with magical symbols and
building a new vision of reality came in its place.
This flight of ideas, its
conflict with established order and aristocracy became the breeding ground for
the French Revolution. Some of its leaders were once steeped in the world of
mesmerism.
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