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In the
preceding chapters we have been considering man in relation to three of the
five Worlds which form the field of his evolution. We have partly described
these Worlds and noted the different vehicles of consciousness by means of
which he is correlated to them. We have studied his relation to the other three
Kingdoms--mineral, plant and animal--noting the difference in vehicles, and
consequent difference in consciousness, between man and each of these Kingdoms.
We have followed man through one life cycle in the three Worlds and have
examined the operation of the twin laws of Consequence and Rebirth in their
bearing upon the evolution of man.
In order to understand further details as to the progress of man,
it now becomes necessary to study his relation to the Grand Architect of the
Universe--to God and to the Hierarchies of Celestial Beings which stand upon
the many different rungs of the Jacob's ladder of attainment that stretches
from man to God and beyond.
This is a task of the utmost difficulty, rendered still more so
by the indefinite conceptions of God which exist in the minds of the majority
of the readers of literature dealing with this subject. It is true that names,
in and of themselves, are not important, but it matters greatly that we know
what we mean by a name; otherwise misunderstanding will result, and if a common
nomenclature is not agreed upon by writers and teachers, the present confusion
will be worse confounded. When the name "God" is used it is always
uncertain whether The Absolute, the One Existence, is meant; or The Supreme
Being, Who is the Great Architect of the Universe; or God, Who is the Architect
of our Solar system.

The division of the Godhead into "Father,"
"Son" and "Holy Ghost" is also confusing. Although the Beings
designated by these names are immeasurably above man and worthy of all the
reverence and worship he is capable of rendering to his highest conceptions of
Divinity, yet They are different from one another in actual fact.
Diagram 6 and diagram
11 will perhaps make the subject clear. It must be kept
in mind that the Worlds and Cosmic Planes are not one above another in space,
but that the seven Cosmic Planes inter-penetrate each other and all the seven
Worlds. They are states of spirit-matter, permeating one another, so that God
and the other great Beings who are mentioned are not far away in space. They
pervade every part of their own realms and realms of greater density than their
own. They are all present in our world and are actually and de facto
"nearer than hands and feet." It is a literal truth when we say
" in Him we live and move and have our being." For none of us could
exist outside these great Intelligences Who pervade and sustain our world with
Their Life. It has been shown that the Etheric Region extends
beyond the atmosphere of our dense Earth; that the Desire World extends out
into space further than the Etheric Region; also that the World of Thought
extends further into inter-planetary Space than either of the others. Of
course, the Worlds of rarer substance occupy a larger space than the denser
World, which has crystallized and condensed, thus occupying less space.
The same principle is operative in the Cosmic Planes. The densest
of them is the seventh (counting from the top downward). It is represented in
the diagram as larger than any of the others, the reason being that it is the
plane with which we are most intimately concerned, and it was desired to
indicate its principle subdivisions. In reality, however, it occupies less
space than any of the other Cosmic Planes, although it must be borne in mind
that, even with this comparatively restrictive qualification as to its extent,
it is still immeasurably vast, far beyond the utmost power of the human mind to
conceive, comprising within its limits millions of Solar Systems similar to our
own, which are the fields for the evolution of many grades of beings of
approximately our own status.
Of the six Cosmic Planes above our own we know nothing, save that
we are told they are the fields of activity of great Hierarchies of Beings of
indescribable splendor.
Proceeding from our Physical World to the inner and finer worlds
and up through the Cosmic Planes, we find that God, the Architect of our Solar
System, the Source and goal of our existence, is found in the highest division
of the seventh Cosmic Plane. This is His World.
His realm includes the systems of evolution carried on in the
other planets which belong to our system--Uranus, Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Earth,
Venus, Mercury, and their satellites.
The great Spiritual Intelligences designated as the Planetary
Spirits, which guide these evolutions, are called the "Seven Spirits
before the Throne." They are His Ministers, each presiding over a certain
department of the Kingdom of God--which is our solar System. The Sun is also
the field of evolution of the most exalted Beings in our Cosmos. They alone can
endure and advance by means of the terrific solar vibrations. The Sun is the
nearest approach we have to a visible symbol of God, yet it is but a veil for
That which is behind. What That is cannot be uttered publicly.
When we try to discover the origin of the Architect of our Solar
System, we find that we must pass to the highest of the seven Cosmic Planes. We
are then in the Realm of the Supreme Being, Who emanated from the Absolute.
The Absolute is beyond comprehension. No expression nor simile
which we are capable of conceiving can possibly convey any adequate idea.
Manifestation implies limitation. Therefore, we may at best characterize the
Absolute as Boundless Being; as the Root of Existence.
From the Root of Existence--The Absolute--proceeds the Supreme
Being, at the dawn of manifestation. This is The One.
In the first chapter of John this Great Being is called God.
From this Supreme Being emanates The Word, the Creative Fiat "without whom
was not anything made," and this Word is the alone-begotten Son, born of His
father (the Supreme Being) before all worlds--but positively not Christ.
Grand and glorious as is Christ, towering high above mere human nature, He is
not this Exalted Being. Truly "the Word was made flesh," but not in
the limited sense of the flesh of one body, but the flesh of all that is, in
this and millions of other solar Systems.
The first Aspect of the Supreme Being may be characterized as power.
From this proceeds the Second Aspect, the Word; and from both of these
proceeds the Third, Aspect, motion.
From this threefold Supreme Being proceed the seven Great Logoi.
They contain within Themselves all the great Hierarchies which differentiate
more and more as they diffuse through the various Cosmic Planes. (See diagram
6). There are forty-nine Hierarchies on the second Cosmic Plane; on the third
there are 343 Hierarchies. Each of these is capable of septenary divisions and
subdivisions, so that in the lowest Cosmic Plane, where the Solar System
manifest, the number of divisions and subdivisions is almost infinite.
In the Highest World of the seventh Cosmic Plane dwells the God
of our Solar Systems in the Universe. These great Beings are also threefold in
manifestation, like The Supreme Being. Their three aspects are Will, Wisdom and
Activity.
Each of the seven Planetary Spirits which proceeds from God and
has charge of the evolution of life on one of the seven planets, is also
threefold and differentiates within itself Creative Hierarchies which go
through a septenary evolution. The evolution carried on by one Planetary Spirit
differs from the methods of development inaugurated by each of the others.
It may be further stated that, at least in the particular
planetary scheme to which we belong, the entities farthest evolved in the earliest
stages, who had reached a high stage of perfection in previous evolutions,
assume the functions of the original Planetary Spirit and continue the
evolution, the original Planetary Spirit withdrawing from active participation,
but guiding its Regents.
The foregoing is the teaching relative to all the Solar Systems,
but coming down to the particular System to which we belong, the following is
the teaching which the sufficiently trained Seer can obtain for himself by
personal investigation of the memory of nature.
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