What reincarnation could have done for history
by Felicity Eliot

A study of history has certain inevitable consequences, one of which 
is the `what-if' and `if only' theory. This is the sort of awareness 
of what might have happened which only hindsight affords. The 
following is a brutally brief glance at the history of reincarnation —
 a history which tempts one to indulge in more what-iffing than 
usual. For the sake of all, we will suppose Atlantis never was and 
start where standard received history normally begins. Poor Western 
man. For centuries he has suffered, confronted with absurdity, 
meaninglessness and injustice. Death, blind faith, materialism, 
political and patriotic passion were possible antidotes. But whether 
he applied the remedy of faith and dogma, or of materialism, indeed 
whatever was tried, his reality remained fragmented. However he tried 
to make sense of life and death some nagging questions remained. (If 
only the teachings of Origen had not been pronounced anathema...)

There is one way — the way of knowledge through experience and 
intuition. This is the way of the initiates, the great thinkers, 
whose names are well known and whose impact is felt even centuries 
later. Space does not allow anything but the briefest mention of 
these extraordinary and highly evolved people. A list of brilliant 
thinkers, who intuited and taught the doctrine of rebirth is 
virtually endless. Let us name a few: Plato, Pythagoras, Origen, St. 
Augustine, Philo Judaeus, Paracelsus, Boehme, Spinoza, Leibniz, 
Schopenhauer, Goethe, Leonardo da Vinci, Bruno, Kant, Blake, 
Schiller, Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, Browning, Flaubert, Wagner, 
Tolstoy, Kipling, Sibelius, McTaggart, Gandhi.

Golden seam

Tracing the idea of rebirth backwards into remote times, we find that 
it runs like a golden seam through the thought and teachings of some 
of these greatest minds and existed too in early cultures. That a 
belief in reincarnation forms a basic part of many eastern religions 
is well known. What may be surprising to some is its acceptance by 
peoples and cultures as diverse as some African tribes and the 
Eskimos; Australian and Finns, Lapps, Danes and Norse; Pacific 
Islanders and Celts of Gaul, Wales, England and Ireland. In other 
words, it is not difficult to make a case for reincarnation. The idea 
seems to have been with mankind from earliest times and in many 
different often unconnected cultures.

In the development of Western civilization the doctrine of rebirth is 
always present: explicit and popular at times, persecuted and forced 
underground at others, the essence of philosophers' teachings, the 
cause of cruel deaths. It formed an integral part of many religions 
including Christianity. The doctrine of metempsychosis was always 
known to esoteric groups: the Egyptian and Greek Mystery Schools, in 
the Hermetic tradition, part of Kabalism, Manicheism, Gnosticism, 
Sufism, to give a few examples.

Philosophical tradition

The great initiate-philosophers knew and taught metempsychosis. 
Pythagoras, Plato, Pindar, Herodotus the historian and Socrates all 
believed in reincarnation. Pythagoras had the surname `Mnesarchides', 
which means `one who remembers his origins'. According to Diogenes 
Laertius in his Life of Pythagoras, the sage talked of previous lives 
which he recalled.

Pindar is quite explicit not only about the soul's immortality and 
its cyclical manifestation but also on the subject of karma and 
evolution into greater divinity: "As for those from whom Persephone 
has exacted the penalty of their ancient sins, she once more 
restoreth their souls to the upper sunlight; and from these come into 
being august monarchs, and men who are swift in strength and supreme 
in wisdom; and for all future time, men call them sainted heroes." 
(`supreme in wisdom', `sainted heroes' — a description which accords 
so well with those we have from various disciples of their Masters!) 
Socrates we know of through his pupil Plato; both accepted the 
doctrine of rebirth, which rendered Socrates quite fearless, so that 
he was able to devote "his last morning to reasoning on the real 
distinction of the soul from the body, and the grounds for believing 
that it is neither born with the body nor dies with it...." Plato's 
ideas on reincarnation had an enormous influence on Western 
literature and philosophy. The Platonic Schools of Athens, modelled 
on his Academy, flourished for nine centuries until a decree by 
Justinian forbade their existence.

Rome's history was influenced by neighbouring Greece. (Pythagoras 
settled in southern Italy, where he founded a religious-philosophical 
group. The Stoics held that the soul is immortal and periodically 
reincarnates. A powerful advocate for the idea of rebirth was 
Posidonius, born in Syria a little over a century before Christ. 
Among those who heard him speak was Cicero who himself gradually 
became a reincarnationist. Other famous Roman names connected with 
this doctrine were Virgil and Ovid.

The Early Church

In the Early Church again we find a host of names of great and well-
known people whose ideas, had they not been declared anathema, would 
certainly have ensured a broader and more logical view of reality in 
the West. Among them are Tertullian, Origen (c. 185-c. 254 AD) and 
Saint Augustine (354-430).

Around about the 4th century everything gets a little nasty; this is 
a time when issues of dogma turn into disputes and battles which the 
church council is called upon to settle. The cry `heresy!' seems to 
spring readily to the lips and notorious anathemas are pronounced, 
persecution and murder instigated. Origenism is forbidden, Platonism 
too. (See the article `Emperor, not Pope...') By the 5th century 
Neoplatonism had reached a peak of popularity and influence; one of 
the leading figures was Hypatia, philosopher and mathematician. She 
lectured in Alexandria, her obvious wisdom drawing crowds. So popular 
were Hypatia's teachings that, in 414, Cyril, Bishop of Alexandria, 
had her murdered. The Neoplatonist School came to an end; some 
adherents fled to Athens and attempted to found a similar school 
there but were prevented from doing so by Emperor Justinius. Some 
members managed to escape to the Middle East.

Suppressed in Europe, the idea of reincarnation appears in Asia 
Minor, taught and protected by the Paulinian Gnostics. The knowledge 
was deliberately spread to Thrace (modern Bulgaria) and thence 
throughout the Slavic world. Following the trade routes into central 
Europe, the doctrine of metempsychosis reappeared in Europe where it 
was taken up by groups and communities who became known as the 
Cathars and the Albigenses. Their beliefs became so popular and 
threatening to the established church that once again persecution 
broke out, this time in the form of the fanatical Inquisition. Those 
who escaped to England and their followers became known as the 
Lollards.

The Renaissance throughout Europe meant a revival of Platonism, 
interest in the Kabala and the ideas of Pythagoras. That a versatile 
genius like Leonardo Da Vinci was a reincarnationist comes as no 
surprise; in his Notebooks there are several passages that show 
clearly that Leonardo accepted the pre-existence of the soul. At 
about the same time, Paracelsus wrote: "Some children are born from 
heaven and others are born from hell, because each human being has 
his inherent tendencies, and these tendencies belong to his spirit, 
and indicate the state in which he existed before he was born."

Philosopher and dramatist, Giordano Bruno, born in 1548, was put to 
death in 1600 accused of heresy. Intellectually, he began within the 
Church but, dissatisfied, he later studied the teachings of earlier 
reincarnationists — Plato, Hermes, Raymond Lully, Nicolas de Cusa, 
and others. Threatened with arrest on a charge of heresy he travelled 
through Europe, lecturing at various universities. His theories were 
brilliantly developed, he was a true evolutionist and one of the 
first Europeans to introduce the term `Monad (Leibniz later took this 
up). A fascinating fact about Bruno is that by simply extending his 
views of the cosmic laws of rebirth (that all movement and 
manifestation is cyclic, and that the soul incarnates cyclically) to 
the workings of the physical body, he was the first Westerner to 
teach the idea of the circulation of the blood.

In books on reincarnation, many writers and poets have been cited as 
believers in the doctrine, often because characters in their books 
and plays talk about past or future lives. Whether the writers can be 
described, therefore, as reincarnationists is debatable. 
Shakespeare's characters, for instance, vary in their ideas on death, 
life and immortality. Edmund Spenser, Shakespeare and Milton all 
address the idea of rebirth.

Spinoza and Leibniz, born within a few years of each other, both 
recognized and wrote about man's immortality and the process of 
evolution through reincarnation. Concurrently, similar ideas held the 
attention of other great minds. Voltaire in France, Benjamin Franklin 
and Thomas Paine in America, Kant, Herder and Lessing in Germany, 
Hume and Pope in England were all men of the eighteenth century, the 
age of enlightenment and the predominance of rationalism. They all 
believed in the notion of rebirth. Voltaire wrote: "The doctrine of 
metempsychosis is, above all, neither absurd nor useless...It is not 
more surprising to be born twice than once; everything in nature is 
resurrection."

Immanuel Kant

Immanuel Kant's exposition on reincarnation is extraordinary in that 
he theorizes about man's continued life not only on this planet but 
on others too. His transcendentalism opened up a new era in 
metaphysical thought which flourished, especially in 19th century 
Germany. Others whose brilliance added light to the Kantian 
revolution were Lessing, Herder, Goethe, Schiller, Hegel, and 
Schopenhauer. Their influence was not limited to Germany alone, but 
was felt in Europe and America and was enhanced by an increased 
interest in Oriental philosophy and religious writings.

Schopenhauer was the first to collect and publish references to the 
doctrine of rebirth from early to contemporary times; in the 
compilation he himself wrote:  "We find the doctrine of 
metempsychosis springing from the earliest and noblest ages of the 
human race, always spread abroad on the earth as the belief of the 
great majority of mankind."

Translations of Eastern scriptures — the Bhagavad Gita, the Vedas, 
etc, —now became more widely available, with far-reaching 
consequences. The American Transcendental movement was deeply 
influenced by Oriental doctrines. Thoreau, Emerson and their 
contemporaries studied them and also read Platonic philosophers in 
the original Greek. Thoreau, Emerson, Walt Whitman and others, too 
numerous to mention here, were all reincarnationists.

In France, Flaubert, Victor Hugo and others examined the doctrine in 
their works, many were absolutely convinced that they had lived 
before. In Russia, Dostoevsky (in The Brothers Karamazov) refers to 
the idea, while Tolstoy seems to have been quite definite that he had 
lived before.

The Theosophical Society was founded in 1875 by Helena Petrovna 
Blavatsky, Henry Olcott and William Judge. This marked, from the 
Hierarchical point of view, the first step towards its 
externalization, making more exoteric much information that had up to 
then been known to few. From this point on, through the work of 
Madame Blavatsky and her colleagues, the doctrine of rebirth, the 
idea of a great law equivalent to the scientifically known law of 
cause and effect, the theory of the existence of a soul and its 
immortality and other related ideas became available to the general 
public.

If only there had been a more favourable press reception of these 
teachings...

"When I see nothing annihilated and not a drop of water wasted, I 
cannot suspect the annihilation of souls...I believe I shall, in some 
shape or other, always exist. I shall not object to a new edition of 
mine, hoping, however, that the errata of the last may be 
corrected."  Benjamin Franklin

"I am certain that I have been here as I am now a thousand times 
before, and I hope to return a thousand times...Man is a dialogue 
between nature and God. On other planets this dialogue will doubtless 
be of a higher and profounder character. What is lacking is Self-
Knowledge. After that the rest will follow." Goethe


----------------------------------------------------------------------
----------

Benjamin Creme, the chief editor of Share International, lectures 
throughout the world on the emergence of Maitreya -- the World 
Teacher -- and His group, the Masters of Wisdom. Click here to see 
Mr. Creme's upcoming lecture venues or here to listen to his previous 
talks located on this site. 

Details about the emergence of Maitreya, the World Teacher


----------------------------------------------------------------------
----------

More articles on reincarnation
 
Reincarnation FAQ 
Archives main index 
Background information page 
 
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------
----------
 
Top of Page 
HOME | INTRODUCTION | MAITREYA | BACKGROUND| EVENTS | SEARCH | FOR 
NEWS MEDIA | LANGUAGES | FEEDBACK | ARCHIVES | SI NEWS | ABOUT US | 
UPDATES TO THE SITE |
 
 
First published April 1999, Last modified: 15-Oct-2005 

  
 






To subscribe, send a message to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Or go to: 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/
and click 'Join This Group!' 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to