the creatures spoken of by the Apostle are evidently
creatures
distinct from men:--not only they but ourselves also;
and then, that which is meant is not deliverance from
sin, but from death to come."30
But even the brave Cornelius finally gets scared by the general
opposition and decides that under the term creatures St.
Paul may have meant--as St. Ambrosius, St.
Hilarius (Hilaire) and others insisted elements (!!)
i.e., the sun, the moon, the stars,
the earth, etc. etc.
Unfortunately for the holy speculators and scholastics,
and very fortunately for the animals--if these are ever to profit
by polemics--they are over-ruled by a still greater authority
than themselves. It is St. John Chrysostomus,
already mentioned, whom the Roman Catholic Church,
on the testimony given by Bishop Proclus, at one time his
secretary, holds in the highest veneration. In fact
St. John Chrysostom was, if such a profane (in our
days) term can be applied to a saint,--the "medium"
of the Apostle to the Gentiles. In the matter of his Commentary
on St. Paul's Epistles, St. John is held
as directly inspired by that Apostle himself, in other
words as having written his comments at St. Paul's dictation.
This is what we read in those comments on the 3rd Chapter of the
Epistle to the Romans.
"We must always groan about the delay made for our emigration
(death); for if, as saith the Apostle, the
creature deprived of reason (mente, not anima,
"Soul")--and speech (nam si hæc creatura
mente et verbo carens) groans and expects, the more
the shame that we ourselves should fail to do so."3l
Unfortunately we do, and fail most ingloriously in this
desire for "emigration" to countries unknown.
Were people to study the scriptures of all nations and interpret
their meaning by the light of esoteric philosophy, no one
would fail to become, if not anxious to die, at
least indifferent to death. We should then make profitable
use of the time we pass on this earth by quietly preparing in
each birth for the next by accumulating good Karma. But
man is a sophist by nature. And, even after reading
this opinion of St. John Chrysostom--one that settles the
question of the immortal soul in animals forever, or ought
to do so at any rate, in the mind of every Christian,--we
fear the poor dumb brutes may not benefit much by the lesson after
all. Indeed, the subtle casuist, condemned
out of his own mouth, might tell us, that whatever
the nature of the soul in the animal, he is still doing
it a favour, and himself a meritorious action, by
killing the poor brute, as thus he puts an end to its "groans
about the delay made for its emigration" into eternal glory.
The writer is not simple enough to imagine, that a whole
British Museum filled with works against meat diet, would
have the effect of stopping civilized nations from having slaughter-houses,
or of making them renounce their beefsteak and Christmas goose.
But if these humble lines could make a few readers realize the
real value of St. Paul's noble words, and thereby
seriously turn their thoughts to all the horrors of vivisection--then
the writer would be content. For verily when the world
feels convinced--and it cannot avoid coming one day to such a
conviction--that animals are creatures as eternal as we ourselves,
vivisection and other permanent tortures, daily inflicted
on the poor brutes, will, after calling forth an
outburst of maledictions and threats from society generally,
force all Governments to put an end to those barbarous and shameful
practices.
H.P. BLAVATSKY
Theosophist, January, February,
and March, 1886
l De la Resurrection et du Miracle. E.
de Mirville.
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2 De la Resurrection et du Miracle. E.
de Mirville.
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3 Compare also the difference between the translation
of the same verse in the Vulgata, and the texts
of Luther and De Wette.
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4 Commen. Apocal., ch.
v. 137.
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5 It is but justice to acknowledge here that De Mirville
is the first to recognize the error of the Church in this particular,
and to defend animal life, as far as he dares do so.
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text
6 De Beatificatione, etc., by Pope
Benedict XIV.
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7 In scholastic philosophy, the word "form"
applies to the immaterial principle which informs or animates
the body.
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8 De Beautificatione. etc. I,
IV, c. Xl, Art. 6.
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9 Quoted by Cardinal de Ventura in his Philosophie
Chretienne, Vol. 11, p.
386. See also De Mirville, Résurrections
animales.
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10 Summa--Drioux edition in 8 vols.
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11 St. Patrick, it is claimed,
has Christianized "the most Satanized country of the globe--Ireland,
ignorant in all save magic"--into the "Island
of Saints," by resurrecting "sixty men dead years
before." Suscitavit sexaginta mortuos (Lectio I.
ii, from the Roman Breviary, 1520).
In the M.S. held to be the famous confession of
that saint, preserved. in the Salisbury Cathedral
(Descript. Hibern. I.
II, C. 1), St. Patrick
writes in an autograph letter: "To me the last of
men, and the greatest sinner, God has, nevertheless,
given, against the magical practices of this barbarous
people the gift of miracles, such as had not been given
to the greatest of our apostles--since he (God) permitted that
among other things (such as the resurrection of animals and creeping
things) I should resuscitate dead bodies reduced to ashes since
many years." Indeed, before such
a prodigy, the resurrection of Lazarus appears a very insignificant
incident.
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12 More recently Dr. Romanes and Dr.
Butler have thrown great light upon the subject.
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text
13 Biographie Universelle, Art.
by Cuvier on Buffon's Life.
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14 Discours sur la nature des Animaux.
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15 Esprits, 2m. mem.
Ch. XII, Cosmolatrie.
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16 Ibid.
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text
17 Esprits--p. 158.
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18 Longevity, pp. 49 and 52.
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19 Resurrections. p. 621.
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20 The occultists call it
"transformation"
during a series of lives and the final, nirvanic Resurrection.
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2l Leibnitz. Opera philos.,
etc.
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22 See vol. XXIX of the Bibliothéque
des sciences, 1st Trimester of the year 1768.
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to text
23 From two Greek words--to be born and
reborn again.
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24 See Vol. II Palingenesis. Also,
De Mirville's Resurrections.
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25 We too believe in "future states" for
the animal from the highest down to the infusoria--but in a series
of rebirths, each in a higher form, up to man and
then beyond --in short, we believe in evolution
in the fullest sense of the word.
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26 See Isis, Vol. I.
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27 What was really meant by the "sons of
God" in antiquity is now demonstrated fully in the SECRET
DOCTRINE in its Part I (on the Archaic Period)--now
nearly ready.
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28 This is the orthodox Hindu as much as the
esoteric version. In his Bangalore Lecture "What is
Hindu Religion?"--Dewan Bahadoor Raghunath Rao, of
Madras, says: "At the end of each Manvantara,
annihilation of the world takes place; but one warrior,
seven Rishis, and the seeds are saved from destruction.
To them God (or Brahm) communicates the Statute law or the Vedas
. . . as soon as a Manvantara commences these
laws are promulgated . . . and become binding
. . . to the end of that Manvantara.
These eight persons are called Sishtas, or remnants,
because they alone remain after the destruction of all the others.
Their acts and precepts are, therefore, known as
Sishtacar. They are also designated 'Sadachar'
because such acts and precepts are only what always existed."
This is the orthodox version. The secret one speaks of
seven Initiates having attained Dhyanchohanship toward the end
of the seventh Race on this earth, who are left on earth
during its "obscuration" with the seed of every mineral,
plant, and animal that had not time to evolute into man
for the next Round or world-period. See Esoteric Buddhism,
by A. P. Sinnett, Fifth Edition,
Annotations, pp. 146, 147.
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29 . . . ingemiscit et parturit
usque adhuc in the original Latin translation.
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text
30 Cornelius, edit. Pelagaud,
I. IX, p.114.
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31 Homélie XIV. Sur l'Epitre
aux Romains.
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