The Visions of Sadhu Sundar Singh
BY THE RELUCTANT MESENGER
INTRODUCTION
Luke 16:19-31
19 "There was a
rich man who was dressed in purple and fine linen and lived in luxury every
day. 20 At his gate was laid a beggar named Lazarus, covered with sores 21 and
longing to eat what fell from the rich man's table. Even the dogs came and
licked his sores. 22 "The time came when the beggar died and the angels
carried him to Abraham's side. The rich man also died and was buried. 23 In
hell, where he was in torment, he looked up and saw Abraham far away, with
Lazarus by his side. 24 So he called to him, 'Father Abraham, have pity on me
and send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue,
because I am in agony in this fire.' 25 "But Abraham replied, 'Son,
remember that in your lifetime you received your good things, while Lazarus
received bad things, but now he is comforted here and you are in agony. 26 And
besides all this, between us and you a great chasm has been fixed, so that
those who want to go from here to you cannot, nor can anyone cross over from
there to us.' 27 "He answered, 'Then I beg you, father, send Lazarus to my
father's house, 28 for I have five brothers. Let him warn them, so that they
will not also come to this place of torment.' 29 "Abraham replied, 'They
have Moses and the Prophets; let them listen to them.' 30 " 'No, father
Abraham,' he said, 'but if someone from the dead goes to them, they will
repent.' 31 "He said to him, 'If they do not listen to Moses and the
Prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead.'
" NIV
In The Book of Enoch, Enoch is escorted by angels
through the different levels of Heaven as he is educated on the mysteries of
the spirit world. The Tibetan Book of the Dead discusses how the
soul encounters wrathful dieties and peaceful dieties as it travels the bardos.
Another interesting parallel can be found in The Dead Sea Scrolls because many of them discuss
the Sons of Light and the Sons of Darkness. This is the exact same term used in
Sadhu's book.
I hope you find this
book as inspiring as I did.
PUBLISHERS' PREFACE
The life of Sadhu
Sundar Singh was most remarkable in its Christ-likeness. He was born amidst the
depths of Indian culture and religion, and into a Sikh family. During the early
part of his life, Sundar's mother would take him week by week to sit at the
feet of a sadhu, an ascetic holy man, who lived some distance away in the
rainforest.
But with the death of
his beloved mother when he was only fourteen years old, the young Sundar grew
increasingly despairing and aggressive. His hatred of the local missionaries
and Christians culminated in the public burning of a Bible, which he tore apart
page by page and threw, into the flames.
Yet before long
Sundar was intent on taking his own life. Sundar had arrived at a point of
desperation: he had decided to throw himself under the Ludhiana express if God
did not reveal to him the true way of peace.
At three in the
morning he rose from his bed and went out into the moonlit courtyard for the
ceremonial bath observed by devout Hindus and Sikhs before worship. He then
returned to his room and knelt down, bowed his head to the ground and pleaded
that God would reveal himself. Yet, nothing happened.
He had not known what
to expect: a voice, a vision, and a trance? Still nothing happened. And it was
fast approaching the time for the Lothian express.
He lifted his head
and opened his eyes, and was rather surprised to see a faint cloud of light in
the room. It was too early for the dawn. He opened the door and peered out to
the courtyard. Darkness. Turning back into the room, he saw that the light in
the room was getting brighter. To his sheer amazement, he saw not the face of
any of his traditional gods, but of Jesus the Christ.
Jesus Christ was
there in the room, shining, radiating an inexpressible joy, peace, and love,
looking at him with compassion and asking, "Why do you persecute me? I
died for you..."
From here on the life
of Sundar Singh became most Christ-like. Being unwilling to denounce his
Master, it was not long before his family had rejected him. Sundar took the
saffron robes of the sadhu and began a life of spreading the simple message of
love and peace and rebirth through Jesus. He carried no money or other
possessions, only a New Testament.
He traveled India and
Tibet, as well as the rest of the world, with the message that the modern
interpretation of Jesus was sadly watered down. He visited the West twice,
traveling to Britain, the United States, and Australia in 1920, and Europe
again in 1922.
With the large number
of "spiritual paths" and "techniques”, facing the world of today
it is of special value to consider the life and insights of one who truly
embraced the simplicity, love and freedom offered through devotion to Christ.
"I am not worthy
to follow in the steps of my Lord," he said, "but like Him, I want no
home, no possessions. Like Him I will belong to the road, sharing the suffering
of my people, eating with those who will give me shelter, and telling all
people of the love of God."
PREFACE by SUNDAR
SINGH
The following is the preface of the original publication
of 1926:
In this book, I have attempted to write about some of the
visions, which God has given me. Had I considered my own inclinations I would
not have published the account of these visions during my life time; but
friends, whose judgment I value, have been insistent that, as a spiritual help
to others, the publication of the teaching of these visions should not be
delayed. In deference to the wish of these friends, this book is now presented
to the public.
At Kotgarh, fourteen years ago, while I was praying, my
eyes were opened to the Heavenly Vision. So vividly did I see it all that I
thought I must have died, and that my soul had passed into the glory of heaven;
but throughout the intervening years these visions have continued to enrich my
life. I cannot call them up at will, but, usually when I am praying or
meditating, sometimes as often as eight or ten times in a month, my spiritual
eyes are opened to see within the heavens, and, for an hour or two, I walk in
the glory of the heavenly sphere with Christ Jesus, and hold converse with
angels and spirits. Their answers to my questions have provided much of the
material that has already been published in my books, and the unutterable ecstasy
of that spiritual communion makes me long for the time when I shall enter in
permanently to the bliss and fellowship of the redeemed.
Some may consider that these visions are merely a form of
spiritualism, but I would emphasize that there is one very essential
difference. Spiritualism does presume to produce messages and signs from
spirits out of the dark, but they are usually so fragmentary and
unintelligible, if not actually deceptive, that they lead their followers away
from, rather than to, the truth. In these visions, on the other hand, I see
vividly and clearly every detail of the glory of the spiritual world, and I
have the uplifting experience of very real fellowship with the saints, amid the
inconceivably bright and beautiful world made visible. It is from these angels
and saints that I have received, not vague, broken and elusive messages from
the unseen, but clear and rational elucidations of many of the problems that
have troubled me.
This "Communion of the Saints" was a fact so
real in the experience of the early Church, that it is given a place among the
necessary articles of their faith, as stated in the "Apostles'
Creed." Once, in a vision, I asked the saints for a proof from the Bible
of this communion of saints, and was told that it was to be found clearly given
in Zechariah 3:7-8, where "those that were standing by" were not
angels, but saints in glory; and God's promise, on condition of Joshua
fulfilling His command, is that he will be given "a place of access to walk
among them (saints) that stand by," and these are his "fellows"
the spirits of men made perfect with whom he could commune. There is repeated
mention of Spirits, Saints and Angels in this book. The distinction I would
make between them is that spirits are good or bad, which after death exist in a
state intermediate between heaven and hell. Saints are those who have passed on
through this stage into the higher sphere of the spiritual world, and have had
special service allotted to them. Angels are those glorious beings to whom all
kinds of superior service have been allotted, and among them are included many
saints from other worlds, as well as from this world of ours, who live together
as one family. They serve one another in love, and, in the effulgence of God's
glory, are eternally happy. The World of Spirits means that intermediary state
into which spirits enter after leaving the body. By the Spiritual World is
meant all spiritual beings that progress through the stages between the
darkness of the bottomless pit and the throne of the Lord in light.
I wish to express my sincere thanks to Rev. T. E. Riddle
of the New Zealand Presbyterian Mission, Kharar, Punjab, who has journeyed up
to Subathu to translate the original book from Urdu into English. My thanks are
again due to Miss E. Sanders, of Coventry, for having corrected the proofs.
SUNDAR SINGH, Subathu,
July 1926.
The Visions
LIFE
There is only one
source of Life--an Infinite and Almighty Life, whose creative power gave life
to all living things. All creatures live in Him and in Him will they remain
forever. Again, this Life created innumerable other lives, different in kind,
and in the stages of their progress man is one of these, created in God's own
image that he might ever remain happy in His holy presence.
DEATH
This life may change
but it can never be destroyed, and though the change from one form of existence
into another is called Death, this never means that death finally ends life, or
even that it adds to life, or takes away from it. It merely transfers the life
from one form of existence to another. A thing that disappears from our sight
has not thereby ceased to exist. It reappears, but in another form and state.
MAN CAN NEVER BE
DESTROYED
Nothing in this whole
universe was ever destroyed, nor can it ever be, because the Creator has never
created anything for destruction. If He had wished to destroy it, He would
never have created it. And if nothing in creation can be destroyed, then how
can man be destroyed, who is the crown of creation, and the image of his
Creator? Can God Himself destroy His own image, or can any other creature do
it? Never! If a man is not destroyed at death then at once the question arises,
where will man exist after death, and in what state?
I shall attempt to
give a brief explanation from my own visional experiences though it is not
possible for me to describe all the things which I have seen in visions of the
spiritual world, because the language and illustrations of this world are
inadequate to express these spiritual realities; and the very attempt to reduce
to ordinary language the glory of the things seen is likely to result in
misunderstanding. I have, therefore, had to eliminate the account of all those
subtle spiritual occurrences, for which only a spiritual language is adequate,
and to take up only a few simple and instructive incidents that will prove
profitable to all. And since at some time or other every one will have to enter
into this unseen spiritual world it will not be without profit, if we, to some
extent, become familiar with it.
WHAT HAPPENS AT
DEATH?
One day when I was
praying alone, I suddenly found myself surrounded by a great concourse of
spirit beings, or I might say that as soon as my spiritual eyes were opened I
found myself bowed in the presence of a considerable company of saints and
angels. At first, I was somewhat abashed, when I saw their bright and glorious
state and compared with them my own inferior quality. But I was at once put at
ease by their real sympathy and love-inspired friendliness. I had already had
the experience of the peace of the presence of God in my life, but the
fellowship of these saints added a new and wonderful joy to me. As we conversed
together, I received from them answers to my questions relating to my
difficulties about many problems that puzzled me. My first inquiry was about
what happens at the time of dying and about the state of the soul after death.
I said, ' We know what happens to us between childhood and old age, but we know
nothing of what happens at the time of death or beyond the gates of death.
Correct information about it can be known only by those on the other side of
death, after they have entered the spiritual world. "Can you", I
asked, "Give us any information about this?"
To this one of the
saints answered! "Death is like sleep. There is no pain in the passing
over, except in the case of a few bodily diseases and mental conditions. As an
exhausted man is overcome by deep sleep, so comes the sleep of death to man.
Death comes so suddenly to many, that it is only with great difficulty that
they realize that they have left the material world, and entered this world of
spirits. Bewildered by the many new things that they see around them, they
imagine that they are visiting some country or city of the physical world,
which they have not seen before. It is only when they have been more fully
instructed, and realize that their spiritual body is different from their
former material body, that they allow that they have, in fact, been transferred
from the material world to the realm of spirits."
Another of the saints
who was present gave this further answer to my question, "Usually,"
he said, "at the time of death the body loses its power of feeling. It has
no pain, but is simply overcome by a sense of drowsiness. Sometimes in cases of
great weakness, or after accident, the spirit departs while the body is still
unconscious. Then the spirits of those who have lived without thought of, or
preparation for, entering the spiritual world, being thus suddenly transferred
into the world of spirits, are extremely bewildered, and in a state of great
distress at their fate, so, for a considerable period, they have to remain in
the lower and darker planes of the intermediate state. The spirits of these
lower spheres often greatly harass people in the world. But the only ones that
they can injure are those who are like in mind to themselves, who of their own
free will open their hearts to entertain them. These evil spirits, allying
themselves with other evil spirits, would do immense harm in the world were it
not that God has appointed innumerable angels everywhere for the protection of
His people, and of His creation, so that His people are always safe in His
keeping."
"Evil spirits
can injure only those in the world who are like in nature to themselves, and
then they can do it only to a limited extent. They can, indeed, trouble the
righteous, but not without God's permission. God sometimes does give to Satan
and his angels permission to tempt and persecute His people, that they may
emerge from the trial stronger and better, as when He allowed Satan to
persecute His servant Job. But from such a trial there is gain rather than loss
to the believer."
Another of the saints
standing by added in reply to my question, "Many whose lives have not been
yielded to God, when about to die, seem to become unconscious; but what
actually happens is that when they see the hideous and devilish faces of the
evil spirits that have come about them, they become speechless and paralyzed by
fear. On the other hand the dying of a believer is frequently the very opposite
of this. He is extremely happy for he sees angels and saintly spirits coming to
welcome him. Then too, his loved ones, who have died before, are permitted to
attend his deathbed, and to conduct his soul to the spiritual world. On
entering the world of spirits he at once feels at home for not only are his
friends about him, but, while in the world he had long been preparing himself
for that Home by his trust in God and fellowship with Him."
After that a fourth
saint said, "To conduct the souls of men from the world is the work of
angels. Usually Christ reveals Himself in the spiritual world to each one in
degrees of glory differing in intensity according to the state of each soul's
spiritual development. But in some cases, He Himself comes to a deathbed to
welcome His servant and in love dries his tears, and leads him into Paradise.
As a child born into the world finds everything provided for its wants, so does
the soul, on entering the spiritual world find all its wants supplied."
THE WORLD OF SPIRITS
Once in the course of
conversation, the saints gave me this information. "After death the soul
of every human being will enter the world of spirits, and every one, according
to the stage of his spiritual growth, will dwell with spirits like in mind and
in nature to himself, either in the darkness or in the light of glory. We are
assured that no one in the physical body has entered into the spiritual world,
except Christ and a few saints, whose bodies were transformed into glorious
bodies, yet to some it has been granted, that, while still dwelling in the
world, they can see the world of spirits, and heaven itself, as in 2 Cor. 12:2,
though they themselves cannot tell whether they enter Paradise in the body or
in the spirit."
After this
conversation, these saints conducted me around and showed me many wonderful
things and places. I saw that from all sides thousands upon thousands of souls
were constantly arriving in the world of spirits, and that all were attended by
angels. The souls of the good had with them only angels and good spirits, who
had conducted them from their deathbeds. Evil spirits were not allowed to come
near to them, but stood far off and watched. I saw also that there were no good
spirits with the souls of the really wicked, but about them were evil spirits,
who had come with them from their death-beds, while angels, too, stood by and
prevented the evil spirits from giving free play to the spite of their
malicious natures in harassing them. The evil spirits almost immediately led
these souls away towards the darkness, for when in the flesh, they had consistently
allowed evil spirits to influence them for evil, and had willingly permitted
themselves to be enticed to all kinds of wickedness.
For the angels in no
way interfere with the free will of any soul. I saw there, also, many souls who
had lately come into the world of spirits, who were attended by both good and
evil spirits, as well as by angels. But before long, the radical difference of
their lives began to assert itself, and they separated themselves--the good in
character towards the good, and the evil towards the evil.
SONS OF LIGHT
When the souls of men
arrive in the world of spirits the good at once separate from the evil. In the
world all are mixed together, but it is not so in the spiritual world. I have
many times seen that when the spirits of the good--the Sons of Light enter into
the world of spirits they first of all bathe in the impalpable air-like waters
of a crystal clear ocean, and in this they find an intense and exhilarating
refreshment. Within these miraculous waters they move about as if in open air,
neither are they drowned beneath them, nor do the waters wet them, but,
wonderfully cleansed and refreshed and fully purified, they enter into the
world of glory and light, where they will ever remain in the presence of their
dear Lord, and in the fellowship of innumerable saints and angels.
SONS OF DARKNESS
How different from
these are the souls of those whose lives have been evil. Ill at ease in the
company of the Sons of Light, and tormented by the all-revealing light of
Glory, they struggle to hide themselves in places where their impure and
sin-stained natures will not be seen. From the lowest and darkest part of the
world of spirits a black and evil-smelling smoke arises, and in their effort to
hide themselves from the light, these Sons of Darkness push down, and cast
themselves headlong into it, and from it their bitter wails of remorse and
anguish are heard constantly to arise. But heaven is so arranged that the smoke
is not seen, nor does the spirits in heaven hear the wails of anguish, unless
any of them for some special reason should wish to see the evil plight of those
souls in darkness.
DEATH OF A CHILD
A little child died
of pneumonia, and a party of angels came to conduct his soul to the world of
spirits. I wish that his mother could have seen that wonderful sight, then,
instead of weeping, she would have sung with joy, for the angels take care of
the little ones with a care and a love that no mother ever could show. I heard
one of the angels say to another, "See how this child's mother weeps over
this short and temporary separation! In a very few years she will be happy
again with her child." Then the angels took the child's soul to that
beautiful and light-filled part of heaven, which is set apart for children,
where they care for them, and teach them in all heavenly wisdom, until
gradually the little ones become like the angels.
After some time this
child's mother also died, and her child, who had now become like the angels,
came with other angels to welcome the soul of his mother. When he said to her,
"Mother, do you not know me? I am your son Theodore," the mother's
heart was flooded with joy, and when they embraced one another their tears of
joy fell like flowers. It was a touching sight! Then as they walked along
together he kept on pointing out, and explaining to her the things around them,
and during the time appointed for her stay in the intermediate state, he
remained with her, and, when the period necessary for instruction in that world
was completed he took her with him to the higher sphere where he himself dwelt.
There, on all sides,
were wonderful and joyous surroundings, and unnumbered souls of men were there,
who in the world had borne all kinds of suffering for the sake of Christ, and
in the end had been raised to this Glorious place of honor. All around were
matchless and exceedingly beautiful mountains, springs & landscapes, &
in the gardens was abundance of all kinds of sweet fruits & beautiful
flowers. Everything the heart could desire was there. Then he said to his
mother, "In the World, which is the dim reflection of this real world, our
dear ones are grieving over us, but, tell me, is this death, or the real life
for which every heart yearns?" The mother said, "Son. This is the
true life. If I had known in the world the whole truth about heaven, I would
never have grieved over your death. What a pity it is those in the world are so
blind! In spite of the fact that Christ has explained quite clearly about this
state of glory, and that the Gospels again and again tell of this eternal
kingdom of the Father, yet, not only ignorant people, but many enlightened
believers as well, still remain altogether unaware of its glory. May God grant
that all may enter into the abiding joy of this place!"
DEATH OF A
PHILOSOPHER
The soul of a German
philosopher entered into the world of spirits and saw from afar the
incomparable glory of the spiritual world, and the boundless happiness of its
people. He was delighted with what he saw, but his stubborn intellectualism
stood in the way of his entering into it, and enjoying its happiness. Instead
of admitting that it was real, he argued thus with himself, "There is no
doubt at all that I see all this, but what proof is there that it has objective
existence, and is not some illusion conjured up by my mind? From end to end of
all this scene I will apply the tests of logic, philosophy and science, and
then only will I be convinced that it has a reality of its own, and is no
illusion." Then the angels answered him, "It is evident from your
speech that your intellectualism has warped your whole nature, for as
spiritual, and not bodily, eyes are needed to see the spiritual world, so
spiritual understanding is necessary to comprehend its reality, and not mental
exercises in the fundamentals of logic and philosophy. Your science that deals
with material facts has been left behind with your physical skull and brain in
the World. Here, only that spiritual wisdom is of use which arises out of the
fear and love of God." Then said one of the angels to another, "What
a pity it is that people forget that precious word of our Lord, 'Except ye be
converted, and become as little children, ye shall in no wise enter into the
Kingdom of Heaven' (Matt. 18:3). I asked one of the angels what the end of this
man would be, and he replied "If this man's life had been altogether bad,
then he would at once have joined the spirits of darkness, but he is not
without a moral sense, so for a very long time he will wander blindly round in
the dim light of the lower parts of the intermediate state, and keep on bumping
his philosophical head, until tired of his foolishness, he repents. Then he
will be ready to receive the necessary instruction from the angels appointed
for that purpose, and, when instructed, will he be fit to enter into the fuller
light of God in the higher sphere."
In one sense the
whole of infinite space, filled as it is with the presence of God, who is
Spirit, is a spiritual world. In another sense, the World also is a spiritual
world, for its inhabitants are spirits clothed with human bodies. But there is
yet another world of spirits after they leave the body at death. This is an intermediate
state -- a state between the glory and light of the highest heavens, and the
dimness and darkness of the lowest hells. In it are innumerable planes of
existence, and the soul is conducted to that plane for which its progress in
the World has fitted it. There, angels especially appointed to this work,
instruct it for a time, that may be long or short, before it goes on to join
the society of those spirits -- good spirits in the greater light, or evil
spirits in the greater darkness -- that are like in nature and in mind to
itself.
UNSEEN HELP
Our relatives and
dear ones, and at times the saints as well often come from the unseen world to
help and protect us, but the angels always do. Yet they have never been allowed
to make themselves visible to us, except at a few times of very special need.
By ways unrecognized by us they influence us towards holy thoughts, and incline
us towards God and towards good conduct, and God's Spirit, dwelling in our
hearts, completes that work for the perfecting of our spiritual life, which
they have been unable to accomplish.
The greatness of any
one does not depend upon his knowledge and position, nor by these alone can any
one be great. A man is as great as he can be useful to others, and the
usefulness of his life to others depends on his service to them. Hence, in so
far as a man can serve others in love, just so far is he great. As the Lord
said, "But whosoever will be great among you let him be your servant"
(Matt. 20:26). The joy of all those that dwell in heaven is found in this that
they serve one another in love, and thus, fulfilling the object of their lives,
they remain forever in the presence of God.
THE CORRECTION OF
ERROR
When people earnestly
desire to live lives pleasing to God, the readjustment of their views, and the
renewal of their lives, begin in this world. Not only does the Spirit of God
teach them directly but in the secret chamber of their hearts they are helped
by communion with the saints, who, unseen by them are ever at hand to assist
them towards the good.
But, as many
Christian believers, as well as non-Christian seekers after truth, die while
still holding false and partial views of truth, their views are corrected in
the world of spirits, provided that they are not obstinately welded to their
opinions, and are willing to learn, because neither in this world, nor in the
next, does God, or any servant of His, force a man to believe anything against
his will.
THE MANIFESTATION OF
CHRIST
I saw in a vision the
spirit of an idolater on reaching the world of spirits begin at once to search
for his god. Then the saints said to him, "There is no god here save the
One True God, and Christ, who is His manifestation." At this, the man was
a good deal astonished, but being a sincere seeker after truth, he frankly
admitted that he had been in error. He eagerly sought to know the correct view
of truth, and asked if he might see the Christ. Shortly after this Christ
manifested Himself in a dim light to him, and to others who had newly arrived
in the world of spirits, because at this stage they could not have endured a
full exhibition of His glory, for His glory is so surpassing that even the
angels look on Him with difficulty, and cover their faces with their wings
(Isaiah 6:9). When He does reveal Himself to any one He takes into account the
particular stage of progress to which that soul has attained, so He appears
dimly, or in the fuller light of His glory, that the sight of Him may be
endured. So, when these spirits saw Christ in this dim but attractive light,
they were filled with a joy and peace, which is beyond our power to describe.
Bathed in the rays of His life-giving light, and with the waves of His love,
which constantly flow out from Him, flowing over them, all their error was
washed away. Then with all their hearts, they acknowledged Him as the Truth,
and found healing, and, bowing in lowly adoration before Him, thanked and
praised Him. And the saints, who had been appointed for their instruction; also
rejoiced over them.
A LABOURER AND A
DOUBTER
Once I saw in a
vision a laboring man arrive in the spirit world. He was in great distress, for
in all his life he had given no thought to anything but earning his daily
bread. He had been too busy to think of God, or of spiritual things. At the
same time he had died another had also died, who was a doubter, obstinate in
his opinions. Both were ordered to remain for a long period far down in the
world of spirits in a place of darkness. In this, being in distress, they began
to cry for help. Saints and angels, in love and sympathy, went to instruct them
that they might understand how to become members of the Kingdom of Glory and
Light. But in spite of their distress, like many other spirits, they preferred
to remain on in their dark abode, for sin had so warped their whole character
and nature that they doubted everything. They even looked with suspicion on the
angels who had come to help them. As I watched I wondered what their end would
be, but, when I asked, the only answer I got was from one of the saints, who
said, "God may have mercy on them."
We can form an
estimate from the depravity of man's perverted nature from this, that, if an
evil report about another goes round, even if it is false, a man whose outlook
is distorted by sin will at once accept it as true. If, on the other hand, a
good and perfectly true report is received, for example that such and such a
man is a devout man, who has done this or that work for the glory of God and
for the good of his fellows, then, without hesitation, such a hearer will say,
"It is all false. So-and-so must have some motive of his own at the back
of it all." Should we ask such a man how he knows that the former case is
true and the latter false, and what proof he can give, he will have not the
slightest proof to put forward.
All that we can learn
from such an attitude of mind is, that, as his mind is tainted with evil he
believes evil reports because they fit in with his evil nature, and he thinks
good reports are lies because they do not fit in with the evil of his heart. By
nature, a good man's attitude is the opposite of this. He is naturally inclined
to doubt an evil report, and to believe a good report, because this attitude
best fits in with the goodness of his nature. Those who in this world pass
their lives in opposition to the will of God will have rest of heart neither in
this world nor in the world to come; and, on entering the world of spirits they
will feel bewildered and distressed. But those who in this world are conformed
to the will or the Lord will be at peace on reaching the next, and will be
filled with unspeakable joy, because here is their eternal home, and the
kingdom of their Father.
THE JUDGMENT OF
SINNERS
Many have the idea
that if they sin in secret then none will ever know about it, but it is
altogether impossible that any sin should remain hidden forever. At some time
or other, it will certainly be known, and the sinner will also receive the
punishment he deserves. Also, goodness and truth can never be hidden. In the
end they must triumph, though, for a time, they may not be recognized. The
following incidents will throw light on the state of the sinner.
A GOOD MAN AND A
THIEF
Once in a vision, one
of the saints recounted this story to me, "Late one night a godly man had
to go a distance to do some necessary work. As he went along, he came upon a
thief breaking into a shop. He said to him, 'you have no right to take other
people's property, and to cause them loss. It is a great sin to do so.' The
thief answered, 'If you want to get out of this safely, then get out quietly.
If you don't there will be trouble for you.' The good man persisted in his
efforts, and, when the thief would not listen, he began to shout and raised the
neighbors. They rushed out to seize the thief, but as soon as the good man
began to accuse him, the thief retaliated and accused the good man. 'Oh-yes;'
he said, 'you think this fellow is very religious, but I caught him in the very
act of stealing.' As there were no witnesses both were arrested, and locked up
together in a room, while a police officer and some of his men hid themselves
to listen to their conversation. Then the thief began to laugh at his fellow
prisoner.
'Look,' he said,
'haven't I caught you nicely? I told you at first to get out or it would be the
worse for you. Now we'll see how your religion is going to save you.' As soon
as the officer heard this, he opened the door and released the good man with
honor and a reward, while he gave the thief a severe beating, and locked him in
a prison cell. So, even in this world, there is a degree of judgment between
good and bad men, but the full punishment and reward will be given only in the
world to come."
SECRET SINS
The following was
also related to me in a vision. A man in the secret of his own room was committing
a sinful act, and he thought that his sin was hidden. One of the saints said,
"How I wish that the spiritual eyes of this man had been open at the time,
then he would never have dared to commit this sin." For in that room were
a number of angels and saints, as well as some spirits of his dear ones, who
had come to help him. All of them were grieved to see his shameful conducts and
one of them said, "We came to help him, but now we will have to be
witnesses against him at the time of his judgment. He cannot see us, but we can
all see him indulging in this sin. Would that this man would repent, and be
saved from the punishment to come."
WASTED OPPORTUNITIES
Once I saw in the
world of spirits a spirit who, with cries of remorse was rushing about like a
madman. An angel said, "In the world this man had many chances of
repenting and turning towards God, but whenever his conscience began to trouble
him he used to drown its prickings in drink. He wasted all his property, ruined
his family, and in the end committed suicide, and now in the world of spirits
he rushes frantically about like a mad dog and writhes in remorse at the
thought of his lost opportunities. We are all willing to help him, but his own
perverted nature prevents him from repenting, for sin has hardened his heart,
though the memory of his sin is always fresh to him. In the world, he drank to
make himself forget the voice of his conscience, but here there is no possible
chance of covering up anything. Now his soul is so naked that he himself, and
all the inhabitants of the spiritual world, can see his sinful life. For him,
in his sin-hardened state, no other course is possible but that he must hide
himself in the darkness with other evil spirits, and so to some extent escape
the torture of the light."
A WICKED MAN
PERMITTED TO ENTER HEAVEN
Once in my presence a
man of evil life entered at death into the world of spirits. When the angel and
saints wished to help him he at once began to curse and revile them, and say,
"God is altogether unjust. He has prepared heaven for such flattering
slaves as you are, and casts the rest of mankind into hell. Yet you call Him
Love!" The angels replied, "God certainly is Love. He created men
that they might live forever in happy fellowship with Him, but men, by their
own obstinacy, and by abuse of their free will have turned their faces away
from Him, and have made hell for themselves. God neither casts any one into
hell, nor will He ever do so, but man himself, by being entangled in sin,
creates hell for himself. God never created any hell."
Just then, the
exceedingly sweet voice of one of the high angels was heard from above saying,
"God gives permission that this man may be brought into heaven."
Eagerly the man stepped forward accompanied by two angels, but when they
reached the door of heaven, and saw the holy and light-enveloped place and the
glorious and blessed inhabitants that dwell there, he began to feel uneasy. The
angels said to him, "See how beautiful a world is this! Go a little
farther, and look at the dear Lord sitting on His throne." From the door
he looked, and then as the light of the Sun of Righteousness revealed to him
the impurity of his sin-defiled life, he started back in an agony of
self-loathing, and fled, with such precipitancy, that he did not even stop in
the intermediate state of the world of spirits, but like a stone he passed
through it, and cast himself headlong into the bottomless pit.
Then the sweet and
ravishing voice of the Lord was heard saying, "Look, My dear children,
none is forbidden to come here, and no one forbade this man, nor has any one
asked him to leave. It was his own impure life that forced him to flee from
this holy place, for, 'Except a man be born again he cannot see the kingdom of
God' (John 3:3).
THE SPIRIT OF A
MURDERER
A man, who some years
before had killed a Christian preacher, was bitten by a snake in the jungle,
and died. When he entered the world of spirits, he saw good and bad spirits all
around him, and because the whole aspect of his soul showed that he was a son
of darkness, the evil spirits soon had possession of him, and pushed him along
with them towards the darkness. One of the saints remarked, "He killed a
man of God by the poison of his anger, and now he is killed by the poison of a
snake. The old Serpent, the devil, by means of this man, killed an innocent
man. Now, by means of another snake, which is like him, he has killed this man,
for 'he was a murderer from the beginning' " (John 8:44).
AND THE SPIRIT OF THE
MAN MURDERED
As he was being taken
away, one from among the good spirits, who had come to help him, said to him,
"I have forgiven you with all my heart. Now can I do anything to help
you?" The murderer at once recognized him as the same man whom he had
killed some years before. Ashamed and smitten with fear he fell down before
him, and at once the evil spirits began to clamor loudly, but the angels who
were standing at a distance rebuked and silenced them. Then the murderer said
to the man whom he had killed, "How I wish that, in the world, I could
have seen your unselfish and loving life as I see it now! I regret that through
my blindness, and because your body screened your real spiritual life, I could
not then see the inner beauty of your life. Also, by killing, you I deprived
many of the blessing and benefit that you would have given them. Now I am
forever a sinner in God's sight, and fully deserve my punishment. I don't know
what I can do except hide myself in some dark cave, because I cannot bear this
light. In it, not only does my own heart make me miserable, but all can see
every detail of my sinful life." To this the man who had been murdered
replied, "You should truly repent, and turn to God, for if you do there is
hope that the Lamb of God will wash you in His own blood, and give you new life
that you may live with us in heaven, and be saved frown the torment of
Hell."
The murderer said in
reply, "There is no need for me to confess my sins for they are open to
all. In the world, I could hide them, but not here. I want to live with saints
like you in heaven, but when I cannot bear the dimness of the self-revealing
light in the world of spirits, then what will be my state in the searching
brightness and glory of that light-filled place? My greatest hindrance is that,
through my sins, my conscience is so dull and hardened that my nature will not
incline towards God and repentance. I seem to have no power to repent left in me.
Now there is nothing for it, but that I shall be driven out from here forever.
Alas for my unhappy state!" As he said this, fear-stricken, he fell down,
and his fellow evil spirits dragged him away into the darkness. Then one of the
angels said, "See! There is no need for anyone to pronounce a sentence of
doom. Of itself, the life of any sinner proves him guilty. There is no need to
tell him, or to put forward witnesses against him. To a certain extent,
punishment begins in the heart of every sinner while in the world, but here
they feel the full effect of it. And God's arrangement here is such that goats
and sheep, that is, sinners and righteous, separate of their own accord.
God created man to
live in light, in which his Spiritual health and joy are made permanent
forever. Therefore, no man can be happy in the darkness of hell, nor, because
of his sin-perverted life, can he be happy in the light. So, wherever a sinner
may go he will find himself in hell. How opposite to this is the state of the
righteous, who freed from sin, is in heaven everywhere!"
THE SPIRIT OF A LIAR
In the world, there
was a man so addicted to lying that it had become second nature to him. When he
died and entered the world of spirits, he tried to lie as usual, but was
greatly ashamed because even before he could speak, his thoughts were known to
all. No one can be a hypocrite there, because the thought of no heart can
remain hidden. The soul as it leaves the body bears in it the imprint of all
its sin, and its very members become witnesses against it. Nothing can blot out
that stain of sin except the blood of Christ. When this man was in the world he
regularly tried to distort right into wrong, and wrong into right, but, after
his bodily death he learned that there never is, and never can be, a
possibility of twisting truth into untruth. He who lies injures and deceives no
one but himself, so this man by lying had killed the inner perception to truth,
which he had once possessed. I watched him as, inextricably tangled in his own
deceit, he turned his face away from the light from above, and hurried away far
down into the darkness, where none could see his filthy love of lying, except
those spirits who were like in nature to himself.
For Truth is always
Truth, and it alone gave this man the sentence of his falseness, and condemned
him as a liar.
THE SPIRIT OF AN
ADULTERER
I saw an adulterer,
who had shortly before arrived in the world of spirits. His tongue was hanging
out like a man consumed by thirst, his nostrils were distended, and he beat his
arms about as if a kind of fire burned within him. His appearance was so evil
and loathsome that I revolted at looking at him. All the accompaniments of
luxury and sensuality had been left behind in the world and now, like a mad
dog, he ran frantically around, and cried, "Curse on this life! There is
no death here to put an end to all this pain. And here the spirit cannot die;
otherwise, I should again kill myself, as I did with a pistol in the world in
order to escape from my troubles there. But this pain is far greater than the
pain of the world. What shall I do?" Saying this he ran towards the
darkness, where were many other like-minded spirits, and there disappeared.
One of the saints
said "Not only is an evil act sin, but an evil thought, and an evil look
is also sin. This sin is not confined only to trafficking with strange women,
but excess and animalism in relation to one's wife is also sin. A man and his
wife are truly joined together not for sensualism but for mutual help and
support, that they with their children may spend their lives in the service of
mankind and for the glory of God.
But he who departs
from this aim in life is guilty of the adulterer's sin."
THE SOUL OF A ROBBER
A robber died and
entered the world of spirits. At first he took no interest in his state, or in
the spirits about him, but, as his habit was, he at once set about helping
himself to the valuables of the place. But he was amazed that in the spirit
world the very things seemed to be speaking and accusing him of his unworthy
action. His nature was so perverted that he neither knew the true use of these
things nor was he fit to use them rightly. In the World, his passions had been
so unbridled, that, for the most trifling cause, he, in his anger, had killed
or wounded any who had offended him. Now in the world of spirits, he began to
act in the same way. He turned on the spirits, who came to instruct him, as if
he would have torn them to pieces, like a savage dog will do even in the
presence of its master. On this one of the angels said, "If spirits of
this kind were not kept down in the darkness or the bottomless pit, then they
would cause immense harm wherever they might go. This man's conscience is so
dead, that even after he has reached the world of spirits, he fails to
recognize that, by murdering and robbing in the world, he has wasted his own
spiritual discernment and life. He killed and destroyed others, but in reality,
he has destroyed himself. God alone knows if this man, and those who are like
him, will remain in torment for ages or forever."
After this, the
angels appointed to the duty took him, and shut him down in the darkness from
which he is not permitted to come out. The state of evildoers in that place is
so terrible, and so inexpressibly fierce is this torment, that those who see
them tremble at the sight. Because of the limitations of our worldly speech, we
can only say this, that wherever the soul of a sinner is, always and in every
way, there is nothing but pain that ceases not for a moment. A kind of
lightless fire burns forever and torments these souls, but neither are they
altogether consumed, nor does the fire die out. A spirit who was watching what
had just happened said, "Who knows but that in the end this may not be a
cleansing flame?" In the dark part of the world of spirits, which is
called Hell, there are many grades and planes, and the particular one in which
any spirit lives in suffering is dependent on the quantity and character of his
sins. In fact God made them all in His own image (Gen. 1:26, 27; Col. 1:15),
yet by their connection with sin they have disfigured this image, and have made
it unbeautiful and evil. They have, indeed, a kind of spiritual body, but it is
exceedingly loathsome and frightful, and if they are not restored by true
repentance, and the grace of God, (while on earth), then in this fearful form
they must remain in torment forever.
THE STATE OF THE
RIGHTEOUS AND THEIR GLORIOUS END
Heaven, or the
Kingdom of God, begins in the lives of all true believers in this world. Their
hearts are always filled with peace and joy, no matter what persecutions and
troubles they may have to endure; for God, who is the source of all peace and
life, dwells in them. Death is no death for them, but a door by which they
enter forever into their eternal home. Or we may say that though they have
already been born again into their eternal kingdom, yet when they leave the
body, it is for them, not the day of their death, but their day of birth into
the spiritual world, and it is for them a time of superlative joy as the
following incidents will make clear.
THE DEATH OF A
RIGHTEOUS MAN
An angel related to
me how a true Christian, who had wholeheartedly served his Master for thirty
years, lay dying. A few minutes before he died God opened his spiritual eyes
that, even before leaving the body, he might see the spiritual world and might
tell what he saw to those about him. He saw that heaven had been opened for
him, and a party of angels and saints was coming out to meet him, and at the
door, the Savior with outstretched hand was waiting to receive him. As all this
broke upon him, he gave such a shout of joy that those at his bedside were
startled. "What a joy it is for me," he exclaimed, "I have long
been waiting that I might see my Lord, and go to Him. Oh friends! Look at His
face all lighted by love, and see that company of angels that has come for me.
What a glorious place it is! Friends, I am setting out for my real home, do not
grieve over my departure, but rejoice!" One of those present at his
bedside said quietly, "His mind is wandering." He heard the low voice
and said, "No, it is not. I am quite conscious. I wish you could see this
wonderful sight. I am sorry it is hidden from your eyes. Good-bye, we will meet
again in the next world." Saving this he closed his eyes, and said,
"Lord I commend my soul into thy hands" and so fell asleep.
COMFORTING HIS DEAR
ONES
As soon as his soul
had left his body the angels took him in their arms, and were about to go off
to heaven, but he asked them to delay a few minutes. He looked at his lifeless
body, and at his friends, and said to the angels, "I did not know that the
spirit after leaving the body could see his own body and his friends. I wish my
friends could see me, as well as I can see them, then these would never count
me as dead, nor mourn for me as they do." Then he examined his spiritual
body and found it beautifully light and delicate, and totally different from
his gross material body. On that, he began to restrain his wife and children
who were weeping and kissing his cold body. He stretched out his delicate
spiritual hands, and began to explain to them, and with great love to press
them away from it, but they could neither see him, nor hear his voice, and, as
he tried to remove his children from off his body, it seemed as if his hands
passed right through their bodies, as if they were air, but they felt nothing
at all. Then one of the angels said, "Come, let us take you to your
everlasting home. Do not be sorry for them. The Lord Himself, and we also, will
comfort them. This separation is but for a few days."
Then in company with
the angels he set out for heaven. They had gone forward only a little way when
another band of angels met them with cries of "Welcome." Many friends
and dear ones, who had died before him, also met him, and on seeing them, his
joy was further increased. On reaching the gate of heaven, the angels and
saints stood in silence on either side. He entered, and in the doorway was met
by Christ. At once, he fell at His feet to worship Him, but the Lord lifted him
up, embraced him, and said, “Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou
into the joy of thy Lord At that the man's joy was indescribable. From his eyes
tears of joy began to flow, the Lord in great love wiped them away, and to the
angels He said, "Take him to that most glorious mansion that, from the
beginning, has been prepared for him." Now the spirit of this man of God
still held the earthly idea, that to turn his back on the Lord as he went off
with the angels would be a dishonor to Him. He hesitated to do this, but, when
at last he turned his face towards the mansion, he was astonished to see that
wherever he looked he could see the Lord. For Christ is present in every place,
and is seen everywhere by saints and angels.
In addition to the
Lord, he was delighted to see that on every side there were surroundings that
filled him with joy, and that those who are lowest in rank meet without envy
those who are higher, and that those whose position is more exalted count
themselves fortunate to be able to serve their brethren in lower positions
because this is the kingdom of God, and of love.
In every part of
heaven, there are superb gardens, which all the time produces every variety of
sweet and luscious fruit, and all kinds of sweet scented flowers that never
fade. In them creatures of every kind, give praise to God unceasingly. Birds,
beautiful in hue, raise their sweet songs of praise, and such is the sweet
singing of angels and saints that on hearing their songs a wonderful sense of
rapture is experienced. Wherever one may look there is nothing but scenes of
unbounded joy.
This, in truth, is
the Paradise that God has prepared for those that love Him, where there is no
shade of death, nor error, nor sin, nor suffering, but abiding peace and joy.
THE MANSIONS OF
HEAVEN
Then I saw a man of
God examining his appointed mansion from a great distance. When this man, in
company with the angels, arrived at the door of his appointed mansion, he saw
written on it in shining letters the word "Welcome," and from the
letters themselves "Welcome, Welcome," in audible sound was repeated
and repeated again. When he had entered his home, to his surprise he found the
Lord there before him. At this, his joy was more than we can describe, and he
exclaimed, "I left the Lord's presence and came here at His command, but I
find that the Lord Himself is here to dwell with me." In the mansion was
everything that his imagination could have conceived, and everyone was ready to
serve him. In the near-by houses, saints, like-minded to himself, lived in
happy fellowship. For this heavenly house is the kingdom, which has been
prepared for the saints from the foundation of the world (Matt. 25:34), and
this is the glorious future that awaits every true follower of Christ.
A PROUD MINISTER AND
A HUMBLE WORKMAN
A minister who looked
on himself as an exceedingly learned and religious man died at a ripe old age.
And without doubt, he was a good man. When the angels came to take him to the
place appointed for him by the Lord in the world of spirits, they brought him
into the intermediate state, and left him there with many other good spirits,
who had lately arrived, in charge of those angels who are appointed to instruct
good souls, while they themselves went back to usher in another good spirit. In
that intermediate heaven, there are grades upon grades right up to the higher
heavens, and the grade into which any soul is admitted for instruction, is
determined by the real goodness of his life on earth.
When the angels, who
had put this minister in his grade, came back conducting in the other soul, for
whom they had gone, they brought him up beyond the grade in which the minister
was, on their way up to a higher plane. Seeing this the minister in a
blustering voice called out, "What right have you to leave me half-way up
to that glorious country, while You take this other man away up near to it?
Neither in holiness, nor in anything else, am I in any way less than this man,
or than you yourselves." The angels replied, "There is no question
here of great or small, or of more or less, but a man is put into whatever
grade he has merited by his life and faith. You are not quite ready yet for that
upper grade, so you will have to remain here for a while, and learn some of the
things that our fellow-workers are appointed to teach. Then, when the Lord
commands us, we will, with great pleasure, take you with us to that higher
sphere." He said, "I have been teaching people all my life about the
way to reach heaven. What more have I to learn? I know all about it."
Then the instructing
angels said, "They must go up now, we can't detain them, but we will
answer your question. My friend, do not be offended if we speak plainly, for it
is for your good. You think you are alone here, but the Lord is also here
though you cannot see Him. The pride that you displayed when you said, 'I know
all about it' prevents you from seeing Him, and from going up higher. Humility
is the cure for this pride. Practice it and your desire will be granted."
After this, one of the angels told him, "The man who has just been
promoted above you, was no learned or famous man. You did not look at him very
carefully. He was a member of your own congregation. People hardly knew him at
all, for he was an ordinary working man, and had little leisure from his work.
But in his workshop, many knew him as an industrious and honest worker. All who
came in contact with him recognized his Christian character. In the war, he was
called up for service in France. There, one day, as he was helping a wounded
comrade, he was struck by a bullet and killed.
Though his death was
sudden, he was ready for it, so he did not have to remain in the intermediate
state as long as you will have to do. His promotion depends, not on favoritism,
but on his spiritual worthiness. His life of prayer and humility, while he was
in the world, prepared him to a great extent for the spiritual world. Now he is
rejoicing at having reached his appointed place, and is thanking and praising
the Lord, who, in His mercy, has saved him, and given him eternal life."
HEAVENLY LIFE
In heaven, no one can ever be a hypocrite, for all can see the lives of others as they are. The all-revealing light which flows out from the Christ in Glory makes the wicked in their remorse try to hide themselves, but it fills the righteous with the utmost joy to be in the Father's kingdom of Light. There, their goodness is evident to all, it ever increases more and more, for nothing is present that can hinder their growth, and everything that can sustain them is there to help them. The degrees of goodness reached by the soul of a righteous man is known by the brightness that radiates from his whole appearance; for character and nature show themselves in the form of various glowing rainbow-like colors of great glory. In heaven, there is no jealousy. All are glad to see the spiritual elevation and glory of others, and, without any motive of self seeking, try, at all times, truly to serve one another. All the innumerable gifts and blessings of heaven are for the common use of all. No one out of selfishness ever thinks of keeping anything for himself, and there is enough of everything for all. God, who is Love, is seen in the person of Jesus sitting on the throne in the highest heaven. From Him, who is the "Sun of Righteousness," and the "Light of the World," healing and life-giving rays and waves of light and love are seen flowing out through every saint and angel, and bringing to whatever they touch vitalizing and vivifying power. There is in heaven neither east or west, nor north nor south, but for each individual soul or angel, Christ's throne appears as the center of all things.
In heaven, no one can ever be a hypocrite, for all can see the lives of others as they are. The all-revealing light which flows out from the Christ in Glory makes the wicked in their remorse try to hide themselves, but it fills the righteous with the utmost joy to be in the Father's kingdom of Light. There, their goodness is evident to all, it ever increases more and more, for nothing is present that can hinder their growth, and everything that can sustain them is there to help them. The degrees of goodness reached by the soul of a righteous man is known by the brightness that radiates from his whole appearance; for character and nature show themselves in the form of various glowing rainbow-like colors of great glory. In heaven, there is no jealousy. All are glad to see the spiritual elevation and glory of others, and, without any motive of self seeking, try, at all times, truly to serve one another. All the innumerable gifts and blessings of heaven are for the common use of all. No one out of selfishness ever thinks of keeping anything for himself, and there is enough of everything for all. God, who is Love, is seen in the person of Jesus sitting on the throne in the highest heaven. From Him, who is the "Sun of Righteousness," and the "Light of the World," healing and life-giving rays and waves of light and love are seen flowing out through every saint and angel, and bringing to whatever they touch vitalizing and vivifying power. There is in heaven neither east or west, nor north nor south, but for each individual soul or angel, Christ's throne appears as the center of all things.
There also are found
every kind of sweet and delicious flower and fruit, and many kinds of spiritual
food. While eating them an exquisite flavor and pleasure are experienced but
after the are assimilated, a delicate scent, which perfumes the air around,
exudes from the pores of the body. In short, the will and desires of all the
inhabitants of heaven are fulfilled in God, because in every life God's will is
made perfect, so under all conditions, and at every stage of heaven, there is
for every one an unchanging experience of wonderful joy and blessedness.
THE AIM AND PURPOSE
OF CREATION
A few months ago, I was lying alone in my room suffering acutely from an ulcer in my eye. The pain was so great that I could do no other work, so I spent the time in prayer and intercession. One day I had been thus engaged for only a few minutes, when the spiritual world was opened to me, and I found myself surrounded by numbers of angels. Immediately I forgot all my pain, for my whole attention was concentrated on them. I mention below a few other subjects on which we conversed together.
A few months ago, I was lying alone in my room suffering acutely from an ulcer in my eye. The pain was so great that I could do no other work, so I spent the time in prayer and intercession. One day I had been thus engaged for only a few minutes, when the spiritual world was opened to me, and I found myself surrounded by numbers of angels. Immediately I forgot all my pain, for my whole attention was concentrated on them. I mention below a few other subjects on which we conversed together.
NAMES IN HEAVEN
I asked them,
"Can you tell me by what names you are known?" One of the angels
replied, "Each of us has been given a new name, which none knows except
the Lord and the one who has received it (Rev. 2:17). All of us here have
served the Lord in different lands and in different ages, and there is no need
that any know what our names are. Nor is there any necessity that we should
tell our former earthly names. It might be interesting to know them, but what
would be the use of it? And then we do not want people to know our names, lest
they should imagine us great and give honor to us, instead of to the Lord, who
has so loved us that He has lifted us up out of our fallen state, and has
brought us into our eternal home, where we will forever sing praises in His
loving fellowship - - and this is the object for which He has created us."
SEEING GOD
I asked again, "Do the angels and saints who live in the highest spheres of heaven, always look on the face of God? And, if they see Him, in what form and state does He appear?" One of the saints said, "As the sea is full of water, so is the whole universe filled with God, and every inhabitant of heaven feels His presence about him on every side. When one dives under water, above and below and round about there is nothing but water, so in heaven is the presence of God felt. And just as in the water of the sea, there are uncounted living creatures, so in the Infinite Being of God His creatures exist. Because He is Infinite, His children, who are finite, can see Him only in the form of Christ. As the Lord Himself has said, "He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father" (John 14:9). In this world of spirits, the spiritual progress of any one governs the degree to which he is able to know and feel God; and the Christ also reveals His glorious form to each one according to his spiritual enlightenment and capacity. If Christ were to appear in the same glorious light to-the dwellers of the darkened lower spheres of the spiritual world, as he; appears to those in the higher planes, then they would not be able to bear it. So He tempers the glory of His manifestation to the state of progress, and to the capacity, of each individual soul."
I asked again, "Do the angels and saints who live in the highest spheres of heaven, always look on the face of God? And, if they see Him, in what form and state does He appear?" One of the saints said, "As the sea is full of water, so is the whole universe filled with God, and every inhabitant of heaven feels His presence about him on every side. When one dives under water, above and below and round about there is nothing but water, so in heaven is the presence of God felt. And just as in the water of the sea, there are uncounted living creatures, so in the Infinite Being of God His creatures exist. Because He is Infinite, His children, who are finite, can see Him only in the form of Christ. As the Lord Himself has said, "He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father" (John 14:9). In this world of spirits, the spiritual progress of any one governs the degree to which he is able to know and feel God; and the Christ also reveals His glorious form to each one according to his spiritual enlightenment and capacity. If Christ were to appear in the same glorious light to-the dwellers of the darkened lower spheres of the spiritual world, as he; appears to those in the higher planes, then they would not be able to bear it. So He tempers the glory of His manifestation to the state of progress, and to the capacity, of each individual soul."
Then another saint
added, "God's presence can indeed be felt and enjoyed but it cannot be
expressed in words. As the sweetness of the sweet is enjoyed by tasting, and
not by the most graphic descriptive phrasing, so every one in heaven
experiences the joy of God's presence, and every one in the spiritual world
knows that his experience of God is real, and has no need that any should
attempt to help him with a verbal description of it."
DISTANCE IN HEAVEN
I asked, "How
far from one another are the various heavenly spheres of existence? If one
cannot go to stay in other spheres is he permitted to visit them?" Then
one of the saints said, "The place of residence is appointed for each soul
in that plane to which his spiritual development has fitted him, but for short
periods he can go to visit other spheres. When those of the higher spheres come
down to the lower, a kind of spiritual covering is given to them, that the
glory of their appearance may not be disconcerting to the inhabitants of the
lower and darker spheres. So when one from a lower sphere goes to a higher, he
also gets a kind of spiritual covering that he may be able to bear the light
and glory of that place." In heaven
distance is never felt by any one, for as soon as one forms the wish to go to a
certain place he at once finds himself there. Distances are felt only in the material world.
If one wishes to see a saint in another sphere, either he himself is
transported there in a moment of thought, or at once, the distant saint arrives
in his presence.
THE WITHERED FIG TREE
I inquired of them,
"Everything is created for some purpose, but it sometimes appears that
that purpose is not fulfilled, for instance, the purpose of the fig tree was to
produce fruit, but, when the Lord found it fruitless, He withered it up. Can
you enlighten me as to whether its purpose was fulfilled or not?" A saint
replied, "Undoubtedly its purpose was fulfilled, and was fulfilled more
fully. The Lord of Life gives life to every creature for a certain specific
purpose, but if that purpose is not fulfilled, He has power to take back the
life in order to fulfill some higher purpose. Many thousands of God's servants
have sacrificed their lives in order to teach and uplift others. By losing
their lives for others, they have helped them, and thus fulfilled the higher
purpose of God. And if it is lawful, and a most noble service, for man, who is
higher than fig trees and all other created things, to give his life for other
men, then how can it be unjust if a mere tree gives its life for the teaching
and warning of an erring nation? So through this fig tree Christ taught this
great lesson to the Jews, and to the whole world, that those whose lives are
fruitless, and who fail in the purpose for which God created them, will be
altogether withered and destroyed."
And the facts of
history make it abundantly plain to us that the bigoted and narrow Jewish
national life of that day was, because of its barrenness, withered away like
the fig tree. And in the same way the fruitless lives of others, though
outwardly they may appear fruitful, are a cause of deception to others, and
will be cursed and destroyed. If any one should object that when the Lord
cursed this fig tree, it was not the fruit season and figs should not have been
looked for, then he should reflect that for doing good there is no fixed season,
because all seasons and times are equally appointed for good works, and that he
himself should make his life fruitful and thus fulfill the purpose for which he
was created.
IS MAN A FREE AGENT?
Again I asked,
"Would it not have been far better if God had created man and all creation
perfect, for then man could neither have committed sin, nor because of sin
would there have been so much sorrow and suffering in the world; but now, in a
creation made subject to vanity, we have all kinds of suffering to
undergo?"
An angel who had come
from the highest grades of heaven, and occupied a high position there, replied,
"God has not made man like a machine, which would work automatically; nor
has He fixed his destiny as in the case of the stars and planets, that may not
move out of their appointed course, but He has made man in His own image and
likeness, a free agent, possessed of understanding, determination, and power to
act independently, hence he is superior to all other created things. Had man
not been created a free agent he would not have been able to enjoy God's
presence, nor the joy off heaven, for he would have been a mere machine, that
moves without knowing or feeling, or like the stars that swing unknowingly
through infinite space. But man, being a free agent, is by the constitution of
his nature, opposed to this kind of soulless perfection -- and a perfection of
this kind would really have been imperfection -- for such a man would have been
a mere slave whose very perfection had compelled him to certain acts, in the
doing of which he could have had no enjoyment, because he had no choice of his
own. To him there would be no difference between a God and a stone."
Man, and with him all
creation, has been subjected to vanity but not forever. By his disobedience,
man has brought himself, and all other creatures, into all the ills and
sufferings of this state of vanity. In this state of spiritual struggle alone
can his spiritual powers be fully developed, and only in this struggle can he
learn the lesson necessary to his perfection. Therefore, when man at last
reaches the state of perfection of heaven, he will thank God for the sufferings
and struggle of the present world, for then he will fully understand that all
things work together for good to them that love God (Rom. 8:28).
THE MANIFESTATION OF
GOD'S LOVE
Then another of the saints said, "All the inhabitants of heaven know that God is Love, but it had been hidden from all eternity that His love is so wonderful that He would become man to save sinners, and for their cleansing would die on the Cross. He suffered thus that He might save men, and all creation, which is in subjection to vanity. Thus God, in becoming man, has shown His heart to His children, but had any other means been used His infinite love would have remained forever hidden. "Now the whole creation, with earnest expectation, awaits the manifestation of the sons of God, when they shall be again restored and glorified. But, at present, they, and all creation, will remain groaning and travailing till this new creation comes to pass. And those also who have been born again groan within themselves, waiting for the redemption of the body; and the time approaches when the whole creation, being obedient to God in all things, will be freed from corruption, and from this vanity forever. Then will it remain eternally happy in God, and will fulfill in itself the purpose for which it was created. Then God will be all in all" (Rom. 8:18-23).
Then another of the saints said, "All the inhabitants of heaven know that God is Love, but it had been hidden from all eternity that His love is so wonderful that He would become man to save sinners, and for their cleansing would die on the Cross. He suffered thus that He might save men, and all creation, which is in subjection to vanity. Thus God, in becoming man, has shown His heart to His children, but had any other means been used His infinite love would have remained forever hidden. "Now the whole creation, with earnest expectation, awaits the manifestation of the sons of God, when they shall be again restored and glorified. But, at present, they, and all creation, will remain groaning and travailing till this new creation comes to pass. And those also who have been born again groan within themselves, waiting for the redemption of the body; and the time approaches when the whole creation, being obedient to God in all things, will be freed from corruption, and from this vanity forever. Then will it remain eternally happy in God, and will fulfill in itself the purpose for which it was created. Then God will be all in all" (Rom. 8:18-23).
The angels also
conversed with me about many other matters, but it is impossible to record
them, because, not only is there in the world no language, no simile, by which
I could express the meaning of those very deep spiritual truths, but also they
did not wish me to attempt it, for no one without spiritual experience can
understand them, so in that case, there is the fear that, instead of their
being a help, they would be to many a cause of misunderstanding and error. I
have, therefore, written only a few of the simplest of the matters talked over,
in the hope that from them many may get direction and warning, teaching and
comfort. Also, that time is not far distant when my readers will pass over into
the spiritual world, and see these things with their own eyes. But before we
leave this world forever, to go to our eternal home, we must with the support
of God's grace, and in the Spirit of prayer, carry out with faithfulness our
appointed work. Thus, shall we fulfill the purpose of our lives, and enter
without any shade of regret, into the eternal joy of the Kingdom of our
Heavenly Father.
THE END