17. The Hermit Sage p.285-301
(the summary is followed by the first few pages of text and a note from the author)
Sister Agatha is a Hermit Sage living in a hut overlooking Codale Tarn in the English Lake District. This is no ordinary hut. It is constructed and designed to make full use of virtual reality in bringing about the spiritual Enlightenment of Knights, impounded dominophiles or anyone wishing to be transformed spiritually in Christ. Father James visits her with Roscoe, his fellow Knight Eric, Isla and her atheist brother Damien. Sister Agatha explains the Divine Light, how it not only relates to the Holy Spirit but is a manifestation of it, revealing how our different belief systems are necessary and complement each other, stressing that it also heals, confers spiritual gifts and yields fruit. She demonstrates and explains how the stages of Enlightenment take one on a journey, like a pilgrim, to successively higher levels. She says that logic divorced from or denying the divine source of reasoning, the Logos, behind our universe and our own being, can be destructive. The actual programme of Enlightenment goes on for months under the guidance of a Hermit Sage and there is no coercion.
First few pages of chapter 17, the Hermit Sage...
It was dawn as the five of
them walked up the damp stony path which was the final steep stretch towards
the hut overlooking Codale Tarn.
A small stone building came into
view. A nun-like figure in dark grey stood in the entrance, welcoming and
composed in her demeanour. Her face had a few creases but shone with an
indefinable radiance. Was it the Holy Spirit, or the Divine Light that dwelled
in her? Roscoe decided they were more or less the same thing. There was no
mistaking those who were filled with it.
On coming up to the hut Father
James introduced her as ‘Sister Agatha’. She was in fact a Sister of the
Numinous, a Hermit Sage of the Monastery of Divine Light. She welcomed each one
of them in turn with a friendly and dignified handshake then beckoned them in
to the small stone hut. It reminded Roscoe of the one he had built during his
trial as part of the entry test to the Knights of Peace, though this one was
noticeably larger.
As they filed into the hut Roscoe
was relieved to see that Eric, now almost recovered from the puma attack, was
not accompanied by Isla. She stayed close to her brother Damien, indicating no
special privilege of affection for either Roscoe or Eric. There was an
overwhelming sense of peace inside the hut, which seemed to calm Roscoe, and
indeed all of them. Somehow this reminded him, through its contrast, of the
barbaric battle between Ogrenians and Essonians he had witnessed only three
days ago.
Sister Agatha announced that she
was feeling rather hungry after her dawn stroll along the top of the valley
overlooking Easedale and invited them to help themselves to bread, cheese and
cakes, which she had placed on a small table, while she put the kettle on the
stove, which burned logs from one of the large forest plantations covering
parts of Cumbriana. Father James touched Sister Agatha on the arm and announced
he would leave her to conduct the visit. He would go back as soon as he had had
a cup of tea and one of her delicious cakes.
She brought over the kettle and
poured hot water into a large teapot. Isla took charge of pouring the brewed
tea into the mugs which Sister Agatha had placed on a small table and soon they
were all sipping gratefully as a way of warming themselves up after walking in
the cold mist of the early morning. They also ate pieces of bread and cheese,
except Father James who eagerly finished his cake before leaving.
After a few minutes of eating and
drinking Sister Agatha made clear her wish to address them. ‘I believe that all
four of you are interested in Enlightenment but have not yet had it. Am I
right?’
They
nodded assent, putting down their cups.
‘The tour will, I hope, give you
a basic understanding of the process so that, if and when you experience it,
your mind and soul will be prepared.’ She and Isla cleared the table, then Eric
folded it up and put it in the corner
A white dome of very fine mesh
material took shape above and around them as a black curtain dropped down to
cover the door, casting the single room of the hut into deep darkness. Sister
Agatha turned on a small dim lamp, then spoke in a gentle and reverent voice.
‘Now remember, I’m here to answer any questions you may have. So please don’t
hesitate to stop me in my tracks.’
‘You all have a Christian
belief, I understand. Had you been, say, Moslems, or Jews or Buddhists, the
spiritual journey inspired by the Divine Light would have been slightly
different. It might be instructive sometime for you to see the versions used
for followers of other faiths. There is even a version for atheists, although
this is much more than slightly different from all the other schemes.
‘But today let’s sample the
Christian version. Remember, the purpose is to show how your religion serves as
a spiritual model for engaging with God. As you know, all the world’s major
faiths and mystical philosophies use the word ‘light’ to mean something which
illuminates one spiritually and Father James was the first to receive what we
call the Divine Light in a Holy vision. Under its inspiration he became a healer
of the divisions between the world’s faiths and, a little later, perhaps
because of the Christian roots of the culture in which he was raised, became a
Christian.
‘Now you’ve no doubt heard it said
by followers of some religions that theirs is the only way to God and the
truth. What the Divine Light shows us is that they are all right, in that each
religion relates to a particular aspect of our Lord that God chooses to reveal
to followers through a particular belief-system. We have discovered that the
Creator is incomparably greater, more mysterious and more unfathomable than was
thought at any time in history.’
Damien was an atheist but had
heard about Christians who would not admit of any route to God other than that
of Jesus and Moslems who considered followers of other faiths as infidels. It
was one of the factors that had turned him away from religion, except from his
brief encounter with the SSS. ‘Excuse me, Sister, but is this not blasphemy for
a Christian?’
‘It was indeed considered to be so
by many Christians – the exclusivists. However, the situation has changed.
Since the leaders of the world’s classic religions have been illuminated by the
Light they have recognised that no one faith can accommodate the Creator of
space, time, matter and life in all his magnificence. Yahweh surpasses all
understanding. The Light teaches us that for any faith to believe itself to
have an exclusive grasp of the true source of being is blasphemous. However, we
Christians are right in saying we have exclusive access to the character of the
Creator which Yahweh has chosen to reveal to us.’
Roscoe interjected. ‘Sister, one
thing has confused me for a long time and I don’t know if you think it a fair
question. How does the Divine Light relate to the Holy Spirit?’
‘A good question. I have found
the best way to look at it is this. The Divine Light is the work of the Holy
Spirit. At this stage in our history God has chosen to reveal how our religions
are necessary and complementary to each other and the Holy Spirit is revealing
this through the agency of the Light.’ Sister Agatha paused to see if he wanted
to follow up his question and her reply, then continued. ‘Not that the Spirit
and the Light are synonymous – the Spirit does other things than speak to us
through the Light – it heals and responds to prayer. Are any of you
scientists or philosophers?’
Roscoe raised his hand ‘I studied
philosophy and I take an interest in science.’ Isla hesitantly mentioned her
mathematics degree and investigation of quantum encryption.
‘Probably even those who have not
followed science in depth will realise that in recent decades the strides made
have been quite stupendous not only in explaining the previously inexplicable
but in presenting to us new mysteries which make the universe so awe-inspiring,
almost frightening, that the sense of a deity behind it is as great as it was
at the time of the hunter gatherer, as he looked at the moon and stars, or
witnessed thunder and lightning or the birth of a child.’
She turned the lamp off and there
appeared a large holographic image suspended in the darkness. It was a still
one of a wealthy man standing in front of a prostrate, undernourished man in
rags.
‘We are now in the first stage of
a journey. Here the subject is taught that to go to the next stage he must
understand the need for virtue. Without virtue it is impossible to reach truth
because one is cut off from the divine source of reality, otherwise known as
God. In a moment the image will become animated.’
The rich man appeared to come to
life, although he was faint, as did the poor man, who was slightly less faint.
The expression on the former’s face was initially one of insolence but it
gradually changed to a look of kindness. Then he knelt, touched the poor man
gently on the head and gave him food and drink, at which both seemed to fill
with light as a thin silver cord from the realm of God dangled in space
and blended into their foreheads, . ‘This is to show graphically and
symbolically how a virtuous act brings us closer to union with God. And the
closer we get to God, the more clearly will we see the reality of the world he
created. During an actual Enlightenment process the pilgrim discusses the
images with the Hermit Sage and is guided through the different levels. The
Hermit Sage asks the pilgrim to meditate and pray as the journey proceeds. I
will show you a few more images before we go to the next level.’
Now the dome appeared to become
enormous, as big as a cathedral. A multiplicity of holographic scenes floated
and slowly drifted throughout the seemingly huge space. A man was attacked by a
vicious thug and refused to resist. Prostrate, he was kicked and punched in the
face but refused to retaliate except with a look of pity, causing first his own
body to glow with light, then that of the attacker, whose face gradually lost
its hardness. A man saw a lady being robbed by two thieves and intervened, in a
kindly and firm way, causing all four people involved to glow with
numinousness. A man enslaved by pornographic images cast them angrily aside and
became filled with the Light.
‘These images and conversations
with the Hermit Sage continue until the pilgrim has fully absorbed the message:
that acts of goodness, rejection of evil, bring in the holy light and draw one
closer to our Creator.’
Author’s note
Some may get the impression that I hold a “many paths to God” belief. This is not the case. All reality emanates from the one true Triune God through whom everything in creation was brought into being and by whom reality is sustained. By this very definition He can only be reached through Jesus the Christ. Those who believe in other gods are living in the same reality as the Christian (there can only be one) and even shares some of the values emanating from Christ. This is how God decreed it, knowing that it would take time to bring the world to harvest. However, as I hope is made clear in this novel, the final step to the Holy Trinity has to be via Jesus, a member of the Trinity.
John 14:6: Jesus answered: “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.”
Author’s note
Some may get the impression that I hold a “many paths to God” belief. This is not the case. All reality emanates from the one true Triune God through whom everything in creation was brought into being and by whom reality is sustained. By this very definition He can only be reached through Jesus the Christ. Those who believe in other gods are living in the same reality as the Christian (there can only be one) and even shares some of the values emanating from Christ. This is how God decreed it, knowing that it would take time to bring the world to harvest. However, as I hope is made clear in this novel, the final step to the Holy Trinity has to be via Jesus, a member of the Trinity.
John 14:6: Jesus answered: “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.”