CONFESSIONS
OF AN ATHEIST
I do not believe in the
existence of God. The reason ... is that
I have come to realize that the traditional concepts of God are both inadequate
and misguided. They either confound God
with the Devil or mistake that tiny quota of spirit we each possesses for
God. In the first case, the Father is
taken for God and regarded as the Supreme Being! In the second case that which is potentially
God is taken for God, so that God is considered immanent. But the fact of the matter is that God is
neither diabolic nor immanent but divine, and has yet to be brought about. Yes, that is the blunt fact of the matter,
and that is why I am an atheist. For I
have come to realize that human evolution is essentially a journey to God, a
journey away from the Devil. It is a
journey, in other words, from the Diabolic Alpha to the Divine Omega, from the
Creator to the Ultimate Creation, from the most agonized doing to the most
blissful being.
The Devil exists, then?
Yes, most certainly! The Devil
exists as the most agonized doing ... in the form of the millions of stars
which burn ferociously throughout the Cosmos.
The Devil is manifested in the stars, and one might say of our star, the
sun, that it is a component of the overall cosmic Devil, not the Devil itself,
but a particular manifestation of the Diabolic.
For the Diabolic is that which appertains to the Devil and this is not
only the most agonized doing, but the greatest separateness, the most intense
divergence as well. The Devil, clearly,
is divisible, and thus the very antithesis of God, Who is unity. The Devil is manifold, the Supreme Being
one. Between the Devil and God man
weaves his course, a victim of the former, an aspirant towards the latter. On his shoulders rests the responsibility of
creating the Supreme Being, of bringing God to fruition in the Universe, and
thus of establishing ultimate reality.
For beyond the Supreme Being, as beyond a supreme level of being, there
can be no further development, since evolution will have attained to its climax
in Eternity. One by one the stars will
disintegrate; the Devil, so to speak, will reach the end of its negative term
and, in collapsing into nothingness, leave the Universe to its final perfection
in God. All higher human endeavour tends
towards the consummation of evolution; for only in that consummation will
humanity have attained to its goal in the transcendental Beyond.
Yes, the transcendental Beyond, not 'heaven on earth' but an
area in space towards which pure spirit will gravitate at the climax of our
evolution. Unfortunately the earth is
always too close to the sun, that component of the Devil, to be in a position
to enable a truly heavenly context to develop.
The influence of the Diabolic, with its raging negativity, is never very
far away. The logic of transcendence,
however, is to get as far away from stars and their planetary offspring as
possible, in order not to be victimized by their diabolical nature. Eventually, they will die out, leaving the
Universe to God. But, before that
happens, the Divine will need to find the best possible area in space available
to it. Supreme Being will have plenty of
room in which to be. And not only plenty of room but plenty of
time - Eternity. For being, by its very
essence, is self-perpetuating; doing, by contrast, self-destructive. Doing expends itself in hate, being sustains
itself on love. The sun loses millions
of tons of its mass every second, expending its energy in the conversion of
hydrogen into helium through the so-called proton-proton reaction. Supreme Being, on the other hand, would not
only sustain itself on the bliss of transcendent spirit, but gradually expand
in the process, so that it would eventually be far larger than the largest
stars currently in existence. The '
Christ taught that the '
I, however, do not worship the fundamental Behind, which is to
say, the diabolical creative-and-sustaining force. Neither do I take much interest in Jesus
Christ, who was basically a worshipper of the fundamental Behind, as his famous
last words: 'Father, Father, why hast Thou forsaken me?' would seem to attest,
his 'father' being effectively Jehovah-esque in character. Christ stands between the Father and the Holy
Ghost, between the Diabolic and the Divine.
Let no-one be deceived into imagining that this trinity of gods is
wholly blessed! Only the Holy Ghost, as
transcendent spirit, would be truly blessed and therefore heavenly. As the creative and sustaining force, the
Father is decidedly cursed, as befitting the agonized nature of Hell. For the Devil and Hell are, of course,
roughly synonymous. The stars in all
their raging fury, their infernal heat, are distinctly cursed, and so one
should never apply the word blessed to the Father, under which term the stars
are here subsumed. And as for Jesus
Christ who, as man, comes in-between the two absolutes - the lesser absolute of
existing evil and the greater absolute of pure good which has yet to be created
- one is obliged to confess that he is neither cursed nor blessed but, like all
men to whom dualistic criteria can be applied, a combination of both, as his
dual role of banisher and redeemer at the Last Judgement sufficiently-well
demonstrates. He is man, and therefore a
combination of evil and good, flesh and spirit, illusion and truth, etc.,
etc. But he isn't late man, or man
biased on the side of good, spirit, truth, etc., and neither is he early man,
or man dominated by evil, flesh, illusion, etc.
On the contrary, Christ is decidedly middle man, or man balanced, in
accordance with the dictates of a midway point in evolution, between the two
opposites in what amounts to a dualistic compromise. And like all middle men, like all men who
live and die while human evolution is in this dualistic phase of its unfolding,
which may be likened to Purgatory, he didn't know the literal nature of the
twin extremes of Hell and Heaven, but could only approximate to a viewpoint
compatible with his dualistic essence, to a viewpoint necessarily watered-down
by dualistic compromise. Thus he spoke
of the Father without understanding exactly what the Father was, and
likewise spoke of the '
However, there comes a time when, thanks in large measure to
man's changing environments, to his growing urban severance from nature, such a
balance no longer obtains for a majority of people, and the religious sense
appropriate to it consequently goes into decline. The modern age is such a time, and this is
why Christ is no longer relevant. We are
if not already in, then almost certainly
on the threshold of a
higher age, an age when post-dualistic criteria prevail over dualism, and so we
should increasingly turn towards the cultivation of spirit through meditation,
rather than continue to acknowledge or beseech Christ through prayer. The fact that this is already happening in
the West is generally well-known. But it
isn't yet happening officially, which is why the Church still exists. And what the Church stands for, i.e. the
worship of Christ, is incompatible with the direct cultivation of spirit!
Regarded from an objective post-worldly standpoint, Christ is
clearly not God. He is simply the God of
Christians, a perfectly legitimate God for a given period of time, commensurate
with purgatorial dualism, but destined to be superseded once that period has
elapsed, as I believe it now has. This
is another confession of the atheist who, as writer of this essay, wishes to
see the Church removed. He cannot bring
himself to worship Christ, still less the Father, which he equates with the
Devil purely and simply. Rather, he
looks forward to a time when every effort will be made to create the Supreme
Being, when men, whilst acknowledging the existence of the Diabolic (though not
assuredly through worship), will be dedicated to the furtherance of spirit in
the world through the expansion of superconscious mind.
At present, however, such a fortunate time is still some way
off; for we live in a transitional age from the dualistic to the
transcendental, and therefore aren't in a position to cultivate spirit
extensively. For the extensive
cultivation of spirit demands that we be far more civilized than at present,
which is to say, recipients of a much greater degree of artificiality than is
currently the case. True, most of us
live in the city and have effectively left nature behind. But we haven't, as yet, evolved to a point of
replacing the natural body with an artificial one which would act as a support
for and sustainer of the brain, and so enable us to indulge in a much more
exclusive cultivation of spirit than would otherwise be possible. Unfortunately we are still victims of our
stomachs, bowels, reproductive organs, senses, etc., and are consequently at
the mercy of nature to an extent which renders an extensive and/or intensive
cultivation of spirit all but impossible.
We may have spiritual ambitions, be inclined to read regularly and spend
some time in meditation every day. But
when one is obliged to eat, drink, defecate, urinate, sleep, walk, etc., as
human beings invariably are in greater or lesser degrees, then it stands to
reason that those ambitions are either unlikely to be realized or, if partly realized,
won't extend very far. It should be
obvious, I mean, that one can't fully serve two masters at once, and that one's
sensual obligations inevitably detract from such spiritual aspirations as one
may be committed to, making it impossible to cultivate a transcendental
potential.
Of course Asians, and Hindus in particular, have long been
practitioners of yoga and, hence, more given to directly cultivating spirit
than Europeans, whose Christian worship and acts of charity, etc., have
traditionally had the upper-hand over contemplation and beingfulness. Yet, despite their spiritual superiority, the
practitioners of yoga have failed to attain to the transcendental Beyond, and
for the very simple reason that they haven't been the fortunate recipients of a
technology which would make transcendence possible. In short, they haven't sacrificed the natural
body to an artificial one. They have
striven, on the contrary, to attain to salvation solely on the basis of their
commitment to yoga, to meditation and its attendant relatively superficial
physical sacrifices. Admittedly, they
haven't worshipped nature, at least not as a rule. But, in turning towards the transcendental
Beyond, they have quite often become the victims of nature through either
starvation or disease, or a lethal combination of both. And where this misfortune has been avoided
through a degree of compromise with nature, with the relatively good fortune,
it may be, of having been born into a higher caste, they haven't greatly
profited from the application of water enemas or clean towels down their
throats, by attempts, in other words, to purify the body. For even after the most rigorous application
of purificatory procedures, the body still remains an obstacle to spiritual
transcendence simply by its continued existence as a sensual phenomenon. There is still too much flesh, too much
subconscious influence to contend with, making the degree of one's spiritual
cultivation comparatively limited in scope.
Alas, even with the best will in the world, even with a thin
half-starved body which has received thorough purificatory attention, one is
still incapable of attaining to the transcendental Beyond! For let there be no doubt on this point;
unless the natural body has been superseded by an artificial
support-and-sustain apparatus for the brain, there isn't the slightest chance
of one's being in a position whereby a truly transcendental potential can be
cultivated. So long as one has natural,
sensual needs to attend to, Heaven, alas, will remain no more than a
pipe-dream, a faint possibility. To
approximate to the transcendental Beyond is to live continuously and
permanently in a context akin to it, where sensual indulgences are entirely
excluded. It is also to live at the
furthest possible environmental remove from nature, from the sensuous influence
of the plant world, which is something that even the Buddha didn't do and, at
that distant and more naturalistic epoch in time, wasn't really in a position
to do, cities not having developed to any significantly artificial extent.
Clearly, then, meditation by itself isn't enough! We must bring, in the course of time, the
maximum of technology to bear on it or, rather, on those who practise it, so
that, in a very literal sense, the East can meet the West and both become fused
into a single civilization. Of course,
to some extent this is already happening, albeit on a comparatively rudimentary
basis at present. Centuries will have to
pass before humanity can be expected to attain to its collective goal in
spiritual transcendence. Heaven is still
a condition of the future, a sphere of being signifying the most artificial and
supernatural existence conceivable. We
are still relatively naturalistic.
But the Supreme Being is in our sights, so to speak, and now we
should see more clearly than ever before the direction we must take in order to
become it. We should be able to see
through the religious illusions and limitations of the past, inevitable as they
were for their time, and advance towards our goal with fresh
determination. Under the supervision of
socialism, technology will take us to a stage of evolution whereby meditation
will become a truly viable means of attaining to the transcendental Beyond. But it won't be the only means; for, bearing
in mind the progress of the artificial element in life commensurate with
civilized evolution, the use of synthetic hallucinogens like LSD will doubtless
play a part in facilitating upward self-transcendence and, accordingly, in
opening the mind to higher visionary experience. How great a part the introduction of
synthetic hallucinogens will play, in this respect, remains to be seen. But if such experiments as have already been
made with LSD are anything to judge by, then it is more than probable that
drugs of this type will play a highly significant role in the advancement of
spiritual consciousness. For by their
very artificial essence such synthetics result in upward self-transcendence,
and may therefore be regarded as a good, whereas natural drugs, from tea and
tobacco to opium and heroin, result in varying degrees of downward
self-transcendence, and are comparatively evil.
The present age has by no means escaped the evils of natural drugs, of
which addiction is the chief, but it is at least to some extent discouraging
their use. The future will doubtless
discourage them far more thoroughly and efficiently, with a compensatory
encouragement, however, of artificial drugs.
How long it will be before mankind outgrows drugs altogether also
remains to be seen. Yet I am disposed to
the belief that the highest civilization will have developed beyond recourse to
even the most artificial drugs, having advanced to a stage where the cultivation
of spirit is so extensive as not to require any artificial stimulation. And this could well be because the old brain,
in which reposes the subconscious part of the psyche, had 'gone the way' of the
natural body and thereby left humanity free of its sensuous influence. Elevated to the status of new-brain
collectivizations, humanity or, rather, its godlike successors would be in the
most advantageous position to achieve ultimate transcendence, having acquired a
gradual acclimatization to a consciousness predominantly comprised of pure spirit. All that would thereafter remain to be done
would be for these highly-charged spiritual minds to break away from the new
brain and soar heavenwards to their ultimate destination in undifferentiated
spirit. At that point in time evolution
would have reached its zenith, the earth being left to the now-empty artificial
supports which had sustained the highest civilization.
We, however, are a long way from that hypothetical civilization,
since recipients of so much sensuality.
For all our boasts of progress, we are relatively primitive and will
doubtless remain so for some time to come.
We haven't yet earned the right to an exclusive spirituality, but must
work for technological and social progress in the world at large. Naturally, we can be proud of what we have achieved to-date. Yet we mustn't allow such achievements to
make us complacent or distract us from the greater things which have still to
be achieved. For the world is ever a place
where improvements can be made, if we are to attain to our goal in spiritual
perfection. The world is simply a
stepping-stone to something higher, not a place to be worshipped in and for
itself! Non-attachment to the world is
now, as before, the key to salvation in the transcendental Beyond. But it should not be a non-attachment that
leads to starvation or disease, to the triumph of the natural world over the
spirit, which we cultivate at this juncture in time, as too many people have
been traditionally exposed to doing in the East. We must come to accept that a true, higher
non-attachment has to be earned through civilized progress, and that it is
therefore in our best interests to attend to the affairs of the world which
make for social progress, not to shirk them as though they constituted an
impediment to salvation.