<h2><SPAN name="The_Life_of_Saint_Issa" id="The_Life_of_Saint_Issa"></SPAN> <span class='italics'>The Life of Saint Issa</span></h2>
<p>"Best of the Sons of Men."</p>
<p>I.</p>
<p>1. The earth trembled and the heavens wept, because of the great crime
committed in the land of Israel.</p>
<p>2. For there was tortured and murdered the great and just Issa, in whom
was manifest the soul of the Universe;</p>
<p>3. Which had incarnated in a simple mortal, to benefit men and destroy
the evil spirit in them;</p>
<p>4. To lead back to peace, love and happiness, man, degraded by his sins,
and recall him to the one and indivisible Creator whose mercy is
infinite.</p>
<p>5. The merchants coming from Israel have given the following account of
what has occurred:<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>II.</p>
<p>1. The people of Israel—who inhabit a fertile country producing two
harvests a year and affording pasture for large herds of cattle—by
their sins brought down upon themselves the anger of the Lord;</p>
<p>2. Who inflicted upon them terrible chastisements, taking from them
their land, their cattle and their wealth. They were carried away into
slavery by the rich and mighty Pharaohs who then ruled the land of
Egypt.</p>
<p>3. The Israelites were, by the Pharaohs, treated worse than beasts,
condemned to hard labor and put in irons; their bodies were covered with
wounds and sores; they were not permitted to live under a roof, and were
starved to death;</p>
<p>4. That they might be maintained in a state of continual terror and
deprived of all human resemblance;</p>
<p>5. And in this great calamity, the Israelites, remembering their
Celestial Protector, implored his forgiveness and mercy.</p>
<p>6. At that period reigned in Egypt an illustrious Pharaoh, who was
renowned for his many victories, immense riches, and the gigantic
palaces he had erected by the labor of his slaves.</p>
<p>7. This Pharaoh had two sons, the younger of whom, named Mossa, had
acquired much knowledge from the sages of Israel.</p>
<p>8. And Mossa was beloved by all in Egypt for his kindness of heart and
the pity he showed to all sufferers.</p>
<p>9. When Mossa saw that the Israelites, in spite of their many
sufferings, had not forsaken their God, and refused to worship the gods
of Egypt, created by the hands of man.</p>
<p>10. He also put his faith in their invisible God, who did not suffer
them to betray Him, despite their ever growing weakness.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>11. And the teachers among Israel animated Mossa in his zeal, and prayed
of him that he would intercede with his father, Pharaoh, in favor of
their co-religionists.</p>
<p>12. Prince Mossa went before his father, begging him to lighten the
burden of the unhappy people; Pharaoh, however, became incensed with
rage, and ordered that they should be tormented more than before.</p>
<p>13. And it came to pass that Egypt was visited by a great calamity. The
plague decimated young and old, the healthy and the sick; and Pharaoh
beheld in this the resentment of his own gods against him.</p>
<p>14. But Prince Mossa said to his father that it was the God of his
slaves who thus interposed on behalf of his wretched people, and avenged
them upon the Egyptians.</p>
<p>15. Thereupon, Pharaoh commanded Mossa, his son, to gather all the
Israelite slaves, and lead them away, and found, at a great distance
from the capital, another city where he should rule over them.</p>
<p>16. Then Mossa made known to the Hebrew slaves that he had obtained
their freedom in the name of his and their God, the God of Israel; and
with them he left the city and departed from the land of Egypt.</p>
<p>17. He led them back to the land which, because of their many sins, had
been taken from them. There he gave them laws and admonished them to
pray always to God, the indivisible Creator, whose kindness is infinite.</p>
<p>18. After Prince Mossa's death, the Israelites observed rigorously his
laws; and God rewarded them for the ills to which they had been
subjected in Egypt.</p>
<p>19. Their kingdom became one of the most powerful on earth; their kings
made themselves renowned for their treasures, and peace reigned in
Israel.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>III.</p>
<p>1. The glory of Israel's wealth spread over the whole earth, and the
surrounding nations became envious.</p>
<p>2. But the Most High himself led the victorious arms of the Hebrews, and
the Pagans did not dare to attack them.</p>
<p>3. Unfortunately, man is prone to err, and the fidelity of the
Israelites to their God was not of long duration.</p>
<p>4. Little by little they forgot the favors he had bestowed upon them;
rarely invoked his name, and sought rather protection by the magicians
and sorcerers.</p>
<p>5. The kings and the chiefs among the people substituted their own laws
for those given by Mossa; the temple of God and the observances of their
ancient faith were neglected; the people addicted themselves to sensual
gratifications and lost their original purity.</p>
<p>6. Many centuries had elapsed since their exodus from Egypt, when God
bethought himself of again inflicting chastisement upon them.</p>
<p>7. Strangers invaded Israel, devastated the land, destroyed the
villages, and carried their inhabitants away into captivity.</p>
<p>8. At last came the Pagans from over the sea, from the land of Romeles.
These made themselves masters of the Hebrews, and placed over them their
army chiefs, who governed in the name of Cæsar.</p>
<p>9. They defiled the temples, forced the inhabitants to cease the worship
of the indivisible God, and compelled them to sacrifice to the heathen
gods.</p>
<p>10. They made common soldiers of those who had been men of rank; the
women became their prey, and the common people, reduced to slavery, were
carried away by thousands over the sea.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>11. The children were slain, and soon, in the whole land, there was naught
heard but weeping and lamentation.</p>
<p>12. In this extreme distress, the Israelites once more remembered their
great God, implored his mercy and prayed for his forgiveness. Our
Father, in his inexhaustible clemency, heard their prayer.</p>
<p>IV.</p>
<p>1. At that time the moment had come for the compassionate Judge to
reincarnate in a human form;</p>
<p>2. And the eternal Spirit, resting in a state of complete inaction and
supreme bliss, awakened and separated from the eternal Being, for an
undetermined period,</p>
<p>3. So that, in human form, He might teach man to identify himself with
the Divinity and attain to eternal felicity;</p>
<p>4. And to show, by His example, how man can attain moral purity and free
his soul from the domination of the physical senses, so that it may
achieve the perfection necessary for it to enter the Kingdom of Heaven,
which is immutable and where bliss eternal reigns.</p>
<p>5. Soon after, a marvellous child was born in the land of Israel. God
himself spoke, through the mouth of this child, of the miseries of the
body and the grandeur of the soul.</p>
<p>6. The parents of the infant were poor people, who belonged to a family
noted for great piety; who forgot the greatness of their ancestors in
celebrating the name of the Creator and giving thanks to Him for the
trials which He had sent upon them.</p>
<p>7. To reward them for adhering to the path of truth, God blessed the
firstborn of this family; chose him for His elect, and sent him to
sustain the fallen and comfort the afflicted.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>8. The divine child, to whom the name Issa was given, commenced in his
tender years to talk of the only and indivisible God, exhorting the
strayed souls to repent and purify themselves from the sins of which
they had become guilty.</p>
<p>9. People came from all parts to hear him, and marvelled at the
discourses which came from his infantile mouth; and all Israel agreed
that the Spirit of the Eternal dwelt in this child.</p>
<p>10. When Issa was thirteen years old, the age at which an Israelite is
expected to marry,</p>
<p>11. The modest house of his industrious parents became a meeting place
of the rich and illustrious, who were anxious to have as a son-in-law
the young Issa, who was already celebrated for the edifying discourses
he made in the name of the All-Powerful.</p>
<p>12. Then Issa secretly absented himself from his father's house; left
Jerusalem, and, in a train of merchants, journeyed toward the Sindh,</p>
<p>13. With the object of perfecting himself in the knowledge of the word
of God and the study of the laws of the great Buddhas.</p>
<p>V.</p>
<p>1. In his fourteenth year, young Issa, the Blessed One, came this side
of the Sindh and settled among the Aryas, in the country beloved by God.</p>
<p>2. Fame spread the name of the marvellous youth along the northern
Sindh, and when he came through the country of the five streams and
Radjipoutan, the devotees of the god Djaïne asked him to stay among
them.</p>
<p>3. But he left the deluded worshippers of Djaïne and went to
Djagguernat, in the country of Orsis, where repose the mortal<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></SPAN></span> remains
of Vyassa-Krishna, and where the white priests of Brahma welcomed him
joyfully.</p>
<p>4. They taught him to read and to understand the Vedas, to cure physical
ills by means of prayers, to teach and to expound the sacred Scriptures,
to drive out evil desires from man and make him again in the likeness of
God.</p>
<p>5. He spent six years in Djagguernat, in Radjagriha, in Benares, and in
other holy cities. The common people loved Issa, for he lived in peace
with the Vaisyas and the Sudras, to whom he taught the Holy Scriptures.</p>
<p>6. But the Brahmins and the Kshatnyas told him that they were forbidden
by the great Para-Brahma to come near to those who were created from his
belly and his feet;<SPAN name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1" /><SPAN href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</SPAN></p>
<p>7. That the Vaisyas might only hear the recital of the Vedas, and this
only on the festal days, and</p>
<p>8. That the Sudras were not only forbidden to attend the reading of the
Vedas, but even to look on them; for they were condemned to perpetual
servitude, as slaves of the Brahmins, the Kshatriyas and even the
Vaisyas.</p>
<p>9. "Death alone can enfranchise them from their servitude," has said
Para-Brahma. "Leave them, therefore, and come to adore with us the gods,
whom you will make angry if you disobey them."</p>
<p>10. But Issa, disregarding their words, remained with the Sudras,
preaching against the Brahmins and the Kshatriyas.</p>
<p>11. He declaimed strongly against man's arrogating to himself the
authority to deprive his fellow-beings of their human and spiritual
rights. "Verily," he said, "God has made no difference between his
children, who are all alike dear to Him."</p>
<p>12. Issa denied the divine inspiration of the Vedas and the Puranas,
for, as he taught his followers,—"One law has been given to man to
guide him in his actions:
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>13. "Fear the Lord, thy God; bend thy knees only before Him and bring to
Him only the offerings which come from thy earnings."</p>
<p>14. Issa denied the Trimurti and the incarnation of Para-Brahma in
Vishnu, Siva, and other gods; "for," said he:</p>
<p>15. "The eternal Judge, the eternal Spirit, constitutes the only and
indivisible soul of the universe, and it is this soul alone which
creates, contains and vivifies all.</p>
<p>16. "He alone has willed and created. He alone has existed from
eternity, and His existence will be without end; there is no one like
unto Him either in the heavens or on the earth.</p>
<p>17. "The great Creator has divided His power with no other being; far
less with inanimate objects, as you have been taught to believe, for He
alone is omnipotent and all-sufficient.</p>
<p>18. "He willed, and the world was. By one divine thought, He reunited
the waters and separated them from the dry land of the globe. He is the
cause of the mysterious life of man, into whom He has breathed part of
His divine Being.</p>
<p>19. "And He has put under subjection to man, the lands, the waters, the
beasts and everything which He created, and which He himself preserves
in immutable order, allotting to each its proper duration.</p>
<p>20. "The anger of God will soon break forth upon man; for he has
forgotten his Creator; he has filled His temples with abominations; and
he adores a multitude of creatures which God has subordinated to him;</p>
<p>21. "And to gain favor with images of stone and metal, he sacrifices
human beings in whom dwells part of the Spirit of the Most High;</p>
<p>22. "And he humiliates those who work in the sweat of their brows, to
gain favor in the eyes of the idler who sitteth at a sumptuous table.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>23. "Those who deprive their brothers of divine happiness will
themselves be deprived of it; and the Brahmins and the Kshatriyas shall
become the Sudras of the Sudras, with whom the Eternal will stay
forever.</p>
<p>24. "In the day of judgment the Sudras and the Vaisyas will be forgiven
for that they knew not the light, while God will let loose his wrath
upon those who arrogated his authority."</p>
<p>25. The Vaisyas and the Sudras were filled with great admiration, and
asked Issa how they should pray, in order not to lose their hold upon
eternal life.</p>
<p>26. "Pray not to idols, for they cannot hear you; hearken not to the
Vedas where the truth is altered; be humble and humiliate not your
fellow man.</p>
<p>27. "Help the poor, support the weak, do evil to none; covet not that
which ye have not and which belongs to others."</p>
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