José
Passini |
Kardec and his
vision of the
future |
When we analyze
Kardec’s
personality, and
try to learn his
culture, deeply
identified with
the Gospel, we
should not only
aim at praising
his memory. We
must see him as
someone who came
to fulfill a
promise of
Jesus. We should
assess his
spiritual
stature, not
only for our own
amazement, but
in order to be
conscious of our
condition of
beneficiaries of
his work, this
huge collection
of
clarifications
which definitely
marked a new
step in human
evolution.
We must think of
Kardec in his
day and age, in
order to
evaluate his
timely progress
at that point in
time, in
relation to the
dominant
thinking of that
era. We would
need to be able
to travel though
time, in order
to really feel
the mood of that
era, with its
customs and,
mainly, its
limitations.
Only then we
would be able to
fairly observe
the improvement
of Kardec’s
thinking as
opposed to the
one of his
contemporaries,
even to some of
the modern
thinkers in the
social,
political and
religious areas
today.
The Church,
fresh out of the
Inquisition in
Portugal and by
decree of the
Regency in 1821,
still held a lot
of power. In the
so-called
catholic
countries, there
was no
separation
between Church
and State. To
have an idea of
this power,
remember that on
the 9th
of October of
1861, in Spain,
300
spiritualistic
works, legally
imported from
France during
Barcelona’s act
of faith were
burned in a
public square.
In 1864, the
encyclical
Quanta Cura
condemned
religious
tolerance. And
this effort to
retain power was
not restricted
to the 19th
century, as in
1906 two of the
Pope Pio X’s
encyclicals, the
Vehements nos
and the
Gravissimi
Offici,
condemned the
separation of
Church and
State.
In Spain, in
1931, there was
a secularization
of civilian
power, with the
limitation of
the powers of
the Church.
Unfortunately,
in 1953, during
Franco’s
dictatorship,
and in
accordance with
the Holy See,
Catholicism was
again declared
the only
religion of the
Spanish nation.
In Portugal,
during Salazar’s
dictatorship, in
broad 20th
Century, the
Portuguese
Spiritualistic
Federation was
shut down and
all its assets
confiscated. In
France, the mood
was different,
but not much.
One should look
at the
prosecutions and
attacks suffered
by Kardec.
The gap between
religion and
science became
increasingly
wider
However, despite
the strong
dominating
pressure of the
Church towards
keeping their
version of
Catholicism
throughout the
19th
Century, in some
parts of Europe
there was a
slightly
rebellious
liberation from
religious
preaching, by
many
intellectuals
who could no
longer be
convinced. The
gap between
Church and
Science was
becoming
increasingly
wider, breeding
disillusions
that led many
clear thinking
Spirits to take
positions
eminently
materialistic,
thus creating
the environment
for the dawn of
Positivism, a
doctrine that
aims at
overcoming the
metaphysical and
theological
states and
denied
everything that
was not
physically
measurable, and
preparing the
ground for the
materialism of
the 20thCentury.
In the social
area, the
religious
message only
served to
legitimize the
selfishness
undergone by the
powerful,
without any
effort to soften
the inhuman and
dreadful
situation of the
working class,
noticeably blue
collar workers.
It was then,
that Karl Marx
coined the
phrase:
“Religion is the
opium of the
people”. And it
truly was, for
it was easy to
notice the huge
gap between the
simple,
fraternal,
loving and
active message
of Jesus and
what was being
offered as
Christianity by
a Church fully
committed to the
powers of that
time.
Kardec does not
bow down to the
Church, and
neither adheres
to the
destructive and
dry materialism,
like so many
intellectuals of
his time. His
missionary
vision allows
him to disagree
with what the
Church offered
as the truth and
enables for a
different
religious
proposition, to
be experienced
principally
outside the
temples. A
religion to be
experienced in a
free
environment, of
reason and
feeling,
according to the
teachings and
examples of
Jesus.
In the face of
Kardec’s
performance,
it’d be hard to
fit him into any
areas of human
knowledge. He
reveals himself
as a theologian
when conversing
with Superior
Spirits about
Jesus, showing
independence and
superiority of
thinking in
relation to his
contemporaries,
when he
formulates the
question: “What
is God?” That
being said in a
time when great
thinkers were
attached to the
idea of a
human-like God,
with human
limitations, as
far as form and
attributes area
concerned.
Reincarnation,
rejected until
then, deserved
a
clear and
undeniable
analysis
The Encoder
shows that his
vision of God is
of a cosmic one,
and it is in
perfect
alignment with
advances in
Astronomy which,
moving far ahead
from religions,
already showed
those who had
“eyes to see”
that the known
Universe was far
greater than the
God they were
taught to
believe.
However, his
scientific
conception of
the cosmic
greatness of God
did not stop him
from rescuing
the figure of a
fair, providing,
loving and
endlessly
merciful Father,
according to the
teachings of
Jesus, directly
opposing this
ominous creation
of theologians:
a Hell of
endless
punishment,
within the
Christian
context. In this
field, the
Encoder also
shows his
condition of
educator and
scholar of penal
studies, when
with impeccable
lucidity he
investigates
matters such as
Heaven,
Purgatory and
Hell, mainly in
his book “Heaven
and Hell”.
Nonetheless, it
was clear that
if the gates of
hell were open,
the gates of
heaven would not
open up by
attending
religious
functions or
one’s
post-mortem
legacy, but
through the
individual,
conscious and
not transferable
effort of each
Spirit, as Jesus
adjudged: “… If
someone wants to
come after me,
renounce
yourself, take
up on your own
cross and follow
me.”
Reincarnation,
which was then
ridiculed and
rejected,
deserved a more
throughout, deep
and undeniable
analysis, on the
premise that the
future, in which
we live today,
will bring
victory to this
concept that
hasn’t yet been
disputed. On the
contrary, as
time goes by,
more academic
works are being
written to prove
it.
It clearly shows
the immortality
of the soul, not
only as a matter
of faith,
anchored on
dogmas, but on
scientific
experimentation,
through the
rescue of the
exercise of
mediumship, a
practice that
was subject of
studies in the
academic area,
first under the
name of
Metapsychics,
and much later
Parapsychology.
He revealed
himself as a
truly Christian
sociologist when
dialoguing with
the Spirits
about social
issues, putting
in evidence
matters that
would only be
discussed by
other religions
decades later.
Labor, deemed as
punishment by
religion, is
shown as
ennobling
opportunity to
collaborate with
God’s work. For
the first time
the relationship
between capital
and labor is
dealt with
within the
religious realm,
with severe
warnings to
those who, by
abusing their
power, impose
excessive
workloads to
their so-called
inferiors, for
it was common
throughout
Europe at that
time when
working days
exceeded 12
hours.
Kardec
introduced
concepts of
religious
morals
in an eminently
social field
For the first
time in history,
someone creates
a favorable
environment for
the Superior
Spirits to warn
mankind, in the
name of God,
about the
responsibility
in the use of
power: “All whom
has the power of
command is
responsible for
the excess of
workload imposed
to his
subordinates,
for doing so he
violates God’s
law.” Whilst
most voices in
religion
remained silent,
Kardec inquires
the Spirits
about the right
that workers had
to rest after
spending their
youth working:
“What should the
elder who needs
to work to
survive do?” The
answer, which
should be used
as inspiration
for many
religious and
sociological
discourses, is:
“The strong must
work for the
weak. If he
lacks a family,
society should
play this role.
This is the law
of charity.”
Only 31 years
after the
definitive issue
of the “Book of
Spirits”, the
Encyclical
Rerum Novarum,
in 1891, the
Catholic Church
awakens for the
issue.
Regarding
slavery, still
existing in
Brazil, the
United States
and in Cuba, the
religious powers
remained silent
and were kept
from raising the
flag of
abolitionism for
being committed
to those who
beneficiated
from slave work.
Against this
ignominious
domination of a
human being over
another, the
Spirits
manifested,
speaking in the
name of God,
thanks to
Kardec’s
inquires which
introduced
concepts of
religious morals
to an eminently
social field.
Nine years prior
to the
publication of
the work
“Subjection of
Women”, by
Stuart Mill,
which is deemed
as a propeller
of women’s
rights
movements,
Kardec publishes
his dialogue
with the
Superior Spirits
and his remarks,
analyzing the
equality of
rights of men
and women,
whilst other
Christian
branches kept,
and still do in
their core,
highly
discriminatory
positions, in
which the woman
is kept
subordinate,
despite the
dignifying
examples of
Jesus.
“The abolition
of marriage
would mean going
back to the
early days of
Mankind”
Highlighted by
Kardec over a
century ago, and
still our
current vision,
the common trend
is that nobody
marries anybody;
people get
married on their
own account, and
only they are
responsible for
keeping this
established
bond. It’s worth
pointing out the
position of the
Encoder, who on
the one hand
clarifies,
freeing the
creature of the
chains of
priestly
blessings,
pretentiously
given in the
name of God, on
the other hand,
calls your
attention to the
commitments made
before the altar
of your own
consciousness.
The worth that
Kardec
attributes to
marriage is
evident when he
comments on the
subject: “The
abolition of
marriage would
mean, therefore,
to go back to
the infancy of
Mankind and
would place man
below even some
animals that
serve as
examples of
long-lasting
unions.”
In a time when
religions did
not question the
role of the
family, for
deeming it
established
according to the
sacrament
ministered in
the name of God
– although, in
some cases, even
against the will
of the recipient
– Kardec,
foreseeing
attitudes and
future
questionings,
explores and
argues with the
Spirits the role
of the
institution of
the family. He
was given
enlightening
answers from the
Spirits placing
the family as
the
irreplaceable
core of human
education, a
core which is
formed not
because of
social
evolution, but
divine will. On
that account,
Spiritualism
already had the
answers to the
harsh challenges
that would come
up in decades to
come, when
totalitarian
regimes intended
to establish a
State-owned
model of
children
education, and
later still,
through the
promise of “free
living”, carried
out by the
hippies and
those who shared
their ideas.
When vehemently
opposing the
death penalty –
while many
religious
sectors kept
silent or even
acted in league
with it – Kardec
takes the ‘thou
shall not kill’
out of the
temples,
bringing it up
to a penal and
social
discussion,
anticipating, in
decades,
campaigns that
would arise much
later.
The immense
abyss between
Science and
Religion that
was brought
about by the
studies of
Copernicus and
Galileo got even
wider with the
publication of
the book “The
Origin of
Species”, by
Charles Darwin.
It was up to
Kardec to play
the historic
role of building
a lit up bridge
between Science
and Religion.
Kardec’s
thinking is an
earthly
foresight of the
paths of
Mankind
When challenging
Creationism, the
evolution of the
Spirit is put in
evidence. It
moves pari
passu with
the physical
evolution
demonstrated by
Darwin, at the
same time it
redeems, in face
of human
consciousness,
one of the basic
attributes of a
Perfect Being:
Justice.
Everything stems
from the same
source; we all
come from the
same place,
endowed with the
same
evolutionary
potential, as
taught by the
Spirits: “This
is how
everything is of
service; all is
entwined in
Nature, from the
tiniest atom to
the Archangel,
who also started
off as an atom.”
For knowing the
immanent divine
spark of all
creation, Jesus
lashed out the
evolutionary
challenge:
“Let your light
shine out before
men (…)”.
The text hereby
was not intended
to make a
throughout
analysis of
Kardec’s works,
or his
competence as a
philosopher,
educator,
sociologist or
theologian. It
was aimed at
focusing only on
the progress of
his thinking in
comparison to
his
contemporaries.
Kardec
transcends his
time, seeing
beyond
interests, the
culture and the
social and
religious
environment in
which he lived
in.
If Prof.
Hippolyte Léon
Denizard Rivail
had published
his works
without
revealing his
dialogues with
the Spirits and
its religious
aspects, for
sure France
would have
included him
among its
philosophers, as
it had done with
its great
educators.
Some tome in
this millennium,
when religious
rancidity and
proud
academicism
become less
prevalent, and
no longer far
away from the
truths of the
pure Gospel,
Kardec will
certainly be
studied at
universities and
‘discovered’ as
a true genius of
the 20th
Century,
marveling
Spirits who will
already be
incarnated in
order to
establish the
educational
guidelines of
the new age. On
this occasion,
it will be hard
to place Kardec
in a specific
area of human
knowledge, for
he was a master
in the fields of
sociology, law,
education,
philosophy and,
mainly,
theology.
The undisputable
mark of Kardec’s
condition as a
great missionary
is the fact that
his thought was
not tied up to a
place or time.
His vigorous
thinking
projects into
the future,
foreseeing the
paths of
Mankind.
Spiritually
speaking, it’s
not foresight,
it’s simply the
remembrance of
human issues
that were
studied and
analyzed
throughout,
before
reincarnating.
Maintaining due
proportions, it
is the same
phenomena that
happened to
Jesus who,
transcending the
knowledge,
interests,
aspirations -
and even the
culture of the
time -,
approached
unusual subjects
and left
evolutionary
teachings and
guidelines for
centuries to
come.
References:
The Book of
Spirits::
1 - item 1
3 - item 684
4 - item 685 a
5 - item 695
6 - 696
(commentary)
7 - item 540
New Testament:
2 - Mt, 16: 24
8 - Mt, 5: 16
|