This Theosophical Encyclopedia contains all the articles of the printed Theosophical Encyclopedia published by the Theosophical Publishing House, Manila. In addition, new articles that are not in the printed version are continually being added. Many of the articles are also being updated.
You may contribute to this Encyclopedia by sending your article by email to the General Editor at editor.theosopedia@gmail.com.
This Encyclopedia is intended to be a useful resource to everyone. Although the articles are copyrighted, the articles may be quoted freely provided that the Theosophical Encyclopedia is acknowledged as the source.
Welcome to Theosopedia
This Theosophical Encyclopedia contains all the articles of the printed Theosophical Encyclopedia published by the Theosophical Publishing House, Manila. In addition, new articles that are not in the printed version are continually being added. Many of the articles are also being updated.
You may contribute to this Encyclopedia by sending your article by email to the General Editor at editor.theosopedia@gmail.com.
This Encyclopedia is intended to be a useful resource to everyone. Although the articles are copyrighted, the articles may be quoted freely provided that the Theosophical Encyclopedia is acknowledged as the source.
A form of punishment where a criminal’s hands are nailed to the extremities of the horizontal part of a cross, while the feet are nailed to the lower part of the verticle part. Some authorities suggest instead that the nails were inserted through the wrists.
The cross, from the time of remote antiquity, has been regarded as a sacred symbol, but the ancient Romans and a few other cultures used the cross to inflict cruel and unnatural torture. Flavius Josephus reported its use by the Romans in his chronicles of the Jewish wars.
The cross is known today as the symbol of Christianity supposedly because Jesus was crucified. Yet, according to Gerald Massey, the well-known Egyptologist, Christian iconography of the catacombs did not have the symbol of a crucified human being for six centuries. In fact, according to Helena P. BLAVATSKY, in the first two decades the apostles regarded the symbol with horror (IUII:255).
As a symbol, the cross is a binary system where the horizontal limb corresponds to the passive principle or the world of phenomena, and the vertical limb the active principle, that is, the transcendent world of spiritual evolution. Apart from the symbolism of the cross itself, crucifixion has acquired its own esoteric meaning. Theosophical literature tends to view the crucifixion story of Christ as an allegory.
Classical sources exhibit some measure of agreement regarding the symbolism of the crucifixion of Christ. It was and is commonly held that the crucifixion symbolizes the Divine sacrifice where Jesus of Nazareth, being the Son of God, took upon himself all the sins of humanity. That the crucifixion was viewed as something that happens for the sake of all humanity is graphically depicted in the medieval drawing shown below.
Theosophical literature takes the crucifixion symbol as the suffering or limitation of the higher spiritual principle due to its being fixed or “nailed” in the cross of matter. On the macrocosmic level, H. P. Blavatsky states that legends of a crucifixion “were built upon one and the same primitive type; the voluntary sacrifice of the logoi — the raysof the one LOGOS, the direct manifested emanation from the One ever-concealed Infinite and Unknown — whose rays incarnated in mankind. They consented to fall into matter, and are, therefore, called the ‘Fallen Ones’” (CW VIII:200). On the human level, it is the “Higher Ego which is, so to speak, punished, which suffers, and this is the true crucifixion of the Christos” (CW XII:660).
Gottfried de PURUCKER wrote that “the meaning of the crucifixion is the resignation, painful to most human beings, of the material personal man and exchanging it for a greater light; and it is called a crucifixion because to the personal man with his limited vision it seems like his own death. We must remember that the inner Christ — or the inner Buddha if you please — is fixed to the cross of material existence; but after the crucifixion there ensues the resurrection of the inner god” (Purucker, Questions We All Ask).
Geoffrey HODSON wrote that “the Cross of Matter in the human is sixfold, and štma in the middle of the intersection is the ‘crucified Christos’ — the divine nature in man crucified on the cross of the fourfold personal nature: physical, etheric, astral, and lower mental (prideful, critical, cruel, separative mind)” (Hodson, Light of the Sanctuary).