Indian sage Sri Aurobindo was also a major influence in the blending of evolutionary science with spiritual philosophy. Although Hindu philosophy from ancient times had expounded a distinctly evolutionary view, such evolution came within a cyclic context, with the emphasis of evolution being a return to spirit, followed by another period of involution when spirit would once again flow out into manifestation. Aurobindo saw evolution as leading the enlightened one beyond nirvana to continued engagement with the evolutionary force that has been at work in the cosmos. He called man a “transitional being,” saying that the step from man to superman is the next approaching achievement in the earth's evolution and that it flows from an inherent logic of the evolutionary principle whereby intellectual mind transitions to spiritual mind.
Among the American transcendentalists, both Thoreau and Emerson were also synthesizers of evolutionary thinking with spiritual philosophy. The biological aspects of evolution paralleled and brought enrichment to their own observations of the natural world, while its spiritual aspects dovetailed with transcendental ideas of evolution toward unity and perfection.
Richard Bucke, whose classic Cosmic Consciousness was recommended in the Cayce readings, saw a growing phenomenon of cosmic consciousness experiences as a reflection of evolution continuing its advance through the human race and predicted that such experiences would become more and more common as we evolved. Gopi Krishna, whose writings perhaps more than anyone else's illuminate the mysteries of kundalini, saw the kundalini forces as an evolutionary force and our ability to experience them in a balanced, healthful way as the key to the next evolutionary advance.
Perhaps the best-known spiritual evolutionary thinker of modern times was the French priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. Published in 1955, Teilhard de Chardin's The Phenomenon of Man puts forth a comprehensive view of the evolution of the cosmos with humankind's arrival and growing consciousness at the leading edge of an evolutionary advance toward what he called the “Omega Point,” the ultimate development of consciousness into a unified God consciousness. As a Jesuit who studied both paleontology and geology, Teilhard de Chardin grasped the spiritual implications of evolutionary theory for the entire human race and the future of the earth. “The outcome of the world, the gates of the future, the entry into the super-human—these are not thrown open to a few of the privileged nor to one chosen people to the exclusion of all others,” he wrote. “They will open only to an advance of all together, in a direction in which all together can join and find completion in a spiritual renovation of the earth.”11
A “spiritual renovation of the earth:” how timely that message is! Yet until recently this evolutionary perspective has been largely ignored by most of the spiritually minded. In our culture, the religionists with a “ticket to heaven” theology and the New Agers with a “this world is only an illusion to be outgrown” spirituality have largely ignored the huge importance of our place in this evolving world of manifest form. Nonetheless, that importance cannot be overstated in a world that seems to be tripping over its own limited resources in solving the problems that beset humanity. It's been said that religion is for those who are afraid to go to hell and spirituality is for people who've been there. Well, evolutionary spirituality is for people who've been to both hell and heaven and now know that we have a choice as to which decides the destiny of our world. Or to put it in the language of that other herald of evolutionary spirituality, Edgar Cayce, “…The soul of each individual is a portion then of the Whole, with the birthright of Creative Forces to become a co-creator with the Father, a co-laborer with Him. As that birthright is then manifested, growth ensues. If it is made selfish, retardments must be the result.”12
Evolutionary Thought in the Cayce Readings
Certainly the Cayce readings were on board with our crucial role in the renovation of the earth. It is no small thing from the evolutionary perspective that one of the most common terms for God in the readings is “Creative Force.” And it would seem that the Creative Force always intended the continuation of creation. One reading suggested that God rested on the seventh day in the creation story “…to let His purpose flow through that which had been made, that it might be perfected in itself.”13 This same divine intention that creation evolve toward completion rather than be a finished product at the start is reflected in the somewhat cryptic comment:
When the heavens and the earth came into being, this meant the universe as the inhabitants of the earth know same; yet there are many suns in the universe,—those even about which our sun, our earth, revolve; and all are moving toward some place,—yet space and time appear to be incomplete.14
An incomplete realm of time and space, a manifest world that is still unfolding, an aspect of the Ultimate that has an innate drive to express in form—that is the essence of the evolutionary story. As we already saw in the statement by Friedrich Schelling, God did not bring about the consummation of creation “in the beginning” because “God is Life, and not merely Being.” Made in the image of God, we too are characterized by the quickening impulse of life and not simply being. We do not exist simply to transcend the manifest universe and exist in changeless, eternal bliss, but rather to express the onward movement of life as it expresses through us in this world of form. “…For the purpose is that each soul should be a co-creator with God,” the Cayce readings tell us.15
Co-creativity is no mere incidental aspect of our being in the Cayce world view. It is at the very core of our purpose for being, for we are described as “…[children] of Creative Force…” and are told that we came into being in order to “…be a companion with the Creative Force, God, in its activity…”16 So intrinsic is our co-creative role that we are described as corpuscles in the body of God, where acts that reflect love are God's bloodstream and consciousness is like God's nervous system.17 Astonishingly, he even says that we are instrumental in the redemption of the world: “Know that self in the physical activative state is a part of the plan of salvation, of righteousness, of truth, of the Creative Forces or God in the earth.”18
Notice the repeated emphasis on activity in this world. We are not called to armchair philosophize about evolution, but to live out our evolutionary potential in the character of the lives we lead. This character is closely linked in the readings, as it is in most contemporary spirituality, with the quality of our consciousness:
For, the soul being a part or a shadow of the real spiritual self, it controls or rules the universe rather than being ruled by same. But, they that have entirely put on a consciousness are ruled by same. Hence, as each individual entity accepts and lives by this or that awareness, or consciousness, it gives power and spirit to same. Thus is each soul, each entity, a co-creator with that universal consciousness ye call God.19
In us, consciousness is waking up; and as it does evolution takes an enormous leap forward. In the words of Teilhard de Chardin:
Man is not the centre of the universe as once we thought in our simplicity, but something much more wonderful—the arrow pointing the way to the final unification of the world in terms of life. Man alone constitutes the last-born, the freshest, the most complicated, the most subtle of all the successive layers of life.20
We are evolution waking up to itself.
*Richard Maurice Bucke, Cosmic Consciousness (New York: Penguin Compass, 1991), 22.
5Although Lamarck's idea that acquired traits can be passed on to offspring was largely discredited for many years, by the 1920s some vindication for his theories began to show up in laboratory experiments in which successive generations of rats learned to navigate mazes with fewer and fewer learning trials (the acquired learning of the parents presumably passing on to their offspring) and reports from Pavlov that his famous conditioned response similarly affected subsequent generations of dogs. Today, a growing neo-Lamarckian perspective is supported by the field of epigenetics, which studies environmental influence on the activation of genetic codes.
6As quoted by Arthur Lovejoy in The Great Chain of Being: A Study of the History of an Idea (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1936), 257.
7Friedrich