Max Heindel As I Knew Him
by
Art Taylor
My mother was astrological secretary with Augusta and
Max Heindel, beginning with early 1914. The Fellowship was small in numbers but
was a happy and harmonious family. Mother came up to Los Angeles frequently on
weekends and very shortly brought me a Cosmo to read. I was impressed with its
clear and rational presentation of occult truths, and when Max Heindel came to
speak at the Los Angeles Center, I went to hear him. When we met, each of us
knew instantly that we were old friends from previous lives.
Being
invited to come down to Oceanside, I boarded the Santa Fe train the next
weekend, and upon alighting saw a tiny little village of about two blocks and a
scattering of a few homes. I walked the two miles of gravel road to the
Fellowship grounds, and found that Headquarters consisted of an administration
building (housing all activities), a small chapel, and about three
cottages.
Subsequently making frequent weekend trips to Oceanside, I
became well acquainted with Mr. and Mrs. Heindel, and whenever there was an
accumulation of work in setting up and reading the horoscopes of applicants for
help, I assisted Mrs. Heindel and my mother. Usually after the Sunday morning
service, Max Heindel and I sat on a bench near the spot where the Rose Cross
Emblem is now. We chatted about many subjects of mutual interest: astronomy,
astrology, the Philosophy, and the sciences, always including refreshing little
human reminiscences and a joke or two. Those were delightful times.
One
Sunday morning, as we left the Chapel, a visitor walked along with us,
mentioning how much he liked the accordion. Mr. Heindel said: "Well, accordion
is the common name, but the classical name is 'come to me, go from me." We
laughed heartily, and I have recalled the incident countless times. One day
while helping Mrs. Heindel with the horoscopes I called her "Aunt Gussie." She
liked it and suggested that I always call her that. I said I would be happy to,
but added that then Mr. Heindel would need to be "Uncle Max," so henceforth they
were, and became a cherished uncle and aunt.
On one trip to Oceanside,
the regular service and the Moon Meeting coincided, and I was asked to speak at
the regular service, while "Uncle Max" conducted the Moon Meeting. There was a
vacant chair left in the front row, and presently the Brother was
there.
I had been teaching the Los Angeles Philosophy Class for some
time, particularly the Scheme of Evolution. One day, as I sat down at the piano
for practice, I saw that the entire scheme, as so beautifully portrayed in the
Cosmo was on the keyboard--the significance of the five Hierarchies that gave us
some help and then passed into liberation, and also the seven that were to
further their involution and evolution in regular progression, to minute detail.
On the next trip to Oceanside, I described what I had done. "Uncle Max" was
impressed and suggested that I write it all out, with an explanatory diagram. I
did so and he published it in the March, 1917,
issue of Rays from the Rose
Cross.
I felt that I knew Max Heindel better than most other people, and
there is a reason for this. When an author is read and studied, the salient
features of his nature are quite apparent, but the other facets of his composite
being are not. They are more or less hidden behind the work he concentrates
upon. In intimate, personal association, the other sides reveal themselves. We
were able to discuss the reverent, devotional aspirations, the comprehension of
the cultures, music, art, the sciences, and in addition, the human, so essential
to balanced development.
Max Heindel was a living example of the precepts
of the Rosicrucian Fellowship Teachings: "A sane mind, a soft heart, a sound
body," and the counterpart: "Be ye wise as the serpent, strong as the lion,
harmless as the dove." He knew that the Elder Brothers frowned upon organization
in general, and sought carefully to avoid any more than was necessary for
carrying on administration. Also, he was keenly aware that our real progress
along the path of illumination
was from within--"the temple without sound of
hammer." He decried any form of regimentation, and frequently emphasized that we
should not too suddenly strive to become so enlightened that we would lose the
value of experience of the particular horoscope we had chosen for that very
purpose.
He tried, valiantly, to stress the reverent, devotional nature
of the mystic, the occult side of intellectual comprehension, and to balance
them with sufficient of the wholesome, human influences for rational unfoldment.
It was a privilege to have worked with him.
--Rays from the Rose Cross
Magazine, February, 1965, p. 64, 83
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