Under this general title is now being published a series of small volumes, drawn from, or based upon, the mystic, theosophic and gnostic writings of the ancients, so as to make more easily audible for the ever-widening circle of those who love such things, some echoes of the mystic experiences and initiatory lore of their spiritual ancestry. There are many who love the life of the spirit, and who long for the light of gnostic illumination, but who are not sufficiently equipped to study the writings of the ancients at first hand, or to follow unaided the labours of scholars. These little volumes are therefore intended to serve as introduction to the study of the more difficult literature of the subject; and it is hoped that at the same time they may become for some, who have, as yet, not even heard of the Gnosis, stepping-stones to higher things.
George Robert Stowe Mead, who always published under the initialism G.R.S. Mead, was a historian, writer, editor, translator, and an influential member of the Theosophical Society, as well as founder of the Quest Society. His scholarly works dealt mainly with the Hermetic and Gnostic religions of Late Antiquity, and were exhaustive for the time period.
By mistake I bought volume 2. This doesn't much matter since the book consists of comments on obscure oracular utterances. The commentator explains the individual soul-spark is a light spark which is also a life-spark or rather life-flood. he's commenting on 'The Father of men and gods placed Mind in Soul, and Soul in inert Body'. That should give you some idea of the book's contents. I picked this excerpt because when a child I thought of individual generation as two sparks coming together to make the individual flame of life. What else snagged my interest was the comment that the resurrection of the gross physical body was a superstition of the ignorant. Resurrection is wishful thinking, derived from a sense of dispensability in concurrence with a self-importance necessary for life, and possible in the past because heaven could be placed above the mountain tops in a place one was otherwise ignorant of. If you're going to think like that you would think it was the physical body that was resurrected. Augustine, hanging on to the concept, makes it not as it was but of an angelic substance though it all seems rather unnecessary since where's it going? Where is heaven now? Believers elide over such difficulties. Besides, the soul is what gives life. The body dies when it dies. It's dead. Is it revivified? How? It's likened by believers to a seed but it's dead and a seed isn't. They can't have it both ways. Assuming its resurrection, a body is needed by them to put it in.