The Rev. Geoffrey Hodson (1886-1983) served as a priest in the Liberal Catholic Church in Australia. His writings on esoteric matters remain highly relevant to this day.
The Inner Side of Church Worship
by the Rev. Geoffrey Hodson
Dedicated to J.I.Wedgwood in grateful recognition of his power as an inspirer and teacher of men.
Foreword
by Archbishop Frank W. Pigott [Erstwhile Presiding Bishop of the Liberal Catholic Church]
Catholic Christians claim that the Church, with its threefold ministry tracing spiritual descent by the laying on of hands from the earliest Apostles of Our Lord, its seven sacraments or means of grace and its elaborate ceremonial, is a Divine Society; that is to say, it is a body corporate which is ensouled by the life of the Lord Himself; or, changing the metaphor without in any way changing the sense, it is an apparatus, a piece of intricate mechanism, by means of which grace or spiritual benediction is brought from on high and distributed far and wide on the Lord’s people here in this world ‘in the body pent ‘.
It is a high claim to make and, indeed, an unique claim; there does not seem to be any other society or organization in the world which makes quite such a claim as that. Yet the Catholic Church makes that claim unflinchingly and has been making it for something like two thousand years.
It is worth while examining the basis of such a claim. What are the grounds on which Catholic Christians for so long a time have dared to claim that their Church is a Divine Society, and still make the claim? Briefly they are three. First, there is tradition. Since the very beginning the belief that the Lord gives Himself to His people in His church by the operation of the Holy Spirit has been held by Catholic Christians and handed on from generation to generation. This is the tradition of the Church. Next, there is the experience of Christians themselves. For two thousand years or thereabouts Christians have ‘felt’ the presence of their Lord at their sacraments, at their worship and at all the holiest moments in their churches. This feeling has nothing to do with the exercise of any of the five senses. It cannot be described or explained, but it is a fact to those who know the experience. Then, supplementing tradition and experience, there is a third ground or basis for the claim, which so far has been recognized as a legitimate ground for belief on a large scale only by members of the Liberal Catholic Church; that third basis is the revelation which is the result of clairvoyant investigation and research. There are people in the world, only a few perhaps, but still some, who have so trained their faculties that they can perceive that which is hidden from normal people. Using this extended means of perception some investigators have been able to verify what the Church has claimed, namely, that the life of its sacraments does indeed proceed from the Lord Himself and, further, that in the work of distribution of His grace the officiating clergy and the devout worshippers have as co-operators with them hosts of angelic beings. Continue reading


