XXIV. PRINCE OF THE TABERNACLE.
SYMBOLS were
the almost universal language of ancient theology. They were
the
most obvious method of instruction ; for, like nature
herself, they addressed
the understanding through the eye ; and
the most ancient expressions denoting
communication of religious
knowledge, signify ocular exhibition. The first
teachers of
mankind borrowed this method of instruction ; and it comprised
an
endless store of pregnant hieroglyphics. These lessons of the
olden time were
the riddles of the Sphynx, tempting the curious
by their quaintness, but
involving the personal risk of the
adventurous interpreter. "The Gods
themselves," it was said,
"disclose their intentions to the wise, but to fools
their
teaching is unintelligible ;" and the King of the Delphic Oracle was
said
not to declare, nor onthe other hand to conceal; but
emphatically to "intimate
or signify."
The Ancient Sages, both
barbarian and Greek, involved their meaning in
similar
indirections and enigmas ; their lessons were conveyed
either in visible
symbols, or in those "parables and dark sayings
of old," which the Israelites
considered it a sacred duty to hand
down unchanged to successive generations.
The explanatory tokens
employed by man, whether emblematical objects or
actions, symbols
or mystic ceremonies, were like the mystic signs and
portends
either in dreams or by the wayside, supposed to he
significant of the
intentions of the Gods ; both required the aid
of anxious thought and skillful
interpretation. It was only by a
conect appreciation of analogous problems of
nature, that the
will of Heaven could be understood iy the Diviner, or the
lessons
of Wisdom become manifest to the Sage.
The Mysteries were a
series of symbols ; and what was spoken there consisted
wholly of
accessory explanations of the act or image ; sacred
commentaries,
explanatory of established symbols; with little of
those independent traditions
embodying physical or moral
speculation, in which the elements or planets were
the Sage.
actors, and the creation and revolutions of the world
were
intermingled with recollections of ancient events: and yet
with so much of that
also, that nature became her own expositor
through the medium of an arbitrary
symbolical instruction; and
the ancient views of the relation between the human
and divine
received dramatic forms.
There has ever been an intimate alliance
between the two systems, the symbolic
and the philosophical, in
the allegories of the monuments of all ages, in the
symbolic
writings of the priests of all nations, in the rituals of all
secret
and mysterious societies; there has been a constant
series, an invariable
uniformity of principles, which come from
an aggregate, vast imposing, and
true, composed of parts that fit
harmoniously only there.
Symbolical instruction is recommended by
the constant and' uniform usage of
antiquity, - and it has
retained its influence throughout all ages, as a system
of
mysterious communication. The Deity, in his revelations to man,
adopted the
use of material images for the purpose of enforcing
sublime truths; and Christ
taught by symbols and parables. The
mysterious knowledge of the Druids was
embodied in signs and
symbols. Taliesin, describing his initiation, says : "The
secrets
were imparted to me by the old Giantess (Ceridwen, or Isis),
without
the use of audible language." And again he says, "I am a
silent proficient"
Initiation was ,a school, in which were taught
the truths of primitive
revelation, the existence and attributes
of one God, the immortality of the
Soul, rewards and punishments
in a future life, the phenomena of Nature, the
arts, the
sciences, morality, regulation, philosophy, and philanthropy,
and
what we now style psychology and metaphysics, with animal
magnetism, and the
other occult sciences.
All the ideas of the
Priests of Hindustan, Persia, Syria, Arabia, Chaldaea,
Phoenicia,
were known to the Egyptian Priests. The rational Indian
philosophy,
after penetrating Persia and Chaldaea, gave birth to
the Egyptian Mysteries. We
find that the use of Hieroglyphics was
preceded in Egypt by that of the easily
understood symbols and
figures, from the mineral, animal, and vegetable
kingdoms, used
by the Indians, Persians, and Chaldans to express their
thoughts;
and this primitive philosophy was the basis of the modern
philosophy
of Pythagoras and Plato. - All the philosophers and
legislators that made
Antiquity illustrious, were pupils of the
initiation; and all the beneficent
modifications in the religions
of the different people instructed by them were
owing to their
institution and extension of the Mysteries In the chaos
of
popular superstitions, those Mysteries alone kept man from
lapsing into
absolute brutishness. Zoroaster and Confucius drew
their doctrines from the
Mysteries. Clement of Alexandria,
speaking of the Great Mysteries, says : "Here
ends all
instruction. Nature and all things are seen and known
moral
truths alone been taught the Initiate, the Mysteries could never
have
deserved nor received the magnificent eulogiums of the most
enlightened alien
of Antiquity,-of Pindar, Plutarch, Isocrates,
Diodorus, Plato, Euripides,
Socrates, Aristophanes, Cicero,
Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, and others
;-philosophers hostile to
the Sacerdotal Spirit, or historians devoted to the
investigation
of Truth. No : all the sciences were taught there ; and
those
oral on written traditions briefly communicated, which
reached back to the
first age of the world.
Socrates said, in
the Phaedo of Plato: "It well appears that those who
established
the Mysteries, or secret assemblies of the initiated, were
no
contemptible personages, but men of great genius, who in the
early ages strove
to teach us, under enigmas, that he who shall
go to the invisible regions
without being punfied, will be
precipitated into the abyss ; while he who
arrives there, purged
of the stains of this world, and accomplished in virtue,
will be
admitted to the dwelling-place of the Deity . The jnitiated are
certain
to attain the company of the Gods."
Pretextatus,
Proconsul of Achaia, a man endowed with all the virtues, said,
in
the 4th century, that to deprive the Greeks of those Sacred
Mysteries which
bound together the whole human race, would make
life insupportable.
Initiation was considered to be a mystical
death ; a descent into the infernal
regions, where every
pollution, and the stains and imperfection's of a corrupt
and
evil life were purged away by fire and water ; and the perfect Epopt
was
then said to be regenerated, new-born, restored to a
renovated existence of
life, light, and purity; and placed under
the Divine Protection.
A new language was adapted to these
celebrations, and also a language of
hieroglyphics, unknown to
any but those who had received the highest Degree.
And to them
ultimately were confined the learning, the morality, and
the
political power, of every people among which the Mysteries
were practiced. So
effectually was the knowledge of the
hieroglyphics of the highest Degree hidden
from all but a favored
few, that in process of time their meaning was entirely
lost, and
none could interpret them. If the same hieroglyphics were employed
in
the higher as in the lower Degrees, they had a different and
more abstruse and
figurative meaning. It was pretended, in later
times, that the sacred
hieroglyphics and language were the same
that were used by the Celestial
Deities. Everything that could
heighten the mystery of initiation was
added, until the very name
of the ceremony possessed a strange charm, and yet
conjured up
the wildest fears. ache greatest rapture came to be expressed
by
the word that signified to pass through the Mysteries.
The
Priesthood possessed one third of Egypt. They gained much of
their
influence by means of the Mysteries, and spared no means to
impress the people
with a full sense of their importance. They
represented them as the beginning
of a new life of reason and
virtue : the initiated, or esoteric companions were
said to
entertain the most agreeable anticipations respecting death
and
eternity, to comprehend all the hidden mysteries of Nature,
to have their souls
restored to the original perfection from
which man had fallen ; and at their
death to be borne to the
celestial mansions of the Gods. The doctrines of a
future state
of rewards and punishments formed a prominent feature in
the
Mysteries; and they were also believed to assure much
temporal happiness and
good fortune, and afford absolute security
against the most imminent dangers by
land and sea. Public odium
was cast of those who refused to be initiated. They
were
considered profane, unworthy of public employment or private
confidence;
and held to be doomed to eternal punishment as
impious. To betray the secrets
of the Mysteries, to wear on the
stage the dress of an Initiate, or to hold the
Mysteries up do
derision, was to incur death at the hands of public vengeance.
It
is certain that up to the time of Cicero, the Mysteries still
retained much
of their original character of sanctity and purity.
And at a later day, as we
know, Nero, after committing a horrible
crime, did not dare, even in Greece, to
aid in the celebration of
the Mysteries ; nor at a still later day was
Constantine, the
Christian Emperor, allowed to do so, after his murder of
his
relatives.
Everywhere, and in all their forms, the
Mysteries were funereal ;
and celebrated the mystical death and
restoration to life of some divine or
heroic personage : and the
details of the legend and the mode of the death
varied in the
different Countries where the Mysteries were practiced.
heir
explanation belongs both to astronomy and mythology, and the Legend
of
the Master's Degree is but another form of that of the
Mysteries, reaching
back, in one shape or other, to the remotest
antiquity.
Whether Egypt originated the legend, or borrowed it
from India or Chaldea, it
is now impossible to know. But the
Hebrews received the Mysteries from the
Egyptians; and of course
were familiar with their legend,-known as it was to
those
Egyptian Initiates, Joseph and Moses. It was the fable (or rather
the
truth clothed in allegory and figures) of Osiris, the Sun,
Source of Light and
Principle of good, and Typhon, the Principle
of Darkness, and Evil. In all the
histories of the Gods and
Heroes lay couched and hidden astronomical details
and the
history of the operations of visible Nature; and those in their
turn
were also symbols of higher and profounder truths. None but
rude uncultivated
intellects could long consider the Sun and
Stars and the Powers of Nature as
Divine, or as fit objects of
Human Worship; and they will consider them so
while the world
lasts ; and ever. remain ignorant of the great Spiritual
Truths
of which these are the hieroglyphics and expressions.
A
brief summary of the Egyptian legend will serve to show the leading
idea on
which the Mysteries among the Hebrews were based. Osiris,
said to have been an
ancient King of Egypt, was the Sun; and
Isis, his wife, the Moon: and his
history recounts, in poetical
and figurative style, the annual journey of the
Great Luminary of
Heaven through the different Signs of the Zodiac. In the
absence
of Osiris, Typhon, his brother, filled with envy and malice, sought
to
usurp his throne ; but his plans were frustrated by Isis. Then
he resolved to
kill Osiris. This he did,. by persuading him to
enter a coffin or sarcophagus,
which he then flung into the Nile.
Alter a Long search, Isis found the body,
and concealed it in the
depths of a forest ; but Typhon, finding it there, cut
it into
fourteen pieces, and scattered them hither and thither. After
tedious
search, Isis found thirteen pieces, the fishes having
oaten the other (the
privates), which she replaced of wood, and
buried the body at Philae; where a
temple of surpassing
magnificence was erected in honor of Osiris.
Isis, aided by her
son Orus, Horus or Har-oeri, warred against Typhon, slew
him,
reigned gloriously, and at her death was reunited to her husband, in
the
same tomb. Typhon was represented as born of the earth ; the
upper part of his
body covered with feathers, in stature reaching
the clouds, his arms and legs
covered with scales, serpents
darting from him on every side, and fire flashing
from his mouth.
Horus, who aided in slaying him, became the God of the
Sun,
answering to the Grecian Apollo; and Typhon is but the
anagram of Python, the
great serpent slain by Apollo.
The word
Typhon, like Eve, signifies a serpent, and life. By its form
the
serpent symbolizes life, which circulates through all nature.
When, toward the
end of autumn, the Woman (Virgo), in the
constellations seems (upon the
Chaldean sphere) to crush with her
heel the head of the serpent, this figure
foretells the coming of
winter, during which life seems to retire from all
beings, and no
longer to circulate through nature. This is why Typhon
signifies
also a serpent, the symbol of winter, which, in the
Catholic Temples, is
represented surrounding the Terrestrial
Globe, which surmounts the heavenly
cross, emblem of redemption.
If the word Typhon is derived from Tupoul) it
signifies a tree
which produces apples (mala) evils), the Jewish origin of
the
fall of man: Typhon means also one who supplants, and
signifies the human
passions, which expel from our hearts the
lessons of wisdom. In the Egyptian
Fable, Isis wrote the sacred
word for the instruction of men, and Typhon
effaced it as fast as
she wrote it. In morals, his name signifies Pride,
Ignorance and
Falsehood.
When Isis first found the body, where it had floated
ashore near Byblos, a
shrub of Erica or tamarisk near it had, by
the virtue of the body, shot up into
a tree around it, and
protected it; and hence our sprig of acacia. Isis was
also aided
in her search by Anubis, in the shape of a dog. He was Sirius or
the
Dog-Star, the friend and counselor of Osiris, and the
inventor sf language,
grammar, astronomy, surveying, arithmetic,
music, and medical science; the
first maker of laws; and who
taught the worship of the Gods, and the building
of
Temples.
In the Mysteries, the nailing up of the body of Osiris
in the chest or ark was
termed the aphanism) or disappearance [of
the Sun at the Winter Solstice, below
the Tropic of Capricorn],
and the recovery of the different parts of his body
by Isis, the
Euresis, or finding. The candidate went through a
ceremony
representing this, in all the Mysteries everywhere. The
main facts in the fable
were the same in all countries; and the
prominent Deities were everywhere a
male and a female.
In
Egypt they were Osiris and Isis: in India, Mahadeva and Bhavani :
in
Phoenicia, Thammuz (or Adonis) and Astarte: in Phrygia, Atys
and Cybele: in
Persia, Mithras and Asis: in Samothrace and
Greece, Dionysus or Sabazeus and
Rhea: in Britain, Hu and
Ceridwen : and in Scandinavia, Woden and Frea: and in
every
instance these Divinities represented the Sun and the Moon.
The
mysteries of Osiris, Isis, and Horus, seem to have been the model of
all
other ceremonies of initiation subsequently established among
the different
peoples of the world. Those of Atys and Cybele,
celebrated in Phrygia; those of
Ceres and Proserpine, at Eleusis
and many other places in Greece, were but
copies of them. This we
learn from Plutarch, Diodorus Siculus, Lactantius, and
other
writers; and in the absence of direct testimony should necessarily
infer
it from the similarity of the adventures of these Deities ;
for the ancients
held that the Ceres of he Greeks was the same as
the Isis of the Egyptians; and
Dionusos or Bacchus as
Osiris.
In the legend of Osiris and Isis, as given by Plutarch,
are many details and
circumstances other than those that we have
briefly mentioned; and all of which
we need not repeat here.
Osiris married his sister Isis ; and labored publicly
with her to
ameliorate he lot of men. He taught them agriculture, while
Isis
invented laws. He built temples to the Gods, and established
their worship.
Both were the patrons of artists and their useful
inventions: and .introduced
the use of iron for defensive weapons
and implements of agriculture, and of
gold to adorn the temples
of the Gods. He went forth with an army to conquer
men to
civilization, teaching he people whom he overcame to plant the vine
and
sow grain for food.
Typhon, his brother, slew him when the
sun was in the sign of e Scorpion, that
is to say, at the
Autumnal Equinox. They had been rival claimants, says
Synesius,
for the throne of Egypt, as Light and Darkness contend ever for
the
empire of the world. Plutarch adds, that at the time when
Osiris was slain, the
moon was at its full; and therefore it was
in the sign opposite the Scorpion,
that is, the Bull, the sign of
the Vernal Equinox.
Plutarch assures us that it was to represent
these events and details that
Isis established the Mysteries, in
which they were reproduced by images,
symbols, and a religious
ceremonial, whereby they were imitated : and in which
lessons of
piety were given, and consolations under the misfortunes
that
afflict us here below. Those who instituted these Mysteries
meant to strengthen
religion and console men in their sorrows by
the lofty hopes found in a
religious faith, whose principles were
represented to them covered by a pompous
ceremonial, and under
the sacred veil of allegory.
Diodorus speaks of the famous
columns erected near Nysa, in Arabia, where, it
was said, were
two of the tombs of Osiris and Isis. On one was this
inscription:
"I am Isis, Queen of this country. I was instructed by Mercury.
No
one can destroy the laws which I have established. I am the
eldest daughter of
Saturn, most ancient of the Gods. I am the
wife and sister of Osiris the King.
I first made known tomortals
the use of wheat. I am the mother of Orus the
King. In my honor
was the city of Bubaste built. Rejoice, O Egypt, rejoice,
land
that gave me birth!" ... And on the other was this: "I am Osiris the
King,
who led my armies into all parts of the world, to the most
thickly inhabited
countries of India, the North, the Danube, and
the Ocean. I am the eldest son
of Saturn : I was born of the
brilliant and magnificent egg, and my substance
is of the same
nature as that which composes light. There is no place in
the
Universe where I have not appeared, to bestow my benefits and
make known my
discoveries." The rest was illegible.
To aid her
in the search for the body of Osiris, and to nurse her infant
child
Horus, Isis sought out and took with her Anubis, son of
Osiris, and his sister
Nephte. He, as we have said, was Sirius,
the brightest star in the Heavens.
After finding him, she went to
Byblos, and seated herself near a fountain;
where she had learned
that the sacred chest had stopped which contained the
body of
Osiris. There she sat, sad and silent, shedding a torrent of
tears.
Thither came the women of the C6urt of Queen Astarte, and
she spoke to them,
and dressed their heir, pouring upon it
deliciously perfumed ambrosia. This
known to the Queen, Isis was
engaged as nurse for her child, in the palace, one
of the columns
of which was made of the Erica or tamarisk, that had grown
up
over the chest containing Osiris, cut down by the King, and
unknown to him,
still enclosing the chest: which column Isis
afterward demanded, and from it
extracted the chest and the body,
which, the latter wrapped in thin drapery and
perfumed, she
carried away with her.
Blue Masonry, ignorant of its import,
still retains among its emblems one of a
woman weeping over a
broken column, holding in her hand a branch of acacia,
myrtle, or
tamarisk, while Time, we are told, stands behind her combing out
the
ringlets of her hair. We need not repeat the vapid and
trivial explanation
there given, of this representation of Isis,
weeping at Byblos, over the column
torn from the palace of the
living, that contained the body of Osiris, while
Horus, the God
of Time, pours ambrosia on her hair.
Nothing of this recital was
historical; but the whole was an allegory or
sacred fable,
containing a meaning known only to those who were initiated
into
the Mysteries. All the incidents were astronomical, with a
meaning still deeper
lying behind that explanation, and so hidden
by a double veil. The Mysteries in
which these incidents were
represented and explained, were like those of
Eleusis in their
object, of which Pausanias, who was initiated, says that
the
Greeks, from the remotest antiquity, regarded them as the
best calculated of
all things to lead mental piety : and
Aristotle says they were the most
valuable of all religious
instillations, and thus were called mysteries par
excellence; and
the Temple of Eleusis was regarded as, in some sort, the
common
sanctuary of the whole earth, where religion had brought
together all that was
most imposing and most august.
The
object of all the Mysteries was to inspire men with piety, and to
console
them in the miseries of life. That consolation, so
afforded, was the hope of a
happier future, and of pasting, after
death, to a state of eternal felicity.
Cicero says that the
Initiates not only received lessons which made life
more
agreeable, but drew from the ceremonies happy hopes for the
moment of death.
Socrates says that those who were so fortunate
as to be admitted to the
Mysteries, possessed, when dying, the
most glorious hopes for eternity.
Aristides says that they not
only procure the Initiates consolations in the
present life, and
means of deliverance from the great weight of their evils,
but
also the precious advantage of passing after death to a happier
state.
Isis was the Goddess of Sais; and the famous Feast of
Lights was celebrated
there in her honor. There were celebrated
the Mysteries, in which were
represented the death and subsequent
restoration to life of the God Osiris, in
a secret ceremony and
scenic representation of his sufferings, called the
Mysteries of
Night.
The Kings of Egypt often exercised the functions of the
Priesthood; and they
were initiated into the sacred science as
soon as they attained the throne. So
at Athens, the First
Magistrate, or Archon-King, superintended the Mysteries.'
This
was an image of the union that existed between the Priesthood and
Royalty,
in those early times when legislators and kings sought
in religion a potent
political instrument.
Herodotus says,
speaking of the reasons why animals were deified in Egypt: "If
I
were to explain these reasons, I should be led to the disclosure of
those
holy matters which I particularly wish to avoid, and which,
but from necessity,
I should not leave discussed at all." So he
says, "The Egyptians have at Sais
the tomb of a certain
personage, whom I do not think myself permitted to
specify. It is
behind the Temple of Minerva." [The latter, so called by
the
Greeks, was really Isis, whose was the often-cited
enigmatical inscription, "I
am what was and is and is to come. No
mortal hath yet unveiled me."] So again
he says: "Upon this lake
are represented by night the accidents which happened
to him whom
I dare not name. The Egyptians call them their
Mysteries.
Concerning these, at the same time that I confess
myself sufficiently informed,
I feel myself compelled to be
silent. Of the ceremonies also in honor of Ceres
I may not
venture to speak, further than the obligations of religion will
allow
me."
It is easy to see what was the great object of
initiation and the Mysteries ;
whose first and greatest fruit
was, as all the ancients testify, to civilize
savage hordes, to
soften their ferocious manners, to introduce among them
social
intercourse, and lead them into a way of life more worthy of men.
Cicero
considers the establishment of the EIeusiiiian Mysteries
to be the greatest of
all the benefits conferred by Athens on
other commonwealths ; their effects
381 having been, he says, to
civilize men, soften their savage and ferocious
manners, `and
teach them the true principles of morals, which initiate man
into
the only kind of life worthy of him. The same philosophic
orator, in a passage
where he apostrophizes Ceres and Proserpine,
says that mankind owes these
Goddesses the first elements of
moral life, as well as the first means of
sustenance of physical
life ; knowledge of the laws, regulation of morals, and
those
examples of civilization which have improved the manners of men
and
cities.
Bacchus in Euripides says to Pentheus, that his
new institution (the Dionysian
Mysteries) deserved to be known,
and that one of its great advantages was, that
it prescribed all
impurity : that these were the Mysteries of Wisdom, of which
it
would be imprudent to speak to persons not initiated : that they
were
established among the Barbarians, who in that showed greater
wisdom than the
Greeks, who had not yet received them.
This
double object, political and religious,-one teaching our duty to
men, and
the other what we owe to the Gods; or rather, respect
for the Gods calculated
to maintain that which we owe the laws,
is found in that well-known verse of
Virgil, borrowed by him from
the ceremonies of initiation : "Teach me to
respect Justice and
the Gods." This great lesson, which the Hierophant
impressed on
the Initiates, after they had witnessed a representation of
the
Infernal regions, the Poet places after his description of
the different
punishments suffered by the wicked in Tartarus, and
immediately after the
description of that of
Sisyphus.
Pausanias, likewise, at the close of the
representation of the punishments of
Sisyphus and the daughters
of Danaus, in the Temple at Delphi, makes this
reflection ; that
the crime or impiety which in them had chiefly merited
this
punishment, was the contempt which they had shown for the
Mysteries of Eleusis.
From this reflection of Pausanias, who was
an Initiate, it is easy to see that
the Priests of Eleusis, who
taught the dogma of punishment in Tartarus,
included among the
great crimes deserving these punishments, contempt for
and
disregard of the Holy Mysteries; whose object was to lead men
to piety, and
thereby to respect for justice and the laws, chief
object of their institution,
if not the only one, and to fvhich
the needs and interest of religion itself
were subordinate; since
the latter was but a means to lead more surely to the
foyer ; for
the whole force of religious opinions being in the hands of
the
legislators to be wielded, they were sure of being better
obeyed.
The Mysteries were not merely simple illustrations and
the observation of some
arbitrary formulas and ceremonies ; nor a
means of reminding men of the ancient
condition of the race prior
to civilization: but they led men to piety by
instruction in
morals and as to a future life; which at a very early day, if
not
originally, formed the chief portion of the ceremonial.
Symbols
were used in the ceremonies, which referred to agriculture, as
Masonry
has preserved the ear of wheat in a symbol and in one of
her words; but their
principal reference was to astronomical
phenomena. Much was no doubt said as to
the condition of
brutality and degradation in which man was sunk before
the
institution of the Mysteries ; but the allusion was rather
metaphysical, to the
ignorance of the uninitiated, than to the
wild life of the earliest men.
The great object of the Mysteries
of Isis, and in general of all the
Mysteries, was a great and
truly politic one. It was to ameliorate our race, to
perfect, its
manners and morals, and to restrain society by stronger bonds
than
those that human laws impose. They were the invention of
that ancient science
and wisdom which exhausted all its resources
to make legislation perfect ; and
of that philosophy which has
ever sought to secure the happiness of man, by
purifying his soul
from the passions which can trouble it, and asia
necessary
consequence introduce social disorder. And that they
were the work of genius is
evident from their employment of all
the sciences, a profound knowledge of the
human heart, and the
means of subduing it.
It is a still greater mistake to imagine
that they were the inventions of
charlatanism, and means of
deception. They may in the lapse of time have
degenerated into
imposture and schools of false ideas; but they were not so at
the
beginning; or else the wisest and best men of antiquity have uttered
toe
most willful falsehoods. In process 0f time the very
allegories of the
Mysteries themselves, Tantalus and its
punishments, Minos and the other judges
of the dead. came to be
misunderstood, and to be false because they were so;
while at
first they were true, because they were recognized as merely
the
arbitrary forms in which truths were enveloped.
The object
of the Mysteries was to procure for man a real felicity on earth
by
the means of virtue; and to that end he was taught that his
soul was immortal ;
and that error, sin, and vice must needs, by
an inflexible law, produce their
consequences. The rude
representations of physical torture in Tantalus was but
an image
of , the certain, unavoidable, eternal consequences that flow by
the
law of God's enactment from the sin committed and the vice
indulged in. The
poets and mystagogues labored to propagate these
doctrines of the soul's
immortality and the certain punishment of
sin and vice, and to accredit them
with the people, by teaching
them the former in their poems, and the latter in
the
sanctuaries; and they clothed them with the charms, the one of
poetry, and
the other of spectacles and magic illusions.
They
painted, aided by all the resources of art, the virtuous man's
happy
lif.e after death, and the horrors of the frightful prisons
destined to punish
the vicious. In the shades of the sanctuaries,
these delights and horrors were
exhibited as spectacles, and the
Initiates witnessed religious dramas, under
the name of
initiation and mysteries. Curiosity was excited by secrecy, by
tie
difficulty experienced in obtaining admission, and by the
tests to be
undergone. The candidate was amused by the variety of
the scenery, the pomp of
the decorations, the appliances of
machinery. Respect was inspired by the
gravity and dignity of the
actors and the majesty of the ceremonial ; and fear
and hope,
sadness and delight, were in turns excited.
The Hierophants, men
of intellect, and well understanding the disposition of
the
people and the art of controlling them, used every appliance to
attain that
object, and give importance and impressiveness to
their ceremonies. As they
covered those ceremonies with the veil
of Secrecy, so they preferred that Night
, should cover them with
its wings. Obscurity adds to impressiveness, and
assists
illusion; and they used it to produce an effect upon the
astonished
Initiate. The ceremonies were conducted in caverns
dimly lighted : thick groves
were planted around the Temples, to
produce that gloom that impresses the mind
with a religious
awe.
The very word mystery, according to Demetrius Phalereus, was
a metaphorical
expression that denoted the secret awe which
darkness and gloom inspired. The
night was almost always the time
fixed for their celebration ; and they were
ordinarily termed
nocturnal ceremonies. Initiations into the Mysteries
of
Samothrace tookplace at night ; as did those of Isis, of which
Apuleius speaks.
Euripides makes Bacchus say, that his
Mysteries were celebrated at night,
because there is in night
something august and imposing. Nothing excites men's
curiosity so
much as Mystery, concealing things which they desire to know :
and
nothing so much increases curiosity as obstacles that
interpose to prevent them
frown indulging in the gratification of
their desires. Of this the Legislators
and Hierophants took
advantage, to attract the people to their sanctuaries, and
to
induce them to seek to obtain lessons from which they would perhaps
have
turned away with indifference, if they had been pressed upon
them. In this
spirit of mystery they professed to imitate the
Deity who hides Himself from
our senses, and conceals from us the
springs by which He moves the Universe.
They admitted that they
concealed the highest truths under the veil of
allegory, the more
to excite the curiosity of men, and to urge them
to
investigation. The secrecy in which they buried their
Mysteries, had that end.
Those to whom they were confided, bound
themselves, by the most fearful oaths,
never to reveal `them.
They were not allowed even to speak of these important
secrets
with any others than the initiated ; and the penalty of death
was
pronounced against any one indiscreet enough to reveal them,
or found in the
Temple without being an Initiate; and any one who
had betrayed those secrets,
was avoided by all, as
excommunicated.
Aristotle was accused of impiety, by the
Hierophant Eurymendon, for having
sacrificed to the manes of his
wife, according to the rite used in the worship
of Ceres. He was
compelled to flee to Chalcis ; and to purge his memory from
this
stain, he directed, by his will, the erection of a Statue to that
Goddess.
Socrates, dying, sacrificed to Esculapius, to exculpate
himself from the
suspicion of Atheism. A price was set on the
head of Diagoras because he had
divulged the Secret of the
Mysteries. Andocides was accused of the same crime,
as was
Alcibiades, and both were cited to answer the charge before
the
inquisition at Athens, where the People were the Judges:
Aeschylus the
Tragedian was accused of having represented the
Mysteries on the. stage ; and
was acquitted only on proving that
he had never been initiated.
Seneca, comparing Philosophy to
initiation, says that the most sacred
ceremonies could be known
to the adapts alone : but that man of their precepts
were known
even to the Profane. Such 385 was the case with the doctrine of
a
future life, and a state of rewards and punishments beyond the
grave. The
ancient legislators clothed this doctrine in the pomp
of a mysterious ceremony,
in mystic words and magical
representations, to impress upon the mind the
truths they taught,
by the strong influence of such scenic displays upon the
senses
and imagination.
In the same way they taught the origin of the
soul, its fall to the earth past
the spheres and through the
elements, and its final return to the place of its
origin, when,
during the continuance of its union with earthly matter,
the
sacred fire, which formed its essence, had contracted no
stains, and its
brightness had not been marred by foreign
particles, which, denaturalizing it,
weighed it down and delayed
its return. These metaphysical ideas, with
difficulty
comprehended by the mass of the Initiates, were represented
by
figures, by symbols, and by allegorical analogies; no idea
being so abstract
that men do not seek to give it expression by,
and translate it into, sensible
images.
The attraction of
Secrecy was enhanced by the difficulty of obtaining
admission.
Obstacles and suspense redoubled curiosity. Those who aspired to
the
initiation of the Sun and in the Mysteries of Mathias in
Persia, underwent many
trials. `rhey commenced by easy tests and
arrived by degrees at those that were
most cruel, in which the
life of the candidate was often endangered. Gregory
Nazianzen
terms them tortures and mystic punishments. No one call be
initiated,
says Suidas, until after he has proven, by the most
terrible trials, that he
possesses a virtuous soul, exempt from
the sway of every passion, and at it
were impassible. There were
twelve principal tests; and some make the number
larger.
The
trials of the Eleusinian initiations were not so terrible ; but they
were
severe ; and the suspense, above all in which the aspirant
was kept for several
years [the memory of which is retained in
Masonry by the ages of those of the
different Degrees ], or the
interval between admission to the inferior and
initiation in the
great Mysteries, was a species of torture to the curiosity
which
it was desired to excite. Thus the Egyptian Priests tried
Pythagoras
before admitting him to know the secrets of the sacred
science. He succeeded,
by his incredible patience and the courage
with which he surmounted all
obstacles, in obtaining admission to
their society and receiving their lessons.
Among the Jews, the
Essenes admitted none among them, until they had passed the
tests
or several Degrees.
By initiation, those who before were
fellow-citizens only, became brothers,
connected by a closer bond
than before, by means. of a religious fraternity,
which, bringing
men nearer together, united them more strongly : and the weak
and
the poor could more readily appeal for assistance to the powerful
and the
wealthy, with whom religious association gave them a
closer fellowship.
The Initiate was regarded as the favorite of
the Gods. For him alone Heaven
opened its treasures. Fortunate
during life, he could, by virtue and the favor
of Heaven, promise
himself after death an eternal felicity.
The Priests of the
Island of Samothrace promised favorable winds and
prosperous
voyages to those who wer initiated. It was promised them that
the
CABIRI, and Castor and Pollux, the Dioscuri, should appear to
them when the
storm raged, and give them calms and smooth seas:
and the Scholiast of
Aristophanes says that those initiated in
the Mysteries there were just men,
who were privileged to escape
from great evils and tempests.
The Initiate in the Mysteries of
Orpheus, after he was purified, was
considered as released from
the empire of evil, and transferred to a condition
of life which
gave him the happiest hopes. "I have emerged from evils'? he
was
made to say, “and have attained good." Those initiated in the
Mysteries of
Eleusis believed that the Sun blazed with a pure
splendor for them alone. And,
as we see in the case of Pericles,
they flattered themselves that Ceres and
Proserpine inspired them
and gave them wisdom and counsel.
Initiation dissipated errors
and banished misfortune and after having filled
the heart of man
with joy during life, it gave him the most blissful hopes at
the
moment of da We owe it to the Goddesses of Eleusis, says Socrates,
that we
do not lead the wild life of the earliest men : and to
them are due the
flattering hopes which initiation gives us for
the moment of death and for all
eternity. The benefit which we
reap from these august ceremonies, says
Aristides, is not only
present joy, a deliverance and enfranchisement from the
old ills
; but also the sweet hope which we have in` death of passing to a
more
fortunate state. And Theon says that participation of the
Mysteries is the
finest of all things, and the source of the
greatest blessings. The happiness
promised there was not limited
to this mortal life ; but it extended beyond the
grave. There a
new life was to commence, during which the Initiate was to
enjoy
a bliss without alloy and without limit. The Corybantes
promised eternal life
to the Initiates of the Mysteries of Cybele
and Atys.
Apuleius represents Lucius, while still in the form of
an ass, as addressing
his prayers to Isis, whom be speaks of as
the same as Ceres, Venus, Diana, and
Proserpine, and as
illuminating the walls of many cities simultaneously with
her
feminine lustre, and substituting her quivering light for the bright
rays
of the Sun. She appears to him in his vision as a beautiful
female, "over whose
divine neck her long thick hair hung in
graceful ringlets" Addressing him, she
says, "The parent of
Universal nature attends thy call. The mistress of the
Elements,
initiative germ of generations, Supreme of Deities, Queen of
departed
spirits, first inhabitant of Heaven, and uniform type of
all the Gods and
Goddesses, propitiated by thy prayers, is with
thee. She governs with her nod
the luminous heights of the
firmament, the salubrious breezes of the ocean; the
silent
deplorable depths of the shades below ; one Sole Divintiy under
mazy
forms, worshipped by the different nations of the Earth
under many titles, and
with various a religious
rites."
Directing him how to proceed, at her festival, to
re-obtain his human shape,
she says : "Throughout the entire
course of the remainder of thy life, until
the very last breath
has vanished from thy lips, thou art devoted to my service
Under
my protection will thy life be happy and glorious: and when, thy.
days
being spent, thou shall descend to the shades below, and
inhabit
the Elysian fields, there also, even in the subterranean
hemisphere, shall thou
pay frequent worship fo me, thy propitious
patron : and yet further : if
through sedulous obedience,
religious devotion to my ministry, and inviolable
chastity, thou
shall prove thyself a worthy object of divine favor, then
shall
thou fell the influence of the power that I alone possess.
The number of thy
days shall be prolonged beyond the ordinary
decrees of fate." In the procession
of the festival, Lucius saw
the image of the Goddess, on either side of which
were female
attendants, that, "with ivory combs in their hands, made
believe,
by the motion of their arms and the divesting of their
fingers, to comb and
ornament the Goddess' royal hair."
Afterward, clad in linen robes, came the
initiated, "The hair of
the women was moistened by perfume, and
enveloped in a
transparent covering; but the men, terrestrial stars, as it
were,
of the great religion, were thoroughly shaven, and their bald heads
shone
exceedingly." Afterward came the Priests, in robes of white
linen. The first
bore a lamp in the form of a boat, emitting
flame from an orifice in the middle
: the second, a small altar :
the third, a golden palmtree : and the fourth
displayed the
figure of a left hand, the palm open and expanded,
"representing
thereby a symbol of equity and fair-dealing, of
which the left hand, as slower
than the right hand, and more void
of skill and craft, is therefore an
appropriate emblem."
After
Lucius had, by the grace of Isis, recovered his human form, the
Priest
said to him, "Calamity hath no hold on those whom our
Goddess hath chosen for
her service, and whom her majesty hath
vindicated." And the people declared
that he was fortunate to be
"thus after a manner born again, and at once
betrothed to the
service of the Holy Ministry."
When he urged the Chief Priest to
initiate him, he was answered that there was
not "a single one
among the initiated, of a mind so degraded, or so bent on his
own
destruction, as, without receiving a special command from Isis, to
dare to
undertake her ministry rashly and sacrilegiously, and
thereby commit an act
certain to bring upon himself a dreadful
injury." "For" continued the Chief
Priest,.” the gates of the
shades below, and the care of our life being in the
hands of the
Goddess,-the ceremony of initiation into the Mysteries is, as
it
were, to suffer death, with the precarious chance of
resuscitation. Wherefore
the Goddess, in the wisdom of her
divinity, hath been accustomed to select as
persons to whom the
secrets of her religion can with propriety be entrusted,
those
who, standing as it were on the utmost limit of the course of life
they
have completed, may through her Providence be in a manner
born again, and
commence the career of a new existence." When he
was finally to be initiated,
he was conducted to the nearest
baths, and after having bathed, the Priest
first solicited
forgiveness of the Gods, and then sprinkled him all over with
the
clearest and purest water, and conducted him back to the Temple;
"where,"
says Apuleius, "after giving me some instruction, that
mortal tongue is not
permitted t0 reveal, he bade me for the
succeeding ten days restrain my
appetite, eat no animal food, and
drink no wine."
These ten days elapsed, the Priest led him into
the inmost recesses of the
Sanctuary. "And here, studious
reader," he continues "peradventure thou wilt be
suffciently
anxious to know all that was said and done, which, were it
lawful
to divulge, I would' tell thee; and, wert thou permitted
to hear, thou shouldst
know. Nevertheless, although the
disclosure would affix the penalty of rash
curiosity to my tongue
as well as thy ears, yet will I, for fear thou shouldst
be too
long tormented with religious longing, and suffer the pain of
protracted
suspense, tell the truth notwithstanding. Listen then
to what I shall relate.
I approached the abode of death; with my
foot I pressed the threshold of
Proserpine's Palace. I was
transported through the elements, and conducted back
again. At
midnight I saw the bright light of the sun shining. I stood in
the
presence of the Gods, the Gods of Heaven and of the Shades
below; ay, stood
clear and worskipped. And now have I told thee
such things that, hearing, thou
necessarily canst not understand
; and being beyond the comprehension of the
Profane, I can
enunciate without committing a crime." After night had
passed,
and the morning had dawned, the usual ceremonies were at
an end. Then he was
consecrated by twelve stoles being put upon
him, clothed, crowned with
palmleaves, and exhibited to the
people. The remainder of that day was
celebrated as his birthday
and passed in festivities; and on the third day
afterward, the
same religious ceremonies were repeated, including a
religious
breakfast, "followed by a final consummation of
ceremonies."
A year afterward, he was warned to prepare. for
initiation into the Mysteries
of "the Great God, Supreme Parent
of all the other Gods, the invincible
Osiris." "For," says
Apuleius, "although there is a strict connection between
the
religions of both Deities, AND EVEN THE ESSENCE OF BOTH DIVINITIES
IS
IDENTICAL, the ceremonies of the respective initiations are
considerably
different."
Compare with this hint the following
language of the prayer of Lucius,
addressed to Isis ; and we may
judge what doctrines were taught in the
Mysteries, in regard to
the Deity: "O Holy and Perpetual Preserver of the Human
Race !
ever ready to cherish mortals by Thy munificence, and to afford
Thy
sweet maternal affection to the wretched under misfortune ;
Whose bounty is
never at rest, neither by day nor by night, nor
throughout the very minutest
particle of duration; Thou who
stretchest forth Thy health-bearing right hand
over the land and
over the sea for the protection of mankind, to disperse
the
storms of life, to unravel the inextricable entanglement of
the web of fate, to
mitigate the tempests of fortune, and
restrain the malignant infilences of the
stars,-the Gods in
Heaven adore Thee, the Gods in the shades below do Thee
homage,
tke stars obey Thee, the Divinities rejoice in Thee, the elements
and
the revolving seasons serve Thee! At Thy nod the Winds
breathe, clouds gather,
seeds grow, buds germinate; in obedience
to Thee the Earth revolves AND THE SUN
GIVES US LIGHT. IT IS THOU
WHO GOVERNEST THE UNIVERSE AND TREADEST TARTARUS
UNDER THY
FEET."
Then he was initiated into the nocturnal Mysteries of
Osiris and Serapis: and
afterward into those of Ceres at Rome:
but of the ceremonies in these
initiations, Apuleius says
nothing. Under the Archonship of Euclid, bastards
and slaves were
excluded from initiation ; and the same exclusion
obtained
against the Materialists or Epicureans who denied
Providence and consequently
the utility of initiation. By a
natural progress, it came at length to be
considered that the
gates of Elysium would open only for the Initiates, whose
souls
had been purified and regenerated in the sanctuaries. But it was
never
held, on the other hand, that initiation alone sufficed. We
learn from Plato,
that it was also necessary for the soul to be
purified from every stain: and
that the purification necessary
was such as gave virtue, truth, wisdom,
strength, justice, and
temperance.
Entrance to the Temples was forbidden to all who had
committed homicide, even
if it were involuntary. So it is stated
by both Isocrates and Theon. Magicians
and Charlatans who made
trickery a trade, and impostors pretending to be
possessed by
evil spirits, were excluded from the sanctuaries. Every
impious
person and criminal was rejected ; and Lampridius states
that before the
celebration of the Mysteries, public notice was
given, that none need apply to
enter but those against whom their
consciences uttered no reproach, and who
were certain of their
own innocence.
It was required of the Initiate that his heart and
hands should be free from
any stain. Porphyry says that man's
soul, at death, should be enfranchised from
all the passions,
from hate, envy, and the others; and, in a word, be as pure
as it
is required to be in the Mysteries. Of course it is not surprising
that
parricides and perk jurors, and others who had committed
crimes against God or
man, could not be admitted.
In the
Mysteries of Mithras, a lecture was repeated to the Initiate on
the
subject of Justice. And the great moral. Lesson of the
Mysteries, to which all
their mystic ceremonial tended, expressed
in a single line by Virgil, was to
practice Justice and revere
the Deity, -thus recalling men to justice, by
connecting it with
the justice of the Gods, who require it and punish
its
infraction. The Initiate could aspire to the favors of the
Gods, only because
and while he respected the rights of society
and those of humanity. "The sun,"
says the chorus of Initiates in
Aristophanes, "burns with a pure light for us
alone, who,
admitted to the' Mysteries, observe the laws of piety in
our
intercourse with strangers and our fellow-citizens." The
rewards of initiation
were attached to the practice of the,
social virtues. It was not enough to be
initiated merely. It was
necessary to be faithful to the laws of initiation,
which imposed
on men duties in regard to their kind. Bacchus allowed none
to
participate in his Mysteries, but men who performed to the
rules of piety and
justice. Sensibility, above all, and
compassion for the misfortunes of others,
were precious virtues,
which initiation strove to encourage. "Nature," says
Juvenal "has
created us compassionate, since it has endowed us with
tears.
Sensibility is the most admirable of our senses. What man
is truly worthy of
the torch of the Mysteries; who such as the
Priest of Ceres requires him to be,
if he regards the misfortunes
of others as wholly foreign to himself?"
All who had not used
their endeavors to defeat a conspiracy,
and those who had on the
contrary fomented one; those citizens who had betrayed
their
country, who had surrendered an advantageous post or place, or
the
vessels of the State, to the enemy; all who had supplied the
enemy with money;
and in general, all who had come short of their
duties as honest men and good
citizens., were excluded from the
Mysteries of Eleusis. To be admitted there,
one must have lived
equitably, and with suffcient good fortune not to be
regarded as
hated by the Gods.
Thus the Society of the Initiates was, in its
principle, and according to the
true purpose of its institution,
a society of virtuous men, who labored to free
their souls from
the tyranny of the passions, and to develop the germ of all
the
social virtues, And this was the meaning of the idea,
afterward
misunderstood, that entry into Elysium was only allowed
to the Initiates :
because entrance to the sanctuaries was
allowed to the virtuous only, and
Elysium was created for
virtuous souls alone.
The precise nature and details of the
doctrines as to a future life, and
rewards and punishments there,
developed in the Mysteries, is in a measure
uncertain. Little
direct information in regard to it has corme down to us.
No
doubt, in the ceremonies, there was a scenic representation of
Tantalus and the
judgment of the dead, resembling that which we
find in Virgil : but there is as
little doubt ihat these
representations were explained to be allegorical. It is
not our
purpose here to repeat the descriptions given We are only
concerned
with the great fact that the Mysteries taught the
doctrine of the soul's
immortality, and that, in some shape,
suffering, pain, remorse, and agony, ever
follow sin as its
consequences.
Human ceremonies are indeed but imperfect symbols;
and the alternate baptisms
in fire and iwater intended to purify
us into immortality, are ever in, this
world interrupted at the
moment of their anticipated completion. Life its a
mirror which
reflects only to deceive, a tissue perpetually. Interrupted
and
broken, an urn forever fed, yet never ful1.
All initiation
is but introductory to the great change of death.
Baptism,
anointing, embalming, obsequies by burial or fire, are
preparatory symbols,
like the initiation of Hercules before
descending to the Shades, pointing out
the mental change which
ought to prece4e the renewal of existence. Death is the
true
initiation, to which sleep is the introductory or minor mystery. It
is the
final rite which united the Egyptian with his God, and
which opens the same
promise to all who are duly prepared for
it.
The body was deemed a prison for the soul; but the latter was
not condemned to
eternal banishment and imprisonment. The Father
of the Worlds permits its
chains to be broken, and has provided
in the course of Nature the means of its
escape. It was a
doctrine of immemorial antiquity, shared alike by
Egyptians,
Pythagoreans, the Orphici, and by that characteristic
Bacchus Sage, "the
Preceptor of the Soul," Silence, that death is
far better than life; that the
real death belongs to those who on
earth are immersed in the Lethe of its
passions and fascinations,
and that the true life commences only when the soul
is
emancipated for its return.
And in this sense, as presiding over
life and death, Dionysus is in the
highest sense the LIBERATOR :
Since, like Osiris, he frees the soul, and guides
it in its
migrations beyond the grave, preserving it from the risk of
again
falling under the slavery of matter or of some inferior
animal form, the
purgatory of Metempsychosis ; and exalting and
perfecting its nature through
the purifying discipline of his
Mysteries. "The great consummation of all
philosophy," said
Socrates, professedly quoting from traditional and
mystic
sources, "is Death: He who pursues philosophy aright, is
studying how to die."
All soul is part of the Universal Soul,
whose totality is Dionysus; and it is
therefore he who, as Spirit
of Spirits, leads back the vagrant spirit to its
home, and
accompanies it through the purifying processes, both real
and
symbolical, of its earthly thansit. He is therefore
emphatically the Mystic or
Hierophant, the great Spiritual
Mediator of Greek religion.
The human soul is itself demonios a
God withers the mind, capable through its
own power of rivaling
the canonization of the Hero, of making itself immortal
by the
practice of the good, and the contemplation of the beautiful and
true.
The removal to the Happy Islands could only be understood
mythically;
everything earthly must die; Man, like OEdipus, is
wounded from his birth, his
realm elysium can exist only beyond
the grave. Dionysus died and descended to
the shades. His passion
was the great Secret of the Mysteries ; as Death is the
Grand
Mystery of existence. His death, typical of Nature's Death, or of
her
periodical decay and restoration, eras one of the many
symbols of the
palingenesia or second birth of man.
Man
descended from the elemental Forces or Titans [Elohim], who fed on
the
body of the Pantheistic Deity creating the Universe by
self-sacrifice,
commemorates in sacramental observance this
mysterious passion ; and while
partaking of the raw flesh of the
victim, seems to be invigorated by a fresh
draught from the
fountain of unversal life, to receive a new pledge of
regenerated
existence. Death is the inseparable antecedent of life; the
seed
lies in order to produce the plant, and earth ishelf is rent
asunder and dies
at the birth of Dionusos. Hence the significancy
of the phallus, or of its
inoffensive substitute, the obelisk,
rising as an emblem of resurrection by the
tomb of buried Deity
at Lerna or it Sais.
Dionysus-Orpheus descended to the Shades to
recover the lost Virgin of the
Zodiac, to bring back his mother
to the sky as Thyone; or what has the same
meaning, to consummate
his eventful marriage with Persephone, thereby securing,
like the
nuptials of his father with Semele or Danae, the perpetuity of
Nature.
His under-earth office is the depression of the year, the
wintry aspect in the
alternations of bull and serpent, whose
united` series makes up the continuity
of Time, and in whirls,
physically speaking, the stash and dark are ever the
parents of
the beautiful and bright.
the Mysteries : the human sufferer was
consoled by witnessing the severer
trials of the Gods; and the
vicissitudes of life and death, expressed by
apposite symbols,
such as the sacrifice or submission of the Bull, the
extinction
and re-illumination of the torch, excited corresponding emotions
of
alternate grief and joy, that play of passion which was
present at the origin
of Nature, and which accompanies all her
changes.
The greater Eleusiniae were celebrated in the month
Boedromion, when the seed
was buried in the ground, and when the
year, verging to its decline, disposes
the mind to serious
reflection. The first days of the ceremonial were passed
in
sorrow and anxious silence, in fasting and expiatory or
lustral offices. On a
sudden, the scene was changed : sorrow and
lamentation were discarded, the glad
name of Bacchus passed from
mouth to mouth, the image of the God, crowned with
myrtle and
bearing a lighted torch, was borne in ,joyful procession from
the
Ceramicus to Eleusis, where, during thee ensuing night, the
initiation was
completed by an imposing revelation. The first
scene was in the paonaos, or
outer court of the sacred enclosure,
where amidst utter darkness, or while the
meditating God, the
star illuminating the Nocturnal Mystery, alone carried
an
unextinguished torch, the candidates were overawed with
terrific sounds and
noises, while they painfully groped their
way, as in the gloomy cavern of the
soul's sub lunar migration ;
a scene justly compared to the passage of the
Valley of the
Shadow of Death. For by the immutable law exemplified in
the
trials of Psyche, man must pass through the terrors of the
under-world, before
he can reach the height of Heaven. At length
the gates of the adytum were
thrown open, a supernatural light
streamed from the illuminated statue 395
of the Goddess, and
enchanting sights and sounds, mingled with songs and
dances,
exalted the communicant to a rapture of supreme felicity, realizing,
as
far as sensuous imagery could depict, the anticipated reunion
with the Gods.
In the dearth of direct evidence as to the detail
of the ceremonies enacted,
or of the meanings connected with
them, their tendency must be inferred from
the characteristics of
the contemplated deities with their accessory symbols
and mythi,
or from direct testimony as to the value of the
Mysteries
generally. The ordinary phenomena of vegetation, the death of
the
seed in
giving birth to the plant, connecting the
sublimest hopes with the plainest
occurrences, was the simple yet
beautiful formula assumed by the great mystery
in almost all
religions, from the Zend-Avesta to the Gospel. As Proserpine,
the
divine power is as the seed decaying and destroyed; as
Artemis, she is the
principle of its destruction ; but Artemis
Proserpine is also Core Soteria, the
Saviour, who leads the
Spirits of Hercules and Hyacinthus to Heaven. Many other
emblems
were employed in the Mysteries,-as the dove, the myrtle-wreath,
and
others, all significant of life rising. out of death, and of
the equivocal
condition of dying yet immortal man.
The horrors
and punishments of Tantalus, as described in the Phaedo and
the
AEneid, with a11 the ceremonies of the judgments of Minos,
Eacus, and
Rhadamanthus, were represented, sometimes more and
sometimes less fully, in the
Mysteries; in order to impress upon
the minds of the Initiates this great
lesson,-that we should be
ever prepared to appear before the Supreme Judge,
with a heart
pure and spotless ; as Socrates teaches in the Gorgias. For
the
soul stained with crimes, he says, to descend to the Shades,
is the bitterest
ill. To adhere to Justice and Wisdom, Plato
holds, is our duty, that we may
some day take that lofty road
that leads toward the heavens, and avoid most of
. the evils to
which the soul is exposed in its subterranean journey of
a
thousand years. And so in the Phaedo, Socrates teaches that we
should seek here
below to free our soul of its passions, in order
to be ready to enter our
appearance, whenever Destiny summons us
to the Shades.
Thus the Mysteries inculcated a great moral truth,
veiled with a fable of huge
proportions and the appliances of an
impressive spectacle, to ,which, exhibited
in the sanctuaries art
and natural magic lent all they had that was imposing.
They
sought to strengthen men against the horrors of death and the
fearful idea
of utter annihilation. Death, says the author of the
dialogue, entitled
Axiochus, included in the works of Plato, is
but a passage to a happier state;
but one must have lived well,
to attain that most fortunate result. So that the
doctrine of the
immortality of the soul was consoling to the virtuous
and
religious man alone; while to all others it came with menaces
and despair,
surrounding them with" terrors and alarms that
disturbed their repose during
all their life.
For the material
horrors of Tantalus, allegorical to the Initiate, were real
to
the mass of the Profane ; nor in latter times, did, perhaps many
Iiiitiates
read rightly the allebaory. The triple-walled prison,
which the condemned soul
first met, round which swelled and
surged the fiery waves of Phlegethon,
wherein rolled roaring,
huge, blazing rocks ; the great gate with columns of
adamant,
which none save the Gods could crush; Tisiphone, their warder,
with
her bloody robes ; the lash resounding on the mangled bodies
of the miserable
unfortunates, their plaintive groans, mingled in
horrid 'harmony with the
clashing of their chains; the Furies,
lashing the guilty with their snakes; the
awful abyss where Hydra
howls with its hundred heads, greedy to devour;
Tityus,
prostrate, and his entrails fed upon by the cruel
vulture; Sisyphus, ever
rolling his rock; Ixion on his wheel;
Tantalus tortured by eternal thirst and
hunger, in the midst of
water and with delicious fruits touching his head ;
the
daughters, of Danaus at their eternal, fruitless task ;
beasts biting and
venomous reptiles stinging ; and devouring
flame eternally consuming bodies
ever renewed in endless agony;
all these sternly impressed upon the people the
terrible
consequences of sin and vice, and urged them to pursue the paths
of
honesty and virtue.
And if , in the ceremonies of the
Mysteries, these material horrors were
explained to the Initiates
as mere symbols of the unimaginable torture,
remorse, and agony
that would rend the immaterial soul and rack the immortal
spirit,
they were feeble and insufficient in the same mode and measure only,
as
all material images and symbols fall short of that which is
beyond the
cognizance of our senses : and the grave Hierophant,
the imagery, the
paintings, the dramatic horrors, the funeral
sacrifices, the august rnysteries,
the solemn silence of the
sanctuaries, were none the less impressive, because
they were
known to be but symbols, that` with material shows and images
made
the imagination to be the teacher of the
intellect.
expiation; and the tests of water, air, and flre were
represented ; by means
of which, during the march of many years,
the soul could be purified, and rise
toward the ethereal regions
; that ascent being more or less tedious and
laborious, according
as each soul was more or less clogged by the gross
impediments
,of its sins and vices. Herein was shadowed forth, (how
distinctly
taught the Initiates we know not), the doctrine that
pain and sorrow,
misfortune and remorse, are the inevitable
consequences that flow from sin and
vice, as effect flows from
cause; that by each sin and every act of vice the
soul drops back
and loses ground in its advance toward perfection : and that
the
ground so, lost is and will be in reality never so recovered as that
the
sin shall be as if it never had been committed; but that
throughout all the
eternity of its existence', each soul shall be
conscious that every act of vice
or baseness it did on earth has
made the distance greater between itself and
ultimate
perfection.
We see this truth glimmering in the doctrine, taught
in the Mysteries, that
though slight and ordinary offences could
be expiated by penances, repentance,
acts of beneficence, and
prayers, grave crimes were mortal sins, beyond the
reach of all
such remedies. Eleusis closed her gates against Nero: and
the
Pagan Priests told Constantine that among all their modes of
expiation there
was none so potent as could wash from his soul
the dark spots left by the
murder of his wife, and his multiplied
perjuries and assassinations.
The object of the ancient
initiations being to ameliorate mankind and to
perfect the
intellectual part of man, the nature of the human soul, its
origin,
its destination, its relations to the body and to
universal nature, all formed
part of the mystic science; and to
them in part the lessons given to the
Initiate were directed. For
it was believed that initiation tended to his
perfection, and to
preventing ,the divine part within him, overloaded with,
matter
gross and earthy, from being plunged into gloom, and impeded in
its
return to the Deity. The soul, with them, was not a mere
conception or
abstraction ; but a reality including in itself
life and thought; or, rather,
of whose essence it was to live and
think. It was material ; but not brute,
inert, inactive,
lifeless, motionless, formless, lightless matter. -It was held
to
be active, reasoning, thinking; its natural home in the highest
regions of
the Universe, whence it descended to illuminate, give
form and movement to,
vivify, animate, and carry with itself the
baser matter; and whither it
unceasingly tends to reascend, when
and as soon as it can free itself from its
connection with that
matter. From that substance, divine, infinitely .delicate
and
active, essentially luminous, the souls of men were formed, and by
it
alone, uniting with and organizing their bodies, men
lived.
This was the doctrine of Pythagoras, who learned it when
he received the
Egyptian Mysteries : and it was the doctrine of
all who, by means of the
ceremonial of initiation, thought to
purify the soul. Virgil makes the spirit
of Archives teach it to
AEneas: and all the expiations and lustrations vised in
the
113`steries were but symbols of those intellectual olies by which
the soul
was to be purged of its vice-spots and stains, and freed
of the encumbrance of
its earthly prison, so that it might rise
unimpeded to the source from which it
came.
Hence sprung the
doctrine of the transmigration of souls; which Pythagoras
taught
as an allegory, and those who came after him received literally.
Plato,
like him, drew, his doctrines from the East and the
Mysteries, and undertook to
translate the language of the symbols
used there, into that of Philosophy ; and
to prove by argument
and philosophical deduction, what, felt by the
consciousness, the
Mysteries taught by Symbols as an indisputable
fact,-the
immortality of the soul. Cicero did the same ; and
followed the Mysteries in
teaching that the Gods were but mortal
men, who for their great virtues and
signal services had deserved
that their souls should, after death, be raised to
that lofty
rank.
It being taught in the Mysteries, either by way of
allegory, the meaning of
which was not made known except to a
select few, or, perhaps only at a later
day, as an actual
reality, that the souls of the vicious dead passed into
the
bodies of those animals to whose nature their vices had most
affinity, it was
also taught that the soul could avoid these
transmigrations, often successive
and numerous, by the practice
of virtue, which would acquit it of thrum, free
it from the
circle of successive generations, and restore it at once to
its
source. Hence nothing was so ardently prayed far by the
Initiates, says
Proclus, as this happy fortune, which, delivering
them from the empire of Evil,
would restore them to their true
life, and conduct them to the place of final
rest. To this
doctrine probably referred those figures of animals and
monsters
which were exhibited to the Initiate, before allowing
him to see the sacred
light for which he sighed., Plato says,
that souls will not reach the term of
their ills, until the
revolutions of the world have restored them to their
primitive
condition, and purified them from the stains which they
have
contracted by the contagion of fire, earth, and air. And he
held that they
could not be allowed to enter Heaven, until they
had distinguished themselves
by the practice of virtue in some
one of three several bodies. The Manicheans
allowed five: Pindar,
the same. number as Plato; as did the Jews. And Cicero
says, that
the ancient soothsayers, and the interpolators of the will of
the
Gods, in their religious ceremonies and initiations, taught
that we expiate
here below the crimes committed in a prior life ;
and for that are born. It was
taught in these Mysteries, that the
soul passes' through several states, and
that the pains and
sorrows of this life are an expiation of prior faults.
This
doctrine of transmigration of souls obtained, as Porphyry informs
us,
among the Persians and Magi. It was held in the East and the
West, and that
from the remotest antiquity. Herodotus found, it
among the Egyptians, who made
the term of the circle of
migrations from one human body, through animals,
fishes, and
birds, to another human body,' three thousand years.
Empedocles
even held that souls went into plants Of these, the
laurel was the noblest, as
of animals the lion; both being
consecrated to the Sun, to which, it was held
in the Orient,
virtuous souls were to return. The Curds, the Chinese,
the
Cabbalists, all held the same doctrine. So Origin held, and
the Bishop
Synesius, the latter of whom had been initiated, and
who thus prayed to God :
"O Father, grant that my soul, reunited
to the light, may not be plunged again
into the defilements of
earth," So the Gnostics held; and even the Disciples of
Christ
inquired if the man who was born blind, was not so punished for some
sin
that he had committed before his birth.
Virgil, in the
celebrated allegory in which he develops the doctrines taught
in
the Mysteries, enunciated the doctrine, held by" most of the
ancient
philosophers, of the pre-existence of `souls, in the
eternal fire from which
they emanate; that fire which animates
the stars, and circulates in every part
of Nature: and the
purifications of the soul, by fire, water, and air, of which
he
speaks, and which three modes were employed in the Mysteries of
Bacchus,
were symbols of the passage of the soul into different
bodies.
The relations of the human soul with the rest of nature
were a chief object of
the science of the Mysteries. The man was
there brought face to face with
entire nature, The world, and the
spherical envelope that surrounds it, were
represented by a
mystic egg, by the side of the image of the Sun-God
whose
Mysteries were celebrated. The famous Orphic egg was
consecrated to Bacchus in
his Mysteries. It was, says Plutarch,
an. image of the Universe, which,
engenders everything, and
contains everything in its bosom."`Consult," says
Macrobius, "the
Initiates of the? Mysteries of Bacchus, who honor with
special
veneration the sacred egg." The rounded and almost
spherical form of its shell,
he says, which encloses it on every
side, and confines within itself the
principles of life, is a
symbolic image of the world ; and the world is the
universal
principle of all things.
This symbol was borrowed from the
Egyptians, who also consecrated the egg to
Osiris, germ of Light,
himself born, sans Diodorus, from that famous egg. In
Thebes, in
Upper Egypt, he was represented as emitting it from his mouth,
and
causing to issue from it the first principle of heat and
light, or the
Fire-God, Vulcan, or Phtha. We find this egg even
in Japan, between the horns
of the famous Mithriac Bull,- whose
attributes Osiris, Apis, and Bacchus all
borrowed.
Orpheus,
author of the Grecian Mysteries, which he carried from Egypt
`to
Greece, consecrated this symbol : and taught that matter,
untreated and
informers, existed from all eternity, unorganized,
as chaos ; containing in
itself the Principles of all Existences
confused and intermingled, light with
darkness, the dry with the
humid, heat with cold; from which, it after long
ages :eking the
shape of an immense egg, issued the purest matter, or
First
substance, and the residue was divided into the four
elements, From which
proceeded heaven and earth and all things
else. This Grand Cosmogonic idea he
taught in the Mysteries; and
thus the Hierophant explained the meaning of the
mystic egg, seen
by the initiates in the Sanctuary.
Thus entire Nature, in her
primitive organization, was presented 401 to him
whom it was
wished to instruct in her secrets and initiate in her mysteries
;
and Clement of Alexandria might well say that initiation was a
real physiology.
So Phanes, the Light-God, in the
Mysteries of the New Orphics, emerged from
the egg of chaos: and
the Persians had the great egg of Ormuzd. And
Sanchoniathon tells
us that in the Phoenician theology, the matter of chaos
took the
form of an egg; and he adds: "Such ,are the lessons which the Son
of
Thabion~ first Hierophant of the Phoenicians,. turned into
allegories, in which
physics and astronomy intermingled, and
which he taught to the other
Hierophants, whose duty it was to
preside at orgies and initiations ; and who,
seeking to excite
the astonishment and admiration of mortals,
faithfully
transmitted these things to their successors and the
Initiates."
In the Mysteries was also taught the division of the
Universal Cause into an
Active and a Passive cause; of which two,
Osiris and Isis,-the heavens and the
earth were symbols. These
two .First Causes, into which it was held that the
great
Universal First Cause at the beginning of things divided itself,
were the
two great Divinities, whose worship was, according to
Varro, inculcated upon
the Initiates at Samothrace. "As is
taught," he says, "in the initiation into
the Mysteries at
Samothrace, Heaven and Earth are regarded as the two
first
Divinities. They are the potent Gods worshipped in that
Island, and whose
narr4es are consecrated in the books of our
Augurs. One of them is male and the
other female; and they bear
the same relation to each other as the soul does to
the body,
humidity to dryness." The Curates, in Crete, had built an altar
to
Heaven and to Earth; whose Mysteries they celebrated at
Gnossus, in a cypress
grove.
These two Divinities, the Active
and Passive Principles of the
Universe, were commonly symbolized
by the generative pasts of man and woman ;
to which, in remote
ayes, no idea of indecency was attached ; the Phallus and
Cteis,
emblems of generation and production, and which, as such, appeared
in
the Mysteries. The Indian Lingam was the union of both, as
were the boat and
mast and the point within a circle: all of
which expressed the same
philosophical idea as to the Union of
the two great Causes of Nature, which
concur, one actively and
the other passively, in the generation of all beings :
which were
symbolized by what we now term Gemini, the Twos, at that
remote
period when the Sun was in that Sign at the Vernal
Equinox, and when they were
Male and Female; and of which the
Phallus was perhaps taken from the generative
organ of the Bull,
when about twenty-five hundred years before our era he
opened
that equinox, and became to the Ancient World the symbol of the
creative
and generative Power.
The Initiates at Eleusis,
commenced, Process says, by invoking the two great
causes of
nature, the Heavens and the Earth, on which in succession they
fixed
their eyes, addressing to each a prayer. And they deemed it
their duty to do
so, he adds, because they saw in them the Father
and Mother of all generations.
The concourse of these two agents
of the Universe was termed in theological
language a marriage.
Tertullian, accusing the Valentinians of having borrowed
these
symbols from the Mysteries of Eleusis, yet admits that in those
Mysteries
they were explained in a manner consistent with
decency, as representing the
powers of nature. He was too little
of a philosopher to comprehend the sublime
esoteric meaning of
these embalms, which will, if you advance, in other Degrees
be
unfolded to you.
` The Christian Fathers contented themselves
with reviling and ridiculing the
use of these emblems. But as
they in the earlier' times created no indecent
ideas, and were
worn alike by the most innocent youths and virtuous women,
it
will be far wiser for us to seek to penetrate their meaning.
Not only the
Egyptians, says Diodorus Sinuous, but every other
people that consecrate this
symbol (the Phallus), deem that they
thereby do honor to the Active ,Force of
the universal generation
of all living things. For the same reason, as we learn
from the
geographer Ptolemy, it was revered among the Assyrians and
Persians.
Proclus remarks that , in the distribution of the
Zodiac among she twelve great
Divinities, by ancient astrology,
six signs were assigned to the male and six
to the female
principle.
There is another division of nature, which has in all
ages struck all men, and
which was not forgotten in the
Mysteries; that of Light and Darkness, Day and
Night, Good and
Evil ; which mingle with, and clash against, and pursue or
are
pursued by eaeh other throughout the Universe. The Great
Symbolic Egg
distinctly reminded the Initiates of this great
division of the world.
plutarch, treating of the dogma of a
Providence, and of that of the two
principles of Light and
Darkness, which he regarded as the basis of the Ancient
Theology,
of the Orgies and the Mysteries, as well among the Greeks as
the
Barbarians,-a doctrine whose origin, according to him, is
lost in the night of
time,-cites, in support of his opinion, the
famous Mystic Egg of the disciples
of Zoroaster and the Initiates
in the Mysteries of Mithras.
To the Initiates in the Mysteries of
Eleusis was exhibited the spectacle of
these two principles, in
the successive scenes of Darkness and Light which
passed before
their eyes. To the profoundest darkness, accompanied
with
illusions and horrid phantoms, succeeded the most brilliant
light, whose
splendor blazed round the statue of the Goddess. The
candidate, says Dion
Chrysostomus, passed into a 'mysterious
temple, of astonishing magnitude and
beauty, where were exhibited
to him many mystic scenes; where his ears were
stunned with many
voices ; and where Darkness and Light successively passed
before
him. And Themistius in like manner describes the Initiate, when
about to
enter into that part of the sanctuary tenanted by the
Goddess, as filled with
fear and religious awe, wavering,
uncertain in what direction to advance
through the profound
darkness that envelopes him. But when the Hierophant has
opened
the entrance to the inmost sanctuary, and removed the robe that
hides
the Goddess, he exhibits her to the Initiate, resplendent
with divine light.
The thick `shadow and gloomy atmosphere which
had enthroned the candidate
vanish ; he is filled with a vivid
and glowing enthusiasm, that lifts his soul
out of the profound
dejection in which it was , plunged ; ant the purest
light
succeeds to the thickest darkness.
In a fragment of the
same writer, preserved by Stobaeus, we learn that the
Initiate,
up to the moment when his initiation is to be consummated, is
alarmed
by every kind of sight: that astonishment and terror take
his soul captive; he
trembles; cold sweat flows from his body;
until the moment when the Light is
shown him,-a most astoundihg
Light,-th? brilliant scene of Elysium, where he
sees charming
meadows overarched by a clear sky, and festivals celebrated
by
dances ; where he hears harmonious voices, and the majestic
chants of the
Hierophants; and views the sacred spectacles. Then,
absolutely free, and
enfranchised from the dominion of all ills,
he mingles with the crowd of
Initiates, and, crowned with
flowers, celebrates with them the holy orgies,' in
the brilliant
realms of ether, and the dwelling-place of Ormuzd.
In the
Mysteries of Isis, the candidate first passed through the dark
valley
of the shadow of death; then into a place representing the
elements or
sublunary world, where the two principles clash and
contend ; and was finally
admitted to a luminous region, where
the sun, with his most brilliant light,
put to rout the shades of
night. Then he himself put on the costume of the
Sun-God, or the
Visible Source o'f Ethereal Light, in whose Mysteries he
was
initiated ; and passed from the empire of darkness to that of
light. After
having set his feet on the threshold of the palace
of Pluto, he ascended to the
Empyrean, to the bosom of the
Eternal Principle of Light of the Universe, from
which all souls
and intelligences emanate.
Plutarch admits that this theory of
two Principles was the basis of all the
Mysteries, and
consecrated in the religious ceremonies and Mysteries of
Greece.
Osiris and Typhon, Ormuzd and Ahriman, Bacchus and the
Titans and Giants, all
represented these principles. Phanes, the
luminous God that issued from the
Sacred Egg, and Night, bore the
scepters in the Mysteries of the New Bacchus.
Night and Day were
two of the eight Gods adored in the Mysteries of Osiris.
The
sojourn of Proserpine and also of Adonis, during six months
of each year in the
upper world, abode of light, and six months
in the lower or abode of darkness,
allegorically represented the
same division of the Universe.
The connection of the-different
initiations with the Equinoxes which separate
the Empire of the
Nights from that of the Days, and fix the moment when one
of
these principles begins to prevail over the other, shows that
the Mysteries
referred to the continual contest between the two
principles of light and
darkness, each alternately victor and
vanquished. The very object proposed by
them shows that their
basis was the theory of the two principles and their
relations
with the soul. "We celebrate the august Mysteries of Ceres
and
Proserpine," says the Emperor Julian, "at the Autumnal
Equinox, to obtain of
the Gods that the soul may not experience
the malignant action of the Power,of
Darkness that is then about
to have sway and rule in Nature." Sallust the
Philosopher makes
almost the same remark as to the relations of the soul with
the
periodical march of light and darkness, during an annual revolution
; and
assures us that the mysterious festivals of Greece related
to the same. And in
all the explanations given by Macrobius of
the Sacred Fables in regard to the
sun, adored under the names of
Osiris, Horus, Adonis, Atys, Bacchus, etc.. we
invariably see
that they refer to the theory of the two Principles, Light
and
Darkness, and the triumphs gained by one over the other. In
April was
celebrated the first triumph obtained by the light of
day over the length of
the nights ; and the ceremonies of
mourning and rejoicing had, Macrobius says,
as their object the
vicissitudes of the annual administration of the world.
This
brings us naturally to the tragic portion of these religious'
scenes, and
to the allegorical history of the different
adventures of the Principle, Light,
victor and vanquished by
turns, in the combats waged with Darkness during each
annual
period. Here we reach the most mysterious part of the
ancient
initiations, and that most interesting to the Mason who
laments the death of
his Grand Master Khir-Om. Over it Herodotus
throws the august veil of mystery
and silence. Speaking of the
Temple of Minerva, or of that Isis who was styled
the Mother of
the Sun-God, and whose Mysteries were termed Isiac, at Sais,
he
specks of a Tomb in the Temple, in the rear of the Chapel and
against the well
; and says, "It is the tomb of a man, whose name
respect requires me to
conceal. Within the Temple were great
obelisks of stone [phalli], and a
circular lake paved with stones
and revetted with a parapet. It seemed to me as
large as that at
Delos" [there the Mysteries of Apollo were celebrated]. "In
this
lake the Egyptians celebrate, during the night, what they style
the
Mysteries, in which are represented the sufferings of the God
of whom I have
spoken above." . This God was Osiris, put to death
by Typhon, and who descended
to the Shades and was restored to
life; of which he had spoken before.
We are reminded, by this
passage, of the Tomb of Khir-Om, his death, and his
rising from
the grave, symbolical of restoration of life ; and also of
the
brazen Sea in the Temple at Jerusalem. Herodotus adds : "I
impose upon myself a
profound, silence in regard to these
Mysteries, with most of which I am
acquainted. As little will I
speak of the initiations of Ceres, known among the
Greeks as
Thesmophoria. What I shall say will not violate the respect which
I
owe to religion."
Athenagoras quotes this passage to show
that not only the Statue but the Tomb
of Osiris was exhibited in
Egypt, and a tragic representation of his
sufferings; and remarks
that the Egyptians had mourning ceremonies in honor of
their
Gods, whose deaths they, Lamented ; and to whom they afterward
sacrificed
as having It is, however, not difficult, combining the
different rays of light
that emanate from the different
Sanctuaries, to learn the genius and the object
of these secret
ceremonies. We have hints, and not details.
We know that the
Egyptians worshipped the Sun, under the name of Osiris.
The
misfortunes and tragical death of this God . were an allegory
relating to the
Sun. Typhon, like Ahriman, represented Darkness.
The sufferings and death of
Osiris in the Mysteries of the Night
were a mystic image of the phenomena of
Nature, and the conflict
of the two great Principle which share the empire of
Nature, and
most infilenced our souls. the sun is neither born, dies, nor
is
raised to life: and the recital of these events was but an
allegory, veiling a.
higher truth Horus, son of Isis, and the
same as Apollo or the Sun, also died
and was restored again to,
life~ and to his mother; and the priests ,of Isis
celebrated
these great events by mourning and joyous festival succeeding
each
other.
In the Mysteries of Phoenicia, established in
honor of Thammuz or Adonis, also
the Sun, the spectacle of his
death and resurrection was exhibited to the
Initiates. As we
learn from Meursius and Plutarch, a figure was
exhibited
representing the corpse of a young man. Flowers were
strewed upon his body, the
women mourned for him ; a tomb was
erected to him. And these feasts, as we
learn from Plutarch and
Ovid, passed into Greece.
God was lamented, and his resurrection
was celebrated with the most
enthusiastic expressions of joy. A
corpse, we. learn from Julian , was shown
the Initiates,
representing Mithras dead; and afterward his resurrection
was
announced; and they were then invited to rejoice that the
dead God was restored
to life, and had by means of his sufferings
secured their salvation. Three
months before, his birth had been
celebrated, under the emblem of an infant,
born on the.25th of
December, or the eighth day before the Calends of January.
In
Greece, in the mysteries of the same God, honored under the name
of
Bacchus, a representation was given of his death, slain by the
Titans ; of his
descent into hell, his ,subsequent resurrection,
and his return toward his
Principle or the pure abode whence he
had descended to unite himself with
matter. In the islands of
Chios and Tenedos, his death was represented by the
sacrifice of
a man,` actually immolated.
The mutilation and sufferings of the
same Sun-God, honored in Phrygia under
the name of Atys, caused
the tragic scenes that were, as we learn from Diodorus
Siculus,
represented annually in the Mysteries of Cybele, mother of the
Gods.
An image was borne there, representing the corpse of a
young man, over whose
tomb tears were shed, and to whom funeral
honors were paid.
At Samothrace, in the Mysteries of the Cabiri
or great Gods, a representation
was given of the death of one if
them. This name was given to the Sun, because
the Ancient
Astronomers gave the name of Gods Cabiri, and of Samothrace to
the
two Gods in the Constellation Gemini; whom others term Apollo
and Hercules, two
names of the Sun.. Athenion says that the young
Cabirus so slain was the same
as the Dionysus or Bacchus of the
Greeks. The Pelasgi, ancient inhabitants of
Greece, and who
settled Samothrace, celebrated these Mysteries, whose origin
is
unknown : and they worshipped Castor and Pollux as patrons of
navigation.
The tomb of Apollo was at Delphi, where his body was
laid, after Python, the
Polar Serpent that annually heralds the
coming of autumn, cold, darkness, and
winter, had slain him, and
over whom. the God triumphs, on the 25th of March,
on his return
to the lamb of the Vernal Equinox.
In Crete, Jupiter Ammon, on
the Sun in Aries, painted with the attributes of
that equinoctial
sign, the Ram or Lamb ;-that Ammon who, Martianus Copella
says,
is the same as Osiris, Adoni, Adonis, Atys, and the other
Sun-Gods,-had
also a tomb, and a religious initiation ; one of
the principal ceremonies of
whi`ch consisted in clothing the
Initiate with the skin of a white lamb. And in
this we see the
origin of the apron of white sheep-skin, used in Masonry.
All
these deaths and resurrections, these funeral emblems, these
anniversaries
of mourning and joy, these cenotaphs raised in
different places to the Sun-God,
honored under different names,
had but a single object, the allegorical
narration of the events
which happened here below-to the Light of Nature, that
sacred
fire from which our souls were deemed to emanate, warring with
matter
and the dark Principle resident therein, ever at variance
with the Principle of
Good and Light poured upon itself by the
Supreme Divinity. All these Mysteries,
says Clement of
Alexandria, displaying to us murders and tombs alone, all
these
religious tragedies, had a common basis, variously
ornamented : and that basis
was the fictitious death and
resurrection of the Sun, Soul of the World,
principle of life and
movement in the Sublunary World, and source of our
intelligences,
which are but a portion of the Eternal Light blazing in
that
Star, their chief center.
It was in the Sun that Souls,
it was said, were purified: and to it they
repaired. It was one
of the gates of the soul, through which the theologians,
says
Porphyry, say that it re-ascends toward the home of Light and the
Good.
Wherefore, in the Mysteries of Eleusis, the Dadoukos (the
first officer after
the Hierophant, who represented the Grand
Demiourgos or Maker of the Universe),
who was casted in the
interior of the Temple, and there received the
candidates,
represented the Sun.
It was also held that the vicissitudes
experienced by the Father of Light had
an influence on the
destiny of souls; which, of the same substance as he,
shared his
fortunes. This we learn from the Emperor Julian and Sallust
the
Philosopher. They are afflicted when he suffers : they
rejoice when he triumphs
over the Power of Darkness which opposes
his sway and hinders the happiness of
Souls, to whom nothing is
so terrible as darkness. The fruit of the sufferings
of the God,
father of light and $ouls, slain.by the Chief of the Powers
of
Darkness, and again restored to life, was received in the
Mysteries. "His death
works your Salvation ;" said the High
Priest of Mithras. That was the great
secret of this religious
tragedy, and its expected fruit ;-the resurrection of
a God, who,
repossessing Himself of His dominion over Darkness,
should
associate with Him in His triumph those virtuous Souls
that by their purity
were worthy to share His glory; and that
strove not against the divine force
that drew them to Him, when,
He had thus conquered.
To the Initiate were also displayed the
spectacles of the chief agents of the
Universal Cause, and of the
distribution of the world, in the detail of its
parts arranged in
most regular order. The Universe itself supplied man with
the
model of the first Temple reared to the Divinity. The
arrangement of the Temple
of Solomon, the symbolic ornaments
which formed its chief decorations, and the
dress of the High
Priest,-all, as Clement of Alexandria, Josephus and Philo
state,
had reference to ,the order of the world. Clement informs us that
the
Temple contained many emblems of the Seasons, the Sun, the
Moon, the planets,
the constellations Ursa Major and Minor, the
zodiac, the elements, and the
other parts of the
world.'
Josephus, in his description of the High Priest's
Vestments, protesting
against the charge of impiety brought
against the He brews by other nati~ons,
for condemning the
Heathen Divinities, declares it false, because, in
the
construction of the Tabernacle, in the vestments of the
Sacrificers, and in the
Sacred vessels, the whole World was in
some sort represented. Of the three
parts, he says, into which
the Temple was divided, two represent Earth and Sea,
open to all
men, and the third, Heaven, God's dwelling-place, reserved for
Him
alone. The twelve loaves of Shew-bread signify the twelve
months of the year.
The Candlestick represented the twelve signs
through which the Seven Planets
run their courses; and the seven
lights, those planets; the veils, of four
colors, the four
elements; the tunic of the High Priest, the earth; the
Hyacinth,
nearly blue, the Heavens ; the. aphid, of four colors, the whole
of
nature; the gold, Light; the breast-plate, in the middle, this
earth in the
center of the world ; the two Sardonyxes, used as
clasps, the Sun and Moon ;
and the twelve precious stones of the
breast-plate arranged by threes, like the
Seasons, the twelve
months, and the twelve signs of the zodiac. Even the loaves
were
arranged in two groups of six, like the zodiacal signs above and
below the
Equator. Clement, the learned Bishop of Alexandria, and
Philo, adopt all these
explanations.
Hermes calls the Zodiac,
the Grent Tent,-Tabernaculum. In the Royal Arch
Degree of the
American Rite, the Tabernacle has four veils, of
different
colors, to each of which. Belongs a banner. the colors
of the four are White,
Blue, Crimson, and Purple, and the banners
bear the images of the Bull, the
Lion, the Man, ant the Eagle,
the Constellations answering 2500 years before
our era to the
Equinoctial and Solstitial points : to which belong four
stars,
aldebaran, Regulus, Fomalhaut, and Antares. At each of
these veils there are
three words : and to each division of the
Zodiac, belonging to each of these
Stars, are three Signs. The
four signs,
Taurus, Leo, Scorpio, and Aquarius, were termed the
fixed signs, and are
appropriately assigned to the four
veils.
`SO the Cherubim, according to Clement and Philo,-
represented the two
hemispheres ; their wings, the rapid course
of the firmament, and of time which
revolves in the Zodiac. "For
the Heavens fly;" says Philo, speaking of the
wings of the
Cherubim : which were winged representations of the Lion,
the
Bull, the Eagle, and the Man; of two of which, the
human-headed, winged bulls
and lions, so many have been found at
Nimrod ; adopted as beneficent symbols,
when the Sun entered
Taurus at the Vernal Equinox and Leo at the Summer
Solstice : and
when, also, he entered Scorpio, far which, on account of
its
malignant influences, Aquila, the eagle was substituted, at
the autumnal
equinox; and Aquarius (the water-bearer) at the
Winter Solstice.
So, Clement says, the candlestick with seven
branches represented the seven
planets, like which the seven
branches were arranged and regulated, preserving
that musical
proportion and system of harmony of which the sun was the
centre
and connection. They were arranged, says Philo, by threes,
like the planets
above and those below the sun; between which two
groups was the branch that
represented him, the mediator or
moderator of the celestial harmony. He is, in
fact, the fourth in
the musical scale, as Philo remarks, and Martianus Capella
in his
hymn to the Sun.
Near the candlestick were other emblems
representing the heavens, earth, and
the vegetative matter out of
whose bosom the vapors arise. The whole temple was
an abridged
image of the world. There were candlesticks with four
branches,
symbols of the elements and the seasons ; with twelve,
symbols of the signs;
and even with three hundred and sixty, the
number of days in the year, without
the supplementary days.
Imitating the famous Temple of Tyre, where were the
great columns
consecrated to the winds and fire, the Tyrian artist placed
two
columns of bronze at the entrance of the porch of the temple.
The hemispherical
brazen sea, supported by four groups of bulls,
of three each, looking to the
four cardinal points of the
compass, represented the bull of the Vernal
Equinox, and at Tyre
were consecrated to Astarte; to whom Hiram, Josephus says,
had
built a temple, and who wore on her head a helmet bearing the image
of a
bull. And the throne of Solomon, with bulls adopting its
arms, and supported on
lions, like those of Horus in Egypt and of
the Sun at Tyre; likewise referred
to the Vernal Equinox and
Summer Solstice. Those who in Thrice adored the sun,
under the
name of Saba Zeus, the Grecian Bacchus, blinded to him,
says
Macrobius, a temple on Mount Zelmisso, its round form
representing the world
and the sun. A circular aperture in the
roof admitted the light, and introduced
the image of the sun into
the body of the sanctuary, where he seemed to blaze
as in the
heights of Heaven, and to dissipate the darkness within that
temple
which was a representation symbol of the world. There the
passion, death, and
resurrection of Bacchus were
represented.
So the Temple of Eleusis was lighted by a window in
the roof. The sanctuary so
lighted, Dion compares to the
Universe, from which he says it differed in size
alone; and in it
the great lights of nature played a great part and
were
myopically represented. The images of the Sun, Moon, and
Mercury were
represented there, (the latter the same as Anubis
who accompanied Isis) ; and
they are still the three lights of a
Masonic Lodge ; except that for Mercury,
the Master of the Lodge
has been absurdly substituted.
Eusebius names as the principal
Ministers in the Mysteries of Eleusis, first,
the Hierophant,
clothed with the attributes of the Grand Architect
(Demiourgos)
of the Universe. After him came the Dadoukos, or
torch-bearer, representative
of the Sun : then the altar-bearer,
representing the Moon : and last, the
Hieroceryx, bearing the
caduceus, and representing Mercury. It was not
permissible to
reveal the different emblems and the mysterious pageantry
of
initiation to the Profane; and therefore we do not. know the
attributes,
emblems, and ornaments of these and other officers ;
of which Apuleius and
Pausanias dared not speak.
We know only
that everything recounted there was marvelous; everything
done
there tended to astonish the Initiate: and that eyes and
ears were equally
astounded. The Hierophant, of lofty height, and
noble features, with long hair,
of a great age, grave and
dignified, with a voice sweet and sonorous, sat upon
a throne,
clad in a long trailing robe; as the Motive-God of Nature was held
to
be enveloped in His work and hidden under a veil which no
mortal can raise.
even his name was concealed, like that of the
Demiourgos, whose name was
ineffable.
The Dadoukos also wore a
long robe, his hair long, and a bandeau on his
forehead. Callias,
when holding that office, fighting on the great day of
Marathon,
clothed with the insignia of his office, was taken by the
Barbarians
to be a King. The Dadoukos led the procession of the
Initiates, and was charged
with the purification.
WE do set
know the functions of the Epibomos or assistant at the altar,
who
represented the moon. That planet was one of the two homes of
souls, and one of
the two great gates by which they descended and
reascended. Mercury was charged
with the conducting of souls
through the two great gates; and in going from the
sun to the
moon they passed immediately by him. He admitted or rejected them
as
they were more or less pure, and therefore the Hieroceryx or
Sacred Herald, who
represented Mercury, was charged with the duty
of excluding the Profane from
the Mysteries.
The same offsets
are found in the procession of Initiates of Isis, described
by
Apuleius. All clad in robes of white linen, drawn tight across the
breast,
and close-fitting down to the very feet, came, first, one
bearing a lamp in the
shape of a boat; second, one carrying an
altar; and third, one carrying a
golden palm-tree and the
caduceus. These are ihe same as the three officers at
Eleusis,
after the Hierophant. Then one carrying an open hand, and pouring
milk
on the ground from a golden vessel in the shape of a woman's
breast. The hand
was that of justice: and the milk alluded to the
Galaxy or Milky Way, along
which souls descended and remounted.
Two others followed, one bearing a
winnowing fan, and the other a
water-vase; symbols of the purification of souls
by air and
water; and the third purification, by earth, was represented by
an
image of the animal that cultivates it, the cow or ox, borne
by another
officer.
Then followed a chest or ark,
magnificently ornamented, containing an image of
the organs of
generation of Osiris, or perhaps of both sexes ; emblems of
the
original generating and producing Powers. When Typhon, said
the Egyptian fable,
cut up the body of Osiris into pieces, he
flung his genitals into the Nile,
where a fish devoured them.
Atys mutilated himself, as his Priests afterward
did in imitation
of him; and Adonis was in that part of his body wounded by
the
boar: all of which represented the loss by the Sun of his
vivifying and
generative power, when he reached the Autumnal
Equinox (the Scorpion that on
old monuments bites those parts of
the Vernal Bull), and descended toward the
region of darkness and
Winter.
Then, says Apuleius, came "one who carried in his bosom
an object that
rejoiced the heart of the bearer, a venerable
effigy of the Supreme Deity,
neither bearing resemblance to man,
cattle, bird, beast, or any living creature
: an exquisite
invention, venerable from the novel originality of
the
fashioning; a wonderful, ineffable symbol of religious
mysteries, to'be looked
upon in profound silence. Such as it was,
its figure was that of a small urn of
burnished gold, hollowed
very ,artistically, rounded at the bottom, and covered
all over
the outside with the wonderful hieroglyphics of the Egyptians.
The
spout was not elevated, but extended laterally, projecting
like a long rivulet;
while on the opposite side was the handle,
which, with similar lateral
extension, bore on its summit an asp,
curling its body into folds, and
stretching upward, its wrinkled,
scaly, swollen throat."
The salient basilisk, ,or royal ensign of
the Pharaohs, often occurs on the
monuments-a serpent in folds,
with his head raised erect above the folds. The
basilisk was the
Phoenix of the serpent-tribe; and the vase or urn was
probably
the vessel, shaped like a cucumber, with a projecting
spout, out of which, on
the monuments of Egypt, the priests are
represented pouring streams of the Cruz
ansasta or Tau Cross, and
of scepters, over the kings.
In the Mysteries of Mithras, a
sacred cave, representing the whole arrangement
of the world, was
used for the reception of the Initiates. Zoroaster, says
Eubulus,
first introduced this custom of consecrating caves. They were
also
consecrated, in Crete, to Jupiter; in Arcadia, to, the Moon
and Pan; and in the
Island of Naxos, to Bacchus. The Persians, in
the cave where the Mysteries of
Mithras were celebrated, fixed
the seat of . that God, Father of Generation, or
Demiourgos, near
the equinoctial point of Spring, with the Northern portion of
the
world on his right, and the Southern on his left.
Mithras, says
Porphyry, presided over the Equinoxes, seated on a Bull
the
symbolical animal of the Demiourgos, and bearing a sword. The
equinoxes were
the gates through which souls passed to and fro,
between the hemisphere of
light and that of darkness. The milky
way was also represented, passing near
each of these gates: and
it was, in the old theology, termed the pathway of
souls. It is,
according to Pythagoras, vast troops of souls that form
that
luminous belt. The route followed by souls, according to
Porphyry, or rather
their progressive march in the world, lying
through the fixed stars and
planets, the Mithriac cave not only
displayed the zodiacal and other
constellations, and marked gates
at the four equinoctial and Solstitial points
of the zodiac,
whereat souls enter into and escape from the world
of
generational and through which they pass to and fro between
the realms of light
and darkness; but it represented the seven
planetary spheres which they needs
must traverse, in descending
from the heaven of the fixed stars to the elements
that envelop
the earth ; and seven gates were marked, one for each.
planet,
through which they pass, in descending or
returning.
We learn this from Celsus, in Origen; who says that
the symbolical image of
this passage among the stars, used in the
Mithriac Mysteries, was a ladder,
reaching from earth to Heaven,
divided into seven steps or stages, to each of
which was a gate,
and at the summit an eighth, that of the fixed stars. The
first
gate, says Celsus, was that of Saturn, and of lead, by the heavy
nature
whereof his dull slow progress was symbolized. The second,
of tin, was that of
Venus, symbolizing her soft splendor and easy
flexibility. The third, of brass,
was that of Jupiter, emblem of
his solidity and dry nature. The fourth, of
iron, was that of
Mercury, expressing his indefatigable activity and sagacity.
The
,fifth, of copper, was that of Mars, expressive of his inequalities
and
variable nature. The sixth, of silver, was that of the Moon:
and the seventh,
of gold, that of the Sun. This order is not the
real order ,of these Planet's
but a mysterious one, like that of
the days of the Week consecrated to them,
commencing with
Saturday, and retrograding to Sunday. It was dictated,
Celsus
says, by certain harmonic relations, those of the
fourth.
Thus there was an intimate connection between the Sacred
Science of the
Mysteries, and ancient astronomy and physics ; and
the grand spectacle of the
Sanctuaries was that of the order of
the renown Universe, or the spectacle of
Nature itself,
surrounding the soul of the Initiate, as it surrounded it when
it
first descended through the planetary gates, and by the equinoctial
and
Solstitial doors, along the Milky Way, to be for the first
time immured in its
prison-house of matter. But the Mysteries
also represented to the candidate, by
sensible symbols, the
invisible forces which move this visible Universe, and
the
virtues, qualities, and powers attached to matter, and which
maintain the
marvellous order observed therein. Of this Porphyry
informs us.
The world, according to the philosophers of
antiquity, was not a purely
material and mechanical machine. A
great Soul, diffused everywhere, vivified
all the members of the
immense body of the Universe ; and an Intelligence,
equally
great, directed all its movements, and maintained the eternal
harmony
that resulted therefrom. Thus the Unity of the Universe,
represented bv the
symbolic egg, contained in itself two units
the Soul and the Intelligence,
which pervaded all its parts : and
they were to the Universe,' considered as an
animated and
intelligent being, what intelligence and the soul of life are
to
the individuality of man.
The doctrine of the Unity of God,
in this sense, was taught by Orpheus. Of
this his hymn or
palinode is a proof ; fragments of which are quoted by many
of
the Fathers, as Justin, Tatian, Clemens of Alexandria, Cyril,
and Theodoret,
and the whole by Eusebius, quoting from
Aristobulus. The doctrine of the Locos
(word) or the Noos
(intellect), his incarnation, death, resurrection
or
transfiguration ; of his union with matter, his division in
the visible world,
which he pervades, his return to the original
Unity, and the whole theory
relative to the origin of the soul
and its destiny, were taught in the
Mysteries, if which they were
the , great object.
The Emperor Julian explains the Mysteries of
Atys and Cybele by the same
metaphysical principles, respecting
the demiurgical Intelligence, its descent
into matter, and its
return to its origin: and extends this explanation to
those of
Ceres. And so likewise does Sallust the Philosopher, who admits in
God
a secondary intelligent Force, which descends into the
generative matter to
organize it. These mystical ideas naturally
formed a part of the sacred
doctrine and of the ceremonies of
initiations the object of which, Sallust
remarks, was to unite
man with the World and the Deity, and the final term
of
perfection whereof was, according to Clemens, the
contemplation of nature, of
real beings, and of causes. The
definition of Sallust is correct. The Mysteries
were practiced as
a means of perfecting the souls of making it to know its
own
dignity, of reminding. It of its noble origin and
immortality, and consequently
of its relations with the Universe
and the Deity.
What was meant by real beings, was invisible
beings, genii, the faculties or
powers of nature ; everything not
a part of the visible world, which was
called, by way of
opposition, apparent existence. The theory of Genii, or
Powers of
Nature, and its Forces, personified, made part of the Sacred
Science
of initiation, and of that religious spectacle of
different beings exhibited in
the Sanctuary. It resulted from
that belief in the providence and
superintendence of the Gods,
which was one of the primary bases of initiation.
The
administration of the Universe by Subaltern Genii, to vihom it is
confided,
and by whom good and evil are dispensed in the world,
was a consequence of this
dogma, taught in the Mysteries of
Mithias, where was shown that famous egg,
shared between Ormuzd
and Ahriman, each ,of whom commissioned twenty-four Genii
to
dispense the good and evil found therein; they being under twelve
Superior
Gods, six on the side of Light and Good, and six on that
of Darkness and Evil.
This doctrine of the Genii, depositaries of
the Universal Provedence, was
intimately connected with the
Ancient Mysteries, and adopted in the sacrifices
and initiations
'both of Greeks and Barbarians. Plutarch says that the Gods,
by
means of Genii, who are intermediates between them and men,
draw near to
mortals in the , ceremonies of initiation, at which
the Gods charge them to
assist, and to distribute punishment and
blessing. Thus not the Deity, but His
ministers, or a Principle
and Power of Evil, were deemed the authors of vice
and sin and
suffering: and thus the Genii or angels differed in character
like
men, some being good and some evil; some Celestial Gods,
Archangels, Angels,
and some Infernal Gods, Demons and fallen
Angels.
At the head of the latter was their Chief, Typhon,
Ahriman, or Shaitan, the
Evil Principle ; who, having wrought
disorder in nature, brought troubles on
men by land and sea, and
caused the greatest ills, is at last punished for his
crimes. It
was these events and incidents, says Plutarch, which Isis desired
to
represent in the ceremonial ,of the Mysteries, established by
her in memory of
her sorrows and wanderings, whereof she
exhibited an image and representation
in her Sanctuaries, where
also were afforded encouragements to piety and
consolation in
misfortune. The dogma of a Providence, he says, administering
the
Universe by means of intermediary Powers, who maintain the
connection of
man with the Divinity, was eonsecrated in the
hlysteries of the Egyptians,
Phrygians, and Thracians, of the
Magi and the Disciples of Zoroaster; as is
plain by their
initiations, in which mournful and funereal ceremonies
mingled.
It was an essential part of the lessons given the
Initiates, to teach them the
relations of their own souls with
Universal Nature, the greatest lessons of
all, meant to dignify
man in his own eyes, and teach him his place in the
Universe of
things.
Thus the whole system of the Universe was displayed in
all its parts to
the eyes of the Initiate ; and the symbolic cave
which reps resented it was
adorned and clothed with all the
attributes of that Universe. To this world so
organized, endowed
with a double force, active and passive, divided between
light
and darkness, moved by a living and intelligent Force, governed by
Genii
or Angels who preside over its different parts, and whose
nature and character
are more lofty or low i# proportion as they
possess a greater or less portion
of dark matter,-to this world
descends the soul, emanation of the ethereal
fire, and exiled
from the luminous region above the world. It enters into
this
dark matter, wherein the hostile principles, each seconded
by his troops of
Genii, are ever in convict, there to submit to
one or more organizations in the
body which is its prison, until
it shall at last return to its place of origin,
its true native
country, from which daring this life it is an exile.
But one
thing remained,-to represent its return, through the
constellations
and planetary spheres, to its original home. The
celestial fire, the
philosophers said, soul of the world and of
fire, an universal principle,
circulating above the Heavens, in a
region infinitely pure and wholly luminous,
itself pure, simple,
and unmixed, is above the world by its specific lightness.
If any
part of it (say a human soul) descends, it acts against its nature
in
doing so, urged by an inconsiderate desire of the
intelligence, a perfidious
love for matter which causes it to
descend, to know what passes here below,
where good and evil are
in conflict. The Soul, a simple substance, when
unconnected with
matter, a ray or partscle of the Divine Fire, whose home is
in
Heaven, ever turns toward that home, while united with the
body, and
struggles to return thither.
Teaching this, the
Mysteries strove to recall man to his divine origin, and
point
out to him the means of returning thither. The grist science
acquired in
the Mysteries was knowledge of man's self, of the
nobleness of his origin, the
grandeur of his destiny, and his
superiority over the animals, which can never
acquire this
knowledge, and whom he resembles so long as he does not
reject
upon his existence and sound the depths of his own
nature.
By doing and suffering, by virtue and piety and good
deeds, the soul was
enabled at length to free itself from the
body, and ascend along the path of
the Milky Way, by the gate of
Capricorn and by the seven spheres. to the place
whence by many
graduations and successive lapses and enthrallments it
had
descended. And thus the theory of the spheres, and of the
signs and
intelligences which preside there, and the whole system
of astronomy, were
connected with that of the soul and its
destiny; and so were taught in the
Mysteries, in which were
developed the great principles of physics and
metaphysics as to
the origin of the soul, its condition here below,
its
destination, and its future fate.
The Greeks fix the date
of the establishment of the Mysteries of Eleusis at
the year 1423
B. C., during the reign of Erechtheus at Athens. According
to
some authors, they were instituted by Ceres herself; and
according to others,
by that Monarch, who brought them from
Egypt, where, according to Diodorus of
Sicily, he was born.
Another tradition was, that Orpheus introduced them into
Greece,
together with the Dionysian ceremonies, copying the latter from
the
Mysteries of Osiris, and the former from those of
Isis.
Nor was it at Athens only, that the worship and Mysteries
of Isis,
metamorphosed into Ceres, were established. The
Boeotians worshipped the Great
or Cabiric Ceres, in the recesses
of a sacred grove, into which none but
Initiates could enter; and
the ceremonies there observed, and the sacred
traditions of their
Mysteries, were connected with those of the Cabiri
in
Samothrace.
So in Argos, Phocis, Arcadia, Achaia, Messenia,
Corinth, and many other parts
of Greece, the Mysteries were
practiced, revealing everywhere their Egyptian
origin and
everywhere having the same general features; but those of
Eleusis,
in Attica, Pausanias informs us, had been regarded by
the Greeks, from the
earliest times, as being as far superior to
all the others, as the Gods are to
mere Heroes.
Similar to
these were the Mysteries of Bona Dea, the Good Goddess, whose
name,
say Cicero and Plutarch, it was not permitted to any man to
know, celebrated at
Rome frorm the earliest times of that city.
It was these Mysteries, practiced
by women alone, the secrecy of
which was impiously violated by Claudius. They
were held at the
Kalends of May; and, according to Plutarch, much of
the
ceremonial greatly resembled that of the Mysteries of
Bacchus.
The Mysteries of Venus and Adonis belonged principally
to Syria and Phoenicia,
whence they passed into Greece and
Sicily. Venus or Astarte was the Great
Female Deity of the
Phoenicians, as Hercules, Melkarth or Adoni was their Chief
God.
Adoni, called by the Greeks Adonis, was the lover of Venus. Slain by
a
wound in the thigh inflicted by a wild boar in the chase, the
flower called
anemone sprang from his blood. Venus received the
corpse and obtained from
Jupiter the boon that her lover should
thereafter pass six months of each year
with her, and the other
six in the Shades with Proserpine; an allegorical
description of
the alternate residence of the Sun in the two hemispheres.
In
these Mysteries his death was represented and mounted, and
after this
maceration and mourning were concluded, his
resurrection and ascent to Heaven
were announced.
Ezekiel
speaks of the festivals of Adonis under the name of those of
Thammuz,
an Assyrian Deity, whom every year the women mourned,
seated at the doors of
their dwellings. These Mysteries, like the
others, were celebrated in the
Spring, at the Vernal Equinox,
when he was restored to life; at which time,
when they-were
instituted, the Sun (Adoni, Lord, or Master) was in the
Sign
Taurus, the domicile of Venus. He was represented with
horns, and the hymn of
Orpheus in his honor styles him "the
two-horned God ;" as in Argos Bacchus was
represented with the
feet of a bull.
Plutarch says that Adonis and Bacchus were
regarded as one' and the same
Deity; and that this opinion was
founded on the great similarity in very many
respects between the
Mysteries of
these two Gods.
The Mysteries of Bacchus were
known as the Sabazian, Orphic and Dionysian
Festivals. They went
back to the remotest antiquity among the Greeks, and
were
attributed by some to Bacchus himself, and by others to
Orpheus. The
resemblance in ceremonial between the observances
established in honor of
Osiris in Egypt, and those in honor of
Bacchus in Greece, the mythological
traditions of the two Gods,
and the symbols used in the festivals of each,
amply prove their
identity. Neither the name of Bacchus, nor the word
orgies
applied to his feasts, nor the sacred words used in his
Mysteries, are Greek,
but of foreign origin. Bacchus was an
Oriental Deity, worshipped in the East,
and his orgies celebrated
there, long before the Greeks adopted them. In the
earliest times
he was worshipped in India, Arabia, and Bavaria.
He was honored
in Greece with public festivals, and in simple or
complicated
Mysteries, varying in ceremonial in various places,
as was natural, because his
worship had come thither from
different countries and at different periods, The
people who
celebrated the complicated Mysteries were ignorant of the
meaning
of. many words which they used, and of many embalms which
they revered. In the
Sabazian Feasts, for example [from
Saba-Zeus, an oriental name of this Deity],
the words EVOI,
SABOI, Were used, which are in nowise Greek; and a serpent
of
gold was thrown into the bosom of the Initiate, in allusion to
the fable that
Jupiter had, in the form of a serpent, had
connection with Proserpine, and
begotten Bakchos, the bull ;
whence the enigmatical saying, repeated to the
Initiates, that a
bull engendered a dragon or serpent, and the serpent in
turn
engendered the bull, who became Bakchos : the meaning if
which was, that the
bull [Taurus, which then opened the Vernal
Equinox, and the Sun in which Sign,
figuratively represented by
the Sign itself, was Bakchos, Dionysus, Saba-Zeus,
Osiris, etc.],
and the Serpent, another constellation, occupied such
relative
positions in the Heavens, that when one rose the other
set, and vice versa.
The serpent was a familiar symbol in the
Mysteries of Bakchos. The Initiates
grasped them with their
hands, as Orphiucus does on the celestial globe, and
the
Orpheo-telestes, or purifier of candidates did the same, crying,
as
Demosthenes taunted. AEschines with doing in public at the
head of the women
whom his mother was to imitate, EVOI, SAB0I,
HYES ATTE, ANTE, HYES!
The Initiates in these Mysteries had
preserved the ritual and ceremonies that
accorded with the
simplicity of the earliest ages, and the manners of the
first
men. The rules of Pythagoras were followed there. Like the
Egyptians, who held
wool unclean, they buried no Initiate in
woolen garments. They abstained from
bloody sacrifices; and lived
on fruits or vegetables or inanimate things. They
imitated the
life of the contemplative Sects of the Orient; thus
approximating
to the tranquility of the first men, who lived
exempt from trouble and crimes
in the bosom of a profound peace.
One of the most precious advantages promised
by their initiation
was, to put a man in communion with the Gods, by purifying
his
soul of all the passions that interfere with that enjoyment, and dim
the
rays of divine light that are communicated to every soul
capable of receiving
them, and that imitate their purity. One of
the degrees of initiation was the
state of inspiration to which
the adapts were claimed to attain. The Initiates
in the Mysteries
of the Lamb, at Pepuza, in Phrygia, professed to be inspired,
and
prophesied and it was claimed that the soul, by means of these
religious
ceremonies, purified of any stain, could see the Gods
in this life, and
certainly, in all cases, after death. The
sacred gates of the Temple, where the
ceremonies of initiation
were performed, were opened but once in each year, and
no
stranger was ever allowed to enter. It. night threw her veil over
these
august Mysteries, which could be revealed to no, one. There
the sufferings of
Bakchos were represented, who, like Osiris,
died, descended to hell and rose to
life again; and raw flesh was
distributed to the Initiates, which each ate, in
memory of the
death df the Deity, torn in pieces by the Titans.
These Mysteries
also were celebrated at the Vernal Equinox; and the emblem
of
generation, to express the active energy and generative power
of the Divinity,
was a principal symbol. The Initiates wore
garlands and crowns of myrtle and
laurel.
In these Mysteries,
the aspirant was kept in terror and darkness to perform
the three
days and nights; and was then made Afa?ismos , Of
Ceremony
representing the death of Bakchos, the same mythological
personage with Osiris.
This was effected by coffining him in a
close cell, that he might seriously
reflect, in solitude and
darkness, on the business he was engaged in : and his
mind be
prepared for the reception of the sublime and mysterious truths
of
primitive revelation and philosophy. This was a symbolic death
; the
deliverance from it, regeneration ; after which he was
called difn?s or
twin-born. While confined in the cell, the
pursuit of Typhon after the mangled
body of Osiris, and the
search of Rhea or Isis for the same, were enacted in
his hearing;
the initiated crying aloud the names, of that Deity derived
from
the Sanskrit. Then it was announced that the body was found
; and the aspirant
was liberated amid shoots of joy and
exultation.
Then he passed through a representation of Hell and
Elysium. "Then," said an
ancient writer, "they are entertained
with hymns and dances, with the sublime
doctrines of sacred
knowledge, and with wonderful and holy visions. And now
become
perfect and initiated, they are FREE, and no longer under restraint
;
but, crowned, and triumphant, they walk up and down the regions
of the blessed,
converse with pure and holy men, and celebrate
the sacred Mysteries at
pleasure." They were taught the nature
and objects of the Mysteries, and the
means of making themselves
known, and received the name of Epopts; were fully
instructed ie
the nature and attributes of the Divinity, and the doctrine of
a
future state; and made acquainted with the unity and attributes
of the Grand
Architect of the Universe, and the true meaning of
the fables in regard to the
Gods of Paganism: the great Truth
being often proclaimed, that "Zeus is the
primitive Source of all
things; there is one God; one power, and one rule over
all." And
after full explanation of the many symbols and emblems
that
surrounded them, they were dismissed with the barbarous
words Kog? Ompa?,
corruptions of the Sanskrit words, Kanska Aom
Pakscha; meaning, object of our
wishes, God, Silence, or Worship
the Deity in Silence.
. Among the emblems used was the rod of
Bakchos; which once, it was said, he
cast on the ground, and it
became a serpent; and at another time he struck the
rivers
Orontes and Hydaspes with it,. and the waters receded and he passed
over
dry-shod. Water was obtained, during the ceremonies, by
striking a rock with
it. The Bakchae crowned their heads with
serpents, carried them in vases and
baskets, and at the Evehois,
or finding, of the body of Osiris, cast one,
alive, into the
aspirant's bosom.
The Mysteries of Atys in Phrygia, and those of
Cybele his mistress, like their
worship, much resembled those of
Adonis and Bakchos, Osiris and Isis. Their
Asiatic origin is
universally admitted, and was with great plausibility claimed
by
Phrygia, which contested the palm of antiquity with Egypt. They,
more than
any other people, mingled allegory with their.
religious worship, and were
great inventors of fables ; and their
sacred traditions as to Cybele and Atys,
whom all admit to be
Phrygian Gods, were very various. In all, as we learn irom
Julius
Firmicus, they represented by allegory the phenomena ,of nature, and
the
succession of physical facts, under the veil of a marvelous
history.
Their feasts occurred at the equinoxes, commencing with
lamentation, mourning,
groans, and pitiful cries for the heath of
Atys; and ending with rejoicings at
his restoration to
life.
We shall not recite the different versions of the legend of
Atys and Cybele,
given by Julius Firmicus, Diodorus, Arnobius,
Lactantius, Servius, Saint
Augustine, and Pausanias. It is enough
to say that it is in substance this:
that Cybele, a Phrygian
Princess, who invented musical instruments and dances,
was
enamored of Atys, a youth; that either he in a fit of frenzy
mutilated
himself or was mutilated by her in a paroxysm of
jealousy ; that he died, and
afterward, like Adonis, was restored
to life.' It is the Phoenician fiction as
to the Sun-God,
expressed in other terms, under other 'forms, and with
other
names.' Cybele was worshipped in Syria, under the name of
Rhea.
Lucian says that the Lydian Atys there established her
worship and built her
temple. The name of Rhea is also found in
the ancient cosmogony of the
Phoenicians by Sanchoniathon. It
was' Atys the Lydian, says Lucian, who, having
been mutilated,
first established the Mysteries of Rhea, and taught
the
Phrygians, the Lydians, and the people of Samothrace to
celebrate them. Rhea,
like Cybele, was represented drawn by
lions, bearing a drum, and crowned with
flowers. - According to
Varro, Cybele represented the earth. She partook of
the
characteristics of Minerva, Venus, the Moon, Diana, Nemesis,
and the Furies ;
was clad in precious stones ; and her High
Priest wore a robe of purple and a
tiara of gold.
`The Grand
Feast of the Syrian Goddess, like that of the Mother of the Gods
at
Rome, was celebrated at the Vernal Equinox. Precisely at that
equinox the
Mysteries of Atys were celebrated,' in which thi
Initiates were taught to
expect the rewards of a future life, and
the flight of Atys from the jealous
fury of Cybele was described,
his concealment in the mountains and in a cave,
and. His
self-mutilation in a fit of delirium ; in which act his
priests
imitated him. The feast of the passion of Atys continued
three days; the first
of which was passed in mourning and tears;
to which afterward clamorous
rejoicings succeeded ; by which,
Macrobius says, the Sun was adored under the
name of Atys. The
ceremonies were all allegorical, some of which, according to
the
Emperor Julian, could be explained, but more remained covered with
the veil
of mystery. Thus it is that symbols outlast their
explanations, as many have
done in Masonry, and ignorance and
rashness substitute new ones.
In another legend, given by
Pausanias, Atys dies, wounded like Adonis by a
wild boar in the
`organs of generation ; a mutilation with which all the
legends
ended. The pine tree under which he was said to have died, was
sacred
to him; and, was found upon many monuments, with a bull
and a ram near it; one
the sign of exaltation of the Sun, and the
other of that of the Moon.
The worship of the Sun under the name
of Mithras belonged to Persia, whence
that name came, as did the
erudite symbols of that worship. The Persians,
adorers of Fire,
regarded the Sun as; the most brilliant abode of the
fecundating
energy of that element, which gives life to the earth,
and
circulates in every part of the Universe, of which it is, as
it were, the soul.
This worship passed from Persia into Armenia,
Cappadocia, and Cilicia, long
before it was known at Rome. The
Mysteries of Mithras flurished more than any
others in the
imperial city. The worship of Mithras commenced to prevail
there
under Trojan. Hadrian prohibited these Mysteries, on
account of the cruel
scenes represented in their ceremonial : for
human victims were immolated
therein, and the events of futurity
looked for in their palpitatirig entrails.
They reappeared in
greater splendor than ever under Commodus, who with his own
hand
sacrificed a victim to Mithras : and they were still more practiced
under
Constantine and his successors, when the Priests of Mithras
were found
everywhere in the Roman Empire, and the monuments of
his worship appeared even
in Britain.
Caves were consecrated
to Mithras, in which were collected a multitude of
astronomical
emblems ; and cruel tests were required of the Initiates.
The
Persians built no temples ; but worshipped upon the summits
of hills, in
enclosures of unhewn stones. They abominated images,
and made the Sun and Fire
emblems of the Deity. The Jews borrowed
this from them, and represented God as
appearing to Abraham in a
flame of fire, and to Moses as a fire at Horeb and
on
Sinai.
With the Persians, Mithras, typified in the Sun, was
the invisible Deity, the
Parent of the Universe, the Mediator. In
Zoroaster's cave of initiation, the'
Sun and Planets were
represented overhead, in gems and gold, as also was the
Zodiac.
The Sun appeared emerging from the back of Taurus. Three great
pillars,
Eternity, Fecundity, and Authority, supported the roof;
and the whole was at
emblem of the Universe.
Zoroaster, like
Moses, claimed to have conversed face to face, as man with
man,
with the Deity; and to have received from Him a system of pure
worship, to
be communicated only to the virtue ous, and those who
would devote themselves
to the study of Philosophy.- His fame
spread over the world, and pupils came to
hi~n from every
country. Even Pythagoras was his scholar.
After his novitiate,
the candidate entered the cavern of initiation, and was
received
on the point of a sword presented to his 425 naked left breast,
by
which he was slightly wounded. Being crowned with olive,
anointed with balsam
of benzoin, and other wise prepared, he was
purified with fire and. Water, and
went through seven stages of
initiation, The symbol of these stages was a high
ladder with
seven rounds or steps. In them, he went through many
fearful
trial's in which darkness displayed a principal part. He
saw a representation
of the wicked in Hides ; and finally emerged
from darkness into light. Received
it a place representing
Elysium, in the brilliant assembly of the initiated,
where the
Arch magus presided, robed in blue, he assumed the obligations
of
secrecy, and was entrusted with the Sacred Words, of which the
Ineffable Name
of God was the chief.
Then all the incidents of
his initiation were explained to him: he was taught
that these
ceremonies brought him nearer the Deity; and that he should
adore
the consecrated Fire, the gift of that Deity and His
visible residence. He was
taught the sacred characters known only
to the initiated; and instructed in
regard to the creation of .
the world, and the true philosophical meaning of
the vulgar
mythology ; and especially of the legend of Ormuzd and Ahriman,
and
the symbolic meaning of the six Amshaspands created by the
former : Bahman, the
Lord of Light; Ardibehest, the Genius of
Fire ; Shariver, the Lord of Splendor
and Metals; Stapandomad,
the Source of Fruitfulness; Kkordad, the Genius of
Water. and
Time ; and Amerdad, the protector of the Vegetable World, and
the
prime cause of growth. And finally he was taught the true
nature of the Supreme
Being, Creator of Ormuzd and Ahriman, the'
Absolute First 'Cause, styled
Zeruane
Akherene.
In the
Mithriac initiation were several Degrees. The first, Tertullian
says,
was that of Soldier of Mithras. The ceremony oi reception
consisted in
presenting the candidate a crown, supported by a
sword. It was placed near his
head, and he repelled it, saying,
"Mithras is my ,crown." Then he was declared
the soldier of
Mithras, and had the right to call the other Initiates
fellow
soldiers or companions in arms. Hence the title Companions
in the Royal Arch
Degree of the American Rite.
Then he passed,
Porphyry says, through. the Degree of the Lion, the
constellation
Leo, domicile of the Sun and symbol of Mithras,. found on
his
monuments. These ceremonies were termed at Rome Leontic and
Helium ; and
Coracia or Hiero-Coracia, of 426 Heavens below the
Lion, with the Hydra,
and also appearing on the Mithras
monuments.
Thence he passed to a higher Degree, where the
Initiates were 'called Perses
and children of the - Sun. Above
them were the Fathers, whose chief or
Patriarch was styled Father
of Fathers, or Pater Patratus. The Initiates also
bore the title
of Eagles and Hawks, birds consecrated to the Sun in Egypt,
the
former sacred to the God Mendes, and the latter the emblem of
the Sun and
Royalty.
The little island of Samothrace was long
the depositary of certain august
Mysteries, and many went thither
from all parts of Greece to be initiated. It
was said to have
been settled by the ancient Pelasgi, early Asiatic colonists
in
Greece. The Gods adored in the Mysteries of this island were termed
CABIRI,
an oriental word, from Caber, great. Varro calls the Gods
of Samothrace, Potent
(Gods. In Arabic, Venus is called Caber.
Varro says thai the Great Deities
whose Mysteries were practiced
there, were Heaven and Earth. These were but
symbols of the
Active and Passive Powers or Principles of universal
generation.
The two Twin, Castor and Pollux, or the Dioscuri,
were also called the Gods of
Samothrace; and the Scholiast of
Apollonius, citing Mnaseas, gives the names of
Ceres, Proserpine,
Pluto, and Mercury, as the four Cabiric Divinities
worshipped at
Samothrace, as Axieros, Axiocersa, Axiocersus, and
Casmillus.
Mercury was, there as everywhere, the minister and
messenger of the Gods ; and
the young servitors of the altars and
the children employed in the Temples were
called Mercuries or
Casmillus, as they were in Tuscany, by the Etrusci and
Pelasgi,
who worshipped the Great Gods.
Tarquin the Etruscan was an
Initiate of the mysteries of Samothrace; and
Etruria had its
Cabiri as Samothrace had. For the worship of the Cabiri
spread
from that island into Etruria, Phrygia, and Asia Minor :
and it probably came
from Phoenicia into Samothrace : for the
Cabiri are mentioned by Sanchoniathon;
and the word Caber belongs
to the Hebrew, Phoenician, and Arabic languages.
The Dioscuri,
tutelary Deities of Navigation, with Venus, were invoked in
the
Mysteries of Samothrace. The constellation Auriga, or
Phaeton, was also honored
there with imposing ceremonies. Upon
the Aeronautic expedition, Orpheus, an
Initiate of these 427
Mysteries, a storm arising, counseled his companions
to put into
Samothrace. They did so, the storm ceased, and they
were
initiated into the Mysteries there, and sailed again with
the
assurance of a fortunate voyage, under the auspices of the
Dioscuri,
patrons
of sailors and navigation.
But much more
than that was promised the Initiates. The
Hierophants of
Samothrace made something infinitely greater to be the object
of
their initiations ; to wit, the consecration of men to the
Deity, by
pledging them to virtue ; and the assurance of those
rewards which
the justice of the Gods reserves for Initiates
after death. This,
above all else, made these ceremonies august,
and inspired
everywhere so great a respect for them, and so great
a desire to
be admitted to them. `that originally caused the
island to be
styled Sacred. It was respected by all nations. The
Romans, when
masters of the world, left it its liberty and laws.
It was an
asylum for the unfortunates and a sanctuary
inviolable.
There men were absolved of the crime of homicide, if
not
committed in a temple. Children of tender age were initiated
there, and
invested with the sacred robe, the purple tincture,
and the crown of olive, and
seated upon a throne, like other
Initiates. In the ceremonies was
represented the death if the
youngest of the Cabiri, slain by his
brothers, who fled into
Etruria, carrying with them the chest or
ark that contained, his
genitals: and there the Phallus and the
sacred ark were adored..
Herodotus says that the Samothracian
Initiates understood the
object and origin of this reverence paid
the Phallus, and why it
was exhibited in the Mysteries. Clement
of Alexandria says that
the Cabiri taught the Tuscany to revere
it. It was consecrated at
Heliopolis in Syria, where the mysteries of a
Divinity having
many points of resemblance with. Atys and Cybele
were
represented. The Pelasgi connected it with Mercury ;and it
appears
on the monuments of Mathias ; always and every-where a
symbol of
the life-giving power of the Sun at the Vernal
Equinox.
In the Indian Mysteries, as the candidate made his three
circuits, he paused
each time he reached the South, and said, "I
copy the example of the
Sun, and follow his beneficent course."
Blue Masonry has renamed
the Circuits, but has utterly lost the
explanation; which is, that in
the Mysteries the candidate
invariably represented the Sun, descending
Southward' toward the
reign of. 428 the Evil Principle, Ahriman,
Sita, or Typhon
(darkness and winter) ; there figuratively to be slain, and
after
a few days to rise again from the dead, and commence to ascend to
the
Northward. Then the death of Sita was bewailed ; or that of
Cama, slain by
Iswara, aid committed to the waves on a chest,
like Osiris and Bacchus; during
which the candidate was terrified
by phantoms and horrid noises.
Then he was made to personify
Vishnu, and perform his avatars, or labors. In
the first two he
was taught in allegories the legend of the Deluge: in the
first
he took three steps at right angles, representing the three huge
steps
taken by Vishnu in that avatar; and hence the three steps
in the Master's
Degree ending at right angles.
The nine
avatars finished, he was taught the necessity of faith, as
superior
to sacrifices, acts of charity, or mortifications of the
flesh. Then he was
admonished against five crimes, and took a
solemn obligation never to commit
them. He was then introduced
into a representation of Paradise; the Company of
the Members of
the Order, magnificently arrayed, and the Altar with a
fire
blazing upon it, as an emblem of the Deity.
Then a new
name was given him, and he was invested in a white robe and
tiara,
and received the signs, tokens, and lectures. A cross was
marked on his
forehead, and an inverted level, or the Tau Cross,
on his breast. He received
the sacred cord, and divers amulets or
talismans; and was then invested with
the sacred Word or Sublime
Name, known only to the initiated, the Trilateral A.
U.
M.
Then the multitude of emblems was explained to the candidate ;
the arcana of
science hidden under them, and the different
virtues of which the mythological
figures were more
personifications. And he thus learne4 the meaning of
those
symbols, which, to the uninitiated, were but a maze of
unintelligible
figures. 429 Godhead, the happiness of the
patriarchs, the destruction by
the Deluge, the depravity of the
heart, and the necessity of a mediator, the
instability of life,
the final destruction of all created things, and the
restoration
of the world in a more perfect form. They inculcated the
Eternity
of the Soul, explained the meaning of the doctrine of
the Metempsychosis, and
held the-doctrine of a state of future
rewards and punishments: and they also
earnestly urged that sins
could only be atoned for by repentance, reformation,
and
voluntary penance; and not by mere ceremonies and sacrifices.
The
Mysteries among the Chinese and Japanese came frown India, and
were
founded on the same principles and with similar rites. The
word given to the
new Initiate was O-Mi-To Fo, in which we
recognize the original name A. U. M.,
coupled at a much later
time with that of Fo, the Indian Buddha, to show that
he was the
Great Deity Himself.
The equilateral triangle was one of their
symbols; and so was the mystical Y;
both alluding to the Triune
God, and the latter being the ineffable name of the
Deity. A ring
supported by two serpents was emblematical of the
world,
protected by the power and wisdom of the Creator; and that
is the origin of the
two parallel lines (into which time has
changed the two serpents), that support
the circle in our
Lodges.
Among the Japanese, the term of probation for the highest
Degree was twenty
years.
The main features of the Druidical
Mysteries resembled those of the Orient.
The ceremonies commenced
with a hymn to the sun. The candidates were arranged
in ranks of
threes, fives, and sevens, according to their qualifications;
and
conducted nine times around the Sanctuary, from East to West.
The candidate
underwent many trials, one of which had direct
reference to the legend of
Osiris. He was placed in a boat, and
sent out to sea alone, having to rely on
his own skill and
presence of mind to reach the opposite shore in safety. The
death
of Hu was represented in his hearing, with every external mark of
sorrow,
while he was in utter darkness. He met with many
obstacles, had to prove his
courage, and expose his life against
armed enemies; represented various
animals, and at last,
attaining the permanent light, he was instructed by
the
Arch-Druid in regard to the Mysteries, and in the morality of
the third Degree
was a life of seclusion, after the Initiate's
children were capable of
providing for themselves ; passed in the
forest, in the practice of prayers and
ablutions, and living only
on vegetables. He was then said to be born again.
The fourth was
absolute renunciation of the world, self-contemplation
add
self-torture ; by which Perfection was thought to be
attained, and the soul
merged in the Deity.
In the second
Degree, the Initiate was taught the Unity of the 430
Order,
incited to act bravely in war, taught the great truths of
the immortality of
the soul and a future state, solemnly enjoined
not to neglect the worship of
the Deity, nor the practice of
rigid morality; and to avoid' sloth, contention,
and
folly.
The aspirant attained only the exoteric knowledge in the
first two Degrees.
The third was attained only by a few, and they
persons of rank and consequence,
and after long purification, and
study of all the arts and sciences known to
the Druids, in
solitude, for nine months. This was the symbolical death
and
burial of these` Mysteries.
The dangerous voyage upon the
actual open sea, in a small boat covered with a
skin, on the
evening of the 29th of April, was the last trial, and
closing
scene, of initiation. If he declined this trial, he was
dismissed with
contempt. If he made it and succeeded, he was
termed thrice-born, was eligible
to all the dignities of the
State, and received complete instruction in the
philosophy= cal
and religious doctrines of the Druids.
The Greeks also styled the
,Epopihz T?ig??o?, thrice-born; and in India
perfection was
assigned to the Yogi who had accomplished many births.
The
general features of the initiations among the Goths were the same as
in
all the Mysteries. A long probation, of fasting and
mortification, circular
processions, representing the march of
the celestial bodies, many fearful tests
and trials, a descent
into the infernal regions, the killing of the God Balder
by the
Evil Principle, Lok, the placing of his body in a boat and sending
it
abroad upon the waters ; and, in short, the Eastern Legend,
under different
names, and with some variations.
The Egyptian
Anubis appeared there, as the dog guarding the gates of
death.
The candidate was immured in the representation of a tomb;
and when released,
goes in search of the body of Balder, and
finds him, at length, restored to
life, and seated upon a throne.
He was obligated upon a naked sword (as is
still the custom in
the Rit Moderne), and sealed his obligation by drinking
mead out
of a human skull.
Then all the ancient primitive truths were made
known to him, so far as they
had survived the assaults of time:
and he was informed as to the generation of
the Gods, the
creation of the world, the deluge, and the resurrection, of
which
that of Balder was a type. He was marked with the sign of
the cross and a ring
was given 431 to him as a symbol of the
Divine Protection; and also as an
emblem of Perfection; from
which comes the custom of giving a ring to the
Aspirant in the
14th Degree.
The point within Circle, and the Cube, emblem of
Odin, were explained to him;
and lastly, the nature of the
Supreme God, "the author of everything that
existeth, the
Eternal, the Ancient, the Living and Awful Being, the
Searcher
into concealed things', the Being that never changeth ;"
with whom Odin the
Conqueror was by the vulgar confounded : and
the Triune God of the Indians was
reproduced, as Odin, the
Almighty FATHER, FREA, (Rhea or Phre), his wife
(emblem of
universal matter), and Thor his son (the Mediator). Here
we
recognize Osiris, Isis, and Hor or Horus. Around the head of
Thor, as if to
show his eastern origin, twelve stars were
arranged in a circle.
He was also taught the ultimate destruction
of the world, and the rising of a
new one, in which the brave and
virtuous shall enjoy everlasting happiness and
delight: as the
means of securing which happy fortune, he was taught to
practise
the strictest morality and virtue. The Initiate was prepared
to
receive the great lessons of all the Mysteries, by long
trials, or by
abstinence and chastity. For many days he was
required to fast and be
continent, and to drink liquids
calculated to diminish his passions and keep
him chaste.
Ablutions were also required, symbolical of the purity necessary
to
enable the soul to escape from its bondage in matter. Sacred
butts and
preparatory baptisms were used, lustrations,
immersions, lustral sprinklings,
and purifications of every kind.
At Athens they bathed in the Ilissus, which
thence became a
sacred river; and before enteringthe Temple of Eleusis, all
were
required to wash their hands in a vase of lustral water placed near
the
entrance. Clean hands and a pure heart were required of the
candidates.
Apuleius bathed seven times in the sea, symbolical of
the Seven Spheres through
which the Soul must reascend ; add the
Hindus must bathe in the sacred river
Ganges.
Clement of
Alexandria cites a passage of Meander, who speaks of a
purification
by sprinkling three times with salt and water
Sulphur, resin, and the laurel
also served for purification as
did air, earth, water, and fire. The Initiates
at Heliopolis, in
Syria, says Lucian, sacrificed the sacred lamb, symbol of
Aries,
then the sign of the Vernal Equinox ; ate his flesh, as the
Israelites.
did at the Passover; and then touched his head and
feet to theirs, and knelt
upon the fleece. Then they bathed in
warm water, drank of the same, and slept
upon the
ground.
There was a distinction between the lesser and greater
Mysteries. One must
have been for some years admitted to the
former,' before he could receive the
latter, which were but a
preparation for them, the Vestibule of the temple, of
which those
of Eleusis were the Sanctuary. There, in the lesser Mysteries,
they
were prepared to receive the holy truths taught in the
greater. The Initiates
in the lesser were called simply Mystic,
or Initiates ; but those in the
greater, Epopts) or Seers. An
ancient poet says that the former were an
imperfect shadow of the
latter, as sleep is of Death. After admission to the
former, the
Initiate was taught lessons of morality, and the rudiments of
the
sacred science, the most sublime and secret part of which was
reserved for the
Epopt, who saw the Truth in its nakedness, while
the Mystic only viewed it
through a veil and under emblems fitter
to excite than to satisfy his
curiosity.
Before communicating
the first secrets and primary dogmas of initiation, the
priests
required the candidate to take a fearful oath never to divulge
the
secrets. Then he made his vows, prayers, and sacrifices to
the Gods. The skins
of the victims consecrated to Jupiter were
spread on the ground, and he was
made to set his feet upon them.
He was then taught some enigmatic formulas, as
answers to
questions, by which to make himself known. He was then
enthroned,
invested with a purple tincture, and crowned with
flowers, or branches of palm
or olive.
We do not certainly
know the time that was required to elapse between the
admission
to the Lesser and Greater Mysteries of Eleusis. Most writers fix
it
at five years. It was a singular mark of favor when Demetrius
was made Mystic
and Epopt in one and the same ceremony. When at
length admitted to the Degree
of perfection, the Initiate was
brought face to face with entire nature, and
learned that the
soul was the whole of man; that earth was but his place of
exile;
that Heaven was his native country; that for the soul to be born
is
really to die; and that death was for it the return to a new
life. Then he
entered the sanctuary; but he did not receive the
whole instruction at once. It
continued through several years.
There were, as it were, many apartments,
through which be
advanced by degrees, and between which thick veils
intervened.
There were Statues and Paintings, says Proclus, in
the inmost sanctuary,
showing the forms assumed by the Gods.
Finally the last veil fell, the sacred
covering dropped from the
image of the Goddess, and she stood revealed in all
her splendor,
-surrounded by a divine light, which, filling the
whole
sanctuary, dazzled the eyes and penetrated the soul of the
Initiate. Thus is
symbolized the final revelation of the true
doctrine as to the nature of Deity
and of the soul, and of the
relations of each to matter. This was preceded by
frightful
scenes, alternations of fear and joy, of light and darkness;
by
glittering lightning and the crashed thunder, and apparitions
of specters, or
magical illusions, impressing at once the eyes
and ears. This Claudian
describes, in his poem on the rape of
Proserpine, where he alludes to what
passed in her Mysteries.
"The temple is shaken," he cries; “fiercely gleams the
lightning,
by which the Deity announces his presence. Earth trembles ; and
a
terrible noise is heard in the midst of these terrors. The
Temple of the Son of
Cecrops resounds with long-continued roars;
Eleusis uplifts her sacred torches
; the serpents of Triptolemus
are heard to hiss ; and fearful Hecate appears
afar."
The
celebration of the Greek Mysteries continued, according to the
better
opinion, for nine days. On the first the Initiates met. It
was the day of the
full moon, of the month Boedromion ; when the
moon was full at the end of the
sign Aries, near the Pleiades and
the place of her exaltation in Taurus.
The second day there was a
procession to the sea, for purification by bathing.
The third was
occupied with offerings, expiatory sacrifices, and
other
religious rites, such as fasting, mourning, continence,
etc.A mullet was
immolated, and offerings of grain and living
animals made. On the fourth they
carried in procession the mystic
wreath of flowers, representing that which
Proserpine dropped
when seized by Pluto, and the Crown of Ariadne in the
Heavens. It
was borne on a triumphal car drawn by oxen; and women
followed
bearing mystic chests or boxes, wrapped with purple
clothe, captaining grains
of sesame, pyramidal biscuits, salt,
pomegranates and the mysterious serpent,
and perhaps the mystic
phallus. On the fifth was the superb procession of
torches,
commemorative of the search for Proserpine by Ceres ; the
Initiates
marching by trios, and each bearing a torch; while at
the head of the
procession marched the Dadoukos.
The sixth was
consecrated to Iakchos, the young Light-God, son of Ceres,
reared
in the sanctuaries and bearing the torch of the Sun-God. The chorus
in
Aristophanes terms him the luminous star that lights the
nocturnal initiation.
He was brought from the sanctuary, his head
crowned with myrtle, and borne from
the gate of the Ceramicus to
Eleusis, along the sacred way, amid dances, sacred
songs, every
mark of joy, and mystic cries of Iakchos.
On the seventh there
were gymnastic exercises and combats, the victors in
which were
crowned and rewarded.
On the eighth was the feast of
AEsculapius.
On the ninth the famous libation was made for the
souls of the departed. The
Priests, according to Athenaus, filled
two vases, placed one in the East and
one in the West, toward the
gates of day and night, and overturned them,
pronouncing a
formula of mysterious prayers. Thus they invoked Light
and
Darkness, the two great' principles of nature.
During all
these days no one could be arrested, nor any suit brought, on
pain
of death, or at least a heavy fine: and no one was allowed,
by the display of
unusual wealth or magnificence, to
endeavor
to rival this sacred pomp. Everything was for religion. Such were
the
Mysteries ; and such the Old Thought, as in scattered and
widely separated
fragments it has come down to us.
The human
mind still speculates upon the great mysteries of nature, and
still
finds its ideas anticipated by the ancients, whose
profoundest thoughts are to
be looked for, not in `their
philosophies, but in their symbols, by which they
endeavored to
express the great ideas that vainly struggled for utterance
in
words, as they viewed fhe great circle of phenomena,-Birth,
Life, Death, or
Decomposition, and New Life out of Death and
Rottenness,- to them the greatest
of mysteries. Remember, while
you study their symbols, that they had a
profounder sense of
these wonders than we have. To them the transformations of
the
worm were a greater wonder than the stars; and hence the poor
dumb
scarabaeus or beetle was sacred to them. Thus their faiths
are condensed into
symbols or expanded into allegories, which
they understood, but were not always
able to explain in language;
for there are thoughts and ideas which no language
ever spoken by
man has words to express
MORALS and DOGMA by ALBERT PIKE
SHORT BIOGRAPHY
TITLES OF DEGREES
1º - Apprentice
2º - Fellow-craft
3º - Master
4º - Secret Master
5º - Perfect Master
6º - Intimate Secretary
7º - Provost and Judge
8º - Intendant of the Building
9º - Elu of the Nine
10º - Elu of the Fifteen
11º - Elu of the Twelve
12º - Master Architect
13º - Royal Arch of Solomon
14º - Perfect Elu
15º - Knight of the East
16º - Prince of Jerusalem
17º - Knight of the East and West
18º - Knight Rose Croix
19º - Pontiff
20º - Master of the Symbolic Lodge
21º - Noachite or Prussian Knight
22º - Knight of the Royal Axe or Prince of Libanus
23º - Chief of the Tabernacle
24º - Prince of the Tabernacle
25º - Knight of the Brazen Serpent
26º - Prince of Mercy
27º - Knight Commander of the Temple
28º - Knight of the Sun or Prince Adept ( Part 1 )
28º - Knight of the Sun or Prince Adept ( Part 2 )
28º - Knight of the Sun or Prince Adept ( Part 3 )
28º - Knight of the Sun or Prince Adept ( Part 4 )
30º - Knight Kadosh
31º - Inspector Inquistor
32º - Master of the Royal Secret
THE CHURCH OF ROME AND FREEMASONRY
SO MOTE IT BE