Joan.
— Advance our waving colors on the walls!
— King Henry
VI. Act IV.
"My life has been devoted to the study of man, his destiny and his
happiness."
— J. R. BUCHANAN,
M.D., Outlines of Lectures on Anthropology.
IT
is nineteen centuries since, as we are told, the night of Heathenism
and Paganism was first dispelled by the divine light of
Christianity; and two-and-a-half centuries since the bright lamp of
Modern Science began to shine on the darkness of the ignorance of
the ages. Within these respective epochs, we are required to
believe, the true moral and intellectual progress of the race has
occurred. The ancient philosophers were well enough for their
respective generations, but they were illiterate as compared with
modern men of science.
The ethics of Paganism perhaps met the wants of the
uncultivated people of antiquity, but not until the advent of the
luminous "Star of Bethlehem," was the true road to moral perfection
and the way to salvation made plain. Of old, brutishness was the
rule, virtue and spirituality the exception. Now, the dullest may
read the will of God in His revealed word; men have every incentive
to be good, and are constantly becoming better.
This is the assumption; what are the facts? On the one hand an
unspiritual, dogmatic, too often debauched clergy; a host of sects,
and three warring great religions; discord instead of union, dogmas
without proofs, sensation-loving preachers, and wealth and
pleasure-seeking parishioners' hypocrisy and bigotry, begotten by
the tyrannical exigencies of respectability, the rule of the day,
sincerity and real piety exceptional. On the other hand, scientific
hypotheses built on sand; no accord upon a single question;
rancorous quarrels and jealousy; a general drift into materialism. A
death-grapple of Science with Theology for infallibility — "a
conflict of ages."
At Rome, the self-styled seat of Christianity, the putative
successor to the chair of Peter is undermining social order with his
invisible but omnipresent net-work of bigoted agents, and incites
them to revolutionize Europe for his temporal as well as spiritual
supremacy. We see him who calls himself the "Vicar of Christ,"
fraternizing with the anti-Christian Moslem against another
Christian nation, publicly invoking the blessing of God upon the
arms of those who have for centuries withstood, with fire
and sword, the pretensions of his Christ to Godhood! At Berlin — one
of the great seats of learning — professors of modern exact
sciences, turning their backs on the boasted results of
enlightenment of the post-Galileonian period, are quietly snuffing
out the candle of the great Florentine; seeking, in short, to prove
the heliocentric system, and even the earth's rotation, but the
dreams of deluded scientists, Newton a visionary, and all past and
present astronomers but clever calculators of unverifiable problems.
[1]
Between these two conflicting Titans — Science and Theology —
is a bewildered public, fast losing all belief in man's personal
immortality, in a deity of any kind, and rapidly descending to the
level of a mere animal existence. Such is the picture of the hour,
illumined by the bright noonday sun of this Christian and scientific
era!
Would it be strict justice to condemn to critical lapidation the
most humble and modest of authors for entirely rejecting the
authority of both these combatants? Are we not bound rather to
take as the true aphorism of this century, the declaration of Horace
Greeley: "I accept unreservedly the views of no man, living
or dead"? [2] Such, at all events, will be our motto, and we
mean that principle to be our constant guide throughout this work.
Among the many phenomenal outgrowths of our century, the strange
creed of the so-called Spiritualists has arisen amid the tottering
ruins of self-styled revealed religions and materialistic
philosophies; and yet it alone offers a possible last refuge of
compromise between the two. That this unexpected ghost of
pre-Christian days finds poor welcome from our sober and positive
century, is not surprising. Times have strangely changed; and it is
but recently that a well-known Brooklyn preacher pointedly remarked
in a sermon, that could Jesus come back and behave in the streets of
New York, as he did in those of Jerusalem, he would find himself
confined in the prison of the Tombs. [3] What sort of welcome,
then, could Spiritualism ever expect? True enough, the weird
stranger seems neither attractive nor promising at first sight.
Shapeless and uncouth, like an infant attended by seven nurses, it
is coming out of its teens lame and mutilated. The name of its
enemies is legion; its friends and protectors are a handful. But
what of that? When was ever truth accepted a priori?
Because the champions of Spiritualism have in their fanaticism
magnified its qualities, and remained blind to its imperfections,
that gives no excuse to doubt its reality. A forgery is impossible
when we have no model to forge after. The fanaticism of
Spiritualists is itself a proof
of the genuineness and possibility of their phenomena. They give us
facts that we may investigate, not assertions that we must believe
without proof. Millions of reasonable men and women do not so easily
succumb to collective hallucination. And so, while the clergy,
following their own interpretations of the Bible, and
science its self-made Codex of possibilities in
nature, refuse it a fair hearing, real science and true
religion are silent, and gravely wait further developments.
The whole question of phenomena rests on the correct
comprehension of old philosophies. Whither, then, should we turn, in
our perplexity, but to the ancient sages, since, on the pretext of
superstition, we are refused an explanation by the modern? Let us
ask them what they know of genuine science and religion; not in the
matter of mere details, but in all the broad conception of these
twin truths — so strong in their unity, so weak when divided.
Besides, we may find our profit in comparing this boasted modern
science with ancient ignorance; this improved modern theology with
the "Secret doctrines" of the ancient universal religion. Perhaps we
may thus discover a neutral ground whence we can reach and profit by
both.
It is the Platonic philosophy, the most elaborate compend of the
abstruse systems of old India, that can alone afford us this middle
ground. Although twenty-two and a quarter centuries have elapsed
since the death of Plato, the great minds of the world are still
occupied with his writings. He was, in the fullest sense of the
word, the world's interpreter. And the greatest philosopher of the
pre-Christian era mirrored faithfully in his works the spiritualism
of the Vedic philosophers who lived thousands of years before
himself, and its metaphysical expression. Vyasa, Djeminy, Kapila,
Vrihaspati, Sumati, and so many others, will be found to have
transmitted their indelible imprint through the intervening
centuries upon Plato and his school. Thus is warranted the inference
that to Plato and the ancient Hindu sages was alike revealed the
same wisdom. So surviving the shock of time, what can this wisdom be
but divine and eternal?
Plato taught justice as subsisting in the soul of its possessor
and his greatest good. "Men, in proportion to their intellect, have
admitted his transcendent claims." Yet his commentators, almost with
one consent, shrink from every passage which implies that his
metaphysics are based on a solid foundation, and not on ideal
conceptions.
But Plato could not accept a philosophy destitute of spiritual
aspirations; the two were at one with him. For the old Grecian sage
there was a single object of attainment: REAL KNOWLEDGE. He
considered those only to be genuine philosophers, or students of
truth, who possess the knowledge of the really-existing, in
opposition to the mere seeing; of the
always-existing, in opposition to the transitory; and of that
which
exists permanently,
in opposition to that which waxes, wanes, and is
developed and destroyed alternately. "Beyond all finite existences
and secondary causes, all laws, ideas, and principles, there is an
INTELLIGENCE or MIND [nou'"
, nous , the
spirit], the first principle of all principles, the Supreme Idea on
which all other ideas are grounded; the Monarch and Lawgiver of the
universe; the ultimate substance from which all things derive their
being and essence, the first and efficient Cause of all the order,
and harmony, and beauty, and excellency, and goodness, which
pervades the universe — who is called, by way of preëminence and
excellence, the Supreme Good, the God (
ὁ
qeò"
) 'the God
over all' (
ὁ
epi pasi qeò"
)." [4] He is not the
truth nor the intelligence, but "the father of it." Though this
eternal essence of things may not be perceptible by our physical
senses, it may be apprehended by the mind of those who are not
wilfully obtuse. "To you," said Jesus to his elect disciples, "it is
given to know the mysteries of the Kingdom of God, but to them [ the
polloi^
] it is
not given; . . . therefore speak I to them in parables [or
allegories]; because they seeing, see not, and hearing, they hear
not, neither do they understand." [5]
The philosophy of Plato, we are assured by Porphyry, of the
Neoplatonic School was taught and illustrated in the MYSTERIES. Many
have questioned and even denied this; and Lobeck, in his
Aglaophomus, has gone to the extreme of representing the sacred
orgies as little more than an empty show to captivate the
imagination. As though Athens and Greece would for twenty centuries
and more have repaired every fifth year to Eleusis to witness a
solemn religious farce! Augustine, the papa-bishop of Hippo, has
resolved such assertions. He declares that the doctrines of the
Alexandrian Platonists were the original esoteric doctrines of the
first followers of Plato, and describes Plotinus as a Plato
resuscitated. He also explains the motives of the great philosopher
for veiling the interior sense of what he taught. [6]
As
to the myths, Plato declares in the Gorgias and
the Phædon that they were the vehicles of great truths well
worth the seeking. But commentators are so little en rapport
with the great philosopher as to be compelled to acknowledge
that they are ignorant where "the doctrinal ends, and the mythical
begins." Plato put to flight the popular superstition concerning
magic and dæmons, and developed the exaggerated notions of the time
into rational theories and metaphysical conceptions. Perhaps these
would not quite stand the inductive method of reasoning established
by Aristotle; nevertheless they are satisfactory in the highest
degree to those who apprehend the existence of that higher faculty
of insight or intuition, as affording a criterion for ascertaining
truth.
Basing all his doctrines upon the presence of the Supreme Mind,
Plato taught that the nous, spirit, or rational soul of
man, being "generated by the Divine Father," possessed a nature
kindred, or even homogeneous, with the Divinity, and was capable of
beholding the eternal realities. This faculty of contemplating
reality in a direct and immediate manner belongs to God alone; the
aspiration for this knowledge constitutes what is really meant by
philosophy — the love of wisdom. The love of truth
is inherently the love of good; and so predominating over every
desire of the soul, purifying it and assimilating it to the divine,
thus governing every act of the individual, it raises man to a
participation and communion with Divinity, and restores him to the
likeness of God. "This flight," says Plato in the Theætetus,
"consists in becoming like God, and this assimilation is the
becoming just and holy with wisdom."
The basis of this assimilation is always asserted to be the
preëxistence of the spirit or nous. In the allegory of the
chariot and winged steeds, given in the Phædrus, he
represents the psychical nature as composite and two-fold; the
thumos, or epithumetic part, formed from the
substances of the world of phenomena; and the
qumoeidev"
thumoeides, the essence
of which is linked to the eternal world. The present earth-life is a
fall and punishment. The soul dwells in "the grave which we call
the body," and in its incorporate state, and previous
to the discipline of education, the noetic or spiritual element is
"asleep." Life is thus a dream, rather than a reality. Like the
captives in the subterranean cave, described in The Republic,
the back is turned to the light, we perceive only the shadows
of objects, and think them the actual realities. Is not this
the
idea of Maya, or the illusion of the senses in physical
life, which is so marked a feature in Buddhistical philosophy? But
these shadows, if we have not given ourselves up absolutely to the
sensuous nature, arouse in us the reminiscence of that higher world
that we once inhabited. "The interior spirit has some dim and
shadowy recollection of its antenatal state of bliss, and some
instinctive and proleptic yearnings for its return." It is the
province of the discipline of philosophy to disinthrall it from the
bondage of sense, and raise it into the empyrean of pure thought, to
the vision of eternal truth, goodness, and beauty. "The soul," says
Plato, in the Theætetus, "cannot come into the form of a
man if it has never seen the truth. This is a recollection of those
things which our soul formerly saw when journeying with Deity,
despising the things which we now say are, and looking up
to that which REALLY IS. Wherefore the nous, or spirit, of
the philosopher (or student of the higher truth) alone is furnished
with wings; because he, to the best of his ability, keeps these
things in mind, of which the contemplation renders even Deity itself
divine. By making the right use of these things remembered from the
former life, by constantly perfecting himself in the perfect
mysteries, a man becomes truly perfect — an initiate into the
diviner wisdom."
Hence we may understand why the sublimer scenes in the
Mysteries were always in the night. The life of the interior spirit
is the death of the external nature; and the night of the physical
world denotes the day of the spiritual. Dionysus, the night-sun, is,
therefore, worshipped rather than Helios, orb of day. In the
Mysteries were symbolized the preëxistent condition of the spirit
and soul, and the lapse of the latter into earth-life and Hades, the
miseries of that life, the purification of the soul, and its
restoration to divine bliss, or reunion with spirit. Theon, of
Smyrna, aptly compares the philosophical discipline to the mystic
rites: "Philosophy," says he, "may be called the initiation into the
true arcana, and the instruction in the genuine Mysteries. There are
five parts of this initiation: I., the previous purification; II.,
the admission to participation in the arcane rites; III., the
epoptic revelation; IV., the investiture or enthroning; V. — the
fifth, which is produced from all these, is friendship and interior
communion with God, and the enjoyment of that felicity which arises
from intimate converse with divine beings. . . . Plato denominates
the epopteia, or personal view, the perfect contemplation
of things which are apprehended intuitively, absolute truths and
ideas. He also considers the binding of the head and crowning as
analogous to the authority which any one receives from his
instructors, of leading others into the same contemplation. The
fifth gradation is the most perfect felicity arising from hence,
and, according to
Plato, an assimilation to divinity as far as is possible to human
beings." [7]
Such is Platonism. "Out of Plato," says Ralph Waldo Emerson, "come
all things that are still written and debated among men of thought."
He absorbed the learning of his times — of Greece from Philolaus to
Socrates; then of Pythagoras in Italy; then what he could procure
from Egypt and the East. He was so broad that all philosophy,
European and Asiatic, was in his doctrines; and to culture and
contemplation he added the nature and qualities of the poet.
The followers of Plato generally adhered strictly to his
psychological theories. Several, however, like Xenocrates, ventured
into bolder speculations. Speusippus, the nephew and successor of
the great philosopher, was the author of the Numerical Analysis,
a treatise on the Pythagorean numbers. Some of his speculations
are not found in the written Dialogues; but as he was a
listener to the unwritten lectures of Plato, the judgment of Enfield
is doubtless correct, that he did not differ from his master. He was
evidently, though not named, the antagonist whom Aristotle
criticised, when professing to cite the argument of Plato against
the doctrine of Pythagoras, that all things were in themselves
numbers, or rather, inseparable from the idea of numbers. He
especially endeavored to show that the Platonic doctrine of ideas
differed essentially from the Pythagorean, in that it presupposed
numbers and magnitudes to exist apart from things. He also asserted
that Plato taught that there could be no real knowledge, if
the object of that knowledge was not carried beyond or above the
sensible.
But Aristotle was no trustworthy witness. He misrepresented
Plato, and he almost caricatured the doctrines of Pythagoras. There
is a canon of interpretation, which should guide us in our
examinations of every philosophical opinion: "The human mind has,
under the necessary operation of its own laws, been compelled to
entertain the same fundamental ideas, and the human heart to cherish
the same feelings in all ages." It is certain that Pythagoras
awakened the deepest intellectual sympathy of his age, and that his
doctrines exerted a powerful influence upon the mind of Plato. His
cardinal idea was that there existed a permanent principle of unity
beneath the forms, changes, and other phenomena of the universe.
Aristotle asserted that he taught that "numbers are the first
principles of all entities." Ritter has expressed the opinion that
the formula of Pythagoras should be taken symbolically, which is
doubtless correct. Aristotle goes on to associate these numbers
with the "forms" and "ideas" of Plato. He even declares that
Plato said:
"forms
are numbers," and that "ideas are substantial existences — real
beings." Yet Plato did not so teach. He declared that the final
cause was the Supreme Goodness — to
ajgaqovn. "Ideas
are objects of pure conception for the human reason, and they are
attributes of the Divine Reason." [8] Nor did he ever say that
"forms are numbers." What he did say may be found in the Timæus:
"God formed things as they first arose according to forms and
numbers."
It is recognized by modern science that all the higher laws of
nature assume the form of quantitative statement. This is perhaps a
fuller elaboration or more explicit affirmation of the Pythagorean
doctrine. Numbers were regarded as the best representations of the
laws of harmony which pervade the cosmos. We know too that in
chemistry the doctrine of atoms and the laws of combination are
actually and, as it were, arbitrarily defined by numbers. As Mr. W.
Archer Butler has expressed it: "The world is, then, through all its
departments, a living arithmetic in its development, a realized
geometry in its repose."
The key to the Pythagorean dogmas is the general formula of
unity in multiplicity, the one evolving the many and pervading the
many. This is the ancient doctrine of emanation in few words. Even
the apostle Paul accepted it as true.
"
Ex autouÆ, kai dij autou', kai ei" auto;n ta; paÆnta " —
Out of him and through him and in him all things are. This, as we
can see by the following quotation, is purely Hindu and Brahmanical:
"When the dissolution — Pralaya — had arrived at its term, the
great Being — Para-Atma or Para-Purusha — the Lord existing through
himself, out of whom and through whom all things were, and are and
will be . . . resolved to emanate from his own substance the various
creatures" (Manava-Dharma-Sastra, book i., slokas 6 and 7).
The mystic Decad 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 = 10 is a way of expressing this
idea. The One is God, the Two, matter; the Three, combining Monad
and Duad, and partaking of the nature of both, is the phenomenal
world; the Tetrad, or form of perfection, expresses the emptiness of
all; and the Decad, or sum of all, involves the entire cosmos. The
universe is the combination of a thousand elements, and yet the
expression of a single spirit — a chaos to the sense, a cosmos to
the reason.
The whole of this combination of the progression of numbers in
the idea of creation is Hindu. The Being existing through himself,
Swayambhu or Swayambhuva, as he is called by some, is one. He
emanates from himself the creative faculty, Brahma or
Purusha (the divine male), and the one becomes Two; out of
this Duad, union of the purely intellectual principle with the
principle of matter, evolves a third, which is Viradj, the
phenomenal world. It is out of this invisible and incomprehensible
trinity, the Brahmanic Trimurty, that evolves the second triad which
represents the three faculties — the creative, the conservative, and
the transforming. These are typified by Brahma, Vishnu, and Siva,
but are again and ever blended into one.
Unity,
Brahma, or as the
Vedas
called him, Tridandi, is the god triply manifested, which gave rise
to the symbolical
Aum
or
the abbreviated Trimurty. It is but under this trinity, ever active
and tangible to all our senses, that the invisible and unknown Monas
can manifest itself to the world of mortals. When he becomes
Sarira,
or he who puts on a visible form, he typifies all the principles of
matter, all the germs of life, he is Purusha, the god of the three
visages, or triple power, the essence of the Vedic triad. "Let the
Brahmas know the sacred Syllable (Aum), the three words of the
Savitri, and read the
Vedas
daily"
(Manu,
book iv., sloka 125).
"After having produced the universe, He whose power is
incomprehensible vanished again, absorbed in the Supreme Soul. . . .
. Having retired into the primitive darkness, the great Soul
remains within the unknown, and is void of all form. . . . .
"When having again reunited the subtile elementary principles,
it introduces itself into either a vegetable or animal seed, it
assumes at each a new form."
"It is thus that, by an alternative waking and rest, the
Immutable Being causes to revive and die eternally all the existing
creatures, active and inert" (Manu,
book i., sloka 50, and others).
He who has studied Pythagoras and his speculations on the Monad,
which, after having emanated the Duad retires into silence and
darkness, and thus creates the Triad can realize whence came the
philosophy of the great Samian Sage, and after him that of Socrates
and Plato.
Speusippus seems to have taught that the psychical or thumetic
soul was immortal as well as the spirit or rational soul, and
further on we will show his reasons. He also — like Philolaus and
Aristotle, in his disquisitions upon the soul — makes of æther an
element; so that there were five principal elements to correspond
with the five regular figures in Geometry. This became also a
doctrine of the Alexandrian school. [9] Indeed, there was much in the
doctrines of the
Philaletheans
which did not appear in the works of the older Platonists, but was
doubtless taught in substance by the philosopher himself, but with
his usual reticence was not committed to writing as being too arcane
for promiscuous publication. Speusippus and Xenocrates after him,
held, like their great master, that the
anima mundi,
or world-soul, was not the
Deity, but a manifestation. Those philosophers never conceived of
the One as an
animate nature.
[10]
The original One did not
exist,
as we understand the term. Not
till he had united with the many — emanated existence (the monad and
duad) was a being produced. The
tivmion
, honored — the something manifested, dwells in the
centre as in the circumference, but it is only the reflection of the
Deity — the World-Soul. [11]
In this doctrine we find the spirit of esoteric Buddhism.
A man's idea of God, is that image of blinding light that he
sees reflected in the concave mirror of his own soul, and yet this
is not, in very truth, God, but only His reflection. His glory is
there, but, it is the light of his own Spirit that the man sees, and
it is all he can bear to look upon.
The clearer the
mirror, the brighter will be the divine image.
But
the external world cannot be witnessed in it at the same moment. In
the ecstatic Yogin, in the illuminated Seer, the spirit will shine
like the noonday sun; in the debased victim of earthly attraction,
the radiance has disappeared, for the mirror is obscured with the
stains of matter. Such men deny their God, and would willingly
deprive humanity of soul at one blow.
NO
GOD,
NO
SOUL?
Dreadful, annihilating thought! The maddening nightmare of a lunatic
— Atheist; presenting before his fevered vision, a hideous,
ceaseless procession of sparks of cosmic matter created by
no one;
self-appearing, self-existent, and
self-developing; this Self
no Self,
for it is
nothing
and
nobody;
floating onward from
nowhence,
it is propelled by no Cause, for
there is none, and it rushes
nowhither.
And
this in a circle of Eternity
blind, inert, and —
CAUSELESS.
What is even the erroneous conception of the Buddhistic Nirvana in
comparison! The Nirvana is preceded by numberless spiritual
transformations and metempsychoses, during which the entity loses
not for a second the sense of its own individuality, and which may
last for millions of ages before the Final
No-Thing
is reached.
Though some have considered Speusippus as
inferior to Aristotle, the world is nevertheless indebted to him for
defining and expounding many things that Plato had left obscure in
his doctrine of the Sensible and Ideal. His maxim was "The
Immaterial is known by means of scientific thought, the Material by
scientific perception." [12]
Xenocrates expounded many of the unwritten theories and
teachings of his master. He too held the Pythagorean doctrine, and
his system of numerals and mathematics in the highest estimation.
Recognizing but three degrees of knowledge—Thought,
Perception,
and
Envisagement
(or
knowledge by
Intuition),
he made the former busy itself
with all that which is
beyond
the heavens; Perception with
things in the heavens; Intuition with the heavens themselves.
We find again these theories, and nearly in the same language
in the
Manava-Dharma-Sastra,
when speaking of the creation of
man: "He (the Supreme) drew from his own essence the immortal breath
which
perisheth not in the being,
and
to this soul of the being he gave the Ahancara (conscience of the
ego)
sovereign guide." Then he gave to that soul of the being (man) the
intellect formed of
the three qualities,
and the five organs of the outward
perception."
These three qualities are Intelligence, Conscience, and Will;
answering to the Thought, Perception, and Envisagement of
Xenocrates. The relation of numbers to Ideas was developed by him
further than by Speusippus, and he surpassed Plato in his definition
of the doctrine of Indivisible Magnitudes. Reducing them to their
ideal primary elements, he demonstrated that every figure and form
originated out of the smallest indivisible line. That Xenocrates
held the same theories as Plato in relation to the human soul
(supposed to be a number) is evident, though Aristotle contradicts
this, like every other teaching of this philosopher.[13] This is
conclusive evidence that many of Plato's doctrines were delivered
orally, even were it shown that Xenocrates and not Plato was the
first to originate the theory of indivisible magnitudes. He derives
the Soul from the first Duad, and calls it a self-moved number.[14]
Theophrastus remarks that he entered and eliminated this Soul-theory
more than any other Platonist. He built upon it the cosmological
doctrine, and proved the necessary existence in every part of the
universal space of a successive and progressive series of animated
and thinking though spiritual beings. [15] The Human Soul with him is a
compound of the most spiritual properties of the Monad and the Duad,
possessing the highest principles of both. If, like Plato and
Prodicus, he refers to the Elements as to Divine Powers, and calls
them gods, neither himself nor others connected any anthropomorphic
idea with the appellation. Krische remarks that he called them gods
only that these elementary powers should not be confounded with the
dæmons of the nether world
[16]
(the Elementary Spirits). As the Soul of the World permeates the
whole Cosmos, even beasts must have in them something divine. [17] This,
also, is the doctrine of Buddhists and the Hermetists, and Manu
endows with a living soul even the plants and the tiniest blade of
grass. —
The dæmons, according to this theory, are intermediate beings between the divine perfection and
human sinfulness,[18] and he divides them into classes, each subdivided
in many others. But he states expressly that the individual or
personal soul is the leading guardian dæmon of every man, and that
no dæmon has more power over us than our own. Thus the
Daimonion
of Socrates is the god or Divine
Entity which inspired him all his life. It depends on man either to
open or close his perceptions to the Divine voice. Like Speusippus
he ascribed immortality to the
fuch
, psychical body, or irrational
soul. But some Hermetic philosophers have taught that the soul has a
separate continued existence only so long as in its passage through
the spheres any material or earthly particles remain incorporated in
it; and that when absolutely purified, the latter are
annihilated,
and the quintessence of the soul
alone becomes blended with its
divine
spirit (the
Rational),
and the two are thenceforth one.
Zeller states that Xenocrates forbade the eating of animal
food, not because he saw in beasts something akin to man, as he
ascribed to them a dim consciousness of God, but, "for the opposite
reason, lest the irrationality of animal souls might thereby obtain
a certain influence over us." [19]
But we believe that it was rather because, like Pythagoras, he had
had the Hindu sages for his masters and models. Cicero depicted
Xenocrates utterly despising everything except the highest virtue;
[20]
and describes the stainlessness and severe austerity of his
character. [21] "To free ourselves from the subjection of sensuous
existence, to conquer the Titanic elements in our terrestrial nature
through the Divine one, is our problem." Zeller makes him say: [22]
"Purity, even in the secret longings of our heart, is the greatest
duty, and only philosophy and the initiation into the Mysteries help
toward the attainment of this object."
Crantor, another philosopher associated with the earliest days
of Plato's Academy, conceived the human soul as formed out of the
primary substance of all things, the Monad or
One,
and the Duad or the
Two.
Plutarch speaks at length of this philosopher, who like his master
believed in souls being distributed in earthly bodies as an exile
and punishment.
Herakleides, though some critics do not believe him to have
strictly adhered to Plato's primal philosophy,[23] taught the same
ethics. Zeller presents him to us imparting, like Hiçetas and
Eçphantus, the Pythagorean doctrine of the diurnal rotation of the
earth and the immobility of the fixed stars, but adds that he was
ignorant of the annual revolution of the
earth
around the sun, and of the heliocentric system. [24] But we have
good evidence that the latter system was taught in the Mysteries,
and that Socrates died for atheism, i.e., for divulging
this sacred knowledge. Herakleides adopted fully the Pythagorean and
Platonic views of the human soul, its faculties and its
capabilities. He describes it as a luminous, highly ethereal
essence. He affirms that souls inhabit the milky way before
descending "into generation" or sublunary existence. His dæmons
or spirits are airy and vaporous bodies.
In the Epinomis is fully stated the doctrine of the
Pythagorean numbers in relation to created things. As a true
Platonist, its author maintains that wisdom can only be attained by
a thorough inquiry into the occult nature of the creation; it alone
assures us an existence of bliss after death. The immortality of the
soul is greatly speculated upon in this treatise; but its author
adds that we can attain to this knowledge only through a complete
comprehension of the numbers; for the man, unable to distinguish the
straight line from a curved one will never have wisdom enough to
secure a mathematical demonstration of the invisible, i.e.,
we must assure ourselves of the objective existence of our soul
(astral body) before we learn that we are in possession of a divine
and immortal spirit. Iamblichus says the same thing; adding,
moreover, that it is a secret belonging to the highest initiation.
The Divine Power, he says, always felt indignant with those "who
rendered manifest the composition of the icostagonus,"
viz., who delivered the method of inscribing in a sphere the
dodecahedron. [25]
The idea that "numbers" possessing the greatest virtue,
produce always what is good and never what is evil, refers to
justice, equanimity of temper, and everything that is harmonious.
When the author speaks of every star as an individual soul, he only
means what the Hindu initiates and the Hermetists taught before and
after him, viz.: that every star is an independent planet, which,
like our earth, has a soul of its own, every atom of matter being
impregnated with the divine influx of the soul of the world. It
breathes and lives; it feels and suffers as well as enjoys life in
its way. What naturalist is prepared to dispute it on good evidence?
Therefore, we must consider the celestial bodies as the images of
gods; as partaking of the divine powers in their substance; and
though they are not immortal in their soul-entity, their agency in
the economy of the universe is entitled to divine honors, such as we
pay to minor gods. The idea is plain, and one must be malevolent
indeed to misrepresent it. If the author of Epinomis places
these fiery gods higher than the animals, plants, and even mankind,
all of which, as earthly creatures, are assigned by him
a lower place, who can prove him wholly wrong? One must needs go
deep indeed into the profundity of the abstract metaphysics of the
old philosophies, who would understand that their various
embodiments of their conceptions are, after all, based upon an
identical apprehension of the nature of the First Cause, its
attributes and method.
Again when the author of Epinomis locates between these
highest and lowest gods (embodied souls) three classes of dæmons,
and peoples the universe with invisible beings, he is more rational
than our modern scientists, who make between the two extremes one
vast hiatus of being, the playground of blind forces. Of these three
classes the first two are invisible; their bodies are pure ether and
fire (planetary spirits); the dæmons
of the third class are clothed with vapory bodies; they are usually
invisible, but sometimes making themselves concrete become visible
for a few seconds. These are the earthly spirits, or our astral
souls.
It is these doctrines, which, studied analogically, and on the
principle of correspondence, led the ancient, and may now lead the
modern Philaletheian step by step toward the solution of the
greatest mysteries. On the brink of the dark chasm separating the
spiritual from the physical world stands modern science, with eyes
closed and head averted, pronouncing the gulf impassable and
bottomless, though she holds in her hand a torch which she need only
lower into the depths to show her her mistake. But across this
chasm, the patient student of Hermetic philosophy has constructed a
bridge.
In his Fragments of Science Tyndall makes the following
sad confession: "If you ask me whether science has solved, or is
likely in our day to solve the problem of this universe, I must
shake my head in doubt." If moved by an afterthought, he corrects
himself later, and assures his audience that experimental evidence
has helped him to discover, in the opprobrium-covered matter, the
"promise and potency of every quality of life," he only jokes. It
would be as difficult for Professor Tyndall to offer any ultimate
and irrefutable proofs of what he asserts, as it was for Job to
insert a hook into the nose of the leviathan.
To avoid confusion that might easily arise by the frequent
employment of certain terms in a sense different from that familiar
to the reader, a few explanations will be timely. We desire to leave
no pretext either for misunderstanding or misrepresentation. Magic
may have one signification to one class of readers and another to
another class. We shall give it the meaning which it has in the
minds of its Oriental students and practitioners. And so with the
words Hermetic Science, Occultism, Hierophant, Adept, Sorcerer,
etc.; there has been little agreement of late as to their
meaning. Though the distinctions between the terms are very often
insignificant — merely ethnic — still, it may be useful to the
general reader to know just what that is. We give a few
alphabetically.
ÆTHROBACY, is the Greek name for walking or being lifted in the
air; levitation, so called, among modern spiritualists. It
may be either conscious or unconscious; in the one case, it is
magic; in the other, either disease or a power which requires a few
words of elucidation.
A symbolical explanation of æthrobacy is given in an old Syriac
manuscript which was translated in the fifteenth century by one
Malchus, an alchemist. In connection with the case of Simon Magus,
one passage reads thus:
"Simon, laying his face upon the ground, whispered in her ear, 'O
mother Earth, give me, I pray thee, some of thy breath; and I will
give thee mine; let me loose, O mother, that I may carry
thy words to the stars, and I will return faithfully to thee after a
while.' And the Earth strengthening her status, none to her
detriment, sent her genius to breathe of her breath on
Simon, while he breathed on her; and the stars rejoiced to
be visited by the mighty One."
The starting-point here is the recognized electro-chemical
principle that bodies similarly electrified repel each other, while
those differently electrified mutually attract. "The most elementary
knowledge of chemistry," says Professor Cooke, "shows that, while
radicals of opposite natures combine most eagerly together, two
metals, or two closely-allied metalloids, show but little affinity
for each other."
The earth is a magnetic body; in fact, as some scientists have
found, it is one vast magnet, as Paracelsus affirmed some 300 years
ago. It is charged with one form of electricity — let us call it
positive — which it evolves continuously by spontaneous action, in
its interior or centre of motion. Human bodies, in common with all
other forms of matter, are charged with the opposite form of
electricity — negative. That is to say, organic or inorganic bodies,
if left to themselves will constantly and involuntarily charge
themselves with, and evolve the form of electricity opposed to that
of the earth itself. Now, what is weight? Simply the attraction of
the earth. "Without the attractions of the earth you would have no
weight," says Professor Stewart; [26] "and if you had an earth
twice as heavy as this, you would have double the attraction." How
then, can we get rid of this attraction? According to the electrical
law above stated, there is an attraction between our planet and the
organisms upon it, which holds them upon the surface of the ground.
But the law of gravitation has been counteracted in many instances,
by levitations of persons and inanimate objects; how account for
this? The condition of our physical systems, say theurgic
philosophers, is largely dependent upon the action of our will. If
well-regulated, it can produce "miracles"; among others a change of
this electrical polarity from negative to positive; the man's
relations with the earth-magnet would then become repellent, and
"gravity" for him would have ceased to exist. It would then be as
natural for him to rush into the air until the repellent force had
exhausted itself, as, before, it had been for him to remain upon the
ground. The altitude of his levitation would be measured by his
ability, greater or less, to charge his body with positive
electricity. This control over the physical forces once obtained,
alteration of his levity or gravity would be as easy as breathing.
The study of nervous diseases has established that even in
ordinary somnambulism, as well as in mesmerized somnambulists, the
weight of the body seems to be diminished. Professor Perty mentions
a somnambulist, Koehler, who when in the water could not sink, but
floated. The seeress of Prevorst rose to the surface of the bath and
could not be kept seated in it. He speaks of Anna Fleisher, who
being subject to epileptic fits, was often seen by the
Superintendent to rise in the air; and was once, in the presence of
two trustworthy witnesses (two deans) and others, raised two and a
half yards from her bed in a horizontal position. The similar case
of Margaret Rule is cited by Upham in his History of Salem
Witchcraft. "In ecstatic subjects," adds Professor Perty, "the
rising in the air occurs much more frequently than with
somnambulists. We are so accustomed to consider gravitation as being
a something absolute and unalterable, that the idea of a complete or
partial rising in opposition to it seems inadmissible; nevertheless,
there are phenomena in which, by means of material forces,
gravitation is overcome. In several diseases — as, for instance,
nervous fever — the weight of the human body seems to be increased,
but in all ecstatic conditions to be diminished. And there may,
likewise, be other forces than material ones which can counteract
this power."
A Madrid journal, El Criterio Espiritista, of a recent
date, reports the case of a young peasant girl near Santiago, which
possesses a peculiar interest in this connection. "Two bars of
magnetized iron held over her horizontally, half a metre distant,
was sufficient to suspend her body in the air."
Were our physicians to experiment on such levitated subjects, it
would be found that they are strongly charged with a similar form of
electricity to that of the spot, which, according to the law of
gravitation, ought to attract them, or rather prevent their
levitation. And, if some physical nervous disorder, as well as
spiritual ecstasy produce
unconsciously to the subject the same effects, it proves that if
this force in nature were properly studied, it could be regulated at
will.
ALCHEMISTS.
— From Al and Chemi, fire, or the god and
patriarch, Kham, also, the name of Egypt. The Rosicrucians
of the middle ages, such as Robertus de Fluctibus (Robert Fludd),
Paracelsus, Thomas Vaughan (Eugenius Philalethes), Van Helmont, and
others, were all alchemists, who sought for the hidden spirit
in every inorganic matter. Some people — nay, the great
majority — have accused alchemists of charlatanry and false
pretending. Surely such men as Roger Bacon, Agrippa, Henry Kunrath,
and the Arabian Geber (the first to introduce into Europe some of
the secrets of chemistry), can hardly be treated as impostors —
least of all as fools. Scientists who are reforming the science of
physics upon the basis of the atomic theory of Demokritus, as
restated by John Dalton, conveniently forget that Demokritus, of
Abdera, was an alchemist, and that the mind that was capable of
penetrating so far into the secret operations of nature in one
direction must have had good reasons to study and become a Hermetic
philosopher. Olaus Borrichias says, that the cradle of alchemy is to
be sought in the most distant times.
ASTRAL
LIGHT.
— The same as the sidereal light of Paracelsus and other
Hermetic philosophers. Physically, it is the ether of modern
science. Metaphysically, and in its spiritual, or occult sense,
ether is a great deal more than is often imagined. In occult
physics, and alchemy, it is well demonstrated to enclose within its
shoreless waves not only Mr. Tyndall's "promise and potency
of every quality of life," but also the realization of the
potency of every quality of spirit. Alchemists and Hermetists
believe that their astral, or sidereal ether, besides the above
properties of sulphur, and white and red magnesia, or magnes,
is the anima mundi, the workshop of Nature and of all
the cosmos, spiritually, as well as physically. The "grand
magisterium" asserts itself in the phenomenon of mesmerism, in the
"levitation" of human and inert objects; and may be called the ether
from its spiritual aspect.
The designation astral is ancient, and was used by some
of the Neoplatonists. Porphyry describes the celestial body which is
always joined with the soul as "immortal, luminous, and star-like."
The root of this word may be found, perhaps, in the Scythic aistaer — which means star, or the Assyrian
Istar, which, according to Burnouf has the same sense. As the
Rosicrucians regarded
the real, as the direct opposite of the apparent, and taught that
what seems light to matter, is darkness to spirit,
they searched for
the latter in the astral ocean of invisible fire which encompasses
the world; and claim to have traced the equally invisible divine
spirit, which overshadows every man and is erroneously called
soul, to the very throne of the Invisible and Unknown God. As
the great cause must always remain invisible and imponderable, they
could prove their assertions merely by demonstration of its effects
in this world of matter, by calling them forth from the unknowable
down into the knowable universe of effects. That this astral light
permeates the whole cosmos, lurking in its latent state even in the
minutest particle of rock, they demonstrate by the phenomenon of the
spark from flint and from every other stone, whose spirit when
forcibly disturbed springs to sight spark-like, and immediately
disappears in the realms of the unknowable.
Paracelsus named it the sidereal light, taking the term
from the Latin. He regarded the starry host (our earth included) as
the condensed portions of the astral light which "fell down
into generation and matter," but whose magnetic or spiritual
emanations kept constantly a never-ceasing intercommunication
between themselves and the parent-fount of all — the astral light.
"The stars attract from us to themselves, and we again from them to
us," he says. The body is wood and the life is fire, which comes
like the light from the stars and from heaven. "Magic is the
philosophy of alchemy," he says again. [27] Everything pertaining
to the spiritual world must come to us through the stars, and if we
are in friendship with them, we may attain the greatest magical
effects.
"As fire passes through an iron stove, so do the stars pass
through man with all their properties and go into him as the rain
into the earth, which gives fruit out of that same rain. Now observe
that the stars surround the whole earth, as a shell
does the egg; through the shell comes the air, and penetrates
to the centre of the world." The human body is subjected as well as
the earth, and planets, and stars, to a double law; it attracts and
repels, for it is saturated through with double magnetism, the
influx of the astral light. Everything is double in nature;
magnetism is positive and negative, active and passive, male and
female. Night rests humanity from the day's activity, and restores
the equilibrium of human as well as of cosmic nature. When the
mesmerizer will have learned the grand secret of polarizing the
action and endowing his fluid with a bisexual force he will have
become the greatest magician living. Thus the astral light is
androgyne, for equilibrium is the resultant of two opposing forces
eternally reacting upon each other. The result of this is
LIFE.
When the two forces are expanded and remain so long inactive, as
to equal one another and so come to a complete rest, the condition
is DEATH.
A human being can blow either a hot or a cold breath; and can absorb
either cold or hot air. Every child knows how to regulate the
temperature of his breath; but how to protect one's self from either
hot or cold air, no physiologist has yet learned with certainty. The
astral light alone, as the chief agent in magic, can discover to us
all secrets of nature. The astral light is identical with the Hindu
akâsa, a word which we will now explain.
AKÂSA. — Literally the word means
in Sanscrit sky, but in its mystic sense it signifies the
invisible sky; or, as the Brahmans term it in the
Soma-sacrifice (the Gyotishtoma Agnishtoma), the
god Akâsa, or god Sky. The language of the Vedas shows that
the Hindus of fifty centuries ago ascribed to it the same properties
as do the Thibetan lamas of the present day; that they regarded it
as the source of life, the reservoir of all energy, and the
propeller of every change of matter. In its latent state it tallies
exactly with our idea of the universal ether; in its active state it
became the Akâsa, the all-directing and omnipotent god. In the
Brahmanical sacrificial mysteries it plays the part of Sadasya, or
superintendent over the magical effects of the religious
performance, and it had its own appointed Hotar (or priest), who
took its name. In India, as in other countries in ancient times, the
priests are the representatives on earth of different gods; each
taking the name of the deity in whose name he acts.
The Akâsa is the indispensable agent of every Kritya (magical
performance) either religious or profane. The Brahmanical expression
"to stir up the Brahma" —Brahma jinvati — means to stir up
the power which lies latent at the bottom of every such magical
operation, for the Vedic sacrifices are but ceremonial magic. This
power is the Akâsa or the occult electricity; the alkahest
of the alchemists in one sense, or the universal solvent, the same
anima mundi as the astral light. At the moment of the
sacrifice, the latter becomes imbued with the spirit of Brahma, and
so for the time being is Brahma himself. This is the evident origin
of the Christian dogma of transubstantiation. As to the most general
effects of the Akâsa, the author of one of the most modern works on
the occult philosophy, Art-Magic, gives for the first time
to the world a most intelligible and interesting explanation of the
Akâsa in connection with the phenomena attributed to its influence
by the fakirs and lamas.
ANTHROPOLOGY. — The science of
man; embracing among other things:
Physiology, or that branch of natural science which
discloses the mysteries of the organs and their functions in men,
animals, and plants; and also, and especially,
Psychology, or the great, and in our days, so neglected
science of the soul,
both as an entity distinct from the spirit and in its relations with
the spirit and body. In modern science, psychology relates only or
principally to conditions of the nervous system, and almost
absolutely ignores the psychical essence and nature. Physicians
denominate the science of insanity psychology, and name the
lunatic chair in medical colleges by that designation.
CHALDEANS, or Kasdim. — At first
a tribe, then a caste of learned kabalists. They were the savants,
the magians of Babylonia, astrologers and diviners. The famous
Hillel, the precursor of Jesus in philosophy and in ethics, was a
Chaldean. Franck in his Kabbala points to the close
resemblance of the "secret doctrine" found in the Avesta
and the religious metaphysics of the Chaldees.
DACTYLS (daktulos, a
finger). — A name given to the priests attached to the worship of
Kybelé (Cybelè). Some archæologists derive the name from
davktulo"
, finger,
because they were ten, the same in number as the fingers of the
hand. But we do not believe the latter hypothesis is the correct
one.
DÆMONS. — A name given by the
ancient people, and especially the philosophers of the Alexandrian
school, to all kinds of spirits, whether good or bad, human or
otherwise. The appellation is often synonymous with that of gods or
angels. But some philosophers tried, with good reason, to make a
just distinction between the many classes.
DEMIURGOS, or Demiurge. —
Artificer; the Supernal Power which built the universe. Freemasons
derive from this word their phrase of "Supreme Architect." The chief
magistrates of certain Greek cities bore the title.
DERVISHES, or the "whirling
charmers," as they are called. Apart from the austerities of life,
prayer and contemplation, the Mahometan devotee presents but little
similarity with the Hindu fakir. The latter may become a sannyasi,
or saint and holy mendicant; the former will never reach beyond his
second class of occult manifestations. The dervish may also be a
strong mesmerizer, but he will never voluntarily submit to the
abominable and almost incredible self-punishment which the fakir
invents for himself with an ever-increasing avidity, until nature
succumbs and he dies in slow and excruciating tortures. The most
dreadful operations, such as flaying the limbs alive; cutting off
the toes, feet, and legs; tearing out the eyes; and causing one's
self to be buried alive up to the chin in the earth, and passing
whole months in this posture, seem child's play to them. One of the
most common tortures is that of Tshiddy-Parvady. [28] It consists
in suspending the fakir to one of the mobile
arms of a kind of gallows to be seen in the vicinity of many of the
temples. At the end of each of these arms is fixed a pulley over
which passes a rope terminated by an iron hook. This hook is
inserted into the bare back of the fakir, who inundating the soil
with blood is hoisted up in the air and then whirled round the
gallows. From the first moment of this cruel operation until he is
either unhooked or the flesh of his back tears out under the weight
of the body and the fakir is hurled down on the heads of the crowd,
not a muscle of his face will move. He remains calm and serious and
as composed as if taking a refreshing bath. The fakir will laugh to
scorn every imaginable torture, persuaded that the more his outer
body is mortified, the brighter and holier becomes his inner,
spiritual body. But the Dervish, neither in India, nor in other
Mahometan lands, will ever submit to such operations.
DRUIDS. — A sacerdotal caste
which flourished in Britain and Gaul.
ELEMENTAL
SPIRITS.
— The creatures evolved in the four kingdoms of earth, air, fire,
and water, and called by the kabalists gnomes, sylphs, salamanders,
and undines. They may be termed the forces of nature, and will
either operate effects as the servile agents of general law, or may
be employed by the disembodied spirits — whether pure or impure —
and by living adepts of magic and sorcery, to produce desired
phenomenal results. Such beings never become men. [29]
Under the general designation of fairies, and fays, these
spirits of the elements appear in the myth, fable, tradition, or
poetry of all nations, ancient and modern. Their names are legion —
peris, devs, djins, sylvans, satyrs, fauns, elves, dwarfs, trolls,
norns, nisses, kobolds, brownies, necks, stromkarls, undines,
nixies, salamanders, goblins, ponkes, banshees, kelpies, pixies,
moss people, good people, good neighbors, wild women, men of peace,
white ladies — and many more. They have been seen, feared, blessed,
banned, and invoked in every quarter of the globe and in every age.
Shall we then concede that all who have met them were hallucinated?
These elementals are the principal agents of disembodied but
never visible spirits at seances, and the producers of
all the phenomena except the subjective.
ELEMENTARY
SPIRITS.
— Properly, the disembodied souls of the depraved; these
souls having at some time prior to death separated from themselves
their divine spirits, and so lost their chance for immortality.
Eliphas Levi and some other kabalists make little distinction
between elementary spirits who have been men, and those beings which
people the elements, and are the blind forces of nature. Once
divorced from their bodies, these souls (also called "astral
bodies") of purely materialistic persons, are irresistibly attracted
to the earth, where they live a temporary and finite life amid
elements congenial to their gross natures. From having never, during
their natural lives, cultivated their spirituality, but subordinated
it to the material and gross, they are now unfitted for the lofty
career of the pure, disembodied being, for whom the atmosphere of
earth is stifling and mephitic, and whose attractions are all away
from it. After a more or less prolonged period of time these
material souls will begin to disintegrate, and finally, like a
column of mist, be dissolved, atom by atom, in the surrounding
elements.
ESSENES — from Asa, a
healer. A sect of Jews said by Pliny to have lived near the Dead Sea
"per millia sæculorum" — for thousands of
ages. Some have supposed them to be extreme Pharisees; and others —
which may be the true theory — the descendants of the
Benim-nabim of the Bible, and think they were
"Kenites" and "Nazarites." They had many
Buddhistic ideas and practices; and it is noteworthy that the
priests of the Great Mother at Ephesus, Diana-Bhavani with
many breasts, were also so denominated. Eusebius, and after him De
Quincey, declared them to be the same as the early Christians, which
is more than probable. The title "brother," used in the early
Church, was Essenean: they were a fraternity, or a koinobion
or community like the early converts. It is noticeable that
only the Sadducees, or Zadokites, the priest-caste and their
partisans, persecuted the Christians; the Pharisees were generally
scholastic and mild, and often sided with the latter. James the Just
was a Pharisee till his death; but Paul or Aher was
esteemed a schismatic.
EVOLUTION. — The development of
higher orders of animals from the lower. Modern, or so-called
exact science, holds but to a one-sided physical evolution,
prudently avoiding and ignoring the higher or spiritual evolution,
which would force our contemporaries to confess the superiority of
the ancient philosophers and psychologists over themselves. The
ancient sages, ascending to the UNKNOWABLE, made their
starting-point from the first manifestation of the unseen, the
unavoidable, and from a strict logical reasoning, the absolutely
necessary creative Being, the
Demiurgos of the universe. Evolution began with them from pure
spirit, which descending lower and lower down, assumed at last a
visible and comprehensible form, and became matter. Arrived at this
point, they speculated in the Darwinian method, but on a far more
large and comprehensive basis.
In the Rig-Veda-Sanhita, the oldest book of the World
[30] (to which even our most prudent Indiologists and Sanscrit
scholars assign an antiquity of between two and three thousand years
B.C.), in the first book, "Hymns to the Maruts," it is said:
"Not-being and Being are in the highest
heaven, in the birthplace of Daksha, in the lap of Aditi" (Mandala,
i, Sukta 166).
"In the first age of the gods, Being (the comprehensible Deity)
was born from Not-being (whom no intellect can comprehend); after it
were born the Regions (the invisible), from them Uttânapada."
"From Uttânapad the Earth was born, the Regions (those that are
visible) were born from the Earth. Daksha was born of Aditi, and
Aditi from Daksha" (Ibid.).
Aditi is the Infinite, and Daksha is dakska-pitarah,
literally meaning the father of gods, but understood by Max
Müller and Roth to mean the fathers of strength,
"preserving, possessing, granting faculties." Therefore, it is easy
to see that "Daksha, born of Aditi and Aditi from Daksha," means
what the moderns understand by "correlation of forces"; the more so
as we find in this passage (translated by Prof. Müller):
"I place Agni, the source of all beings, the father of strength"
(iii., 27, 2), a clear and identical idea which prevailed so much in
the doctrines of the Zoroastrians, the Magians, and the mediæval
fire-philosophers. Agni is god of fire, of the Spiritual Ether, the
very substance of the divine essence of the Invisible God present in
every atom of His creation and called by the Rosicrucians the
"Celestial Fire." If we only carefully compare the verses from this Mandala, one of which runs thus: "The Sky is your father, the Earth
your mother, Soma your brother, Aditi your sister" (i., 191, 6),
[31]
with the inscription on the Smaragdine Tablet of
Hermes, we will find the same substratum of metaphysical philosophy,
the identical doctrines!
"As all things were produced by the mediation of one being, so
all things were produced from this one thing by adaptation: 'Its
father is the sun; its mother is the moon'. . . . etc. Separate the
earth from the fire,
the subtile from the gross. . . . What I had to say about
the operation of the sun is completed" (Smaragdine
Tablet). [32]
Professor Max Müller sees in this Mandala "at last,
something like a theogony, though full of contradictions." [33]
The alchemists, kabalists, and students of mystic philosophy will
find therein a perfectly defined system of Evolution in the
Cosmogony of a people who lived a score of thousands of years before
our era. They will find in it, moreover, a perfect identity of
thought and even doctrine with the Hermetic philosophy, and also
that of Pythagoras and Plato.
In Evolution, as it is now beginning to be understood, there is
supposed to be in all matter an impulse to take on a higher form — a
supposition clearly expressed by Manu and other Hindu philosophers
of the highest antiquity. The philosopher's tree illustrates it in
the case of the zinc solution. The controversy between the followers
of this school and the Emanationists may be briefly stated thus: The
Evolutionist stops all inquiry at the borders of "the Unknowable";
the Emanationist believes that nothing can be evolved — or, as the
word means, unwombed or born — except it has first been involved,
thus indicating that life is from a spiritual potency above the
whole.
FAKIRS. — Religious devotees in
East India. They are generally attached to Brahmanical pagodas and
follow the laws of Manu. A strictly religious fakir will go
absolutely naked, with the exception of a small piece of linen
called dhoti, around his loins. They wear their hair long,
and it serves them as a pocket, as they stick in it various objects
— such as a pipe, a small flute called vagudah, the sounds
of which throw the serpents into a cataleptic torpor, and sometimes
their bamboo-stick (about one foot long) with the seven mystical
knots on it. This magical stick, or rather rod, the
fakir receives from his guru on the day of his initiation, together
with the three mantrams, which are communicated to him
"mouth to ear." No fakir will be seen without this powerful adjunct
of his calling. It is, as they all claim, the divining rod, the
cause of every occult phenomenon produced by them. [34] The
Brahmanical fakir is entirely
distinct from the Mussulman mendicant of India, also called fakirs
in some parts of the British territory.
HERMETIST.— From Hermes, the god
of Wisdom, known in Egypt, Syria, and Phœnicia as Thoth, Tat, Adad,
Seth, and Sat-an (the latter not to be taken in the sense
applied to it by Moslems and Christians), and in Greece as Kadmus.
The kabalists identify him with Adam Kadmon, the first
manifestation of the Divine Power, and with Enoch. There were two
Hermes: the elder was the Trismegistus, and the second an emanation,
or "permutation" of himself; the friend and instructor of Isis and
Osiris. Hermes is the god of the priestly wisdom, like Mazeus.
HIEROPHANT. — Discloser of sacred
learning. The Old Man, the Chief of the Adepts at the initiations,
who explained the arcane knowledge to the neophytes, bore this
title. In Hebrew and Chaldaic the term was Peter, or
opener, discloser; hence, the Pope, as the successor of the
hierophant of the ancient Mysteries, sits in the Pagan chair of "St.
Peter." The vindictiveness of the Catholic Church toward the
alchemists, and to arcane and astronomical science, is explained by
the fact that such knowledge was the ancient prerogative of the
hierophant, or representative of Peter, who kept the mysteries of
life and death. Men like Bruno, Galileo, and Kepler, therefore, and
even Cagliostro, trespassed on the preserves of the Church, and were
accordingly murdered.
Every nation had its Mysteries and hierophants. Even the Jews
had their Peter — Tanaïm or Rabbin, like Hillel, Akiba, [35] and
other famous kabalists, who alone could impart the awful knowledge
contained in the Merkaba. In India, there was in ancient
times one, and now there are several hierophants scattered about the
country, attached to the principal pagodas, who are known as the
Brahma-âtmas. In Thibet the chief hierophant is the Dalay, or
Taley-Lama of Lha-ssa. [36] Among Christian nations, the
Catholics alone have preserved this "heathen" custom, in the person
of their Pope, albeit they have sadly disfigured its majesty and the
dignity of the sacred office.
INITIATES. — In times of
antiquity, those who had been initiated into the arcane knowledge
taught by the hierophants of the Mysteries; and in our modern days
those who have been initiated by the adepts of mystic lore into the
mysterious knowledge, which, notwithstanding the lapse of ages, has
yet a few real votaries on earth.
KABALIST,
from hlbq
, KABALA;
an unwritten or oral tradition. The kabalist is a student of "secret
science," one who interprets the hidden meaning of the Scriptures
with the help of the symbolical Kabala, and
explains the real one by these means. The Tanaim were the first
kabalists among the Jews; they appeared at Jerusalem about the
beginning of the third century before the Christian era. The Books
of Ezekiel, Daniel, Henoch, and the Revelation of
St. John, are purely kabalistical. This secret doctrine is identical
with that of the Chaldeans, and includes at the same time much of
the Persian wisdom, or "magic."
LAMAS. — Buddhist monks belonging
to the Lamaic religion of Thibet, as, for instance, friars are the
monks belonging to the Popish or Roman Catholic religion. Every lama
is subject to the grand Taley-Lama, the Buddhist pope of Thibet, who
holds his residence at Lha-ssa, and is a reincarnation of Buddha.
MAGE, or Magian; from
Mag or Maha. The word is the root of the word
magician. The Maha-âtma (the great Soul or Spirit) in India had its
priests in the pre-Vedic times. The Magians were priests of the
fire-god; we find them among the Assyrians and Babylonians, as well
as among the Persian fire-worshippers. The three magi, also
denominated kings, that are said to have made gifts of gold,
incense, and myrrh to the infant Jesus, were fire-worshippers like
the rest, and astrologers; for they saw his star. The high priest of
the Parsis, at Surat, is called Mobed, others derived the
word from Megh; Meh-ab signifying something grand and noble.
Zoroaster's disciples were called Meghestom, according to
Kleuker.
MAGICIAN. — This term, once a
title of renown and distinction, has come to be wholly perverted
from its true meaning. Once the synonym of all that was honorable
and reverent, of a possessor of learning and wisdom, it has become
degraded into an epithet to designate one who is a pretender and a
juggler; a charlatan, in short, or one who has "sold his soul to the
Evil One"; who misuses his knowledge, and employs it for low and
dangerous uses, according to the teachings of the clergy, and a mass
of superstitious fools who believe the magician a sorcerer and an
enchanter. But Christians forget, apparently, that Moses was also a
magician, and Daniel, "Master of the magicians,
astrologers, Chaldeans, and soothsayers" (Daniel, v. II).
The word magician then, scientifically speaking, is derived from
Magh, Mah, Hindu or Sanscrit Maha — great; a man
well versed in the secret or esoteric knowledge; properly a
Sacerdote.
MANTICISM, or mantic frenzy.
During this state was developed the gift of prophecy. The two words
are nearly synonymous. One was as honored as the other. Pythagoras
and Plato held it in high esteem, and Socrates advised
his disciples to study Manticism. The Church Fathers, who condemned
so severely the mantic frenzy in Pagan priests and Pythiæ,
were not above applying it to their own uses. The Montanists, who
took their name from Montanus, a bishop of Phrygia, who was
considered divinely inspired, rivalled with the manteis or
prophets. "Tertullian, Augustine, and the martyrs of Carthage, were
of the number," says the author of Prophecy, Ancient and Modern.
"The Montanists seem to have resembled the Bacchantes
in the wild enthusiasm that characterized their orgies," he adds.
There is a diversity of opinion as to the origin of the word
Manticism. There was the famous Mantis the Seer, in the days of
Melampus and Prœtus, King of Argos; and there was Manto, the
daughter of the prophet of Thebes, herself a prophetess. Cicero
describes prophecy and mantic frenzy by saying that "in the inner
recesses of the mind is divine prophecy hidden and confined, a
divine impulse, which when it burns more vividly is called furor"
(frenzy, madness).
But there is still another etymology possible for the word
mantis, and to which we doubt if the attention of the
philologists was ever drawn. The mantic frenzy may, perchance, have
a still earlier origin. The two sacrificial cups of the Soma-mystery
used during the religious rites, and generally known as grahas, are
respectively called Sukra and Manti.[37]
It is in the latter manti or manthi cup that Brahma is said
to be "stirred up." While the initiate drinks (albeit sparingly) of
this sacred soma-juice, the Brahma, or rather his "spirit,"
personified by the god Soma, enters into the man and takes
possession of him. Hence, ecstatic vision, clairvoyance, and
the gift of prophecy. Both kinds of divination — the natural and the
artificial — are aroused by the Soma. The Sukra-cup awakens
that which is given to every man by nature. It unites both spirit
and soul, and these, from their own nature and essence, which are
divine, have a foreknowledge of future things, as dreams, unexpected
visions, and presentiments, well prove. The contents of the other
cup, the manti, which "stirs the Brahma," put thereby the soul in
communication not only with the minor gods — the well-informed but
not omniscient spirits — but actually with the highest divine
essence itself. The soul receives a direct illumination from the
presence of its "god"; but as it is not allowed to remember certain
things, well known only in heaven, the initiated person is generally
seized with a kind of sacred frenzy, and upon recovering from it,
only remembers that which is allowed to him. As to the other kind of
seers and diviners — those who make a
profession of and a living by it — they are usually held to be
possessed by a gandharva, a deity which is nowhere so
little honored as in India.
MANTRA. — A Sanskrit
word conveying the same idea as the "Ineffable Name." Some mantras,
when pronounced according to magical formula taught in the
Atharva-Veda, produce an instantaneous and wonderful effect. In
its general sense, though, a mantra is either simply a prayer to the
gods and powers of heaven, as taught by the Brahmanical books, and
especially Manu, or else a magical charm. In its esoteric sense, the
"word" of the mantra, or mystic speech, is called by the Brahmans
Vâch. It resides in the mantra, which literally means those
parts of the sacred books which are considered as the Sruti,
or direct divine revelation.
MARABUT. — A Mahometan pilgrim
who has been to Mekka; a saint, after whose death his body is placed
in an open sepulchre built on the surface, like other buildings, but
in the middle of the streets and public places of populated cities.
Placed inside the small and only room of the tomb (and several such
public sarcophagi of brick and mortar may be seen to this day in the
streets and squares of Cairo), the devotion of the wayfarers keeps a
lamp ever burning at his head. The tombs of some of these marabuts
have a great fame for the miracles they are alleged to perform.
MATERIALIZATION. — A word
employed by spiritualists to indicate the phenomenon of "a spirit
clothing himself with a material form." The far less objectionable
term, "form-manifestation," has been recently suggested by Mr.
Stainton-Moses, of London. When the real nature of these apparitions
is better comprehended, a still more appropriate name will doubtless
be adopted. To call them materialized spirits is inadmissible, for
they are not spirits but animated portrait-statues.
MAZDEANS, from (Ahura) Mazda.
(See Spiegel's Yasna, xl.) They were the ancient Persian
nobles who worshipped Ormazd, and, rejecting images, inspired the
Jews with the same horror for every concrete representation of the
Deity. "They seem in Herodotus's time to have been superseded by the
Magian religionists. The Parsis and Ghebers geberim, mighty
men, of Genesis vi. and x. 8) appear to be Magian
religionists. . . . By a curious muddling of ideas, Zoro-Aster (Zero,
a circle, a son or priest, Aster, Ishtar, or Astarte — in
Aryan dialect, a star), the title of the head of the Magians and
fire-worshippers, or Surya-ishtara, the sun-worshipper, is often
confounded in modern times with Zara-tustra, the reputed Mazdean
apostle" (Zoroaster).
METEMPSYCHOSIS. — The progress of
the soul from one stage of existence to another. Symbolized and
vulgarly believed to be rebirths in animal bodies. A term generally
misunderstood by every class of European and
American society, including many scientists. The kabalistic axiom,
"A stone becomes a plant, a plant an animal, an animal a man, a man
a spirit, and a spirit a god," receives an explanation in Manu's
Manava-Dharma-Sastra, and other Brahmanical books.
MYSTERIES. — Greek teletai,
or finishings, as analogous to teleuteia or
death. They were observances, generally kept secret from the profane
and uninitiated, in which were taught by dramatic representation and
other methods, the origin of things, the nature of the human spirit,
its relations to the body, and the method of its purification and
restoration to higher life. Physical science, medicine, the laws of
music, divination, were all taught in the same manner. The
Hippocratic oath was but a mystic obligation. Hippocrates was a
priest of Asklepios, some of whose writings chanced to become
public. But the Asklepiades were initiates of the Æsculapian
serpent-worship, as the Bacchantes were of the Dionysia; and both
rites were eventually incorporated with the Eleusinia. We will treat
of the Mysteries fully in the subsequent chapters.
MYSTICS. — Those initiated. But
in the mediæval and later periods the term was applied to men like
Bœhmén the Theosophist, Molinos the Quietist, Nicholas of Basle, and
others who believed in a direct interior communion with God,
analogous to the inspiration of the prophets.
NABIA. — Seership, soothsaying.
This oldest and most respected of mystic phenomena, is the name
given to prophecy in the Bible, and is correctly included
among the spiritual powers, such as divination, clairvoyant visions,
trance-conditions, and oracles. But while enchanters, diviners, and
even astrologers are strictly condemned in the Mosaic books,
prophecy, seership, and nabia appear as the special gifts of heaven.
In early ages they were all termed Epoptai, the Greek word
for seers, clairvoyants; after which they were designated as
Nebim, "the plural of Nebo, the Babylonian god of wisdom." The
kabalist distinguishes between the seer and the
magician; one is passive, the other active; Nebirah,
is one who looks into futurity and a clairvoyant; Nebi-poel,
he who possesses magic powers. We notice that Elijah
and Apollonius resorted to the same means to isolate themselves from
the disturbing influences of the outer world, viz.: wrapping their
heads entirely in a woolen mantle; from its being an electric
non-conductor we must suppose.
OCCULTIST. — One who studies the
various branches of occult science. The term is used by the French
kabalists (See Eliphas Levi's works). Occultism embraces the whole
range of psychological, physiological, cosmical, physical, and
spiritual phenomena. From the word occult, hidden or
secret; applying therefore to the study of the Kabala,
astrology, alchemy, and all arcane sciences.
PAGAN
GODS.
— This term gods is erroneously understood by most of the reading
public, to mean idols. The idea attached to them is not
that of something objective or anthropomorphical. With the exception
of occasions when "gods" mean either divine planetary entities
(angels), or disembodied spirits of pure men, the term simply
conveys to the mind of the mystic — whether Hindu Hotar, Mazdean
Mage, Egyptian hierophant, or disciple of the Greek philosophers —
the idea of a visible or cognized manifestation of an invisible
potency of nature. And such occult potencies are invoked under the
appellation of various gods, who, for the time being, are
personating these powers. Thus every one of the numberless deities
of the Hindu, Greek, and Egyptian Pantheons, are simply Powers of
the "Unseen Universe." When the officiating Brahman invokes Aditya —
who, in her cosmic character, is the goddess-sun — he simply
commands that potency (personified in some god), which, as he
asserts, "resides in the Mantra, as the sacred Vâch." These
god-powers are allegorically regarded as the divine Hotars
of the Supreme One; while the priest (Brahman) is the human Hotar
who officiates on earth, and representing that particular Power
becomes, ambassador-like, invested with the very potency which he
personates.
PITRIS. — It is generally
believed that the Hindu term Pitris means the spirits of
our direct ancestors; of disembodied people. Hence the argument of
some spiritualists that fakirs, and other Eastern wonder-workers,
are mediums; that they themselves confess to being unable
to produce anything without the help of the Pitris, of whom
they are the obedient instruments. This is in more than one sense
erroneous. The Pitris are not the ancestors of the present
living men, but those of the human kind or Adamic race; the spirits
of human races which, on the great scale of descending
evolution, preceded our races of men, and were physically, as well
as spiritually, far superior to our modern pigmies. In
Manava-Dharma-Sastra they are called the Lunar
ancestors.
PYTHIA, or Pythoness. — Webster
dismisses the word very briefly by saying that it was the name of
one who delivered the oracles at the Temple of Delphi, and "any
female supposed to have the spirit of divination in her — a
witch," which is neither complimentary, exact, nor
just. A Pythia, upon the authority of Plutarch, Iamblichus,
Lamprias, and others, was a nervous sensitive; she was chosen from
among the poorest class, young and pure. Attached to the temple,
within whose precincts she had a room, secluded from every other,
and to which no one but the priest, or seer, had admittance, she had
no communications with the outside world, and her life was more
strict and ascetic than that of a Catholic nun. Sitting on a tripod
of brass placed over a fissure in the ground, through which arose
intoxicating vapors, these subterranean
exhalations
penetrating her whole system produced the prophetic mania. In this
abnormal state she delivered oracles. She was sometimes called
ventriloqua vates, [38] the ventriloquist-prophetess.
The ancients placed the astral soul of man,
fuch
, or his
self-consciousness, in the pit of the stomach. The Brahmans shared
this belief with Plato and other philosophers. Thus we find in the
fourth verse of the second Nabhânedishtha Hymn it is said:
"Hear, O sons of the gods (spirits) one who speaks through his navel
(nâbhâ) for he hails you in your dwellings!"
Many of the Sanscrit scholars agree that this belief is one of
the most ancient among the Hindus. The modern fakirs, as well as the
ancient gymnosophists, unite themselves with their Âtman and the
Deity by remaining motionless in contemplation and concentrating
their whole thought on their navel. As in modern somnambulic
phenomena, the navel was regarded as "the circle of the sun," the
seat of internal divine light. [39] Is the fact of a number of
modern somnambulists being enabled to read letters, hear, smell, and
see, through that part of their body to be regarded again as a
simple "coincidence," or shall we admit at last that the old sages
knew something more of physiological and psychological mysteries
than our modern Academicians? In modern Persia, when a "magician"
(often simply a mesmerizer) is consulted upon occasions of theft and
other puzzling occurrences, he makes his manipulations over the pit
of his stomach, and so brings himself into a state of clairvoyance.
Among the modern Parsis, remarks a translator of the Rig-vedas,
there exists a belief up to the present day that their adepts
have a flame in their navel, which enlightens to them all darkness
and discloses the spiritual world, as well as all things unseen, or
at a distance. They call it the lamp of the Deshtur, or
high priest; the light of the Dikshita (the initiate), and otherwise
designate it by many other names.
SAMOTHRACES. — A designation of
the Fane-gods worshipped at Samothracia in the Mysteries. They are
considered as identical with the Kabeiri, Dioskuri, and Korybantes.
Their names were mystical — denoting Pluto, Ceres or Proserpina,
Bacchus, and Æsculapius or Hermes.
SHAMANS,
or Samaneans. — An order of Buddhists among the Tartars, especially
those of Siberia. They are possibly akin to the philosophers
anciently known as Brachmanes, mistaken sometimes for
Brahmans. [40] They are all magicians, or rather sensitives or
mediums artificially developed. At present those who act as priests
among the Tartars are generally very ignorant, and far below the
fakirs in knowledge and education. Both men and women may be
Shamans.
SOMA.— This Hindu sacred beverage
answers to the Greek ambrosia or nectar, drunk by the gods of
Olympus. A cup of kykeon was also quaffed by the mysta at the
Eleusinian initiation. He who drinks it easily reaches Bradhna,
or place of splendor (Heaven). The soma-drink known to
Europeans is not the genuine beverage, but its substitute;
for the initiated priests alone can taste of the real soma; and even
kings and rajas, when sacrificing, receive the substitute. Haug
shows by his own confession, in his Aytareya Brahmanan,
that it was not the Soma that he tasted and found nasty, but the
juice from the roots of the Nyagradha, a plant or bush which grows
on the hills of Poona. We were positively informed that the majority
of the sacrificial priests of the Dekkan have lost the secret of the
true soma. It can be found neither in the ritual books nor through
oral information. The true followers of the primitive Vedic religion
are very few; these are the alleged descendants from the Rishis,
the real Agnihôtris, the initiates of the great Mysteries. The
soma-drink is also commemorated in the Hindu Pantheon, for it is
called the King-Soma. He who drinks of it is made to participate in
the heavenly king, because he becomes filled with it, as the
Christian apostles and their converts became filled with the Holy
Ghost, and purified of their sins. The soma makes a new man of the
initiate; he is reborn and transformed, and his spiritual nature
overcomes the physical; it gives the divine power of inspiration,
and develops the clairvoyant faculty to the utmost. According to the
exoteric explanation the soma is a plant, but, at the same time it
is an angel. It forcibly connects the inner, highest
"spirit" of man, which spirit is an angel like the mystical soma,
with his "irrational soul," or astral body, and thus united by the
power of the magic drink, they soar together above physical nature,
and participate during life in the beatitude and ineffable glories
of Heaven.
Thus the Hindu soma is mystically, and in all respects the same
that the Eucharistic supper is to the Christian. The idea is
similar. By means
of the sacrificial prayers — the mantras — this liquor is supposed
to be transformed on the spot into real soma— — or the angel, and
even into Brahma himself. Some missionaries have expressed
themselves very indignantly about this ceremony, the more so, that,
generally speaking, the Brahmans use a kind of spirituous liquor
as a substitute. But do the Christians believe less fervently
in the transubstantiation of the communion-wine into the blood of
Christ, because this wine happens to be more or less spirituous? Is
not the idea of the symbol attached to it the same? But the
missionaries say that this hour of soma-drinking is the golden hour
of Satan, who lurks at the bottom of the Hindu sacrificial cup. [41]
SPIRIT. — The lack of any mutual
agreement between writers in the use of this word has resulted in
dire confusion. It is commonly made synonymous with soul;
and the lexicographers countenance the usage. This is the natural
result of our ignorance of the other word, and repudiation of the
classification adopted by the ancients. Elsewhere we attempt to make
clear the distinction between the terms "spirit" and "soul." There
are no more important passages in this work. Meanwhile, we will only
add that "spirit" is the
nou'"
of Plato, the immortal, immaterial, and purely divine
principle in man — the crown of the human Triad; whereas,
SOUL is the
fuch
, or the nephesh of the Bible; the
vital principle, or the breath of life, which every animal, down to
the infusoria, shares with man. In the translated Bible it
stands indifferently for life, blood, and soul. "Let us
not kill his nephesh," says the original text: "let us not kill
him," translate the Christians (Genesis xxxvii.
21), and so on.
THEOSOPHISTS.— In the mediæval
ages it was the name by which were known the disciples of Paracelsus
of the sixteenth century, the so-called fire-philosophers or
Philosophi per ignem. As well as the Platonists they regarded
the soul
fuch
and the divine spirit,
nous
(nou'"
)as a particle of the
great Archos — a fire taken from the eternal ocean of light.
The Theosophical Society, to which these volumes are dedicated
by the author as a mark of affectionate regard, was organized at New
York in 1875. The object of its founders was to experiment
practically in the occult powers of Nature, and to collect and
disseminate among Christians information about the Oriental
religious philosophies. Later, it has determined to spread among the
"poor benighted heathen" such evidences
as to the practical results of Christianity as will at least give
both sides of the story to the communities among which missionaries
are at work. With this view it has established relations with
associations and individuals throughout the East, to whom it
furnishes authenticated reports of the ecclesiastical crimes and
misdemeanors, schisms and heresies, controversies and litigations,
doctrinal differences and biblical criticisms and revisions, with
which the press of Christian Europe and America constantly teems.
Christendom has been long and minutely informed of the degradation
and brutishness into which Buddhism, Brahmanism, and Confucianism
have plunged their deluded votaries, and many millions have been
lavished upon foreign missions under such false representations. The
Theosophical Society, seeing daily exemplifications of this very
state of things as the sequence of Christian teaching and example —
the latter especially — thought it simple justice to make the facts
known in Palestine, India, Ceylon, Cashmere, Tartary, Thibet, China,
and Japan, in all which countries it has influential correspondents.
It may also in time have much to say about the conduct of the
missionaries to those who contribute to their support.
THEURGIST.— From
Qeo"
, god, and
ergon
, work. The first school of
practical theurgy in the Christian period was founded by Iamblichus
among the Alexandrian Platonists; but the priests attached to the
temples of Egypt, Assyria, and Babylonia, and who took an active
part in the evocations of the gods during the Sacred Mysteries, were
known by this name from the earliest archaic period. The purpose of
it was to make spirits visible to the eyes of mortals. A theurgist
was one expert in the esoteric learning of the Sanctuaries of all
the great countries. The Neoplatonists of the school of Iamblichus
were called theurgists, for they performed the so-called "ceremonial
magic," and evoked the "spirits" of the departed heroes, "gods," and
Daimonia (
daimonia
, divine, spiritual entities). In the rare cases when
the presence of a tangible and visible spirit was
required, the theurgist had to furnish the weird apparition with a
portion of his own flesh and blood — he had to perform the
theopœa, or the "creation of gods," by a mysterious
process well known to the modern fakirs and initiated Brahmans of
India. This is what is said in the Book of Evocations of
the pagodas. It shows the perfect identity of rites and ceremonial
between the oldest Brahmanic theurgy and that of the Alexandrian
Platonists:
"The Brahman Grihasta (the evocator) must be in a state of
complete purity before he ventures to call forth the Pitris."
After having prepared a lamp, some sandal, incense, etc., and
having traced the magic circles taught to him by the superior guru,
in order to keep away bad spirits, he "ceases to breathe,
and calls the fire to his
help to disperse his
body." He pronounces a certain number of times the sacred word, and
"his soul escapes from his body, and his body disappears, and the
soul of the evoked spirit descends into the double body and
animates it." Then "His (Grihasta's) soul reënters into his body,
whose subtile particles have again been aggregating, after having
formed of their emanations an aërial body to the spirit he evoked."
And now, that he has formed for the Pitri a body with the
particles the most essential and pure of his own, the grihasta is
allowed, after the ceremonial sacrifice is over, to "converse with
the souls of the ancestors and the Pitris, and offer them questions
on the mysteries of the Being and the transformations of
the imperishable."
"Then after having blown out his lamp he must light it again,
and set at liberty the bad spirits shut out from the place by the
magical circles, and leave the sanctuary of the Pitris." [42]
The school of Iamblichus was distinct from that of Plotinus
and Porphyry, who were strongly against ceremonial magic and
practical theurgy as dangerous, though these two eminent men firmly
believed in both. "The theurgic or benevolent
magic, the Goëtic, or dark and evil necromancy, were alike in
preëminent repute during the first century of the Christian
era." [43] But never have any of the highly moral and pious
philosophers, whose fame has descended to us spotless of any evil
deed, practiced any other kind of magic than the theurgic, or
benevolent, as Bulwer-Lytton terms it. "Whoever is acquainted
with the nature of divinely luminous appearances
( fasmata ) knows
also on what account it is requisite to abstain from all birds
(animal food), and especially for him who hastens to be liberated
from terrestrial concerns and to be established with the celestial
gods," says Porphyry. [44]
Though he refused to practice theurgy himself, Porphyry, in his
Life of Plotinus, mentions a priest of Egypt, who, "at the
request of a certain friend of Plotinus (which friend was perhaps
Porphyry himself, remarks T. Taylor), exhibited to Plotinus, in the
temple of Isis at Rome, the familiar daimon, or, in modern language,
the guardian angel of that philosopher." [45]
The popular, prevailing idea was that the theurgists, as
well as the magicians, worked wonders, such as evoking the souls or
shadows of the heroes and gods, and doing other thaumaturgic works
by supernatural powers.
YAJNA. — "The Yajna," say the
Brahmans, exists from eternity, for
it
proceeded forth from the Supreme One, the Brahma-Prajapâti,
in whom it lay dormant from "no beginning." It is the key
to the TRAIVIDYA, the thrice sacred science contained in the Rig
verses, which teaches the Yagus or sacrificial mysteries. "The
Yajna" exists as an invisible thing at all times; it is like the
latent power of electricity in an electrifying machine, requiring
only the operation of a suitable apparatus in order to be elicited.
It is supposed to extend from the Ahavaniya or sacrificial
fire to the heavens, forming a bridge or ladder by means of which
the sacrificer can communicate with the world of gods and spirits,
and even ascend when alive to their abodes. [46]
This Yajna is again one of the forms of the Akâsa, and
the mystic word calling it into existence and pronounced mentally by
the initiated Priest is the Lost Word receiving impulse
through WILL-POWER.
To complete the list, we will now add that in the course of the
following chapters, whenever we use the term Archaic, we
mean before the time of Pythagoras; when Ancient, before
the time of Mahomet; and when Mediæval, the period between
Mahomet and Martin Luther. It will only be necessary to infringe the
rule when from time to time we may have to speak of nations of a
pre-Pythagorean antiquity, and will adopt the common custom of
calling them "ancient."
——————————
Before closing this initial chapter, we venture to say a few words
in explanation of the plan of this work. Its object is not to force
upon the public the personal views or theories of its author; nor
has it the pretensions of a scientific work, which aims at creating
a revolution in some department of thought. It is rather a brief
summary of the religions, philosophies, and universal traditions of
human kind, and the exegesis of the same, in the spirit of those
secret doctrines, of which none — thanks to prejudice and bigotry —
have reached Christendom in so unmutilated a form, as to secure it a
fair judgment. Since the days of the unlucky mediæval philosophers,
the last to write upon these secret doctrines of which they were the
depositaries, few men have dared to brave persecution and prejudice
by placing their knowledge upon record. And these few have never, as
a rule, written for the public, but only for those of their own and
succeeding times who possessed the key to their jargon. The
multitude, not understanding them or their doctrines, have been
accustomed to regard them en masse as either charlatans or
dreamers. Hence the unmerited contempt into which the study of the
noblest of sciences — that of the spiritual man — has gradually
fallen.
In
undertaking to inquire into the assumed infallibility of Modern
Science and Theology, the author has been forced, even at the risk
of being thought discursive, to make constant comparison of the
ideas, achievements, and pretensions of their representatives, with
those of the ancient philosophers and religious teachers. Things the
most widely separated as to time, have thus been brought into
immediate juxtaposition, for only thus could the priority and
parentage of discoveries and dogmas be determined. In discussing the
merits of our scientific contemporaries, their own confessions of
failure in experimental research, of baffling mysteries, of missing
links in their chains of theory, of inability to comprehend natural
phenomena, of ignorance of the laws of the causal world, have
furnished the basis for the present study. Especially (since
Psychology has been so much neglected, and the East is so far away
that few of our investigators will ever get there to study that
science where alone it is understood), we will review the
speculations and policy of noted authorities in connection with
those modern psychological phenomena which began at Rochester and
have now overspread the world. We wish to show how inevitable
were their innumerable failures, and how they must continue until
these pretended authorities of the West go to the Brahmans and
Lamaists of the far Orient, and respectfully ask them to impart the
alphabet of true science. We have laid no charge against
scientists that is not supported by their own published admissions,
and if our citations from the records of antiquity rob some of what
they have hitherto viewed as well-earned laurels, the fault is not
ours but Truth's. No man worthy of the name of philosopher would
care to wear honors that rightfully belong to another.
Deeply sensible of the Titanic struggle that is now in progress
between materialism and the spiritual aspirations of mankind, our
constant endeavor has been to gather into our several chapters, like
weapons into armories, every fact and argument that can be used to
aid the latter in defeating the former. Sickly and deformed child as
it now is, the materialism of To-Day is born of the brutal
Yesterday. Unless its growth is arrested, it may become our master.
It is the bastard progeny of the French Revolution and its reaction
against ages of religious bigotry and repression. To prevent the
crushing of these spiritual aspirations, the blighting of these
hopes, and the deadening of that intuition which teaches us of a God
and a hereafter, we must show our false theologies in their naked
deformity, and distinguish between divine religion and human dogmas.
Our voice is raised for spiritual freedom, and our plea made for
enfranchisement from all tyranny, whether of
SCIENCE
or THEOLOGY.
_______________
Notes:
1. See the last chapter of this
volume, p. 622.
2. "Recollections of a Busy Life,"
p. 147.
3. Henry Ward Beecher.
4. Cocker: "Christianity and
Greek Philosophy," xi., p. 377.
5. Gospel according to
Matthew, xiii. 11, 13.
6. "The accusations of
atheism, the introducing of foreign deities, and corrupting of the
Athenian youth, which were made against Socrates, afforded ample
justification for Plato to conceal the arcane preaching of his
doctrines. Doubtless the peculiar diction or 'jargon' of the
alchemists was employed for a like purpose. The dungeon, the rack,
and the fagot were employed without scruple by Christians of every
shade, the Roman Catholics especially, against all who taught even
natural science contrary to the theories entertained by the Church.
Pope Gregory the Great even inhibited the grammatical use of Latin
as heathenish. The offense of Socrates consisted in unfolding to his
disciples the arcane doctrine concerning the gods, which was taught
in the Mysteries and was a capital crime. He also was charged by
Aristophanes with introducing the new god Dinos into the republic as
the demiurgos or artificer, and the lord of the solar universe. The
Heliocentric system was also a doctrine of the Mysteries; and hence,
when Aristarchus the Pythagorean taught it openly, Cleanthes
declared that the Greeks ought to have called him to account and
condemned him for blasphemy against the gods," — ("Plutarch"). But
Socrates had never been initiated, and hence divulged nothing which
had ever been imparted to him.
7. See Thomas Taylor:
"Eleusinian and Bacchic Mysteries," p. 47. New York: J. W. Bouton,
1875.
8. Cousin: "History of
Philosophy," I., ix.
9. "Theol. Arithme.," p. 62:
"On Pythag. Numbers."
10. Plato: "Parmenid.," 141
E.
11. See Stobœus' "Ecl.," i.,
862.
12. Sextus: "Math.," vii. 145.
13. "Metaph.," 407, a. 3.
14. Appendix to "Timæus."
15. Stob.: "Ecl.," i., 62.
16. Krische: "Forsch.," p.
322, etc.
17. Clem.: "Alex. Stro.," v.,
590.
18. Plutarch: "De Isid,"
chap. 25, p. 360.
19. "Plato und die Alt.
Akademie."
20. "Tusc.," v., 18, 51.
21. Ibid. Cf. p. 559.
22. "Plato und die Alt.
Akademie."
23. Ed. Zeller: "Philos.
der Griech."
24. "Plato und die
Alt. Akademie."
25. One of the five solid figures in
Geometry.
26. "The Sun and the
Earth."
27.
"De Ente Spirituali," lib. iv.; "de Ente Astrorum," book i.; and
opera omnia,
vol. i., pp. 634 and
699.
28. Or more commonly chãrkh pũjã.
29.
Persons who believe in the clairvoyant power, but are disposed to
discredit the existence of any other spirits in nature than
disembodied human spirits, will be interested in an account of
certain clairvoyant observations which appeared in the
London
Spiritualist of June 29,
1877. A thunder-storm approaching, the seeress saw "a bright spirit
emerge from a dark cloud and pass with lightning speed across the
sky, and, a few minutes after, a diagonal line of dark spirits in
the clouds." These are the
Maruts
of the "Vedas" (See Max
Müller's "Rig-Veda Sanhita").
The well-known and
respected lecturer, author, and clairvoyant, Mrs. Emma Hardinge
Britten, has published accounts of her frequent experiences with
these elemental spirits.
30. Translated by Max Müller,
Professor of Comparative Philology at the Oxford University,
England.
31. "Dyarih vah pitâ, prithivi mâtâ
sômah bhrâtâ âditih svasâ."
32. As the perfect identity of the
philosophical and religious doctrines of antiquity will be fully
treated upon in subsequent chapters, we limit our explanations for
the present.
33. "Rig-Veda-Anhita," p. 234.
34. Philostratus assures us that the
Brahmins were able, in his time, to perform the most wonderful cures
by merely pronouncing certain magical words. "The Indian Brahmans
carry a staff and a ring, by means of which they are able to do
almost anything." Origenes states the same ("Contra Celsum"). But if
a strong mesmeric fluid — say projected from the eye, and without
any other contact — is not added, no magical words would be
efficacious.
35. Akiba was a friend of Aher, said
to have been the Apostle Paul of Christian story. Both are depicted
as having visited Paradise. Aher took branches from the Tree of
Knowledge, and so fell from the true (Jewish) religion. Akiba came
away in peace. See 2d Epistle to the Corinthians, chapter xii.
36. Taley means ocean or sea.
37. See "Aytareya Brahmanan," 3, I.
38. See Pantheon: "Myths," p.
31; also Aristophanes in "Vœstas," i., reg. 28.
39. The oracle of Apollo was
at Delphos, the city of the
delfu"
, womb or abdomen; the place of the temple was denominated the
omphalos
or navel.
The symbols are female and lunary; reminding us that the Arcadians
were called Proseleni, pre-Hellenic or more ancient than the period
when Ionian and Olympian lunar worship was introduced.
40. From the accounts
of Strabo and Megasthenes, who visited Palibothras, it would seem
that the persons termed by him Samanean, or Brachmane priests, were
simply Buddhists. "The singularly subtile replies of the Samanean or
Brahman philosophers, in their interview with the conqueror, will be
found to contain the spirit of the Buddhist doctrine," remarks Upham.
(See the "History and Doctrine of Buddhism"; and Hale's
"Chronology," vol. iii, p. 238.)
41. In their turn,
the heathen may well ask the missionaries what sort of a spirit
lurks at the bottom of the sacrificial beer-bottle. That evangelical
New York journal, the "Independent," says: "A late English traveller
found a simple-minded Baptist mission church, in far-off Burmah,
using for the communion service, and we doubt not with God's
blessing, Bass's pale ale instead of wine." Circumstances alter
cases, it seems!
42. "Book of Brahmanical
Evocations," part iii.
43. Bulwer-Lytton: "Last Days of
Pompeii," p. 147.
44. "Select Works," p. 159.
45. Ibid., p. 92.
46. "Aitareya
Brahmanan," Introduction.