The
Two Babylons
Chapter
II Objects of Worship
Section II - Sub-Section V
The Deification of the
Child
If there was one who
was more deeply concerned in the tragic death of Nimrod than another,
it was his wife Semiramis, who, from an originally humble position, had
been raised to share with him the throne of Babylon. What, in this
emergency shall she do? Shall she quietly forego the pomp and pride to
which she has been raised! No. Though the death of her husband has
given a rude shock to her power, yet her resolution and unbounded
ambition were in nowise checked. On the contrary, her ambition took a
still higher flight. In life her husband had been honoured as a hero;
in death she will have him worshipped as a god, yea, as the woman's
promised Seed, "Zero-ashta," * who was destined to bruise the serpent's
head, and who, in doing so, was to have his own heel bruised.
* Zero--in Chaldee,
"the seed"--though we have seen reason to conclude that in Greek it
sometimes appeared as Zeira, quite naturally passed also into Zoro, as
may be seen from the change of Zerubbabel in the Greek Septuagint to
Zoro-babel; and hence Zuro-ashta, "the seed of the woman" became
Zoroaster, the well known name of the head of the fire-worshippers.
Zoroaster's name is also found as Zeroastes (JOHANNES CLERICUS, De
Chaldoeis). The reader who consults the able and very learned
work of Dr. Wilson of Bombay, on the Parsi Religion, will find that
there was a Zoroaster long before that Zoroaster who lived in the reign
of Darius Hystaspes. In general history, the Zoroaster of Bactria is
most frequently referred to; but the voice of antiquity is clear and
distinct to the effect that the first and great Zoroaster was an
Assyrian or Chaldean (SUIDAS), and that he was the founder of the
idolatrous system of Babylon, and therefore Nimrod. It is equally clear
also in stating that he perished by a violent death, even as was the
case with Nimrod, Tammuz, or Bacchus. The identity of Bacchus and
Zoroaster is still further proved by the epithet Pyrisporus, bestowed
on Bacchus in the Orphic Hymns. When the primeval
promise of Eden began to be forgotten, the meaning of the name
Zero-ashta was lost to all who knew only the exoteric
doctrine of Paganism; and as "ashta" signified "fire" in Chaldee, as
well as "the woman," and the rites of Bacchus had much to do with
fire-worship, "Zero-ashta" came to be rendered "the seed of fire"; and
hence the epithet Pyrisporus, or Ignigena, "fire-born," as applied to
Bacchus. From this misunderstanding of the meaning of the name
Zero-ashta, or rather from its wilful perversion by the priests, who
wished to establish one doctrine for the initiated, and another for the
profane vulgar, came the whole story about the unborn infant Bacchus
having been rescued from the flames that consumed his mother Semele,
when Jupiter came in his glory to visit her. (Note to OVID'S Metam.)
There was another name
by which Zoroaster was known, and which is not a little instructive,
and that is Zar-adas, "The only seed." (JOHANNES CLERICUS, De
Chaldoeis) In WILSON'S Parsi Religion the
name is given either Zoroadus, or Zarades. The ancient Pagans, while
they recognised supremely one only God, knew also that there was one
only seed, on whom the hopes of the world were
founded. In almost all nations, not only was a great god known under
the name of Zero or Zer, "the seed," and a great goddess under the name
of Ashta or Isha, "the woman"; but the great god Zero is frequently
characterised by some epithet which implies that he is "The only One."
Now what can account for such names or epithets? Genesis 3:15 can
account for them; nothing else can. The name Zar-ades, or Zoro-adus,
also strikingly illustrates the saying of Paul: "He saith not, And to
seeds, as of many; but as of one, and to thy seed, which is Christ."
It is worthy of
notice, that the modern system of Parseeism, which dates from the
reform of the old fire-worship in the time of Darius Hystaspes, having
rejected the worship of the goddess-mother, cast out also from the name
of their Zoroaster the name of the "woman"; and therefore in the Zend,
the sacred language of the Parsees, the name of their great reformer is
Zarathustra--i.e., "The Delivering Seed," the last member of the name
coming from Thusht (the root being--Chaldee--nthsh, which drops the
initial n), "to loosen or set loose," and so to
free. Thusht is the infinitive, and ra appended to
it is, in Sanscrit, with which the Zend has much affinity, the well
known sign of the doer of an action, just as er is
in English. The Zend Zarathushtra, then, seems just the equivalent of
Phoroneus, "The Emancipator."
The patriarchs, and
the ancient world in general, were perfectly acquainted with the grand
primeval promise of Eden, and they knew right well that the bruising of
the heel of the promised seed implied his death, and that the curse
could be removed from the world only by the death of the grand
Deliverer. If the promise about the bruising of the serpent's head,
recorded in Genesis, as made to our first parents, was actually made,
and if all mankind were descended from them, then it might be expected
that some trace of this promise would be found in all nations. And such
is the fact. There is hardly a people or kindred on earth in whose
mythology it is not shadowed forth. The Greeks represented their great
god Apollo as slaying the serpent Pytho, and Hercules as strangling
serpents while yet in his cradle. In Egypt, in India, in Scandinavia,
in Mexico, we find clear allusions to the same great truth. "The evil
genius," says Wilkinson, "of the adversaries of the Egyptian god Horus
is frequently figured under the form of a snake, whose head he is seen
piercing with a spear. The same fable occurs in the religion of India,
where the malignant serpent Calyia is slain by Vishnu, in his avatar of
Crishna; and the Scandinavian deity Thor was said to have bruised the
head of the great serpent with his mace." "The origin of this," he
adds, "may be readily traced to the Bible." In reference to a similar
belief among the Mexicans, we find Humboldt saying, that "The serpent
crushed by the great spirit Teotl, when he takes the form of one of the
subaltern deities, is the genius of evil--a real Kakodaemon." Now, in
almost all cases, when the subject is examined to the bottom, it turns
out that the serpent destroying god is represented as enduring
hardships and sufferings that end in his death. Thus the god Thor,
while succeeding at last in destroying the great serpent, is
represented as, in the very moment of victory, perishing from the
venomous effluvia of his breath. The same would seem to be the way in
which the Babylonians represented their great serpent-destroyer among
the figures of their ancient sphere. His mysterious suffering is thus
described by the Greek poet Aratus, whose language shows that when he
wrote, the meaning of the representation had been generally lost,
although, when viewed in this light of Scripture, it is surely deeply
significant:--
"A
human figure, 'whelmed with toil, appears;
Yet still with name uncertain he remains;
Nor known the labour that he thus sustains;
But since upon his knees he seems to fall,
Him ignorant mortals Engonasis call;
And while sublime his awful hands are spread,
Beneath him rolls the dragon's horrid head,
And his right foot unmoved appears to rest,
Fixed on the writhing monster's burnished crest."
The constellation thus
represented is commonly known by the name of "The Kneeler," from this
very description of the Greek poet; but it is plain that, as
"Eugonasis" came from the Babylonians, it must be interpreted, not in a
Greek, but in a Chaldee sense, and so interpreted, as the action of the
figure itself implies, the title of the mysterious sufferer is just
"The Serpent-crusher." Sometimes, however the actual crushing of the
serpent was represented as a much more easy process; yet, even then,
death was the ultimate result; and that death of the serpent-destroyer
is so described as to leave no doubt whence the fable was borrowed.
This is particularly the case with the Indian god Crishna, to whom
Wilkinson alludes in the extract already given. In the legend that
concerns him, the whole of the primeval promise in Eden is very
strikingly embodied. First, he is represented in pictures and images
with his foot on the great serpent's head, and then, after destroying
it, he is fabled to have died in consequence of being shot by an arrow
in the foot; and, as in the case of Tammuz, great
lamentations are annually made for his death. Even in Greece, also, in
the classic story of Paris and Achilles, we have a very plain allusion
to that part of the primeval promise, which referred to the bruising of
the conqueror's "heel." Achilles, the only son of a goddess, was
invulnerable in all points except the heel, but
there a wound was deadly. At that his adversary took aim, and death was
the result.
Now, if there be such
evidence still, that even Pagans knew that it was by dying that the
promised Messiah was to destroy death and him that has the power of
death, that is the Devil, how much more vivid must have been the
impression of mankind in general in regard to this vital truth in the
early days of Semiramis, when they were so much nearer the
fountain-head of all Divine tradition. When, therefore, the name
Zoroaster, "the seed of the woman," was given to him who had perished
in the midst of a prosperous career of false worship and apostacy,
there can be no doubt of the meaning which that name was intended to
convey. And the fact of the violent death of the hero, who, in the
esteem of his partisans, had done so much to bless mankind, to make
life happy, and to deliver them from the fear of the wrath to come,
instead of being fatal to the bestowal of such a title upon him,
favoured rather than otherwise the daring design. All that was needed
to countenance the scheme on the part of those who wished an excuse for
continued apostacy from the true God, was just to give out that, though
the great patron of the apostacy had fallen a prey to the malice of
men, he had freely offered himself for the good of mankind. Now, this
was what was actually done. The Chaldean version of the story of the
great Zoroaster is that he prayed to the supreme God of heaven to take
away his life; that his prayer was heard, and that he expired, assuring
his followers that, if they cherished due regard for his memory, the
empire would never depart from the Babylonians. What Berosus, the
Babylonian historian, says of the cutting off of the head of the great
god Belus, is plainly to the same effect. Belus, says Berosus,
commanded one of the gods to cut off his head, that from the blood thus
shed by his own command and with his own consent, when mingled with the
earth, new creatures might be formed, the first creation being
represented as a sort of a failure. Thus the death of Belus, who was
Nimrod, like that attributed to Zoroaster, was represented as entirely
voluntary, and as submitted to for the benefit of the world.
It seems to have been
now only when the dead hero was to be deified, that the secret
Mysteries were set up. The previous form of apostacy during the life of
Nimrod appears to have been open and public. Now, it was evidently felt
that publicity was out of the question. The death of the great
ringleader of the apostacy was not the death of a warrior slain in
battle, but an act of judicial rigour, solemnly inflicted. This is well
established by the accounts of the deaths of both Tammuz and Osiris.
The following is the account of Tammuz, given by the celebrated
Maimonides, deeply read in all the learning of the Chaldeans: "When the
false prophet named Thammuz preached to a certain king that he should
worship the seven stars and the twelve signs of the Zodiac, that king
ordered him to be put to a terrible death. On the night of his death
all the images assembled from the ends of the earth into the temple of
Babylon, to the great golden image of the Sun, which was suspended
between heaven and earth. That image prostrated itself in the midst of
the temple, and so did all the images around it, while it related to
them all that had happened to Thammuz. The images wept and lamented all
the night long, and then in the morning they flew away, each to his own
temple again, to the ends of the earth. And hence arose the custom
every year, on the first day of the month Thammuz, to mourn and to weep
for Thammuz." There is here, of course, all the extravagance of
idolatry, as found in the Chaldean sacred books that Maimonides had
consulted; but there is no reason to doubt the fact stated either as to
the manner or the cause of the death of Tammuz. In this Chaldean
legend, it is stated that it was by the command of a "certain king"
that this ringleader in apostacy was put to death. Who could this king
be, who was so determinedly opposed to the worship of the host of
heaven? From what is related of the Egyptian Hercules, we get very
valuable light on this subject. It is admitted by Wilkinson that the
most ancient Hercules, and truly primitive one, was he who was known in
Egypt as having, "by the power of the gods" * (i.e., by the SPIRIT)
fought against and overcome the Giants.
* The name of the true
God (Elohim) is plural. Therefore, "the power of the gods," and "of
God," is expressed by the same term.
Now, no doubt, the
title and character of Hercules were afterwards given by the Pagans to
him whom they worshipped as the grand deliverer or Messiah, just as the
adversaries of the Pagan divinities came to be stigmatised as the
"Giants" who rebelled against Heaven. But let the reader only reflect
who were the real Giants that rebelled against
Heaven. They were Nimrod and his party; for the "Giants" were just the
"Mighty ones," of whom Nimrod was the leader. Who, then, was most
likely to head the opposition to the apostacy from the primitive
worship? If Shem was at that time alive, as beyond question he was, who
so likely as he? In exact accordance with this deduction, we find that
one of the names of the primitive Hercules in Egypt was "Sem."
If "Sem," then, was
the primitive Hercules, who overcame the Giants, and that not by mere
physical force, but by "the power of God," or the influence of the Holy
Spirit, that entirely agrees with his character; and more than that, it
remarkably agrees with the Egyptian account of the death of Osiris. The
Egyptians say, that the grand enemy of their god overcame him, not by
open violence, but that, having entered into a
conspiracy with seventy-two of the leading men of Egypt, he
got him into his power, put him to death, and then cut his dead body
into pieces, and sent the different parts to so many different cities
throughout the country. The real meaning of this statement will appear,
if we glance at the judicial institutions of Egypt. Seventy-two was
just the number of the judges, both civil and sacred, who, according to
Egyptian law, were required to determine what was to be the punishment
of one guilty of so high an offence as that of Osiris, supposing this
to have become a matter of judicial inquiry. In determining such a
case, there were necessarily two tribunals concerned. First, there were
the ordinary judges, who had power of life and death, and who amounted
to thirty, then there was, over and above, a tribunal consisting of
forty-two judges, who, if Osiris was condemned to die, had to determine
whether his body should be buried or no, for, before burial, every one
after death had to pass the ordeal of this tribunal. *
* DIODORUS. The words
of Diodorus, as printed in the ordinary editions, make the number of
the judges simply "more than forty," without specifying how many more.
In the Codex Coislianus, the number is stated to be
"two more than forty." The earthly judges, who tried
the question of burial, are admitted both by WILKINSON and BUNSEN, to
have corresponded in number to the judges of the infernal regions. Now,
these judges, over and above their president, are proved from the
monuments to have been just forty-two. The earthly judges at funerals,
therefore, must equally have been forty-two. In reference to this
number as applying equally to the judges of this world and the world of
spirits, Bunsen, speaking of the judgment on a deceased person in the
world unseen, uses these words in the passage above referred to:
"Forty-two gods (the number composing the earthly tribunal of
the dead) occupy the judgment-seat." Diodorus himself,
whether he actually wrote "two more than forty," or simply "more than
forty," gives reason to believe that forty-two was the number he had
present to his mind; for he says, that "the whole of the fable of the
shades below," as brought by Orpheus from Egypt, was "copied from the
ceremonies of the Egyptian funerals," which he had witnessed at the
judgment before the burial of the dead. If, therefore, there were just
forty-two judges in "the shades below," that even, on the showing of
Diodorus, whatever reading of his words be preferred, proves that the
number of the judges in the earthly judgment must
have been the same.
As burial was refused
him, both tribunals would necessarily be concerned; and thus there
would be exactly seventy-two persons, under Typho the president, to
condemn Osiris to die and to be cut in pieces. What, then, does the
statement account to, in regard to the conspiracy, but just to this,
that the great opponent of the idolatrous system which Osiris
introduced, had so convinced these judges of the enormity of the
offence which he had committed, that they gave up the offender to an
awful death, and to ignominy after it, as a terror to any who might
afterwards tread in his steps. The cutting of the dead body in pieces,
and sending the dismembered parts among the different cities, is
paralleled, and its object explained, by what we read in the Bible of
the cutting of the dead body of the Levite's concubine in pieces
(Judges 19:29), and sending one of the parts to each of the twelve
tribes of Israel; and the similar step taken by Saul, when he hewed the
two yoke of oxen asunder, and sent them throughout all the coasts of
his kingdom (1 Sam 11:7). It is admitted by commentators that both the
Levite and Saul acted on a patriarchal custom, according to which
summary vengeance would be dealt to those who failed to come to the
gathering that in this solemn way was summoned. This was declared in so
many words by Saul, when the parts of the slaughtered oxen were sent
among the tribes: "Whosoever cometh not forth after Saul and after
Samuel, so shall it be done to his oxen." In like manner, when the
dismembered parts of Osiris were sent among the cities by the
seventy-two "conspirators"--in other words, by the supreme judges of
Egypt, it was equivalent to a solemn declaration in their name, that
"whosoever should do as Osiris had done, so should it be done to him;
so should he also be cut in pieces."
When irreligion and
apostacy again arose into the ascendant, this act, into which the
constituted authorities who had to do with the ringleader of the
apostates were led, for the putting down of the combined system of
irreligion and despotism set up by Osiris or Nimrod, was naturally the
object of intense abhorrence to all his sympathisers; and for his share
in it the chief actor was stigmatised as Typho, or "The Evil One." *
* Wilkinson admits
that different individuals at different times bore this hated name in
Egypt. One of the most noted names by which Typho, or the Evil One, was
called, was Seth (EPIPHANIUS, Adv. Hoeres). Now
Seth and Shem are synonymous, both alike signifying "The appointed
one." As Shem was a younger son of Noah, being "the brother of Japhet
the elder" (Gen 10:21), and as the pre-eminence was
divinely destined to him, the name Shem, "the appointed one," had
doubtless been given him by Divine direction, either at his birth or
afterwards, to mark him out as Seth had been previously marked out as
the "child of promise." Shem, however, seems to have been known in
Egypt as Typho, not only under the name of Seth, but under his own
name; for Wilkinson tells us that Typho was characterised by a name
that signified "to destroy and render desert." (Egyptians)
Now the name of Shem also in one of its meanings signifies "to
desolate" or lay waste. So Shem, the appointed one, was by his enemies
made Shem, the Desolator or Destroyer--i.e., the Devil.
The influence that
this abhorred Typho wielded over the minds of the so-called
"conspirators," considering the physical force with which Nimrod was
upheld, must have been wonderful, and goes to show, that though his
deed in regard to Osiris is veiled, and himself branded by a hateful
name, he was indeed none other than that primitive Hercules who
overcame the Giants by "the power of God," by the persuasive might of
his Holy Spirit.
In connection with
this character of Shem, the myth that makes Adonis, who is identified
with Osiris, perish by the tusks of a wild boar, is easily unravelled.
* The tusk of a wild boar was a symbol. In Scripture, a tusk is called
"a horn"; among many of the Classic Greeks it was regarded in the very
same light. **
* In India, a demon
with a "boar's face" is said to have gained such power through his devotion,
that he oppressed the "devotees" or worshippers of
the gods, who had to hide themselves. (MOOR'S Pantheon)
Even in Japan there seems to be a similar myth.
** Pausanian admits
that some in his day regarded tusks as teeth; but he argues strongly,
and, I think, conclusively, for their being considered as "horns."
When once it is known
that a tusk is regarded as a "horn" according to the symbolism of
idolatry, the meaning of the boar's tusks, by which Adonis perished, is
not far to seek. The bull's horns that Nimrod wore were the symbol of
physical power. The boar's tusks were the symbol of spiritual
power. As a "horn" means power, so a tusk, that is,
a horn in the mouth, means "power in the mouth"; in other words, the
power of persuasion; the very power with which "Sem," the primitive
Hercules, was so signally endowed. Even from the ancient traditions of
the Gael, we get an item of evidence that at once illustrates this idea
of power in the mouth, and connects it with that great son of Noah, on
whom the blessing of the Highest, as recorded in Scripture, did
specially rest. The Celtic Hercules was called Hercules Ogmius, which,
in Chaldee, is "Hercules the Lamenter." *
* The Celtic scholars
derive the name Ogmius from the Celtic word Ogum, which is said to
denote "the secret of writing"; but Ogum is much more likely to be
derived from the name of the god, than the name of the god to be
derived from it.
No name could be more
appropriate, none more descriptive of the history of Shem, than this.
Except our first parent, Adam, there was, perhaps, never a mere man
that saw so much grief as he. Not only did he see a vast apostacy,
which, with his righteous feelings, and witness as he had been of the
awful catastrophe of the flood, must have deeply grieved him; but he
lived to bury SEVEN GENERATIONS of his descendants. He lived 502 years
after the flood, and as the lives of men were rapidly shortened after
that event, no less than SEVEN generations of his lineal descendants
died before him (Gen 11:10-32). How appropriate a name Ogmius, "The
Lamenter or Mourner," for one who had such a history! Now, how is this
"Mourning" Hercules represented as putting down enormities and
redressing wrongs? Not by his club, like the Hercules of the Greeks,
but by the force of persuasion. Multitudes were represented as
following him, drawn by fine chains of gold and amber inserted into
their ears, and which chains proceeded from his mouth. *
* Sir W. BETHAM'S Gael
and Cymbri. In connection with this Ogmius, one of the names
of "Sem," the great Egyptian Hercules who overcame the Giants, is
worthy of notice. That name is Chon. In the Etymologicum
Magnum, apud BRYANT, we thus read: "They say that in the
Egyptian dialect Hercules is called Chon." Compare this with WILKINSON,
where Chon is called "Sem." Now Khon signifies "to lament" in Chaldee,
and as Shem was Khon--i.e., "Priest" of the Most High God, his
character and peculiar circumstances as Khon "the lamenter" would form
an additional reason why he should be distinguished by that name by
which the Egyptian Hercules was known. And it is not to be overlooked,
that on the part of those who seek to turn sinners from the error of
their ways, there is an eloquence in tears that is very impressive. The
tears of Whitefield formed one great part of his power; and, in like
manner, the tears of Khon, "the lamenting" Hercules, would aid him
mightily in overcoming the Giants.
There is a great
difference between the two symbols--the tusks of a boar and the golden
chains issuing from the mouth, that draw willing crowds by the ears;
but both very beautifully illustrate the same idea--the might of that
persuasive power that enabled Shem for a time to withstand the tide of
evil that came rapidly rushing in upon the world.
Now when Shem had so
powerfully wrought upon the minds of men as to induce them to make a
terrible example of the great Apostate, and when that Apostate's
dismembered limbs were sent to the chief cities, where no doubt his
system had been established, it will be readily perceived that, in
these circumstances, if idolatry was to continue--if, above all, it was
to take a step in advance, it was indispensable that it should operate
in secret. The terror of an execution, inflicted on one so mighty as
Nimrod, made it needful that, for some time to come at least, the
extreme of caution should be used. In these circumstances, then, began,
there can hardly be a doubt, that system of "Mystery," which, having
Babylon for its centre, has spread over the world. In these Mysteries,
under the seal of secrecy and the sanction of an oath, and by means of
all the fertile resources of magic, men were gradually led back to all
the idolatry that had been publicly suppressed, while new features were
added to that idolatry that made it still more blasphemous than before.
That magic and idolatry were twin sisters, and came into the world
together, we have abundant evidence. "He" (Zoroaster), says Justin the
historian, "was said to be the first that invented magic arts, and that
most diligently studied the motions of the heavenly bodies." The
Zoroaster spoken of by Justin is the Bactrian Zoroaster; but this is
generally admitted to be a mistake. Stanley, in his History
of Oriental Philosophy, concludes that this mistake had
arisen from similarity of name, and that from this cause
that had been attributed to the Bactrian
Zoroaster which properly belonged to the Chaldean, "since it cannot be
imagined that the Bactrian was the inventor of those arts in which the
Chaldean, who lived contemporary with him, was so much skilled."
Epiphanius had evidently come to the same substantial conclusion before
him. He maintains, from the evidence open to him in his day, that it
was "Nimrod, that established the sciences of magic
and astronomy, the invention of which was subsequently attributed to
(the Bactrian) Zoroaster." As we have seen that Nimrod and the Chaldean
Zoroaster are the same, the conclusions of the ancient and the modern
inquirers into Chaldean antiquity entirely harmonise. Now the secret
system of the Mysteries gave vast facilities for imposing on the senses
of the initiated by means of the various tricks and artifices of magic.
Notwithstanding all the care and precautions of those who conducted
these initiations, enough has transpired to give us a very clear
insight into their real character. Everything was so contrived as to
wind up the minds of the novices to the highest pitch of excitement,
that, after having surrendered themselves implicitly to the priests,
they might be prepared to receive anything. After the candidates for
initiation had passed through the confessional, and sworn the required
oaths, "strange and amazing objects," says Wilkinson, "presented
themselves. Sometimes the place they were in seemed to shake around
them; sometimes it appeared bright and resplendent with light and
radiant fire, and then again covered with black darkness, sometimes
thunder and lightning, sometimes frightful noises and bellowings,
sometimes terrible apparitions astonished the trembling spectators."
Then, at last, the great god, the central object of their worship,
Osiris, Tammuz, Nimrod or Adonis, was revealed to them in the way most
fitted to soothe their feelings and engage their blind affections. An
account of such a manifestation is thus given by an ancient Pagan,
cautiously indeed, but yet in such a way as shows the nature of the
magic secret by which such an apparent miracle was accomplished: "In a
manifestation which one must not reveal...there is seen on a wall of
the temple a mass of light, which appears at first at a very great
distance. It is transformed, while unfolding itself, into a visage
evidently divine and supernatural, of an aspect severe, but with a
touch of sweetness. Following the teachings of a mysterious religion,
the Alexandrians honour it as Osiris or Adonis." From this statement,
there can hardly be a doubt that the magical art here employed was none
other than that now made use of in the modern phantasmagoria. Such or
similar means were used in the very earliest periods for presenting to
the view of the living, in the secret Mysteries, those who were dead.
We have statements in ancient history referring to the very time of
Semiramis, which imply that magic rites were practised for this very
purpose; * and as the magic lantern, or something akin to it, was
manifestly used in later times for such an end, it is reasonable to
conclude that the same means, or similar, were employed in the most
ancient times, when the same effects were produced.
* One of the
statements to which I refer is contained in the following words of
Moses of Chorene in his Armenian History,
referring to the answer made by Semiramis to the friends of Araeus, who
had been slain in battle by her: "I have given commands, says
Semiramis, to my gods to lick the wounds of Araeus, and to raise him
from the dead. The gods, says she, have licked
Araeus, and recalled him to life." If Semiramis had really done what
she said she had done, it would have been a miracle. The effects of
magic were sham miracles; and Justin and Epiphanius
show that sham miracles came in at the very birth of idolatry. Now,
unless the sham miracle of raising the dead by magical arts had already
been known to be practised in the days of Semiramis, it is not likely
that she would have given such an answer to those whom she wished to
propitiate; for, on the one hand, how could she ever have thought of
such an answer, and on the other, how could she expect that it would
have the intended effect, if there was no current belief in the
practice of necromancy? We find that in Egypt, about the same age, such
magic arts must have been practised, if Manetho is to be believed.
"Manetho says," according to Josephus, "that he [the elder Horus,
evidently spoken of as a human and mortal king] was admitted to the
sight of the gods, and that Amenophis desired the same
privilege." This pretended admission to the right of the gods
evidently implied the use of the magic art referred to in the text.
Now, in the hands of
crafty, designing men, this was a powerful means of imposing upon those
who were willing to be imposed upon, who were averse to the holy
spiritual religion of the living God, and who still hankered after the
system that was put down. It was easy for those who controlled the
Mysteries, having discovered secrets that were then unknown to the mass
of mankind, and which they carefully preserved in their own exclusive
keeping, to give them what might seem ocular demonstration, that
Tammuz, who had been slain, and for whom such lamentations had been
made, was still alive, and encompassed with divine and heavenly glory.
From the lips of one so gloriously revealed, or what was practically
the same, from the lips of some unseen priest, speaking in his name
from behind the scenes, what could be too wonderful or incredible to be
believed? Thus the whole system of the secret Mysteries of Babylon was
intended to glorify a dead man; and when once the worship of one dead
man was established, the worship of many more was sure to follow. This
casts light upon the language of the 106th Psalm, where the Lord,
upbraiding Israel for their apostacy, says: "They joined themselves to
Baalpeor, and ate the sacrifices of the dead."
Thus, too, the way was paved for bringing in all the abominations and
crimes of which the Mysteries became the scenes; for, to those who
liked not to retain God in their knowledge, who preferred some visible
object of worship, suited to the sensuous feelings of their carnal
minds, nothing could seem a more cogent reason for faith or practice
than to hear with their own ears a command given forth amid so glorious
a manifestation apparently by the very divinity they adored.
The scheme, thus
skilfully formed, took effect. Semiramis gained glory from her dead and
deified husband; and in course of time both of them, under the names of
Rhea and Nin, or "Goddess-Mother and Son," were worshipped with an
enthusiasm that was incredible, and their images were everywhere set up
and adored. *
* It would seem that
no public idolatry was ventured upon till the reign
of the grandson of Semiramis, Arioch or Arius. (Cedreni
Compendium)
Wherever the Negro
aspect of Nimrod was found an obstacle to his worship, this was very
easily obviated. According to the Chaldean doctrine of the
transmigration of souls, all that was needful was just to teach that
Ninus had reappeared in the person of a posthumous son, of a fair
complexion, supernaturally borne by his widowed wife after the father
had gone to glory. As the licentious and dissolute life of Semiramis
gave her many children, for whom no ostensible father on earth would be
alleged, a plea like this would at once sanctify sin, and enable her to
meet the feelings of those who were disaffected to the true worship of
Jehovah, and yet might have not fancy to bow down before a Negro
divinity. From the light reflected on Babylon by Egypt, as well as from
the form of the extant images of the Babylonian child in the arms of
the goddess-mother, we have every reason to believe that this was
actually done. In Egypt the fair Horus, the son of
the black Osiris, who was the favourite object of
worship, in the arms of the goddess Isis, was said to have been
miraculously born in consequence of a connection, on the part of that
goddess, with Osiris after his death, and, in point of fact, to have
been a new incarnation of that god, to avenge his death on his
murderers. It is wonderful to find in what widely-severed countries,
and amongst what millions of the human race at this day, who never saw
a Negro, a Negro god is worshipped. But yet, as we shall afterwards
see, among the civilised nations of antiquity, Nimrod almost everywhere
fell into disrepute, and was deposed from his original pre-eminence,
expressly ob deformitatem, "on account of his
ugliness." Even in Babylon itself, the posthumous child, as identified
with his father, and inheriting all his father's glory, yet possessing
more of his mother's complexion, came to be the favourite type of the
Madonna's divine son.
This son, thus
worshipped in his mother's arms, was looked upon as invested with all
the attributes, and called by almost all the names of the promised
Messiah. As Christ, in the Hebrew of the Old Testament, was called
Adonai, The Lord, so Tammuz was called Adon or Adonis. Under the name
of Mithras, he was worshipped as the "Mediator." As Mediator and head
of the covenant of grace, he was styled Baal-berith, Lord of the
Covenant (Judges 8:33). In this character he is represented in Persian
monuments as seated on the rainbow, the well known symbol of the
covenant. In India, under the name of Vishnu, the Preserver or Saviour
of men, though a god, he was worshipped as the great "Victim-Man," who
before the worlds were, because there was nothing else to offer,
offered himself as a sacrifice. The Hindoo sacred
writings teach that this mysterious offering before all creation is the
foundation of all the sacrifices that have ever been offered since. *
* In the exercise of
his office as the Remedial god, Vishnu is said to
"extract the thorns of the three worlds." (MOOR'S Pantheon)
"Thorns" were a symbol of the curse--Genesis 3:18.
Do any marvel at such
a statement being found in the sacred books of a Pagan mythology? Why
should they? Since sin entered the world there has been only one way of
salvation, and that through the blood of the everlasting covenant--a
way that all mankind once knew, from the days of righteous Abel
downwards. When Abel, "by faith," offered unto God his more excellent
sacrifice than that of Cain, it was his faith "in the blood of the Lamb
slain," in the purpose of God "from the foundation of the world," and
in due time to be actually offered up on Calvary, that gave all the
"excellence" to his offering. If Abel knew of "the blood of the Lamb,"
why should Hindoos not have known of it? One little word shows that
even in Greece the virtue of "the blood of God" had once been known,
though that virtue, as exhibited in its poets, was utterly obscured and
degraded. That word is Ichor. Every reader of the bards of classic
Greece knows that Ichor is the term peculiarly appropriated to the
blood of a divinity. Thus Homer refers to it:
"From
the clear vein the immortal Ichor flowed,
Such stream as issues from a wounded god,
Pure emanation, uncorrupted flood,
Unlike our gross, diseased terrestrial blood."
Now, what is the
proper meaning of the term Ichor? In Greek it has no etymological
meaning whatever; but, in Chaldee, Ichor signifies "The precious
thing." Such a name, applied to the blood of a divinity, could have
only one origin. It bears its evidence on the very face of it, as
coming from that grand patriarchal tradition, that led Abel to look
forward to the "precious blood" of Christ, the most "precious" gift
that love Divine could give to a guilty world, and which, while the
blood of the only genuine "Victim-Man," is at the same time, in deed
and in truth, "The blood of God" (Acts 20:28). Even in Greece itself,
though the doctrine was utterly perverted, it was not entirely lost. It
was mingled with falsehood and fable, it was hid from the multitude;
but yet, in the secret mystic system it necessarily occupied an
important place. As Servius tells us that the grand purpose of the
Bacchic orgies "was the purification of souls," and as in these orgies
there was regularly the tearing asunder and the shedding of the blood
of an animal, in memory of the shedding of the life's blood of the
great divinity commemorated in them, could this symbolical shedding of
the blood of that divinity have no bearing on the "purification" from
sin, these mystic rites were intended to effect? We have seen that the
sufferings of the Babylonian Zoroaster and Belus were expressly
represented as voluntary, and as submitted to for the benefit of the
world, and that in connection with crushing the great serpent's head,
which implied the removal of sin and the curse. If the Grecian Bacchus
was just another form of the Babylonian divinity, then his sufferings
and blood-shedding must have been represented as having been undergone
for the same purpose--viz., for the "purification of souls." From this
point of view, let the well known name of Bacchus in Greece be looked
at. The name was Dionysus or Dionusos. What is the meaning of that
name? Hitherto it has defied all interpretation. But deal with it as
belonging to the language of that land from which the god himself
originally came, and the meaning is very plain. D'ion-nuso-s
signifies "THE SIN-BEARER," * a name entirely appropriate to the
character of him whose sufferings were represented as so mysterious,
and who was looked up to as the great "purifier of souls."
* The expression used
in Exodus 28:38, for "bearing iniquity" or in a vicarious manner is "nsha
eon" (the first letter eon being ayn).
A synonym for eon, "iniquity," is aon
(the first letter being aleph). In Chaldee the first letter a
becomes i, and therefore aon,
"iniquity," is ion. Then nsha "to bear," in the
participle active is "nusha." As the Greeks had no sh, that became
nusa. De, or Da, is the demonstrative pronoun signifying "That" or "The
great." And thus "D'ion-nusa" is exactly "The great sin-bearer." That
the classic Pagans had the very idea of the imputation of sin, and of
vicarious suffering, is proved by what Ovid says in regard to Olenos.
Olenos is said to have taken upon him and willingly to have borne the
blame of guilt of which he was innocent. Under the load of this imputed
guilt, voluntarily taken upon himself, Olenos is represented as having
suffered such horror as to have perished, being petrified or turned
into stone. As the stone into which Olenos was changed was erected on
the holy mountain of Ida, that shows that Olenos
must have been regarded as a sacred person. The
real character of Olenos, as the "sin-bearer," can be very fully
established. (see note below)
Now, this Babylonian
god, known in Greece as "The sin-bearer," and in India as the
"Victim-Man," among the Buddhists of the East, the original elements of
whose system are clearly Babylonian, was commonly addressed as the
"Saviour of the world." It has been all along well enough known that
the Greeks occasionally worshipped the supreme god under the title of
"Zeus the Saviour"; but this title was thought to have reference only
to deliverance in battle, or some suck-like temporal deliverance. But
when it is known that "Zeus the Saviour" was only a title of Dionysus,
the "sin-bearing Bacchus," his character, as "The Saviour," appears in
quite a different light. In Egypt, the Chaldean god was held up as the
great object of love and adoration, as the god through whom "goodness
and truth were revealed to mankind." He was regarded as the predestined
heir of all things; and, on the day of his birth, it was believed that
a voice was heard to proclaim, "The Lord of all the earth is born." In
this character he was styled "King of kings, and Lord of lords," it
being as a professed representative of this hero-god that the
celebrated Sesostris caused this very title to be added to his name on
the monuments which he erected to perpetuate the fame of his victories.
Not only was he honoured as the great "World King," he was regarded as
Lord of the invisible world, and "Judge of the dead"; and it was taught
that, in the world of spirits, all must appear before his dread
tribunal, to have their destiny assigned them. As the true Messiah was
prophesied of under the title of the "Man whose name was the branch,"
he was celebrated not only as the "Branch of Cush," but as the "Branch
of God," graciously given to the earth for healing all the ills that
flesh is heir to. * He was worshipped in Babylon under the name of
El-Bar, or "God the Son." Under this very name he is introduced by
Berosus, the Chaldean historian, as the second in the list of
Babylonian sovereigns. **
* This is the esoteric
meaning of Virgil's "Golden Branch," and of the Mistletoe Branch of the
Druids. The proof of this must be reserved to the Apocalypse
of the Past. I may remark, however, in passing, on the wide
extent of the worship of a sacred branch. Not only do the Negroes in
Africa in the worship of the Fetiche, on certain occasions, make use of
a sacred branch (HURD'S Rites and Ceremonies), but
even in India there are traces of the same practice. My brother, S.
Hislop, Free Church Missionary at Nagpore, informs me that the late
Rajah of Nagpore used every year, on a certain day, to go in state to
worship the branch of a particular species of tree, called Apta, which
had been planted for the occasion, and which, after receiving divine
honours, was plucked up, and its leaves distributed by the native
Prince among his nobles. In the streets of the city numerous boughs of
the same kind of tree were sold, and the leaves presented to friends
under the name of sona, or "gold."
** BEROSUS, in
BUNSEN'S Egypt. The name "El-Bar" is given above in
the Hebrew form, as being more familiar to the common reader of the
English Bible. The Chaldee form of the name is Ala-Bar, which in the
Greek of Berosus, is Ala-Par, with the ordinary Greek termination os
affixed to it. The change of Bar into Par in Greek is just on the same
principle as Ab, "father," in Greek becomes Appa,
and Bard, the "spotted one," becomes Pardos,
&c. This name, Ala-Bar, was probably given by Berosus to Ninyas
as the legitimate son and successor of Nimrod. That Ala-Par-os was
really intended to designate the sovereign referred to, as "God the
Son," or "the Son of God," is confirmed by another reading of the same
name as given in Greek. There the name is Alasparos. Now Pyrsiporus, as
applied to Bacchus, means Ignigena, or the "Seed of Fire"; and
Ala-sporos, the "Seed of God," is just a similar expression formed in
the same way, the name being Grecised.
Under this name he has
been found in the sculptures of Nineveh by Layard, the name Bar "the
Son," having the sign denoting El or "God" prefixed to it. Under the
same name he has been found by Sir H. Rawlinson, the names "Beltis" and
the "Shining Bar" being in immediate juxtaposition. Under the name of
Bar he was worshipped in Egypt in the earliest times, though in later
times the god Bar was degraded in the popular Pantheon, to make way for
another more popular divinity. In Pagan Rome itself, as Ovid testifies,
he was worshipped under the name of the "Eternal Boy." * Thus daringly
and directly was a mere mortal set up in Babylon in opposition to the
"Son of the Blessed."
* To understand the
true meaning of the above expression, reference must be had to a
remarkable form of oath among the Romans. In Rome the most sacred form
of an oath was (as we learn from AULUS GELLIUS), "By Jupiter the
STONE." This, as it stands, is nonsense. But translate "lapidem"
[stone] back into the sacred tongue, or Chaldee, and the oath stands,
"By Jove, the Son," or "By the son of Jove." Ben,
which in Hebrew is Son, in Chaldee becomes Eben,
which also signifies a stone, as may be seen in
"Eben-ezer," "The stone of help." Now as the most learned inquirers
into antiquity have admitted that the Roman Jovis, which was anciently
the nominative, is just a form of the Hebrew Jehovah, it is evident
that the oath had originally been, "by the son of Jehovah." This
explains how the most solemn and binding oath had been taken in the
form above referred to; and,it shows, also, what was really meant when
Bacchus, "the son of Jovis," was called "the Eternal Boy." (OVID, Metam.)
Note
Olenos, the
Sin-Bearer
In different portions
of this work evidence has been brought to show that Saturn, "the father
of gods and men," was in one aspect just our first
parent Adam. Now, of Saturn it is said that he devoured all his
children. *
* Sometimes he is said
to have devoured only his male children; but see SMITH'S (Larger) Classical
Dictionary, "Hera," where it will be found that the female as
well as the male were devoured.
In the exoteric story,
among those who knew not the actual fact referred to, this naturally
appeared in the myth, in the shape in which we commonly find it--viz.,
that he devoured them all as soon as they were born. But that which was
really couched under the statement, in regard to his devouring his
children, was just the Scriptural fact of the Fall--viz., that he
destroyed them by eating--not by eating them,
but by eating the forbidden fruit. When this was
the sad and dismal state of matters, the Pagan story goes on to say
that the destruction of the children of the father of gods and men was
arrested by means of his wife, Rhea. Rhea, as we have already seen, had
really as much to do with the devouring of Saturn's children, as Saturn
himself; but, in the progress of idolatry and apostacy, Rhea, or Eve,
came to get glory at Saturn's expense. Saturn, or Adam, was represented
as a morose divinity; Rhea, or Eve, exceedingly benignant; and, in her
benignity, she presented to her husband a stone bound in swaddling
bands, which he greedily devoured, and henceforth the children of the
cannibal father were safe. The stone bound in swaddling bands is, in
the sacred language, "Ebn Hatul"; but Ebn-Hat-tul * also signifies "A
sin-bearing son."
* Hata, "sin," is
found also in Chaldee, Hat. Tul is from Ntl, "to support." If the
reader will look at Horus with his swathes (BRYANT); Diana with the
bandages round her legs; the symbolic bull of the Persian swathed in
like manner, and even the shapeless log of the Tahitians, used as a god
and bound about with ropes (WILLIAMS); he will see, I think, that there
must be some important mystery in this swathing.
This does not
necessarily mean that Eve, or the mother of mankind, herself actually
brought forth the promised seed (although there are many myths also to
that effect), but that, having received the glad tidings herself, and
embraced it, she presented it to her husband, who received it by faith
from her, and that this laid the foundation of his
own salvation and that of his posterity. The devouring on the part of
Saturn of the swaddled stone is just the symbolical expression of the
eagerness with which Adam by faith received the good news of the
woman's seed; for the act of faith, both in the Old Testament and in
the New, is symbolised by eating. Thus Jeremiah
says, "Thy words were found of me, and I did eat them, and thy word was
unto me the joy and rejoicing of my heart" (Jer 15:16). This also is
strongly shown by our Lord Jesus Christ Himself, who, while setting
before the Jews the indispensable necessity of eating His flesh, and
feeding on Him, did at the same time say: "It is the Spirit that
quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing: the words that I speak unto
you, they are spirit, and they are life" (John 6:63). That Adam eagerly
received the good news about the promised seed, and treasured it up in
his heart as the life of his soul, is evident from the name which he
gave to his wife immediately after hearing it: "And Adam called his
wife's name Eve, because she was the mother of all living ones"
(Gen 3:20).
The story of the
swaddled stone does not end with the swallowing of it, and the
arresting of the ruin of the children of Saturn. This swaddled stone
was said to be "preserved near the temple of Delphi, where care was
taken to anoint it daily with oil, and to cover it with wool"
(MAURICE'S Indian Antiquities). If this stone
symbolised the "sin-bearing son," it of course symbolised also the Lamb
of God, slain from the foundation of the world, in whose symbolic
covering our first parents were invested when God clothed them in the
coats of skins. Therefore, though represented to the eye as a stone, he
must have the appropriate covering of wool. When represented as a
branch, the branch of God, the branch also was wrapped in wool
(POTTER, Religion of Greece). The daily
anointing with oil is very significant. If the stone represented the
"sin-bearing son," what could the anointing of that "sin-bearing son"
daily with oil mean, but just to point him out as the "Lord's
Anointed," or the "Messiah," whom the idolatrous worshipped in
opposition to the true Messiah yet to be revealed?
One of the names by
which this swaddled and anointed stone was called is very strikingly
confirmatory of the above conclusion. That name is Baitulos. This we
find from Priscian, who, speaking of "that stone which Saturn is said
to have devoured for Jupiter," adds, whom the Greeks called "Baitulos."
Now, "B'hai-tuloh" signifies the "Life-restoring child." *
* From Tli, Tleh, or
Tloh, "Infans puer" (CLAVIS STOCKII, Chald.), and
Hia, or Haya, "to live, to restore life." (GESENIUS) From Hia, "to
live," with digamma prefixed, comes the Greek "life." That Hia, when
adopted into Greek, was also pronounced Haya, we have evidence in he
noun Hiim, "life," pronounced Hayyim, which in Greek is represented by
"blood." The Mosaic principle, that "the blood was the life," is thus
proved to have been known by others besides the Jews. Now Haya, "to
live or restore life," with the digamma prefixed, becomes B'haya: and
so in Egypt, we find that Bai signified "soul," or "spirit" (BUNSEN),
which is the living principle. B'haitulos, then, is
the "Life-restoring child." P'haya-n is the same god.
The father of gods and
men had destroyed his children by eating; but the reception of "the
swaddled stone" is said to have "restored them to life" (HESIOD, Theogon.).
Hence the name Baitulos; and this meaning of the name is entirely in
accordance with what is said in Sanchuniathon about the Baithulia made
by the Phoenician god Ouranos: "It was the god Ouranos who devised
Baithulia, contriving stones that moved
as having life." If the stone Baitulos represented the
"life-restoring child," it was natural that that stone should be made,
if possible, to appear as having "life" in itself.
Now, there is a great
analogy between this swaddled stone that represented the "sin-bearing
son," and that Olenos mentioned by Ovid, who took on him guilt not his
own, and in consequence was changed into a stone. We have seen already
that Olenos, when changed into a stone, was set up in Phrygia on the
holy mountain of Ida. We have reason to believe that the stone which
was fabled to have done so much for the children of Saturn, and was set
up near the temple of Delphi, was just a representation of this same
Olenos. We find that Olen was the first prophet at Delphi, who founded
the first temple there (PAUSA Phocica). As the
prophets and priests generally bore the names of the gods whom they
represented (Hesychius expressly tells us that the priest who
represented the great god under the name of the branch in the mysteries
was himself called by the name of Bacchus), this indicates one of the
ancient names of the god of Delphi. If, then, there was a sacred stone
on Mount Ida called the stone of Olenos, and a sacred stone in the
precincts of the temple of Delphi, which Olen founded, can there be a
doubt that the sacred stone of Delphi represented the same as was
represented by the sacred stone of Ida? The swaddled stone set up at
Delphi is expressly called by Priscian, in the place already cited, "a
god." This god, then, that in symbol was divinely anointed, and was
celebrated as having restored to life the children of Saturn, father of
gods and men, as identified with the Idaean Olenos, is proved to have
been regarded as occupying the very place of the Messiah, the great
Sin-bearer, who came to bear the sins of men, and took their place and
suffered in their room and stead; for Olenos, as we have seen,
voluntarily took on him guilt of which he was personally free.
While thus we have
seen how much of the patriarchal faith was hid under the mystical
symbols of Paganism, there is yet a circumstance to be noted in regard
to the swaddled stone, that shows how the Mystery of Iniquity in Rome
has contrived to import this swaddled stone of Paganism into what is
called Christian symbolism. The Baitulos, or swaddled stone, was a
round or globular stone. This globular stone is frequently represented
swathed and bound, sometimes with more, sometimes with fewer bandages.
In BRYANT, where the goddess Cybele is represented as "Spes Divina," or
Divine hope, we see the foundation of this divine hope held out to the
world in the representation of the swaddled stone at her right hand,
bound with four different swathes. In DAVID'S Antiquites
Etrusques, we find a goddess represented with Pandora's box,
the source of all ill, in her extended hand, and the swaddled globe
depending from it; and in this case that globe has only two bandages,
the one crossing the other. And what is this bandage globe of Paganism
but just the counterpart of that globe, with a band around it, and the
mystic
Tau, or cross, on the top of it, that is called "the type of
dominion," and is frequently represented in the hands of the profane
representations of God the Father. The reader does not now need to be
told that the cross is the chosen sign and mark of
that very God whom the swaddled stone represented; and that when that
God was born, it was said, "The Lord of all the earth is born"
(WILKINSON). As the god symbolised by the swaddled stone not only
restored the children of Saturn to life, but restored the lordship of
the earth to Saturn himself, which by transgression he had lost, it is
not to be wondered at that it is said of "these consecrated stones,"
that while "some were dedicated to Jupiter, and others to the sun,"
"they were considered in a more particular manner sacred to Saturn,"
the Father of the gods (MAURICE), and that Rome, in consequence, has
put the round stone into the hand of the image, bearing the profaned
name of God the Father attached to it, and that from his source the
bandaged globe, surmounted with the mark of Tammuz, has become the
symbol of dominion throughout all Papal Europe.
The Two Babylons: Contents
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