My thanks go to Juan Schoch who by his work brought me into contact with the Vitvan material (School of the natural order - Website), Gerald Massey's research on Egypt, the pagan origin of Christanity, and Alvin Boyd Kuhn, the pupil of Massey who has written extensively on the meaning of symbols in myth. Also, Godfrey Higgins work Anacalypsis can be found at members.tripod.com/~pc93 Martin Euser Webmaster --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Message from Juan: Electronically typed and edited by Juan Schoch for educational research purposes. Join gnosis284 - Send e-mail to: gnosis284-subscribe@yahoogroups.com. Refs: enlightenment-engine, members.tripod.com/~pc93 I am looking for contributions: texts, comments, etc. I (Juan) can be contacted at: pc93@enlightenment-engine.net Do not remove this notice. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A good intro into the essence of Kuhn's writings re Christianity can be found
in the books of Tom Harpur,
especially the one about the Pagan Christ.
The modern world is awakening slowly to the fact that in the day
we call ancient, though it was but a few thousand years ago in the run of
millions, advanced men fully worthy of the name of sages were deeply versed in
the profundities of recondite philosophy and possessed knowledge of things both
human and divine, and well comprehended the great sciences of both cosmology and
anthropology. Evident it is that men of this caliber indited the great
Scriptures of ancient religions, which have won and held the reverence of
mankind so generally that they have been made the unique objects of religious
veneration and the canons of spiritual authority for most of the world over long
ages. Indeed the homage paid them has been of the character of worship offered
to something regarded as divine. The tradition has prevailed that the Bible
authors were in truth men of a divine or semi-divine order, or at least men
inspired by a divine afflatus to transmit to mankind the heavenly dictation of
sacred truth.
A study of ancient literature, growing more enlightened as it is
pursued, is revealing the presence of a definitely formulated and high organic
truth-structure, constituted of the essential elements of a great logical
systematization of fundamental archai, as the Greek word has it, or
principles of a cosmic order of being, expressed in many varied forms of
representation everywhere over the field of ancient culture. Primarily, of
course, the great wisdom was embodied in tomes of a vast body of literature, a
literature so cryptically recondite that its esoteric purport has almost
completely eluded the most erudite lucubrations of world scholarship from the
ancient day to the present. Indeed it has been the perversions and
misinterpretations of that ancient corpus of wisdom that have afflicted the
religious consciousness of the world, particularly in the West, with an
intellectual befuddlement that approaches the status of a universal dementia for
some two millennia.
Not only in the scripts of religion, however, but also in a wide
variety of other modes of expression was the wisdom tradition
embodied and transmitted. It is found, but always in subtle
forms of crypticism,--a feature that has bewildered and befogged all later
conclusions of investigators--in ancient art, in architecture, in myth-making,
secret society ritual, dramatic scenario, music, mathematics, anthropological
science, logic, rhetoric, philosophy, astronomy, semantics, psychology, festival
ordinances, social ceremonies and throughout the warp and woof of life
generally. Now, perhaps strangest of all the channels through which it was given
expression, comes the momentous revelation that the sagacious genius of
antiquity had even insinuated a form of its basic outline into the very
structure of that ground-base of all literature,--the alphabet. The
announcement and elucidation of its presence in this, the fundamental semantic
code for the transmission of human thought, should rank as an epochal event in
the history of world culture.
Ancient sagacity viewed high spiritual culture in a different
light from that in which it is envisaged today. While modern intelligence aims
to disseminate its blessings over the widest popular area, hoping that it may
edify the mass body of people generally, the sages of old acted upon a different
estimate of the possibilities in the case. They appraised the cultural potential
of the "vulgar masses" as practically nil, and therefore deemed it a sacrilege
to cast the precious jewels of esoteric truth and knowledge to the "swine" that
would trample them in the mire of unconscionable crudity of misunderstanding. It
may be said that the history of religious cultism over many centuries has
demonstrated the practical wisdom of this conservatism. The perversion,
corruption, materialization and literalization of the lofty mystical sense of
ancient cryptic literature, has caused perhaps the most colossal debacle in the
culture of spiritual values in the course of known history. Its easily
discernible evil fruitage has been the positive derationalization of the
Occidental mind as regards all things religious, theological and Scriptural. It
has deprived that mind of the cardinal advantage of knowing the sublime meaning
of the splendid Jewish-Christian Scriptures, which are a collection of ancient
mythographic portrayals of spiritual truth, sadly and calamitously mistaken for
history.
Not only were the Sages constrained to adopt methods of
crypticism of varied forms to safeguard precious cosmic and anthro-
pogenic truth from desecration by the "rabble," but they
employed a technique which found its basic authentication in nature itself. As
the world below is a mundane reflection and copy of an overshadowing world of
spiritual truth, they strove to portray the structural forms of that higher
truth by representing it under the forms of its counterparts everywhere existent
in the natural world. Even supposed history was oriented into the form of
archetypal ideologies. But everywhere, in drama, ritual, choral dance, festival
institution and in language the astute formulators aimed to incorporate their
figures of fundamental archai. A great structure compounded of the
elements of the cosmic logic of creation was inwrought into the pattern of all
these modes of human cultural expression. Finally, if not perhaps initially, its
structural design was woven into the formation of the alphabet.
If this cryptic organic form was the structural principle
determining the arrangement of the alphabet, it must be seen to have made its
significance definitely basic in all literature. For thus the words themselves,
carrying the elements of the original letter components would constantly
represent the forms of the archaic thought which as symbols they portrayed. So
that in reconstructing the hidden outlines of meaning form in the alphabet, we
are piercing to the heart's core of the most recondite connotations of all
literature.
It is a commonplace of present educational theory to say that
letters of the alphabet are symbolic representations of the sounds universally
possible to the human vocal organs. It is hardly as generally known that in
shape they are more than mere algebraic x's or sheer onomatopoetic imitations.
They are in fact evident forms shaped to picture basic ideas. They are true
ideograms. The capital letter A, for instance, is obviously the cardinal letter
I, the symbol of primordial unity (since it is also the number 1), split apart
from the top into the creative duality of spirit and matter, the cross-bar
indicating the interrelation which dynamically subsists between them. The U (V)
symbolizes, exactly as it is drawn, the descent of spirit into matter and its
return above. The W pluralizes it, and we find, not strangely, the W to be the
letter that pluralizes words in the Egyptian hieroglyphics. The O readily
symbolizes the endlessness of matter and of eternity. So that the Gnostics, when
they named the unit of deity in the cosmos the IAO, had condensed in the triadic
name a sermonette in full,
signifying the initial bifurcation of the first unit divine
consciousness, the I, apart into the duality, A, and running the round of an
eternal cycle, O. And so even Revelation has it: "I (am the) A (and the)
O, the beginning and the end, the first and the last,"--IAO. (The almost
breath-taking significance of the M, when the spirit says "I AM," will be
introduced later.)
It is possibly true that literation started with the utilization
of the two simplest elements of written symbolism, the vertical line I and the
circle O. At any rate it is to be shown here that nearly all divine names in
antiquity were built up from and upon these two. For the Egyptians of remote
past time had combined the two in the form of what is almost certainly the most
ancient of cross symbols, the crux ansata, ansated cross, called by them
the A N K H (more recently spelled E N K H), an O topping an I with a horizontal
line at the point of contact. It represents by the O above, the endless
existence of that which is the indestructible primordial matter, the eternal
Mother of all things; and by the I below, it indicates the emanation of creative
mind, or spirit power, from the heart of the great sea of first matter plunging
downward. The horizontal bar shows both their conjunction and their separation,
as does any boundary line between two areas. But the median line is important
also because it marks the meeting point between the two poles of spirit and
matter, since it is at this point that all reality is brought out to
manifestation through the union of the two. The ANKH is the astrological
symbol--@insert symbol.
The two symbols with which literate symbolism begins are thus
the I and the O. The item of their gender comes first to notice. The I is
masculine, as standing for the Father's power of generation, which is spirit;
the O is the eternal feminine, matter, the universal Mother, personalized in
ancient religions by such goddesses as Isis, Cybele, Mylitta, Aditi, Venus, Juno
and others. The appropriateness of this symbolism from the subsidiary phallic
side needs no accentuation, nevertheless is very important and indeed very
wonderful. (The author has fully dealt with it in his larger work, SEX AS
SYMBOL.) As all progenation of life can come only through the union of male and
female elements of the cosmic duality, a symbol that would dramatize life
would have to combine both the I and the O. This the Egyptians did in their
great A N K H symbol, which thus is their written word for life, and
carries also the connotation of two other elements entering into life,
or
necessary for life, namely love and tie. Even more
than the IAO it condenses in its three renderings the gist of a mighty sermon,
and becomes the hieroglyph of both the structure and the meaning of life.
Rendered in one sentence the symbol means life because life can exist
only where two things, spirit (I), and matter (O), are tied together by a
sufficiently cohesive power, love. Love ties the two together to
procreate life. The A N K H is therefore the first and greatest symbol in the
world, which should make us aware that the cross is the first and greatest
symbol because it is the symbol of life and not of death. (The
ancients said, however, that the soul, when incarnated in the body on earth, was
in its spiritual "death," and therefore the cross became the emblem of
death--but soul-death, not body-death--a death viewed wrongly by all theology
since the days of ancient mystery teaching, since the reference is to the "dead"
condition of the soul when immersed in body, and not to the demise of the
physical body. Even in this view it equally connoted life, for it was the
soul's relative "death" that gave life to the creature, whose bodily demise in
turn liberated it for its freer life above.)
Detaching the two emblems from each other as they are united in
the A N K H symbol, and combining them in lateral juxtaposition, we have the
first divine word and name in all literature, IO. That it figures with equally
fundamental significance in ancient typological numerology is evident from the
fact that the two, now converted into numbers, constitute the cardinal base of
all mathematics, the number 10. Modern study seems not to have recognized this
close connection, amounting almost to identity, between the letters of the
alphabet as originally devised, and numbers. Numbers were indicated by letters.
Each letter carried a number value. Hence words were composed of those
alphabetical units that would together express an idea, a mental value, but as
well a numerical value. As far as the Scriptures are concerned, even whole
sentences were constructed to total a number quantity. As Pythagoras has said,
God geometrized in creating the world; he built the universe on number. Such
esoteric works as The Zohar, of ancient Jewish Kabalistic literature,
reveal clearly also that the deity formed the creation by means of the letters
of the alphabet. This can have sense only on the predication that as (according
to the Scriptures) he spake and the worlds formed themselves in order under the
vibratory impact of the letter tones
of his voice, every letter sound of the creative reverberation
became a constituent element in the cosmic framework. Every letter expressed or
in fact constituted a principle or fundamental part of the universal structure.
Perhaps this is one of the greatest keys to our recovery of the cryptic purport
of ancient writing.
The archaic IO (10) then would be charged with the potency of
the first projection of the creative thought-force, but only in its first
partition into duality, not in its later and further subdivision. In its
expression as the prime triplicity it was the IAO (which became IAH and JAH),
and its still further differentiation toward endless multiplicity at the
quaternary stage brought it to the form of the great Tetragrammaton, the
Kabalistic J H V H. In its full seven-letter expression it became, on the side
of matter alone, the seven-vowelled name, composed of the seven primary vowel
sounds made by the human voice. The Greek alphabet still retains seven vowels,
a, short e, long e, i, short o, long o and u. This was to express the fact that
every cycle of creation runs through seven sub-cycles, each of which sounds out
the reverberation of one of the seven successive component
form-tones.
The potent symbol, typifying primogenital creative energy of
mind and matter combined in the relation of polarity, being the power that
dominates all things as it was their creator, became the figure of all combined
mental and material ruling power everywhere, as all lesser ruling units were
themselves but projected partial rays of the power itself. It was therefore the
first king in the cosmic realm, as every divided segment of it was king
in the tinier realm over which it exercised sovereignty. How notable this will
appear when we shall see in a moment that the very word, King, derives
from the A N K H name!
Nothing has been more revealing than the list of words, in
English, Greek, German, Hebrew, which can be traced to the old Egyptian name of
this mighty symbol. Its central idea, it was noted, is the production of life
through the tieing or union of spirit and matter. The central clue to the
meaning of all these derivatives is the idea of tieing two things
together. It must be elucidated that in building words upon the A N K H stem,
the H may be virtually dropped out of consideration, as K H is equally well
expressed by K alone. But K H is also equivalent to C H, which often replaces
it. The vowel A is of inconsequential value and can also be dropped. So there is
the bare N K left as the hard root.
The next matter to be noted is that in later philosophical usage
it was immaterial whether it was written N K or K N. And in Greek the N K (K N)
became N G (G N),--a significant item. With these specifications it is possible
now to discern a whole new world of meaning in many common words never dreamed
to have come down from so divine a lineage.
It is seen first in such words as anchor, that which
ties a boat to a fixed place; knit, knot, link, gnarled, gnaw, gnash
(accounting for the odd spelling); ankelosis, a growing together of
two bones; anger, anguish, anxiety, a tightening up of feelings. But most
interestingly it seems to have given name to at least four joints or
hinge-points (hinge itself seems to be another) in the human body:
ankle, knee, neck and knuckles. Lung, as being the place where
outside air unites with the inner blood, could perhaps be added. Far away as our
English join appears to be from a source in A N K H, (N being the only
letter common to both), it is certainly directly from it after all. For A N K H
was the root of the Latin jungo, to join, N K becoming N G through
the Greek. From this we get junction, adjunct, juncture, conjunction,
from the Latin past participle form of jungo,--junctus. But in coming
into English through the French, all these words were smoothed down to join,
joint, and this carried so far into English as to give us finally union,
which is really junction in its primal form. With even the N dropping
out we have yoke, that which ties two oxen together. And in
Sanskrit it comes out as yoga, which in reality stands for yonga,
meaning union.
The English present participle ending -ing, as well as
the prefix con-, meaning with or together, likely comes
from the A N K H. For the -ing connotes a continuing of things moving on
together. Therefore all three parts of the word con-nect-ing would be
from the ancient word.
Our most common word, thing, likewise comes from A N K H,
as a thing is that which is created by the union of spirit and matter, a divine
conception and atomic substance.
Next comes one that carries an impressive significance in the
study, the common verb to know, in Greek gnosco, German kennen,
English ken. What constitutes the knowing act? The joining
together of two things, consciousness and an object of consciousness,
for there must be something apart from consciousness to be known. So Greeks
called knowledge the Gnosis. The Greek verb meaning
to be, gignomai, also has the G N, as
token that existence is the result of the "ankhing" together of spirit
and matter.
But a most surprising Hebrew derivation from A N K H is the
first-personal pronoun, I. It is in fact the A N K H itself unchanged except for
the inconsequential insertion of two minor vowels o and i, making it ANOKHI.
This is amazingly significant, since it reveals the identity of the innermost
soul-being of man, the I ego, with the primal cosmic mind. That consciousness in
man which enables him to think and say "I" is indeed a unit element of that same
cosmic mind. In the I-consciousness of a creature the central creative mind
energy of the universe is nucleated in unity. And as the ruler of all life in
every domain, it is in that function and capacity the king of life! That
power which knows things is verily creation's king. And also then
it must be the power that thinks. Gerald Massey, great scholar of ancient
occult knowledge, connects in kindred significance think and thing,
a thing being that which has been thought by some mind. The I, as the
king of consciousness, both thinks and knows. The German
has for king Koenig, the one who can, (which in German is
koennen) and the one who knows what is best. And what has the
Greek for king? Astonishingly anax, which is equivalent to the
spelling anaks.
The Greek for messenger, one who ties the sender
with the recipient of a message, is angelos, from which is our angel.
And messenger itself has the ng in it. Where two lines meet we
have an angle. A nook suggests something in the A N K H meaning.
Perhaps hundreds more words might be traced from this venerable but most
significant origin in the A N K H. And the words themselves help us reestablish
the fundamental elements in the composition and structure of the great ancient
knowledge so well called the Gnosis.
The letter I, as the spiritual-masculine first half of the great
IO symbol, must be examined more closely. It is in the alphabet and in language
the symbol of the divine mind principle. It is the king of all being,
knowing, determining, ordering, acting. And so it has been made the 10th
(tenth) letter of the Hebrew alphabet, the king number both 1 and 10 or any
multiple thereof, and therefore has for its meaning the word God itself.
Its Hebrew name is YOD (YODH) and means the "hand of God." Its hieroglyphic
representation is that of a tongue of candle flame, bent as it would
be momentarily if blown upon by a gentle puff of the breath.
This is to indicate the breathing of God upon the latent creative fires of
atomic energy to blow them up to creative heat. It is suggested in Genesis
when it is said that God brooded over the great deep. Water is the symbol of
matter, as matter in the cosmos and water on the earth are the common universal
mothers of life. And matter contains the latent atomic fire which creates all.
God blows upon this latent fire to enflame it for creative work. This is
indicated in the bent candle flame of the YOD,--@insert Hebrew YOD.
Ten is esoterically called the "perfect number." In the highest
possible sense it is the number that rounds out or perfects a cycle of creation,
and it does this through the interrelation of the eternal upper triad of
noumenal creative forces, cosmic spirit-soul-mind, with the septenate of lower
physical energies, as anciently represented in the great system of Egyptian
Gnosis, and faithfully reproduced in the Ten Holy Sephiroth of the early Jewish
Kabalah. The YOD then stands for that divine creative fire that in its
deployment as a decanate of powers, forges the worlds into the shape prefigured
in the divine mind. The triple-aspected cosmic Noumenon designs the blueprint of
the creation-to-be, and the seven hierarchical energies carry them out in the
world of concreteness. If one reflects on the remarkable physical phenomenon of
a ray of white light passing through a triadic glass prism and casting the
refracted rays upon a screen in the seven colors of the spectrum, one will have
an instructive analogue of the number basis of the creation. Revelation
symbolism evidently represents it as the Beast with seven heads and ten horns,
the three horns in excess of the number of heads being presumably in the
invisible noumenal worlds, the heavens of pure thought.
Concomitant with the IO primacy in symbolism runs a variant
representation which depicts successive stages in the creative process. It
begins with the symbol of inchoate matter, the O as representing primordial
inorganic homogeneity or the unity and eternity of life in its unmanifest state.
It in fact typifies what to us stands as empty space. It is empty (to us) as
exhibiting absolutely nothing in visible palpable form. "The world was without
form and void." But to the cosmic consciousness it is doubtless not empty, since
it is filled with substance apperceptible to that consciousness. What it seems
to us is best depicted by the empty circle,--@insert circle.
The next stage shows the circle with the visible point in the
center. This design indicates the emergence of the first organic entification
out of unmanifest being,--@insert circle w/ point in the center.
The third depiction shows the circle cut horizontally into two
halves, upper and lower, by the median diameter line,--@insert circle just
mentioned. This diagram shows the bifurcation of the original unity into the
creative duality and the polarization of its two self-contained opposite
natures, a prerequisite for any creation of visible organic worlds.
The fourth stage indicates the opposition or crossing of the
cross within the circle, the vertical line standing for the spirit force and the
horizontal for the physical. Lifting the cross out of the circle, we have it in
its simplest form, and since life can add increase unto itself only by
this crossing of spirit and matter, the cross becomes the sign of addition,
the plus sign,--.
The fifth stage has the same configuration, but as it were,
turned one-eighth on its axis, giving the X within the circle. This is to show
that motion has been introduced, that creation has begun,--. This, similarly to
the bent candle flame of the YOD, indicates that God's impulse has begun to
move. Then, as the initial motion imparted to the creation not only adds
to its working potential, but vastly multiplies it, the X becomes the
sign of multiplication. In this final form the design eventuates in giving us
the great symbol of the number 10,--X. And then if we take the X out of its
eternal encirclement in the absolute existence--and by the beginning of the
movement this emergence is indicated,--and place the two great symbols side by
side, we have astonishingly that mystic word and symbol that enters so
mysteriously into Scriptural allegory,--the word OX. (The elucidation of the
esoteric intimation of this word is reserved for the finale.)
The extensive list of divine names derived from the IO base may
now be scanned. Io is itself the name of one of the goddesses with whom Zeus,
king of the gods in the Greek pantheon, entered into an escapade that
exoterically sounds less honorable than would be expected of divine royalty. But
as paramour of the supreme God she would stand in the role of the great Mother
of life, like Cybele, Isis and the rest. An Io character occurs in other
mythologies.
As, however, the I functions as the male-spiritual symbol and is
not to be taken as the vowel force alone, but rather as the con-
sonantal force, it was paired with each of the vowels in turn to
represent the conjoined duality. And so we find IA, IE and IU standing as the
base of a number of early deific names. The IA came to serve as the final
syllable of all names of countries, as Germania, Britannia, Australia, Russia,
Austria, Scandinavia, Asia, India, Arabia and many more. The IE begins the
original Greek name Iesous (Jesus). Preceded by the H, denoting again the first
motion of the breath of God, it began some Greek words for divinity, principally
hieros, sacred, holy and a priest, from which comes hierophant,
hierarchy and the old Greek name for Jerusalem,
Hierosolyma.
But as IU it stands as one of the most basic of all divine
name-forms. IU was in fact the shortest and commonest of Egyptian verbs, and
meant to come. Because the divine nature was considered an element of
consciousness that was in course of its evolutionary coming to deify mankind,
the Messiah doctrine connoted the idea of the slow, gradual and continuous
coming of the deific mind in the world. In fact a common name in Egypt
for the Messianic character was "the Comer." "Iu is he who comes regularly and
continually," periodically. Hence IU is the primal Egyptian name of deity. As
such it formed the first element of the great compound Egyptian name of the
Christ-Messiah, Iu-em-hetep, which was shortened by the Greeks into
Imhotep. In full translation this would read: Iu (he who comes)
-em (with) -hetep (peace, also seven); "he who comes with peace as
number seven." This name comprehends in itself another great sermon like the A N
K H--symbol, referring to the occult fact that in any cycle of creation the
principle of divine consciousness that will unfold to bring peace to the
chaotic subconscious elements (the so-called six elementary powers, the
potencies in the atom) comes to full outward expression in the seventh
and last round of the cycle. Christhood is always a seventh unfoldment. Our
own word seven comes from hetep, as this shortened to hept,
and directly became the Latin sept-em, by the interchange of h with
s, as occurs in very many instances, as in Asura becoming Ahura. H
and s are also closely related through the Hebrew letter shin, which is
either S or sh in sound. S is really only a sharper h.
The next step in the development is quite notable. The I being
male-spiritual, a consonant (masculine gender) rather than a vowel, and
representing the projected ray of divine mind that
beamed forth out of primordial being, ran the course of its
projection into the deepest bosom of matter, planted its germinal seed in
matter's womb, then turned to return, the configuration of the I was
changed or enlarged to include in its shape the suggestion of the turning upward
for the return. It might most significantly then be said that it was turned
into the letter J. With more definiteness the J-form could bespeak the
masculine-divine than the vowel-feminine or the androgynous aspect. Also in this
form it could be more fitly prefixed to the other vowels, as JA, JE, JO and JU.
With this important change the number of divine names begins to multiply
exceedingly.
It is impossible to pass by this item of the turning of the I
into the J (the two are essentially the same letter still in Latin) without
calling attention to the astonishing significance of the fact in relation to one
of the key words in the Biblical allegory of the soul's descent and return.
In the Hebrew-Mosaic allegory in the Old Testament the place where God
descended in a cloud to meet and commune with his children (Israel) was Mount
Sinai. This name then must mean the lowest point to which the spirit-soul
descends to meet matter, the pivot point round which it swings to begin its
return to the heavens. This is diagrammed by the lower turn of the J. What must
be our astonishment, then, to discover that this key name Sinai derives from the
Egyptian word seni (senai), meaning "point of turning to
return!" And where, in concrete reality, is that point located? Nowhere else
than in the physical body of man! The physical body of man is the Mount Sinai of
the Bible. And where else could God and man meet than in the body of his human
child? An obscure point in scholarship has at last come forth to enlighten us on
one of the most important features of our sacred Scriptures.
Greek mythology gives us Jason, a divine figure. In the Old
Testament we have Jacob, Jabez, Jared, Jakin and perhaps others; James in the
New; Jacques, Jack, a folk-lore character of the deity in man; Janus, definitely
a Christ-figure in Roman mythology. The JE-form gives Jesus, Jesse, Jeshua,
Jeshu, Jezebel, Jeremiah, Jerusalem, Jehu, Jethro, Jehosophat, Jehovah,
Jephthah, and others. In passing it seems quite worth while to analyze the true
context of the name Jesus. It is the JE combined with the Egyptian SU, meaning
son, heir, prince, successor to the king; and the final masculine
terminal letter, which was F in Egyptian, but
became S (US) in Latin: JE-SU-S. It would then mean the coming
masculine-divine son (of God the Father) as "prince of peace." The masculine
terminal F of Egypt was kept in the variant form JO-SE-F, JO-SE-PH, as in the
Russian Yussuf at the present. This is the most prominent in the JO group, which
includes Joram, Josiah, Joash, Jonah (Jonas), Job, Joses, Joachim, Joel, Joshua
and (in the Norse) Jotun. These have never been recognized for the divine names
they are, because of the inveterate mistaking of Old Testament allegorism for
assumed factual history. But, being in the allegory of man's divinity immersed
in the flesh, they are incontestably the names of the divine or Christly
principle personalized in the many myth-forms. Horus, the Christ of Egypt, had
for one of his designations "the Jocund."
The JU-form yields Judah, Judas, Judea, Jubilee, Judith, Julia,
along with significant common noun derivatives such as judge, jury, justice.
But Latin mythic usage exalted the JU to the very highest pinnacle of divine
dignity in naming its supreme deity after the Egyptian JU, adding the word for
father, pater (piter), to it to form the great name of the king of
the gods, JU-PITER. Even the god's wife and sister partook of the glorious
title--JUNO. The great Caesar boasted of his fabled derivation from deity in his
cognomen Julius. The Juniper tree carries this connection with divine source.
Latin juventus, our "youth," conveys the idea that the gods are ever
young. (The I, the J and Y are all forms of the same letter-sound.) From
this we have our junior, the German has jung, meaning and
pronounced as our young. The ju--that begins the Latin jungo
(iungo), to join, indicates that spirit and matter are joined
together anew to generate fresh life. This IU (JU) stem is much more significant
than has ever been seen before. In the form of YU--it enters into the great
world signifying the birth of deity--Yule.
Every letter, of course, expresses some aspect or segment of
creative purpose. Alphabetical schematism has been presented in several
different formulations. In the Hebrew alphabet there were said to be three
"mother letters," aleph (A), mem (M) and shin (SH). These
ostensibly represent respectively the pre-creation stage (A), the middle stage
of spirit's involvement in matter (M), and its final stage of glorious
deification (SH),--the symbol of fire. M is the symbol of water.
Life emanates out of potential fire, is "baptized" for evolutionary
purposes in water, the symbol of
matter, and returns to source with fiery potentialities
actualized by having "overcome" the powers in the water-matter. The Hebrew word
for fire is esh, and spirit evolves its divine fire in man,
ish. The divine fire in man made him the ish-man, and the divine
man in the tribal life of some nations was called the shaman.
How the other letters were grouped in relation to the three
mother-letters is matter of uncertainty. Several schematic designs have been
suggested by students of Kabalism. But two consonants, beside J, were made the
central frame of another extensive run of divine names. These are R and L. The
names derived from or based on them must be listed.
It is evident that, as their usage worked out, R and L may be
regarded as essentially the same letter. The Chinese confusion of the two is
well-known. But their identification became almost a necessity in the ancient
Hebrew-Egyptian exchange of words, ideas and symbols, inasmuch as the Egyptian
alphabet had no L and was forced to substitute R in all words where the Hebrew
could use either L or R. It is therefore extremely likely that the great basic
words, as seen so well in Latin rex, king, and lex, law, are of
practically identical significance. The heavenly king is the Lord, and the old
Saxon derivation of Lord from law-ward, as Ruskin points out, is more
than coincidental. The king's will was the law in all archaic life, and in
theology it is still true that the will of the Lord is the law of
life.
Just why R and L came, with J and SH to emblemize divinity is
not too clear. They, along with M and N, are of the class of letters called
liquids: they are sounded with a continued flow of the voice. They could
thus have been chosen as representing the on-flowing course of all life. This
idea would not have been inappropriate. It may be the correct one. At any rate R
came to its divinest application in being chosen as the name of that greatest of
all spiritual deities of antiquity, the Egyptian Sun-god Ra, whose symbol
is that of the sun, the circle with the dot in the center. A cursory view of
names based on R and L yields many interesting items. The R and L can be
associated with any of the vowels and can either follow or be preceded by
it.
From AL-LA we note Allah, Aladdin, Alheim (Elohim), the
frequent Al--of Arabic names and a host of others, perhaps our all.
From EL-LE we have El, the Hebrew word for God, the plural
being Elohim. The masculine article, the, in the four
languages
derived from Latin, is, as in the Spanish, el, and in the
French, le. This will not be seen as significant until it is recognized
that the definite article is, or was, itself a cognomen of deity. Spanish
the is the Hebrew word for God, EL. English the is the
Greek for God, the-os. And Greek masculine form of the is ho,
a Chinese word for deity. The ancients habitually prefixed the to
divine names, as "the Osiris."
From IL comes the Arabic Ilbrahim and the Latin ille,
meaning this, that which is, a succinct definition for deity. The
Latin name for the sacred tree was the holm-oak, and its Latin name was ilex.
OL and UL yield a few words referring to divine things. Hebrew olam,
the world, eternity, the aeon, and olah, up, to go
up, and the Mohammedan Ullah, Abdullah, may trace origin from these
two bases.
AR-RA shows in numerous words, ar meaning river in
Hebrew, and there are several rivers on the world map named the Ar, or
Arar. The stream of divine force emanating from the heart of being to
create worlds was called the river. Every ancient land had its sacred
river. As Ra was the great solar deity, the origin of ray, radiant,
radius, radium, radiate and array is evident. As the king was the one
radiant with divine glory, the rex (rey, roi, roy), such words as
regal, royal, real (as in Mont-real), regulate (along with lex,
legal, loyal, leal and legislate), are traceable to this source.
Plato has the famous "myth of Er," a divine character. The Greek
has Er- with the masculine singular ending -os, giving the great
God of divine love, Eros. Re must be the base of the common Latin word
for thing, res, the stem of which is just re. This gives
reality, realize and reify, and the prefix denoting
repetition, re-, as life is constantly repeating its processes; as
in re-new, re-vive, re-store, etc.
IR-RI shows scant usage, but in OR-RO and UR-RU we encounter a
prolific wealth of derivatives, all pointing to high, if not directly divine
reference. It is significant, to begin with, that OR is found to be the base of
words in several languages meaning two things, gold and light.
French for gold is or, and Latin aur-um; our word ore;
Hebrew for light is Oroh. Gold, the indestructible, was
symbolically related to light, which is also indestructible. The creative energy
of God flowed forth as light like a golden river, so that all three, gold,
light and river show the derivation from ar, aur, or. Aurora,
God of Dawn, needs no further explication; aura and aureole
likewise.
UR reveals a grand list of shining names. It was in itself the
greatest and most likely the original word for fire. The Egyptians,
wishing to name it the fire, added the divine article, the, which
in their language was the hieroglyph for the letter P. This addition made it
p-ur, pur, the Greek word for fire to this day. From this comes pure,
purge, purgatory, as also pyre, pyrotechnic and empyrean, the
Greek U changing to Y in English, as in hundreds of words. Ur (a variant
of aur, or) was the name of that state of the primordial spiritual "fire"
from which the first divine ray, Ab-ra-ham, proceeded as first father of
spiritual Israel (not the historical Hebrews). In the same category it was the
name of the universal Egyptian symbol of creative fire, the uraeus, "a
serpent of fire," which was sevenfold as typifying the seven archangels that
created the universe. It is therefore another representation of the dragon or
beast with seven heads. Is it strange that our modern discovery of the creative
fire of the universe in the atom has brought into prominence as the most fiery
of the elements those two whose names incorporate both the title of the Sun-god
and the Uraeus, RAdium and URanium? The German language has some hundreds of
words prefixing UR, as Ursprung, Urquelle, Ursache, all meaning original
source-spring of being. All life came out of UR, the primordial fount of cosmic
fire. A verse in the Chaldean Oracles says that "all things are the
product of one primordial fire, every way resplendent." How resplendent it is
our modern nuclear physics is now revealing! The Hebrew word for father
being ab, Ab-ra-m is "Father Ra," as clearly as Hebrew can say it.
Ram would be this creative fire immersed in water, matter.
The list so far traced becomes more than doubled through the
prefixing onto these root-forms the Hebrew article, the, which is just
the letter H. The addition of the H has the force of divinizing the word, as has
been seen. So from HAL there is hallow, hale, hallel (Hebrew to
praise), halleluiah, hail and more. From HEL can be traced heal,
health, heil (German hail), hell (German, bright,
clear), and most significantly, the Greek helios, the sun! The
spiral, or helix, was a figure tracing the spiraling course of the sun,
or its planets around it. The feminine names Helen, Helena (with the H
intensified into S becoming the name of the moon, Selene), are assumed to
derive from it also. The Greeks adopted unto themselves the divine name
Hellenes, signifying "bright and shining ones," dubbing the rest of
humanity "barbarians." (They did this
in the same fashion and with the same motive as the Jews adopted
for themselves the divine name Israelites, dubbing the rest of mankind
"Gentiles.")
From HIL comes doubtless our word hill, "the hill of the
Lord," the high locale of divine power. (Har in the R-group is the Hebrew
word for hill!)
From the HOL stem comes of course holy, whole, holism.
Few of particular divine character or reference derive from HUL.
The H-R group yields many of exalted significance. HAR gives
heart, hearth, Har-Tema, (a name of Horus, the great Christ of Egypt),
Harpocrates, (another Greek-Egyptian Christ-name), perhaps harvest, harp,
harpy (the harpies of Virgil's Aeneid). HER gives a long list:
hero (title of one grade of deities in Greek mythology), German Herr
(God), herald, Hera, (Juno's Greek name), Heracles
(Hercules), Hermes (Mercury), and, reinforcing the e with the
i, hieros, Greek for sacred.
HIR appears perhaps in the German for shepherd, and in
Hiram. HOR gives the base of perhaps the greatest of ancient
personalizations of Christhood, the Egyptian god Horus, who stands on the
horizon, hour, horology, hormone, horn, horticulture. Horn was a
universal ancient symbol of divine power. HUR shows in Ben-Hur and
hurricane, the natural exemplification of divine fiery power. The
Hurrians were a people sharing Asia Minor with the Hittites.
As H comes out often in the roughened form of CH (KH), and also
exchanges often with S, the H-basis of hundreds of words, all in one way or
another intimating deific reference, the derivative field is vastly extended,
embracing such words as chalice, charity, care, cure, cross, cheer, choir,
chorus, Christos, charm, cherish, cherubim, Serapis, seraphim, sir, sire, seer,
ser (Egyptian for chief, elder, sire), kherufu (Egyptian for
the two lion-gods on the horizon).
These lists are put down almost at random. It is certain that
intensive research would immensely increase the total number, and no doubt
others of the greatest importance could be revealed.
These formations from the basis IO are of the greatest interest
and importance. They do not, however, give any intimations of the organic
structure in the alphabet which this work is intended to disclose. But they will
appear in clearer light as that hidden structure is outlined.
To enforce the cryptic significance of the disclosure now to be
made, it is necessary to present, with the utmost brevity, the fundamental
meaning-graph of all ancient religious literature. The Bibles of antiquity have
but one theme: the incarnation. The vast body of ancient Scripture
discoursed on but one subject,--the descent of souls, units of deific Mind, sons
of God, into fleshly bodies developed by natural evolution on planets such as
ours, therein to undergo an experience by which their continued growth through
the ranges and planes of expanding consciousness might be carried forward to
ever higher grades of divine being. These tomes of "Holy Writ" therefore
embodied their main message in the imagery of units of fiery spiritual nature
plunging down into water, the descending souls being described as sparks of
a divine cosmic fire, and the bodies they were to ensoul being
constituted almost wholly of water. (The human body is seven-eighths
water!)
It can indeed be said that the one sure and inerrant key to the
Bibles is the simple concept of fire plunging into water, the fire being
spiritual mind-power and water being the constituent element of physical
bodies,--as well as the symbol of matter. Soul (spirit) as fire, plunged down
into body, as water, and therein had its baptism. Hence soul's
incarnation on earth was endlessly depicted and dramatized as its crossing a
body of water, a Jordan River, Styx River, Red Sea, Reed Sea. Since the water
element of human bodies is the "sea" which the soul of fire has to cross in its
successive incarnations, and it is red in color, the "Red Sea" of ancient
Scriptures is just the human body blood. When the red fire of spirit-soul was
gradually introduced into and permeated the original sea-water which was the
bodily essence of earliest living creatures on earth, it changed colorless salt
water into its own color, red. The "Red Sea" never could have meant anything
other than the human blood. The Scriptures reiterate that "fire descended from
heaven and turned the sea into blood." This transformation of course took place
in man's body, not in the world oceans. This is a clarification that alone can
reillumine all old Scriptures with a flashing new and enlightening orientation
of meaning. Egypt said that souls came down to "kindle a fire in the sea," to
"create a burning within the sea," verily to set the ocean on fire. This has
actually been done, but in man's veins and in his passions, not in the seven
seas.
It is now to be announced that the great meaning-structure
discovered in the alphabet outlines this descent of soul-fire into water and its
return to its native empyrean. If one arranges the letters in a circular arc
downward from A to the last letter of the first half of the alphabet, and then
begins the upward return with the first letter of the second half and completes
the arc to the final letter, describing the lower half of a circle, one
will have blueprinted the organic structure here revealed. On the thesis just
presented, one would challenge the claim of such a structure to demonstrate that
the first letter or letters were somehow charactered as fire, and that
the two middle letters at the bottom or turning-point of the semi-circle were
charactered as water. We are proclaiming that the structure meets that
challenge and therefore proves itself as true and correct. The result is that,
along with every other symbolic device of ancient meaning-form, even the
alphabet embodied the central structure of all ancient literature,--the
incarnation, the baptism of fire-soul in and under body-water. If this is to be
confirmed, we must find fire at the top or beginning of the descending
arc, and water at the bottom or turning-point. It must now be shown that
the conditions our thesis requires to prove itself are precisely met in the
alphabet. The discovery was made and certified when it was perceived that the
alphabet did fulfill these precise conditions. The top or beginning letters
are A and B, and should, the A alone or combined with B, represent fire;
the middle letters coming at the base of the arc are M and N, and,
mirabile dictu, they represent water! From A to M, then, the
descending arc traces the downward or involutionary plunge of fire into water,
reaching its lowest depth with M; from N back to the final letter, whatever it
be in different languages, the upward return arc represents the arising out of
water and the return through evolution of the heavenly fire to its true home,
completing the cycle.
The fire-character of A and B does not show out in such explicit
form as does the water-character of M and N. Nevertheless it is intimated and
implicit in various ways. The celestial fire emanated from primal source as one
ray, but soon radiated out in triadic division, and finally reached the deepest
heart of matter in a sevenfold segmentation. But in its first stage of emanation
it was always pictured as triform. The YOD candle-flame being its type-form, the
Hebrews constructed their letter which was to represent the fire-principle with
three YODS at the top level, with
lines extending downward to a base, on which all three met and
were conjoined in one essence. This gives us the great fire-letter SH,
shin,--@insert shin.
But the triform fire symbol was only possible as the result of
the one first ray bifurcating into the two fires of spirit and matter and
uniting to generate their product, which became the third two-flame aspect as
preceding the three-fire aspect. And what letter is it that depicts the
two-flame stage, the first real creative stage? Precisely what the thesis calls
for--the first letter aleph, composed of two YODS, one above, the
other below, the central axis, a slightly variant form of our mathematical sign
of division, a horizontal line with a dot above and one below it. All life is an
interplay between the upper fire of spirit and the lower fires of sense and the
flesh, of "pure" fire in air and "impure" fire in water. Even the English A
carries the same depiction, as it presents the one vertical line of spirit
raying downward, the I, as being split apart into duality, with the two
separated lines still connected by the horizontal bar of mutual
inter-relation,--@insert aleph.
The resulting Hebrew word, then, for fire is just what
the specifications of symbolic representation demand. The word should be
composed of symbolic letters carrying the idea of the one-fire, the dual fire
and the triple fire signs, and this is precisely what the Hebrew word for
fire is. It is ESH, really AeSH, composed of aleph, subvowelled by
e, and shin. Aleph is the dual letter, shin the triple, and the
middle bar between the two YODS is the aleph in the single-bar fire.
Then significantly man, who embodies this single, double and triple
fire is ISH!
One would ask at once whether the English word ash would
carry the same connotations, being the visible end result of fire. It is
extremely likely that it does. Not only is it at once evident in its relation to
fire as its residue,--ashes,--but the Norse mythology, depicting the radiating
streams of the living fire under the imagery of a branching tree, chose the
ash as the tree-type of the fiery emanation: Ygdrasil, the
ash-tree of life.
It has already been stated that the patriarchal character
designated as Abram personified in the Hebrew formulations the first
father of spiritual life, emanating out of the primordial
essence
of fire, UR of the Chasdim. (This latter word signifies not
national Chaldeans, as those thus designated were not an ethnic group, but a
spiritual caste. The term stands for the first archangels, or creative fires,
the seven.) To be the father of spiritual life in an evolutionary cycle, this
ray had to be the first aspect of the emanation. Therefore it would be found to
be composed of the first two letters of the alphabet. This is precisely what is
found in the Hebrew word for father: AB. Linking it with the Egyptian RA,
the radiant solar deity, we have AB-RA-M, receiving later in its evolution the
developed powers of godhood represented by the fifth Hebrew letter, he,
and so becoming AB-RA-H-AM. And as Abram came out of the primordial empyreal
fire, UR, it is hardly coincidental that even UR begins with that letter, U,
which (with V) represents the downward line of descent, the turning upward and
the return to the heights.
The detailed knowledge is not at present available to trace the
chain of linked steps in the descent of the divine flame from A down to M. It
does not seem apparent that at any rate in extant alphabets there is to be found
a sequence of letter significations paralleling and depicting the successive
stages of the creative fire's descent into the water, or matter involvement. If
such an explicit arrangement was planned for the first alphabets, it seems
impossible to trace the stages in orderly succession in present alphabets. But
what emerges with astonishing certitude is that the central letters, M and N,
carry the significance of what the diagram demands,--water. Thus at the point of
lowest descent, where our thesis requires water, there indeed we have
it.
Every letter of the Hebrew alphabet, beside carrying a number
value, also has attached to it a symbolic monograph: B is beth and means
house; G is gimel and means camel; D is daleth and
means door; H is he and means window, etc. When we come to
M, we find it is named mem and means--water! N is called
nun and means that which is the animal life in water,--fish! This
is in the Hebrew. But amazingly, when we turn to the old Egyptian, we find that
N has the name of nun likewise, but means and is the hieroglyph
of--water! Its character letter is simply a short line indented to
indicate seven waves, as our English script m is a succession of
three waves. M therefore in the Hebrew, and in the English as well, marks the
nadir of soul's decent into water, and N, at the same level and therefore also
signifying water (or as fish the
organic life in water), marks the turning-point for return, the
Mount Sinai of evolution. Its reference is undoubtedly to this earth, which true
symbolic insight discovers is itself--and not any hill on its surface--the
"mount" or "hill of the Lord," on which God meets man in a cloud of fire, and on
which all sermons are preached by his inner deity to man, and all temptations,
crucifixions, spiritual initiations and final transfigurations take
place.
From A, the point of emanation of the spiritual fire, the
creative stream of living energy, the river of vivification, as the Greeks call
it, proceeded and swept downward until at M it had immersed its fiery potencies
in the water of the human body, therein to begin to do its evolutionary work of
kindling its own bright flame of spiritual consciousness in the red sea of the
human blood. And now it is known that this red blood was originally sea water.
As fire causes water to evaporate, the ancient allegorism represented the divine
fire as drying up the water of the bodily sea, permitting souls to pass over the
watery terrain dryshod. Variant symbolism had the Christ nature walking on the
water without sinking into its depths. Egyptian figurism had the fire causing
the water to boil, with the soul subjected to the danger of being scalded
thereby.
So the graph of the soul's descent and return swings down from
the fire-height of AB to MN and there turns back upward to end in the final
letter. It may be a chance circumstance, but is at any rate an odd one, that if
we start with A and then take in succession the final letter of the English
alphabet, Z, the final one of Greek, O, and the final of the Hebrew, TH, it
gives us the word AZOTH, the word used in Medieval "alchemy" to denote the
primogenetic source-essence of life. If it were thus made up of the first and
last letters of the three most representative alphabets it would have been
intended to denote that basic essence which constitutes the substance of all
life from the first step in creation through to the final dissolution of all
things.
In descending from the height of fire essence to the depth of
water substance, the energization would have had to pass through the
intermediate stage or form of air. Fire symbolizes pure energy of spirit; air
typifies mind; water stands for emotion, as earth for sensation in the scale of
conscious states. If any of the letters between A and M are intended to mark the
air stage, it has not come to knowledge as yet, unless it be that the bent form
of the tenth
letter YOD, indicating the candle flame bent by a puff of air to
denote the original impulse of God's mind on the flame, is to be taken in this
significance.
M and N, separate or conjoined, form the framework of hundreds
of words relating to the condition of spirit-energy when immersed in matter. As
the primal mind-fire is the father, AB, so the primal matter-essence is
the eternal mother, which in Hebrew is AM. M will be found to begin
virtually all words denoting motherhood. M represents three, or five, or seven
waves of water, and it should not be a matter of surprise, therefore, that we
find all life on the planet having its generation in and from the sea water. Sea
water is in a sense still the mother of our life, because that life is sustained
by the electro-dynamic potencies in our blood, which is still chemically
undistinguishable from sea water! Our blood is the red sea water! So we
get the mother-name by conjoining the letter of potential fiery energy A, with
matter symbolized by water, M. Our colloquial "Ma" for mother is
essentially the Hebrew AM.
Starting with A M for mother, there is met an almost
endless list of words whose connotations link them to the matter side of the
life duality. To view them in the light of this orientation of thought is to
discern in them new and vivid intimations of esoteric meaning. These recondite
connotations can best be seen by contrasting their sense with their antonyms
denoting fire, spirit and the fatherhood. To begin with, the creative powers
symbolized by the letters at the head of the alphabet are gods; while the
being who embodies god-power in matter is--MaN. The divine powers at the
summit are unmanifest; in matter they become MaNifest. At the summit
there is but one power, undifferentiated; below in matter it has
multiplied itself and become the MaNy. At the god height the power
is purely spiritual; at the lower level it comes out as MeNtal; spirit
above, MiNd below. At the top there is the maximum of power, even though
purely potential; at the lower range its is MiNus, or at a MiNimum,
though actual in its limited expression. A man is the cosmos in
MiNiature. That which is expressed down here is, in comparison with the
superior potential above, MeaN. Also as here the two poles of being are
locked in a more or less stable equilibrium, things here are at a MeaN or
MediaN counterbalance. To hold this steady is to MaiNtain life in
its right poise. The father-power, AB is the conscious cognitive
element in creation; the power it wields in matter, the M N
energy of the atom, is the MaNipulative hand of God (the meaning of YOD);
and so it is that the word for hand in many languages is not only
compounded of M and N (Latin manus, Spanish mano, French
main), but is in all languages feminine in gender, intimating the
motherhood. In contrast to heaven above, the earth below is, in Latin,
MuNdus, from which is our adjective MuNdane. Also from this comes
MouNt, MouNtain, MouNd, already explained as referring to no hill on
earth, but to the earth itself. Hebrew name for this lower vale of tribulation
was HiNNoM, or GehiNNoM. In the upper realms souls are not
sufficiently individualized to deserve specific differentiated names; here soul
gets its proper NaMe. The fate allotted to each soul by karmic desert
comes out to manifestation here below; it is therefore the soul's
NeMesis. The soul here is under law, in Greek NoMos. A section of
the terrain of a nation was by the Egyptians termed a NoMe. Since matter,
like type-symbol, water, is, from the philosophical view of reality, nothing (it
was designated by the Greeks "privation"), the Egyptian base-root of the letter
N, whose hieroglyph was seven waves of water, along with the primal deific
trinity Nu, Nun, Nut, gives us all the words expressing Negation: no,
not, neither, nor, none, nil, nix (German: nichts), Latin nox
(night), our night, deny, neuter, never, nay, German nein,
niemals, etc., etc. Applied to man, his (relative) nothingness would make
him "no one" which is in Latin NeMo. As man is cut off from deity here
below, he is in Greek MoNos, alone. Also he is a MoNad. Perhaps
MoNk is one who is alone, not united to the female
counterpart.
The food the soul eats on earth is that divine MaNNa that
was rained down from heaven, but had to be scraped up off the earth, the perfect
analogue of how mortals acquire their heavenly nutriment. The universal ancient
tribal name for the divinity manifesting in the life of nature was MaNa,
MaiNu, MaNitou. Then we have the word for the thinking principle, which in
the Hindu system is MaNas. One caught under the demoniac possession of
this power was a MaNiac. In India the practice of prophecy was called
MaNtric science. And the -mon in the word deMoN is probably
of this derivation. The Greek Furies were called MaeNads. Plato refers to
divine obsession as a MaNia better than sober reason. An oMeN was
a foresight of one's earthly fate. And the mystifying and baffling word ending
prayers,
aMeN, if not directly from the
Egyptian god of that same name, would seem by letter intimation to mean "so let
it be," indicating that what is set forth should come to reality in the
evolutionary process measured by the descent of soul into matter the whole way
from A to M-N. Memory in Latin is MeMiNi and the Greek Muse of
Memory was MNemosyne. To recall one's past is to reMiNisce. Things
here are the MiNutiae of what is whole and integral above. They are
MiNute in magnitude and last but a MiNute of time, poetically
speaking.
Another most important line of derivatives branches off into
sidereal regions. The great cosmic symbol, if not the embodiment of divine
energy, is the sun. In contrast with its mighty generative power, its opposite
character in the earthly region of the heavens, dead, inert, purely passive and
reflective, the symbol of matter, is the MooN. Hence the composition of
its name in English from M and N, giving also MoNth, MoNday and MeNses.
If in Latin L stands for the divine Light, their Luna (the
moon) might have taken form from the idea that on the lunar orb the
divine Light (L) was weakened and dimmed by the reflection from the surface of
the negative lifeless moon, giving them LuNa, L for the light and N for the
darkness; or it might have been originally L reflected in M-N, suggesting
LuMNa, later wearing down into Luna. Oddly enough the Latin for
light in its pure solar glory is lux; but for light in its
earthly refracted dimmed form the word was LuMen. At any rate L and N are
set directly at opposite nodes to each other in lux, light, and nox
(Greek nux) night. L evidently here carries the connotation of
divine character analyzed earlier. For not only does the Latin have lumen
(our illumine) for light, but it has the word representing the
divine light or power in things, NuMen, which comes close to bearing the
same significance as NoMen, Latin for name.
The soul was thought to put on its bodily vesture as a
MaNtle, which, as being the house it lived in was its MaNse or
MaNsion. That which trailed back from the horse's head was his MaNe.
That which flowed forth from the head of being was the eMaNation of
creative force. The divinity implanted in living nature, most evolved in man,
was iMMaNent, our EMaNuel.
It is close to certainty that here is to be found an explanation
of a prominent item in the grammar of language, which seems still unknown in
philological science,--the reason why the accusative
(objective) case of all Latin nouns masculine and feminine in
the singular number ends in the letter--M, and those corresponding in Greek end
in--N, as also in Sanskrit and doubtless other languages. It is obvious that the
M and N endings here denote objectivity, as the accusative is the
objective case. Why this is so is definitely implicit in the significance of the
meaning structure which places the two letters ending this case at the bottom of
the descending arc of involution.
For the divine light is emanated from the supernal kingdom of
spirit, and spirit is the active generative productive force that energizes all
life process. It alone is self-generating, it alone initiates and institutes
action. It is the father principle; the maternal-material principle is eternally
only passive, receptive, mothering that which it receives germinally in its
womb. The spirit force must stand as the actor; it does whatever is done; it
moves upon the inert water, stirs them into agitation and motion to throw them
into the forms of the conceived pattern. It is therefore the subject of
the sentence that tells what its action initiates in the creative order. It is
therefore in the nominative case, the subject-actor in the movement, and
is grammatically called nominative because it gives specific character
and name (Latin: nomen) to that which the action creates.
But what of the end product that the action brings into the
status of being? As end product, materially created, it stands there as the
object of the action, the thing purposed and by an energizing process
made objective as the result. It is therefore the objective in view in the
initial action and the objective thing produced. It must therefore be put into
the objective case in grammar. The actor works subjectively, in the
purely noumenal or subjective realm of conscious being. But its work is to bring
its purposes thus subjectively conceived out into objective actuality. Hence the
creative subject force that emanates out of the A B condition of primal being
ends by generating its product here below at the M-N station of physical
objectivity. The M and N terminations (even this word has the two letters
in its context) therefore fitly appertain to the objective case of nouns, and
the Latin, Greek, Sanskrit and others so have it. To illustrate the point, the
nominative case of "trumpet" in Latin is tuba, but the objective case is
tubam. So all nouns. Only in the case of neuter nouns is there no
distinction between the nominative and accusative cases, obviously
because a noun of neuter gender can not manifest any difference
between subjective and objective status. It is not living, therefore can neither
initiate action or be acted upon by its own volition, hence can be neither
subject nor object in the living sense. The spiritually noumenal world is the
realm where the subject principle initiates action; the lower physical world is
the place where that action results terminally in the production of objectivity.
M and N seem thus always to designate objectivity, and that again must be the
reason for the composition of that English suffix denoting a thing's
attainment or achievement of its status of being in
objectivity--ment.
The principle of explanation thus established is seen with
startling definiteness in three of our common English personal pronouns. Of the
first personal pronoun the nominative case is I, but the objective introduces
the M: me. The third personal pronoun masculine singular is in the
nominative he; but in the objective it is him. The third person
plural nominative is they; but the objective is them. It is in
passing to be noticed that the I is the only one of the pronouns capitalized, in
respect to divinity, since the I-ego is the only part of us that is divine!
Likewise the survival of the dot above the I (and the J) is the remnant of the
YOD, the Hebrew divine flame. All this induces us to think that the I element
(another word incidentally showing the L-M-N sequence) of a person is the
subjective divine self within, initiating all action; while the outer personal
physical bodily self is what this I has produced as the me. It might be
said that the I has objectified itself in and as the me. What the
noumenal I came to be when manifested outwardly in matter is the me. The
I revealed itself in the me, just as it is said in religion that God has
revealed or manifested himself to the world and in the world as Jesus.
The ancients personalized a goddess named Echo. She represented the
physical material repercussion to the impact of the waves of creative noumenal
energy, the "voice" of God, upon matter. What matter, so to say, responded or
answered was the "echo" of the divine voice. There is aptness and beauty in
these ancient conceptions and ingenious allegorizations and poetizations once
their sane high relevance is captured. The me is the echo from the side
of matter of the divine voice of the I-ego.
The M is conspicuously seen as marking the point of lowest
descent and beginning of return in a notable key-word in Hebrew.
The word for sun holds as high a place of glory in
religious philosophy as does the radiant orb itself in the solar system. It
typifies for mental illumination the same generative ray of power that its
physical beams represent in the stellar cosmos. The Hebrew word for it was
obviously aimed at embodying the story of its nature and its daily course of
(apparent) travel. In outward semblance it appears as a globe of fiery essence
that plunges at every eventide down into earth, or water, crosses a land of
darkness and arises again unquenched in fiery splendor the following morning. As
a globe of fire its nature would be expressed most fittingly by the letter
shin (SH), with its threefold candle flame, the three YODS, above; the
place of water into which it nightly descends would be indicated by M, and the
place of its final return, the empyrean above, by SH again. So the word thus
constituted would turn out to be SH-M-SH (shemesh); and this is just what
it is. It is the old basic story of divine fire plunging down into water, the
universal trope-figure under which all operation of spirit in and upon matter
was dramatized.
It seems unquestioned that the Scriptural names of Samson, Saul,
Samuel, Samael, Simon, Solomon were based on this semesh stem. For all
the divine figures in ancient spiritual dramas were essentially sun-god
characters, typifying the spiritual aspect of the solar effluence in man.
Samson's loss of power through the betrayal of Delilah fairly closely parallels
Jesus' loss of life and his helplessness on the cross through his betrayal by
Judas. Jesus, like Samson, was shorn of his aureole of glory which was replaced
by the black crown of thorns, as Samson's loss of hair--always typical of solar
rays--reduced him to impotency. And the etymology of Delilah is most
significant as fulfilling her part in the allegory. In the case of Jesus'
crucifixion "darkness was over the earth" during the agony. The name Delilah
is compounded of the Hebrew word for night, lilah (lailah),
with the fourth Hebrew letter, D, prefixed. Now the tribe of Dan was in
astrological tropism allocated to the autumn sign of Scorpio, when the sun is
entering the winter-time of darkness and solar feebleness. So Scorpio was called
the gate or door of the dark "underworld," which in the Egyptian was named the
Tuat, now tending to be spelled also with a D, as Duat, Duad. When
we turn to the Hebrew alphabet and see that D, daleth, means door,
we have the name D-lilah reading definitely "the door of the dark
underworld of night." This may
seem far-fetched to those not habituated to the nature of
ancient allegorical composition of spiritual myths. When the name of a paramour
of a sun-god figure works out to mean the "door of the dark night" of
incarnation, the fitness of the construction is most astonishingly convincing
and clearly reflects a designed conception.
When one encounters and unravels not only one or two chance
constructions of this kind, but scores of them, indeed finds them at every turn,
one is certain that the methodology of ancient cryptic writing has been
rediscovered. When this disclosure is carried through to the farthest limit of
its bearings on the significance of the ancient literature, it is recognized
with astonishment that the meaning-content of archaic writing was expressed as
definitely by the form-structure of the material as by the connotation of the
words. It is becoming more clearly discerned that the formulators of the sacred
scripts of antiquity strove to dramatize a postulated form of cosmic structure
in a graph outlining the life development and movement by imitating its rhythms
and number counts, its cyclical swirls and sweeps, in the organic form of the
textual construction. Thus it is seen that the numerical basis of Bible writing
in Old Testament Hebrew and New Testament Greek is the "magic" number seven.
The number value of thousands of verses, divine names, key phrases and even
whole Bible books is with surprising regularity a multiple of seven. Thus there
are seven other combinations in the verse score multiples of seven. Life, so to
say, in every one of its creative advances travels in seven-league boots, dances
to a seven-beat measure, runs a scale of seven notes. It is evident that the
authors of Holy Writ labored to inweave the form of this movement into the
writing itself. The lilt and pause, is to reproduce in mantric value the lilt
and swing of evolution itself. That this methodology has lain under the eye of
scholarship for these twenty centuries or more without its implications being
seen or guessed is unimpeachable testimony to the blindness of religious
obsession.
Another most significant combination of the divine SH with the
earthly M-N comes to view in the Hebrew word for oil, shemen. Here the
fire-symbol, SH, is united with both the water letters. As the fuel for fire and
the substance used in the divine anointing, which is itself the dramatization of
the divinizing of man, oil is
one of the most frequent symbols of the deific power in the
Scriptures and mythology. The great divine names Christ and Messiah
both mean "the Anointed One."
It was observed earlier that when the X symbol of the developing
movement of creation was lifted out of the matter-symbol O and placed after it,
we strangely found that it spelled the word OX. This singular circumstance at
once bred the conviction that this word, this theriograph, or animal hieroglyph,
should play some prominent part in the scheme of ancient figurative
representation of values and relations. It was of course known to be a figure in
a number of Biblical stereotypes as well as in Greek and other mythic scores.
But its full symbolic import was not realized until the significance of its
connection with the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet came to view with
startling impact. Aleph, A, has for its name coefficient this very word
OX. Along with this, there is also the Hebrew letter L, lamed, with the
meaning of ox-goad.
But why is A denominated by the ox-symbol? What is the
significance of this animal that connects it with the first letter? Revelation
of this profound and recondite symbolism should indeed open the eyes of all
Scriptural exegetists to the almost impenetrable crypticism of ancient esoteric
writing, which they have with such obdurate intransigence continued to deny,
ignore and scorn.
To put it in the most compact form of statement, it appears that
A was denominated the ox because, as the animal is unproductive, incapable of
begetting life--as the result of desexing--so the primal state or stage of
creation, represented by the letter A, is unproductive, incapable of begetting
life. The alphabet's first character fittingly represents the
no-not-nought-nothing stage of the cyclical creation. It is the pre-zoic stage,
the lingering darkness before the first rays of dawn. As yet there is nothing,
neither matter nor movement. It is the absolute zero on life's or the cycle's
thermometer. It is the state which the Egyptians described by their name NU
(NUN, NUT), night, and the Hebrews by their AIN. It is the stage when
naught was. In it nothing could be produced, nothing could have birth. It was
the great darkness, the great deep, into whose bosom had not yet fallen the
seminal seed of new creation. It was sheer potential of life, standing, like the
ox, unfertilized, unimpregnated by the fructifying ray of cosmic mind, impotent
to mother life until so enriched.
If this seems like an arbitrary fancy, it also appears to be
indubitably substantiated by the positive fact that in the main languages, from
Sanskrit down to English, this letter A is the universal prefix which gives to
all words with which it is conjoined the negative meaning. It can be
translated invariably by the word "not." In Greek it is called "alpha
privative," the letter that deprives a word of its positive meaning,
making it negative. A-theist, a-gnostic, a-symmetrical, a-moral, a-mnesia,
a-pathetic, a-tom (not cuttable), even the Greek word for "truth," a-letheia,
(that which is not forgotten), and a host of others attest the negative
force of A.
This being so, we are introduced directly to another outstanding
fact in connection with the succeeding letter, the second of the alphabet, B. It
is not by chance or as a pure pun that begin begins with B. For in the
structural formation of the alphabet, since the creation does not begin
with A, a pre-creation stage, the ancient books definitely state that it starts
with B,--B-gins, as it were. B is therefore the first letter in the actual
creation. How fitting it is, then, that it is the first letter of the first
verse of Genesis, which starts with the Hebrew word b,rashith and
that followed by the verb bara. B,rashith means in the beginning
and bara means created. Yes, creation begins with B, not a-gins
with A. As the beginning institutes the process of coming to be, or
becoming, these words also start with B. The great number of German words
with the prefix be-, as bekommen, bekennen, bedenken, and a very
large number also in English, as beget, betoken, bespeak, besmirch, behave
and befriend, all carry the meaning of a movement coming, so to say,
to a becoming. And in what way could the whole process of creation be more
graphically expressed than by saying that it is a movement on its way to
becoming to be? As the great Hindu philosopher Aurobindo expresses it, "the only
being is becoming." Can it be without significance, then, that the Hebrew word
meaning to come is just the B leading out the A,--BA? And this also
spells the Egyptian word meaning the soul that comes to being here in the
body. And would it be sheer coincidence that our born, bear, birth, breed,
baby, beget, all start with B? And that well or spring in the
Hebrew is baer? (Beer Sheba, "the well of the seven.") We cry Abba
father, says the Scripture, which, if ab is father, and ba
means comes, would have us saying "the father comes"--in the
character of his Christly Son on earth, the ray in us of the Father principle in
the universe.
It may be asked, why, since the tenth letter YOD represents the
flame of the divine creative fire, and indeed gives its name to God, the
shin (S or SH) has come in for so much of the divine fire symbolism. Our
answer can not be categorical or dogmatic. It can be speculated that as the YOD
represented the flame in its primal oneness, the shin represented it when
it had differentiated into the triplicity, for it contains three YODS. It does
not seem a wild assumption to think also that the letter chosen to carry the
hissing sound of S and SH should depict the threefold divine fire, for the fire
became triple only when it entered the watery composition of the body, and the S
and SH sound is precisely that produced by fire plunging into water! The YOD
then can be taken as representing the cosmic fire when first fanned by the
breath of God. Jesus is dramatized as coming "with his fan in his hand" to
generate heat to mold the worlds in proper shape and to fan into bright flame
the smoldering fire of divinity in man's constitution. Shin would
represent the fire, now become triple, plunging into the lower levels of water,
standing both for the actual water of the human body and as a general symbol of
matter. The three YODS of the shin have lines carrying their power down
to the bottom level, where they are united in one common bar, this again
intimating that the three divine aspects, spirit, soul and mind, are all mingled
as one in the body of man. As a symbol designed to depict the immersion of fiery
spiritual units of consciousness in their actual baptism in the water of
physical bodies, the letter form that dramatizes the actual event, and the
letter sound that onomatopoetically mimics the sound of fire plunging into
water, this alphabet character shin is certainly most eloquently
suggestive.
It has often been said that the S (SH) sound is derived from the
hiss of the serpent. This tradition seems more likely to have come from
the ancient symbolism of fire plunging into water (symbol of soul descending
into body) than from the inaudible "hiss" of the snake. For, again coincidental
as it may seem, the creative fire was by the ancients called the "serpent fire,"
expressly by the Egyptians the great uraeus snake, "a serpent of
fire."
Let it be noted also with regard to the shin, that when a
dot--likely acting deputy for the YOD--is placed above the right side of
the letter, it is pronounced as SH; but when the dot comes above the left
side, it has only the sound of S. This change of position of the dot
actually changes the name of the letter; for
when it is above the left side, the name is not shin, but
sin. Doubtless a thunder of protest and a charge of scholarly chicanery
would greet our intimation that this left-handed name of the great divine letter
is the origin and covertly carries the significance of the theological word
sin. What can be adduced in some support of the suggestion is not without
considerable force on that side. There is the Bible phrase, "the wilderness of
Sin," which is the same as the "wilderness of Sin-ai," and the "mount of the
earth," i.e., the earth itself, as that celestial mount on which every
transaction of the business of human divinization takes place.
A salient feature of the ancient science of truth representation
was the designation of things spiritual and divine as allocated to the right
side of life and things mundane and physical as of the left side.
Good lay on the right hand, evil on the left. Esotericism has always spoken of
the right and the left-hand path. Such books as the Zohar and other
haggadic works of the early Jewish allegorists prominently use this figurism. To
go left, to stand on the left, was to "miss the mark" of good and truth and
right. The Greek word for to sin is precisely this: hamartano, "to
miss the mark." The sharp distinction between the two directions has always
appeared even in language with a moral connotation. The Latin word for right
hand is dexter, from which we get dexterous; the French is
droit, from which comes adroit. For left hand the Latin has our
word sinister; the French has gauche, from which comes our
gawky. Things on the right were favorable, propitious; on the left were
sinister, ill-omened. And as St. Paul's Epistles (mainly Romans 7) so
pointedly reveal, earth was that mount on which the divine soul, sinless in its
celestial habitation, came under the dominion of sin. "Know ye not, my
brethren," asks the Apostle, "how that a man is under the law (of sin and
death) only as long as he liveth?"--that is, while he is here on earth. He
implies that there is no sin in heaven, for he clearly states that "sin sprang
to life" when the soul obeys the "command" to incarnate. Sin can touch the soul
only from the side of body, and, he says, the soul goes "dead" under its power
while here on earth until its resurrection "from the dead" in the course of
evolution of spirit back to its divine condition. So that the earth is that
"Mount of Sin," that "Mount Sin-ai" of the Scriptures.
But the Old Testament contains an allegory--for the story is
preposterous as history--which shows the ancient writers of
sacred ideological constructions using the shin-sin
difference to point the moral that the soul that can pronounce the full SH
sound of the letter has taken the right path and completed its evolution
to divinity; while the one that can enunciate only the S sound has taken the
left-hand path to "sin" and must return to earth, the land of "death" for
further schooling in life. The guards at the Jordan fords were instructed to
subject the Ephraimites on the east side of Jordan who wished to cross to enter
the Holy Land (not of Judea, but of spiritual consciousness) to a simple test:
require each man who crosses to pronounce the key word Shibboleth. But,
says the story, in every case "he said Sibboleth." The direful result was
that forty-two thousand Ephraimites who could not convert the S indicating
sin into the divine SH were put to the sword on one day. They were still
on the left-hand path of sin, not yet ready to "cross the river" into the
land of spiritual blessedness.
It seems worthy of remark that not in twenty centuries has the
easy esoteric unraveling of this simple and evident cryptogram come through to
the intelligence of any scholar. How a Hebrew exegetist could long miss it is
not comprehensible. Furthermore, how it could have been mistaken for history,
for an actual event, is still far more incomprehensible. Yet Fundamentalists
still claim that it "happened." If you assert that "history" was only a few
thousand years ago a run of miracles, of course it neither needs nor can have an
explanation. One is just to gape in awe at the Lord's wondrous doings and be
sanctified of soul,--if stultified of mind.
If the S and SH sounds carried the intimation of fire plunging
into water, a special use of these letters in the old Egyptian hieroglyphic
language seems to fall into conformity with the same idea. The S (SH) was
consistently prefixed to verbs to express the idea of setting off the action
which the verb indicated, to give the action its initial push, or s-tart, as it
were. The likelihood of the origin of this usage from the basic
fire-going-into-water thesis will not so hastily be scouted if it is reflected
that in the creation no real beginning in the visible worlds can have been made
until the fire of spirit potency has radiated forth from the divine thought and
impregnated the sea of matter (water.) The visible and audible work of creation
starts only when the two nodes of being approach each other and establish
tensional relation between themselves. As many a scientific speculator has
predicted, the early stages of earth's
formation brought together the chemical elements of fiery gases
and humid vapors, the precipitates from the mixture finally forming the first
earthly and mineral substances. Those early periods might, in the Egyptian
sense, be termed the hissing, or S (SH) stage of planetary evolution.
An example of the inceptive force of the S in the hieroglyphics
is seen in the Egyptian word MNKH (MeNKH), which as adjective means firm,
stable. But, made into a verb, it becomes SMNKH (SMeNKH), meaning to make
firm, stabilize, establish. It is also likely that in this word MeNKH we
have another prime example of the M-N reference. In relation to its meaning of
firmness and stability, it is to be recalled that a passage from the Egyptian
Book of the Dead described this world of life on earth as "the place of
establishing forever." Also in the M-N connection it is highly significant that
the Egyptian name for this lower region, the "underworld" or "nether earth" of
their system, was Amenta, composed of the name of the God Amen and
ta, meaning earth. Also significant is the name of this god, made
up of the A and the M and N, for he was called "the god in hiding," and his
hieroglyph is a god seated under a canopy. Obviously he then is the
personification of the divine nature hidden under the canopy of our mortal
flesh.
All this should be a specific guiding datum for philosophical
science, inasmuch as orthodox theology has loaded the evolutionary marshland, or
Reed Sea, of the earthy-watery human body with heavy contumely as the place
where only fleeting ephemeral influences affect, if not afflict, the soul with
evil. That it is, on the contrary, the place where the soul establishes forever
its grounding in fundamental realities, is a tenet of the sacred and secret
wisdom of the Egyptian sages which must be made one of the chief stones in the
new temple of rational religion now in process of building.
The S prefixed to MNKH adds the starting forces that brings the
firm establishing to actuality, that sets it to work. It is hardly unlikely that
the very long run of English verbs which begin with S (or SH) carry this
inceptive or initiating force of the letter--though speculation of this sort can
not be asserted with too much certainty--in such words as start, step, slide,
shake, skip, skate, slip, sink, stir, sneak, smite, spur, shout, scream, stamp,
stand, spit, slap, shoot, speak, sprint, spurn, scoff, slay, spill, sift and
scores more.
Massey traces even the great name of mystery, the sphinx,
from the ANKH stem, preceded by the demonstrative adjective P (this, the,
that) and the starting S, thus: S-P-ANKH. Massey was well versed in the
abstrusities of the hieroglyphics and his surmise on this is as good as that of
others. The word thus composed would mean "the beginning of the process of
linking spirit and matter," which indeed is the sphinx-riddle of the creation.
The sphinx image does conjoin the head of man, spirit, with the body of the
animal, lion, representing matter. It is precisely such values and realities
that the sages of antiquity dealt with and in precisely this manner of subtle
indirection. When will modern scholarship come to terms with this recognition!
If sphinx derives from the ANKH symbol, it is not at all
unlikely that the other great emblem suggestive of the spirit involved in
matter, the wondrous "bird of life," the phoenix, stems from it likewise.
It was also named the bennu, the spirit energy that goes from B, the
fiery start, down into water, N, which is also probably the make-up of the
Hebrew word for son, which is ben. Another name of the fabled bird
was nycticorax. Corax is raven in Greek, which, from it black
color, is often called the "bird of night," symbolizing the soul flying down
into the dark night of imprisonment in earthly bodies; and nycti stems
from the Greek nux (nyx), meaning night. The mythic phoenix
was pictured as migrating north and returning south (to Egypt), where it renewed
its life in periodic rhythm. And "Egypt" is symbolically the earth. Can there be
doubt that the fabled migratory fowl is just the divine soul of life that
commutes regularly between heaven and earth, pictured as a bird because it can
build a nest on the ground, but equally well rise into the heavens of
consciousness?
It would be highly revealing to recapitulate some of the, at
times, astonishing formulations which the ancient Hebrews discovered as
fortuitous or designed constructions in their interpretative methodology that
was elementary to their so-called science of Gematria. This was based on the
equation of number value of the words with the meanings expressed in the text.
The number forms were held to "geometrize," so to say, the meanings. As a
physical object or phenomenon can configurate a meaning structure so can number
values and relations. This "science" was carried to
lengths that have ever seemed to overrun the bounds of rational
sense, and the method has been held in disdain as fantastic jugglery since the
days of its esoteric vogue. Yet it would seem to be grounded on legitimate
premises and to be subject to criticism only in its unwarranted extravagances.
One senses this in reading the Zohar, for instance.
Somewhat in the spirit of the Gematria modus it may be
profitable to look at several word and letter combinations in the Hebrew. To
condense in a sentence what would take ten pages to elucidate in full, it is
notable that beside the number of central and basic significance in this
systematization, seven, perhaps the one most prominent in the sacred numerology
was six. If seven was the number rounding out the cycles, six was the one
that completed the physical evolution of the life-forms of any cycle. The
progress achieved in the first six sub-cycles was necessary preparation for the
channeling down of the spiritual grade in the seventh and climactic
sub-cycle. We find the deeply esoteric Jewish philosopher Philo in the first
century A.D. giving expression to the importance of the number six in several
statements. One runs: "The world was created according to the perfect nature of
the number six." And again he asks who can fittingly celebrate the divine
majesty of this number. He says also that the sixth day of creation was the
"festal day of all the earth." The creation was to work at physical labor for
six days and rest in spiritual delight on the seventh. Man, made in the image
and likeness of the cosmic creation, is likewise to work only six days in the
analogical cycle of seven days.
Therefore the number six, hardly less than the number seven,
furnishes the basic clue to the meaning-value of many words. As six stages
finished the physical form of creation in any cycle, it would seem likely that
the Gematria plan would have used the final letter or letters of the alphabet to
construct the words carrying the value of six. We are not disappointed in our
gematric expectations here, for the last three letters of the Hebrew alphabet
are R, S (SH) and TH, and six is written variously shesh, shisah,
sheth and sixth is shishi. It is likely that if records were
available we should find that the last son of Adam in the Genesis had
been traditionally regarded as the sixth, for his name is Seth or
Sheth.
But the Hebrew Bible's very first word opens up a veritable mine
of speculative possibilities of this sort. That first word, translated "in the
beginning," is in Hebrew B'RASHITH. It
was either constructed with amazing ingenuity to express a
remarkable cosmographic conception or chanced to do just that by sheer
coincidence. The reader must first be reminded that in the ancient manuscripts
of the Biblical books the words were not separated and there were no vowels! It
is therefore permissible to separate the words in different ways and in doing so
some curious new readings come out as possibilities.
The initial B is a preposition meaning "in" and can be prefixed
to any noun or participial verb. RASH means head, so that B'RASH would
mean "in the head," "in his (God's) head," as the place where God "created the
heaven and the earth." Oddly enough it is precisely in God's head that the
creation started, as there were formed the archetypal ideas over the pattern of
which he shaped the creation. If B'RASHITH might be considered the overlapped
form of B'RASH-SHITH, it would read "in the head of the six" or "of the sixth,"
and again it can be said (and the Zohar expressly does say it) that the
creation, emanating out of God's head, came to a head in the sixth formative
impulsion.
Then B'RASHITH is followed by the verb BARA, "he created." If we
take the B'RA for BARA (the vowels being wholly conjectural and indeterminable),
BARASHITH itself would read "he created six, or the sixth." The Zohar
gives this as a reading alternative. And it does in fact look as if this
first Hebrew word was designedly made up of the first letter with which the
creation truly begins, B, to indicate the beginning of the process, and the last
three letters, R, SH and TH, to spell out, as it were, a cosmic evolution
running clear through from beginning to end and so inscribed in the alphabet.
The use of all three final letters would appear to indicate that the creative
process brought out the result of the operation of the original unit divine mind
manifesting in its triple aspects of spirit-soul-mind. The SH itself carries
this triplicity, we have seen, in its three YODS. So that in its full esoteric
sweep of meaning this first Bible word B'RASHITH would condense a far more
comprehensive significance than its conventional translation would show. It
would really read: "From the beginning in his head God unfolded from his triple
powers of mind the heavens and the earth in six creative stages." This must
stand as most likely the first full esoteric translation of the first Bible
verse.
The Hebrew words for water and heaven will lucidly
illustrate the water-value of M and the fire-value of SH. Water is
MAYIM,
the M conspicuously predominating. As the Y is another form of
the fiery I, MAY (MAI) would read as the M-water expression of the I-fire power.
Esoterically the universe can be thought of in just those terms. Now, most
appropriately, the word for heaven is this same water-word, MAYIM,
preceded by the SH of fire, SH'MAYIM. Earth is the home or world of water;
heaven is the home of water generated by fire,--the lightning; or water as
invisible vapor, or water proceeding out of the empyrean, or realm of
potential fire. Jesus says that he beheld Satan as lightning, or fire, falling
from heaven, and that he himself came "to send fire on the earth in the sight of
men." The Greeks said that the gods "distribute the divine fire" among men, a
portion of soul-fire to each. Genesis tells us that God first created the
two firmaments in the midst of the waters, the firmament above and the firmament
below, the MAYIM and the SH'MAYIM, the water and the fire-water.
Such a word as YOM, for day, seems to reveal semantic
formation. The time-words, of whatever period, age, aeon, cycle, year, month,
week, day, hour, are used very definitely to indicate no actual time-periods,
but whole cycles as a concept, not a specific duration. A cycle is a year,
a day, a week, a month. The world was created in six
"days." The Israelites (again not the historical Hebrews) marched in the Sinai
desert "forty days, for every day a year," says the text. So YOM (IOM) is the
"day" of creation. It would be the period in which life proceeds from start at A
(B) to deploy the creative fire-power, I (Y), into manifestation at M (N). This
"day" would last from I (Y) to M, making its name YOM. As the action between A,
or I (Y), and M (N) represents the process of life's coming to be, or becoming,
it seems almost as if we find it saying I A M. Is it strange that the Latin word
for now is IAM? It is as if life were saying "I am in existence in the
eternal NOW." If one were to say "I am" in English and now in Latin, it
would be I am iam. Coincidence it is, no doubt, but both forms must be
composed of the same primal letter elements.
To say "I am" in German gives interesting results also. It is
Ich bin. The Ich is the I heavily aspirated. In some parts of
Germany the Ich is pronounced as Ish. This equates the Hebrew word
for man, uniting the primal unitary I-fire-power with the triple
manifestation of that power that the SH represents; and this is precisely what
man does. In man the divine trinity comes to
manifestation. But the German,
instead of using the pre-creative A and the matter-terminal M to say "am," says
it with the actual beginning letter B and the other matter-terminal, N,
with the I between them (as it does stand between them in the alphabet), giving
BIN, Ich bin.
It is not to be forgotten that LOVE was one of the three
elements in the great ANKH symbol, along with LIFE and TIE. Now it is in the
descent of soul fire from A (B) to M and back to the final letter (in Greek it
is O) that the two poles of being generate the power of divine LOVE. Is it not a
bit surprising, then, that to say in Latin "I love" is to say AMO?
The significance of the Hebrew word for "the oil of anointing,"
SHeMeN, has already been mentioned. Since this divine oil that, so to say, is
destined to set the head of man on fire with the divine unction, manifests in
man in its triple spirit-soul-mind divisions, it must be recognized as of great
significance that repeatedly the Old Testament instructs that the sacrificial
cakes are to be compounded of fine flour mixed with three measures of
oil. The three divine flames that are to deify man are to be fed by the "oil"
compressed out of the wine-press or olive-press of our conscious earthly
experience.
It would be gratuitous to assert that the Hebrew shemen, oil,
derived from the earlier Egyptian word smen. This was an incense
spoken of in the Ritual for the dead, those "dead," however, being the souls
incarnated in bodies on earth, and not the "shades" of deceased mortals. The
word must therefore refer to an element in the human constitution, not of
course, to be taken as an actual physical substance burning at funerals. In this
connection it can be speculated whether the Geth- of Gethsemane is
not a variant of Beth as in Bethel, Bethany, Bethlehem, meaning house.
If so, the word Gethsemane would mean the house in which life burns
its smen-incense to divinize its child, man; that "house" being man's
physical body, the beth or home of souls on earth. It was in Gethsemane
that the Christos wrestled in the living agony that caused "him" to sweat, as it
were, great drops of blood. Several of the prime Egyptian mythic legends of the
creation of mankind by the gods represent the deity as exuding drops of his
blood seminally upon the earth, from which sprang two characters, male
and female, that equate Adam and Eve in the Genesis allegory. Seminal
creative blood essence is more than a few times poetized as sweat.
All this is of epochal importance as demonstrating that the
bloody sweat of Jesus in Gethsemane is a watered-down rescript of one of the old
Egyptian mythic constructions.
It must strike any person of open mind how marvelously these
words articulate in all these constructions with perfect naturalness and
semantic felicity. The Scriptures have remained for centuries both a perplexing
riddle and a derationalizing influence simply because the abstruse and recondite
relevance of these symbolic terms has never hitherto been explored.
The study could be pursued to the dimensions of a major work.
Enough has been given to answer the purposes of an introductory treatise that
has been undertaken at the urgent behest of many who heard the exposition in
lecture form. By way of epilogue and summary it will be well to end with the
analysis of another pivotal Hebrew word of only two (Hebrew) letters, as it will
provide virtually irrefutable certification of the main theses of this essay:
the descent of spirit-fire into matter-water at the middle or nadir point of the
alphabet, M-N, and its return. That little word is in Hebrew HAG (CHAG), base of
the Mohammedan words haj, hajj, hegira. It is given in lexicons as
meaning feast, festal day, festival, holy day (holiday); also as
pilgrimage, journey, flight. The Hebrews themselves seem to have little
apprehension of its true significance, even on its exoteric side. What it
connotes in its esoteric reference has never yet been given out. It is virtually
the cryptic key to the Scriptures, the definite key to the chiasmus
construction of much of the material in the Scriptures, in which verses or
portions of chapters are arranged in the form of a succession of four separate
statements made successively in a line outward, so to say, as A, B, C, D and
then a return back over the same first three, C, B, A, giving a seven-form
structure, A, B, C, D, C, B, A. It seems to put the seven-stage structure in the
form of an outgoing journey or pilgrimage, HAG, of three and a half steps or
stages, and a return over the same three and a half, the turn to return
(Sinai by Egyptian derivation) being made at the middle point of the
fourth, or D, stage. To this structure the name chiasmus has been given,
from the form of the Greek letter chi (much like our X), the two upper
arms of which pictorialize a descent and return.
The HAG ordained by the Lord for Israelite observance in
Leviticus reproduces the framework of this same design, though
here in the form or terms of a feast or festival ceremonial. But
deeper research reveals that it was to be carried out in the form of an actual
pilgrimage, setting out from home, journeying outward for three and a half days,
crossing a river or water boundary between two kingdoms, (and
always crossing at that point,) and then the return. It was to be an
actual march out, an exodus of three and a half days, and the nostos,
or return journey of equal length. The tradition of its meaning, preserved
better in Mohammedan ideology than in Christian or Hebrew, was the origin of the
Islamic pilgrimage, the great hegira to Mecca; for that matter the origin
of all religious pilgrimaging.
When we turn to the Scriptural Book of Revelation--and
other places--we are there faced with the recurrence of this specific number,
three and one-half (the half of seven!), three times in the eleventh and
twelfth chapters of the last book in the Bible. This book, has twenty-two
chapters, and, whether it be by chance or by design of ancient
structure-builders of archaic literature, the eleventh and twelfth chapters
stand at the place in the book corresponding to where M and N stand in the
alphabet,--the middle or turning point. This would seem to indicate that the
entire book of twenty-two chapters was arranged with the intent to reproduce the
chiasmus structure. That is, at the three-and-a-half point in the book the
number three and a half is introduced three times!
It seems so clear as to be beyond cavil that this definite form
was used in symbolism to dramatize the outgoing or descent of the soul into
incarnation through three and a half root stages of matter, from ethereal to
solid, its experience there in a body of (seven-eighths) water, and its
evolutionary return through the same three and a half levels, reaping on its
return its harvest of rich experience. Yet this, the open sesame to all the
baffling mystery of Holy Writ, has eluded the sagacity of the Scriptural pundits
for centuries. Most lucidly it allegorizes the soul's pilgrimage out or down to
body, and its return. Most astonishing is the item that at the outward terminus
of the three and a half "days" journey was a river or water body on the boundary
between two kingdoms. This the soul had to cross to begin its return. If
sufficient poetic imagination is used to see that this Red Sea--Jordan
River--Styx River of the allegories is actually the red blood of our human
bodies, the Scriptures begin at once to become like an opaque glass suddenly
made transparent.