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.
It may be that many of you have come to this lecture with the expectation of
hearing about the superstitious beliefs of some ancient fire-worshippers or
sun-worshippers. You may wonder why we should presume to waste an evening
dilating upon the childish fancies of early peoples who could conceive of no
more exalted form of deity in the universe than the physical body of our sun.
Can there possibly be anything important in the study of such forms of crude
fetishism?
Let me disabuse your minds of any such prepossession at once. We have not
invited you to hear of infantile nonsense of early child-humanity. On the
contrary, it is our opinion that there is not a theme within the entire range of
religious interest of such sublimity and authentic grandeur as this subject of
the Sun-gods. We have come to the persuasion that this is the most important
lecture that we have given or shall ever give. In it there is to be found the
central thesis of all religion. We have asked you to hear an exposition of the
cardinal principle of all true religion. Instead of dealing with an erratic
notion of primitive barbarism, we have to present to you this evening the
long-lost supreme datum of all high religion. And it is our design to show that
religion in the world has drifted so far away from its original base that it no
longer recognizes the very first and fundamental conception about which it was
in the beginning constructed. The myth of the Sun-gods is the very heart's core
of religion at its best.
It is commonly supposed that religious honors were paid to the sun as a deity
by a few isolated peoples or sects, such as the Parsees and the ancient Ghebers
of Persia, and some African tribes. In correction of this view we are prepared
to support the declaration that the worship of the Sun-god was quite universal
in the ancient world. It ranged from China and India to Yucatan and Peru. The
Emperor and the Mikado, as well as the Incas, and the Pharaohs were Sun-god
figures. And is the belief only an empty myth? So far from being such, it is at
once the highest embodiment of religious conception in the spiritual history of
the race.
Since the word "myth" occurs in the title, it is necessary to define it so
that we may the better glimpse the nature of the subject. To the modern mind the
word carries with it a derogatory implication. To reduce any construction to the
status of a myth is to put it out of court and render it valueless. We regard a
myth as a fiction and a falsity. To show that a theory or a belief is only a
myth, is to relegate it to the world of non-reality, and dismiss it from further
consideration as a thing of value.
Not so with the ancients. With them a myth was a valuable instrumentality of
knowledge. It was an intellectual, even a spiritual, tool, by the aid of which
truth and wisdom could at one and the same time both be concealed from the
unworthy and expressed for the worthy. The ancients rightly regarded spiritual
truth and experience as being incapable of expression or impartation by means of
words simply. A myth or an allegory could be made the better means of conveying
subtly and with a certain added force, the truth veiled under a set form of
dramatic presentation. The myth would enhance spiritual truth as a drama
reinforces moral situations. It was all the more powerful in its message
precisely because it was known not to be outwardly a true story. No one
was caught by the literal falsity of the construction. Attention could therefore
be given wholly to the hidden import, which was not obscured by the outward
occurrence. The myth was known to be a fiction; therefore it deceived
nobody--until the third century. But at the same time it was most ingeniously
designed to instruct in the deepest of spiritual truths. It was a literary
device to embalm lofty wisdom in the amber of a tradition that could be easily
remembered, in the guise of a human story. It was truth incarnated in a dramatic
occurrence, which was known to be untrue. Outwardly fictitious, but inwardly the
substance of a mighty truth, was the myth. And as such it was the universal
dress in which ancient knowledge was clothed.
To indicate the universality of the Sun-god myth it is only necessary to
enumerate some thirty of the chief figures known as Sun-gods amongst the nations
about the Eastern Mediterranean, before the advent of Jesus. There were in
Egypt, Osiris, Horus, Serapis, Hermes or Taht (Thoth), Khunsu, Atum (Aten, Adon,
the Adonis or Phrygia), Iusa, Iu-sa, Iu-em-hetep; in Syria, Atis, Sabazius,
Zagreus, Kybele (feminine); in Assyria Tammuz; in Babylonia, Marduk and Sargon;
in Persia, Mithra, Ahura-Mazda and the Zoroasters; in Greece, Orpheus, Bacchus
(Dionysus), Achilles, Hercules, Theseus, Perseus, Jason, Prometheus; in India,
Vyasa, Krishna, Buddha; in Tibet the Boddhisattvas; besides many others
elsewhere.
Likewise in the ancient Mystery dramas the central character was ever the
Sun-god the role being enacted by the candidate for initiation in person. He
went through the several initiations as himself the type and representative of
the solar divinity in the field of human experience.
Moreover, the Patriarchs, Prophets, Priests and Kings of Biblical lore are no
less Sun-god figures. For in their several characteristics they are seen to be
typical of the Christos.
From the study of a mass of the ancient material the sincere and disingenuous
student becomes ere long convinced of the fact that the
Jesus figure of the Gospels, whether he lived historically or not (and there
is much question of it even among theologians), is just another in the long list
of the solar gods. They were figured by ancient poetic genius as embodiments of
divine solar glory living among men, if they were not purely the mythical
constructions of the allegorists.
These Sun-god characters, of none of whom can it be said positively that they
were living personages, were, it must be clearly noted, purely typical figures
in the national epics of the several nations. They were symbols, one might say.
But of what were they symbolical? That is the point of central importance. They
were representative characters, summing and epitomizing in themselves the
spiritual history of the human individual in his march across the field of
evolving life on earth. They were the types and models of the divine
potentiality pictured as coming to realization in their careers. They were the
mirror held up to men, in which could be seen the possibilities locked up in
man's own nature. They were type-figures, delineating the divine life that was
an ever-possible realization for any devoted man. They were the symbols of an
ever-coming deity, a deity that came not once historically in Judea, but that
came to ever-fuller expression and liberation in the inner heart of every son of
man. The solar deities were the gods that ever came, that were described as
coming not once upon a time, but continuously and regularly. Their radiant
divinity might be consummated by any earnest person at any time or achieved
piecemeal.
They were typed as ever-coming or coming regularly because they were symboled
by the sun in its annual course around the zodiac of twelve signs, and the
regular periodicity of this natural symbol typified the ever-continuing
character of their spiritual sunlight. The ancients, in a way and to a degree
almost incomprehensible to the unstudied modern, had made of the sun's annual
course round the heavens a faithful reproduction of the spiritual history of the
divine spirit in man. The god in us was emblemed by the sun in its course, and
the sun's varied experiences, as fabulously construed, were a reflection of our
own incarnational history. The sun in its movements through the signs was made
the mirror of our life in spirit. To follow the yearly round of the zodiac was
to epitomize graphically the whole history of human experience. Thus the inner
meaning of our mortal life was endlessly repeated in the daily, weekly, monthly
and yearly cycle of the sun's passage, the seven or twelve divisions of which
marked the seven- or twelvefold segmentation of our spiritual history or our
initiations. (They were figured at first as seven, later as twelve, when the
solar gods came upon the cosmic scene.)
The careers of these solar gods, then, were a type of what is occurring to
every man who is dowered with the spark of divine soul within his
breast. Each one of us has had or will have his festival of conception in
June, his birth into the world of fleshly life in the autumn, his spiritual
awakening at Christmas, and his glorious resurrection from the dead body of this
life at Easter.
The Christians say the Christos came once in a single character in history,
Jesus of Judea, saying nothing about his coming to Everyman at all times. They
present to the world the Only-Begotten Son of the Father, confusing in one
historical figure two distinct characters of ancient philosophy, the Logos and
the Christos, and making both historical in a human being born of woman. Suffice
it to say that neither character was historical in the ancient systems. The
Logos and the Christos were cosmic forces, and the erring Christians confounded
these "personages" of ancient philosophy with the mundane career of the man
Jesus, who was not other than one of the mythical Sun-god heroes, or national
type-figures. What a travesty of truth the Christian representation has become!
What a caricature the Gospels have made of the divine spiritual principle in
man's life!
The ancients had no "only-begotten" son because the term used in their
systems, miserably mistranslated "only-begotten," was something with quite a
different connotation. It was in Greek "monogenes," and in Latin "unigenitus,"
and was far from meaning "only-begotten." It meant that which was begotten of
one parent, the father, alone, not the offspring of the union of father and
mother. By the term the ancients meant to designate him who was the projection
into matter of the spirit forces of life, not the final product of the union of
spirit and matter, or the male and female elements. Had the early Christian
Fathers known of the inner meaning of the symbolism of the Egyptian Ptah, as
Khepr-Ra, who was typed by the male beetle that incubated in the ground and
without union with the female transformed and regenerated himself after
twenty-eight days (exactly a moon cycle) in the form of the young scarab, symbol
of the new-born sun in the moon, they would have been intelligent enough to have
avoided the great schisms that divided the Church into Roman and Greek Catholic
bodies over the abstrusities of this very origin of the persons of the Trinity.
But Egypt was farther away from Rome of the third century than it is from us,
who can now read the inscriptions that were sealed from them.
All this ancient scriptural data accentuates the fact that not the historical
Jesus, but the spiritual Christ, or the god within the individual heart (as
expounded in the lecture on Platonic Philosophy in the Bible) is the subject of
the sacred writings of old, and the kernel of the whole religious ideology.
Angelus Silesius has expressed this in a stanza which should be a perpetual
reminder of the futility of clinging to the historical interpretation of Gospel
literature.
Though Christ a thousand times in Bethlehem be born,
But not within thyself, thy soul will be forlorn;
The cross on Golgotha thou lookest to in vain
Unless within thyself it be set up again.
And the Christian hymn, "O Jesus, thou art standing, outside the fast-closed
door," gives expression to the kindred idea that while we look across the map to
localize the Christos in Judea, we keep the spiritual mentor of our own lives
standing without, seeking an entrance into our lives in vain.
By the aid of archaic sacred books we have been enabled to trace
authentically the origin of the name Jesus. And it is of great importance to
present this material, because it throws a flood of clear light upon the ancient
conceptions of the Messiah and the coming Son, or Sun-god. In this light the
name will be seen to be a type-designation and not the personal name of an
historical being.
It is derived from the two letters (or numbers) which in the beginning of
typology symbolized the two first elements, spirit and matter, into which the
primal One Life bifurcated. They are the I (or 1) symboling the male or spirit,
and the O (letter) or 0 (cipher) symboling the female or material universe.
Together they represented the biune male-female deity. We have, then, the
letters IO, or the number 10. As the vowels were freely interchanged, in ancient
languages, the name was written either IO, IA, IE, or IU, and all these forms
are found. Next the I transformed into consonantal value and became a J (as it
is yet in Latin), so that we find the names JO, JA, JE and JU, from each of
which many names have arisen. When the creation had combined the male and female
and the two had given birth to the Son, or Logoic universe, the name was given
the form of three letters, and we then find such forms as IAO, JAH, IEO, JEU,
ZUE. When the universe became founded on the four cardinal points or the square
of four dimensions, the name was spelled variously as IEOU, JOVE, ZEUS, JEVE,
DIOS, T/HEOS, HUHI, IHUH and others. In its character as a sevenfold or
seven-lettered name, it took the form of JEHOVAH, SABAOTH, DEBORAH, DELILAH,
SEP/HIROT/H, MICHAEL, SOLOMON, and others of seven letters. The I permuted with
l (el) or 1 (one), so that IE became LE or, inverted EL, the great Hebrew
character of deity. The EL and the IAH (JAH), became the most frequent
determinatives of divinity, as a host of names will testify. There are Bethel,
Emanuel, Michael, Israel, Gabriel, Samuel, Abdiel, Uriel, Muriel Azazel, and
many others, in which the EL is prefixed. The JAH is seen in such names as
EliJAH, AbiJAH, while the IAH comes in a host of such names as Nehemiah,
Jeremiah, Obediah, Hezekiah, Isaiah, Messiah, Alleluiah and more.
But whence comes the "s" in Jesus's name? This is of great importance. It is
derived from an Egyptian suffix written either SA, SE, SI, SU, or SAF, SEF, SIF
or SUF (SAPH, SEPH, SIPH or SUPH) and meaning "the son," "heir," "prince" or
successor to the father. (The F is an Egyptian ending for the masculine
singular.) When the original symbol of divinity, IO or IE, JO or JE, was
combined with the Egyptian suffix for the succeeding heir, SU or SA, the
resultant was the name IUSA, IUSE, IUSU, or IOSE; or IESU, JESU, IUSEF, IOSEF,
JOSEF. One of the many forms was JESU and another was JOSEF. The final F became
sibilant at times and gave us the eventual form of JESUS. The name then meant
the "divine son," and combined in the Egyptian IU the idea of the coming one.
Hence JESUS was the Messiah, the coming son of the divine life. There was in
Egypt for ten thousand years B.C. the character of this functionary under the
name of IUSA. Later he was the Iu-em-hetep, which means "the divine son who
comes with peace (hetep). But most interestingly, this last word also means
seven. Hence Jesus is he who comes as the seventh principle to complete the six
elementary powers of natural evolution with the gift of divine intelligence,
which supplants the elementary chaos with the rulership of love and intelligence
and thus brings peace into a warring situation. Hence finally, Jesus is the
seventh cosmic principle, announced in all religious lore as he who comes to
bring peace and good will to men. And as such he was announced in the Christian
Gospels. But there was more than one Jesus or IUSA or IU before the coming of
the alleged historical Jesus.
Startling as are the implications of this bit of etymology, a far more
amazing denouement of Bible study is the revelation that not only were there
over thirty Sun-god figures in the cults of the various nations of old, but
there are immediately in the Bible itself, in the Old Testament, some
twenty more Sun-god characters under the very name of Jesus! Are we
speaking arrant nonsense or sober truth when we make a claim which seems at
first sight so unsupportable? Twenty Jesus characters in the Old Testament! Let
us see. We have noted the many variant forms of the Jesus name. There are still
others in the Old Testament, never suspected as being related to the name of the
Christian Redeemer. There are Isaac, Esau, Jesse, Jacob, Jeshu, Joachim, Joshua,
Jonah and others. All these are variant forms of the one name, which has still
other forms among the Hebrews in secular life, Yusuf, Yehoshua, Yeshu, etc.
Joshua, Hosea and Jesse are from this name indisputably. A few might be the
subject of controversy.
Furthermore, beside these that bear the original divine name, there are other
Sun-god figures in the Old Testament under a wide variety of names. They are
Samson (whose name means "solar"), David, Solomon, Saul
(equals soul, or sol, the sun--Latin.), Abraham, Moses, Gideon, Jephtha and
the like. Their actions identify them as solar representatives.
Now let us see what the conception of our divinity as a Sun-god in reality
meant to the sages of old, and what it should mean to us. It meant that the
divinity within us, our divine soul or Self, was itself the Sun-god, or solar
deity. And what does this signify in concrete terms for us? Just this; that the
god within us is constituted of the imperishable essence of solar light and
energy! In short, we ourselves, in our higher nature, are solar gods in
potentiality! Our highest nature is an incorruptible body composed of the
glorious essence of the sun's energy! The gods in the Bible were always symboled
by the light or fire of the sun. We are now enlightened to see it as a
description of our nature as veritable truth and fact. We are Sun-gods.
Our immortal spirits within us are composed of the radiant substance of
solar energy.
At the very time we were first assembling the material for this lecture,
there came an announcement in the daily press of a discovery by a modern
physicist, Dr. George W. Crile, of the Cleveland Laboratories, which practically
fixed the seal of truth upon every word we have uttered or shall utter in this
lecture. It was most startlingly corroborative of our exegesis. He announced
that he had discovered at the heart of every living organism a tiny nucleus of
energy, all aglow, with temperatures ranging from 3000 to 6000 degrees of heat,
which he called "radiogens" or "hot points." These, he said, were precisely akin
to the radiant energy of solar matter. He affirmed, in short, that a tiny
particle of the sun's power and radiance was lodged within the heart of every
organic unit! The light and energy that has life. What would be Crile's
surprise, however, if he were to be shown a sentence taken from Hargrave
Jennings' old book on the Rosicrucians, written over sixty years ago: "Every man
has a little spark (sun) in his own bosom?" For this was one item in the
teaching of the Medieval Fire-Philosophers, and the reason they were styled
such. They knew what Crile has discovered, as likewise did the ancient
Bible-writers. They based their Sun-god religions upon it. Our souls are
composed of the imperishable essence of solar light! We are immortal because we
are Sun-gods.
But many will impatiently rise to expostulate with us, and ask why, if this
was the universal fundamentum of the old religions, the Bible itself does not
categorically carry this message and state this central fact. Wait a moment! Who
that knows this primary datum has searched the Bible to see if it has nothing to
say on the point? We, too, believed the Bible was remiss in expressing this
conception, until we searched with a more watchful eye. And now let us hear what
the
Bible says as to our solar constitution, and determine for ourselves whether
it is silent on the groundwork of religion or not. Let us hear first the
Psalms. "Our God is a living fire," say they; and "Our God is a consuming
fire." "The Lord God is a sun," avers the same book. "I am come to send fire on
earth," says Jesus, meaning he came to scatter the separated sparks of solar
essence amongst mankind, a spark to each soul. In Revelation the angels
scatter the fire and the incense of their seven censers over the earth, among
the inhabitants. Then says John the Baptist: "I indeed baptize you with water,
but he that cometh after me will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with
fire!" Jesus says: "I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven." (Satan
was the descending Lucifer, or Light-bringer, before he was lifted up and
divinized.) The fire that falls on Jeremiah's altar and many another in the
Bible narrative types the deity coming to dwell with mortals. Says Jesus: "When
I am in the world I am the light of the world." Again he said: "Ye are the light
of the world," and "Let your light so shine that others may . . . glory your
father which is in heaven." The Lord, say the Psalms, "made his angels
messengers and his ministers a flame of fire." The New Testament Jesus,
following the well-known Egyptian diagram of the Ankh, the solar disk with the
spread wings, is described as "the sun of righteousness, risen with healing in
his wings." John has Jesus saying that the condemnation of the world lay in that
it rejected the light when it was sent into the world. Says Job: "Yea,
the light of the wicked shall be put out, and the spark of his fire shall not
shine. The light shall be dark in his tabernacle and his candle shall be put out
with him." Isaiah writes: "Behold all ye that kindle a fire, that compass
yourselves about with sparks; walk in the light of your fire and in the sparks
that ye have kindled." We are adjured to "Rise, shine, for thy light is come."
"The Lord is my light," reiterates the Psalms. And again: "In thy light
shall we see light." "Light is sown for the righteous." "We wait for light," cry
the souls in the darkness of incarnation, far from their original fount of
light. John declares that the Christos "was the true light" which was to come
Messianically for the redemption of our lower nature. And again he declares that
with the Christos "light is come into the world." No cry echoes with more
resounding intensity down to this age than Paul's exhortation to our souls
buried in lethal darkness: "Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead,
and Christ will shine upon thee!" And in Revelation there are those
mighty pronouncements: in the spiritual resurrection "there shall be no more
need of the sun to shine by day nor the moon by night, for the glory of the Lord
did lighten it." And there is no more heartening assurance anywhere in the Bible
than Jesus's statement: "Ye have light in yourselves."
And these are only a gleaning from the great score of similar passages
with which the Bible teems. And still folks will say they find no warrant for
the Sun-god idea in the Bible!
In Rome the sacred fire in the temple of Vesta was guarded by seven Vestal
Virgins, chosen for purity and for psychic vision. If they permitted the fire to
die out (symbolic of the light of deity dying out in the heart) the penalty upon
them was death. If they violated their sexual purity, they were buried alive in
the city. And from the great old Egyptian Book of the Dead we take just
one passage among scores: "Lo, I come from the Lake of Flame, from the Lake of
Fire, and from the field of flame, and I live." And again, from an old Book
of Adam and Eve we quote a great passage in which the Lord says: "I made
thee of the light, and I wished to bring out children of the light from thee."
If only we had been taught by our religious teachers that our spiritual natures
are woven and fabricated of solar light, we should have had a clearer
apprehension of our potentialities for divine education.
Supplementing all this material from the Bible and ancient scriptures, there
is at hand for our supreme enlightenment one grand pronouncement from Greek
Platonic philosophy which we conceive to be that lost ultimate link between
science and religion. It is the truth before whose altar both science and
religion can kneel at last and find themselves paying tribute to the same
god,--the god of solar radiance. It is a sentence from the learned Proclus, last
of the Great Platonists: "The light of the sun is the pure energy of
intellect." Are we big enough to catch the mighty significance of that
statement? Is it not the essence of what the modern physicist means when he
talks of "mind-stuff?" The fiery radiance of the sun is already the motivating
genius of intellect! Matter is itself intelligent and intelligence! Here
is the basic link between all naturalism and all spirituality. Matter enshrouds
and contains the soul of mind and spirit. The light of the sun is the deific
flash of intellect! And the very core of our conscious being is a spark of that
infinite indestructible energy of solar light. There is the "seminal soul of
light" or the seed of fiery divinity (Prometheus's "fire" stolen from the gods)
in each of us. It makes us a god.
Armed with this unquenchable fire which is intellect, we are sent on earth to
inhabit a body which is described as a watery and miry swamp. The body is nearly
eighty per cent. water! It is the duty of the fiery spark to enlighten the whole
dark realm of mortal life, to transmute by its alchemical power the baser dross
of animal propensity into the finer motivation of love and brotherhood. This
life is a purgation--Purgatory--because it is a process of burning and tempering
crude animal elements into the pure gold of spiritual light. In Egyptian
scriptures the twelve sons of Ra (the twelve sons of Jacob, and the twelve
tribes of Israel)
were called the "twelve saviors of the treasure of light." An Egyptian text
reads: "This is the sun within us, the seminal source of light. Do not dim its
luster or cause it to suffer eclipse." And another runs: "Give ye glory as to
the sun; he is the chief, the only one coming from the body, the head of those
who belong to the race of the sun."
With this force of fire we must uplift the lower man and transmute his nature
into the spiritual glow of love and intelligence. With it we must turn the water
of the lower nature into the wine of spiritual force. Around it we must
aggregate the refined material which we shall build into that temple of the
soul, that body of the resurrection, the great garment of solar light, in which
we shall rise out of the tomb of the physical corpus and ascend with the angels.
This is the radiant Augoeides of the Greeks, the Sahu of the Egyptians, in which
the soul wings its flight aloft like the phoenix, after rending the veil of the
temple of the body. It is our garment of immortality, the seamless robe of
glory, in prospect of which we groan and travail, says St. Paul, as we earnestly
desire to be clothed upon with the garment of incorruption. As flesh and blood
can not inherit the kingdom of heaven, we must fashion for our tenancy there
this body of solar glory, in whose self-generated light we may live eternally,
having overcome the realms of darkness, or spiritualized the body. Jesus prays
the Father to grant unto him that glory that he had with him before the world
was, and his prayer is fulfilled in the formation of the spirit body out of the
elements of the sun.
Who is this King of Glory?--says the Psalmist. And we are exhorted to lift up
the aeonial gates, the age-lasting doors, to let the King of Glory enter into
our realm. The King of Glory is the Sun-soul within us, raised in his final
perfection in the fulness of Christly stature to the state of magnificent
effulgence. The King of Glory is the immortal Sun-god, the deity in our hearts;
and when at last he blazes forth in the heyday of his glory, and comes in
majesty into our lives, then we behold his glory, as of the alone-begotten of
the Father, full of grace and truth. And when he appears to those still sitting
in the shadow of darkness, they report that "they have seen a great light, and
to those that sat in the valley of darkness did the light shine." And this
light, seen ever and anon by some illuminated son of man, as he gropes in the
murks of incarnation, is truly "that light that lighteth every man that cometh
into the world."
And when that light shineth clearer and brighter unto the perfect day, then,
indeed, we know of a surety that we ourselves are nucleated of that same
glorious essence of combined intellect and spirit. Then we know that we
ourselves are the Sun-gods, and that the ancient allegory is not a "myth," but
the very essence of our own Selfhood.