Garstin_Secret Fire 1
Garstin_Secret Fire 1
Garstin_Secret Fire 1
By E. J. LANGFORD GARSTIN
The Secret Fire of the Alchemists has been described by them
as "The All in All," and, next to the solution of the Sophic salt,
it is said to be the greatest difficulty in the whole art, Without
knowledge of the Fire nothing can be attained, even if the
Matter be known.
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PREFACE
In a previous work entitled Theurgy, or the Hermetic Practice, we have
endeavoured broadly to indicate the Telestic or
Perfecting ground of Alchemy in its Spiritual aspect. In the present short
treatise the object we have proposed for ourselves is a more particular
consideration of one of the great principles underlying the Art than was
previously possible.
At the same time we do not wish to suggest that the value of this Key is
in any sense directly proportional to its age, for it is, on the contrary, our
firm opinion that its worth is an inherent quality, independent of its date,
but self-evident to those who are familiar with it. And though the
Sephiroth have been described by some as arbitrary distinctions and a
gratuitous multiplication of entities, we feel that such criticism arises
rather from a lack of familiarity with the subject than from any real
understanding.
For the word " arbitrary " is an assertion that we are convinced requires
considerable qualification, so that the alleged "gratuitous multiplication"
hardly arises. At the same time the Qabalah deals with Mathesis, or the
doctrine of the Whole, as well as with Ontology, or that of the Parts or
Singulars, of which latter the whole creation is an example, the apparent,
real or material being, as Oken phrases it in his Physio-Philosophy, the
ideal, non-apparent or spiritual in a state of definition and limitation of
Form, dissevered and become finite. While, therefore, the ideal, which is
the object of our quest, exists under an indefinite, eternal, single form, the
Real exists, ipso facto, under the form of multiplicity.
Nor can the masters of the Art be blamed if the unskilled practitioner,
taking their recipes and instructions literally, fails to achieve any result;
for time and again the warning is repeated not to mistake the shadow for
the substance, not to imagine that in the preparations of the apothecary
is to be found the First Matter.
Let us, as a preliminary, make it quite clear that in our present quest, at
any rate, we are concerned with Spiritual and not Material Alchemy.
Indeed, we would give it as our considered opinion and firm conviction
that the physical practice is impossible for those who have not already
made some progress along theurgical lines, and may, in fact, prove to be
full of danger.
Nor need the reader suppose that the imposition of such limits to our
inquiry is in the nature of a restriction. On the contrary, it will be obvious
that the problem we are to investigate is the greater of the two, and
infinitely the more important. And that it was thus regarded by the
philosophers is everywhere apparent when we come to study their
writings seriously. Not that the work has not been dealt with from the
point of view of physical transmutation, to deny which would be an
absurdity, but simply because allusions to the spirit and to the Spiritual
are of constant occurrence even in the more material treatises.
Even though this is the case, before proceeding to attempt any detailed
analysis of the many statements about Sulphur to which the Sages have
committed themselves, it may be as well to review some of the
information relating to this subject, which is to be found outside the
purely Alchemical writings, amplifying it where need be, however, by
reference to the latter. From such considerations we may hope to find
some clue to the maze that confronts us, some guidance enabling us to
penetrate its dim recesses.
And lest, after such a statement, we may be asked why we have omitted
the Magical Fire from our catalogue of the principal aspects of Fire,
which we have proposed to discuss, we hasten to assert that we have
not, in fact, been guilty of any such neglect, as we shall hope to show in
the chapters which follow.
CHAPTER I
On examining the Bible we find that without any apparent regard for
portraying Him as being wrathful or otherwise, the appearances of God to
mortal man seem almost always to have been in Fire or Flame, frequently
synonyrnous with what is termed the Glory of the Lord. And the same
applies to His Angelic Messengers in many cases, as, in fact, it is written
(Ps. civ, 4): "He maketh His Angels
spirits (winds or breaths) and His Ministers a flaming Fire." Such
instances are very frequent, as when the Angel of the Lord appeared to
Moses in a flame of fire on Horeb (Exod. iii, 2) and the Lord called to him
out of the burning bush (ibid. 4), and when the Lord descended upon
Sinai in Fire (ibid. xvii, 18).
It is not, therefore, surprising that Fire was taken not merely as a symbol
of the holiness and justice of God, but that some of those of old were
given occasion to imagine that God dwelt in fire and that the heaven
world was primarily a realm of fire. To strengthen this impression, fire
from heaven appears frequently to have fallen upon the victims sacrificed
to the Lord, as a mark of His presence and approbation. It has even been
hazarded, though entirely without evidence, that in this manner the
acceptance of Abel's sacrifice was expressed. At least when the Lord
made a covenant with Abraham, a fire passed through the divided pieces
of the sacrifice and consumed them (Gen. xv, 17) ; and fire fell upon the
sacrifices that were offered at the dedication of the Tabernacle (Lev. ix,
24), upon those of Manoah, the father of Samson (Judges xiii, 19-20),
upon the holocaust of Solomon at the dedication of the Temple (II Chron.
vii, i) and in many other instances which it would be tedious to mention.
We also refrain from indicating examples of the wrath of God, which are
as obvious as they are numerous.
Such stories, ideas or descriptions, therefore, being current—and not
merely among the Jews—the Eastern peoples, and particularly the
Persians, evinced a tendency to worship the fire itself, or rather, taking fire
to be God's symbol, and the visible manifestation of His presence, they
worshipped Him in or through fire. Such a cult is to be found among the
Assyrians and Chaldeans, and in some measure among the Egyptians,
whence it spread westwards among the Greeks, who brought it to Rome.
(Aeneid
ii,
296).
And though it was Numa who instituted the order of the Vestal Virgins,
the practice was in force among the Albans long before his time.
Vesta is, of course, properly an Oriental word, and it has even been
suggested that it derives from the Hebrew ASh, Ash, Fire, which root is
distinguishable in the Phoenician Astarte and in Ashtoreth. In any event
the Hebrew letter Sh (Shin), which is one of the three Mother Letters of
that alphabet, is referred to the element of Fire. Qabalistically it is the
symbol of RVCh ALHIM, Ruach Elohim, the Spirit of the Elohim, which
vibrated upon the face of the waters in Gen. i, 2, the two being, by
Gematria, numerically
equivalent as Sh is 300, while the total numeration of RVCh ALHIM is the
same. And this is feminine, as is indicated in the genders of both words,
and amplified in the Sepher Yetirah, or Book of Formation, i, 9 : " AChTh
RVCh ALHIM ChIIM, Achath (feminine, not AChD, Achad, masculine)
Ruach Elohim Chiim, One is She, the Spirit of the Elohim of Life." We may
also remark that AShH, Ashah, is Woman, while with other pointing it
means Fire, though this is usually in the sense of Sacrificial Fire.
According to the Zohar I, fol. 7oa, in Lev. i, 17, we should read Woman and
not Fire, which makes the passage read "The offering is a woman." This is
to be taken as symbolising the union of the male and female principles,
for the offering itself was a male.
In any event the custom seems to have been more or less general from
the very earliest times, to maintain a constant and ever-burning fire in
honour of the God or Gods, and Porphyry suggests that this was because
Fire was most like the Gods, not actually, but in their appearance to
mortals, the brightness which was characteristic on such occasions not
being most like them themselves, but like the Divine Halo, Splendour or
Glory in which they appeared enveloped.
It is thus possible to envisage how the practices of fire-worship
originated, first in the vision, or in the attempted description of such
vision, and how they altered in the gradual mistaking of the symbol for
the reality, a process with which we are all too familiar in the history of
religion, culminating in a false magic based on mistaken analogies, and
the dreadful and degrading ceremonial in regard to a fire reverenced as
the actual, extreme physical form of God, including the awful rites of
human sacrifice as a means of
propitiation.
These all taught that human reason was an insufficient guide, and that
by its means the true wisdom was unobtainable. According to their
teaching the only means of arriving at the truth was by interior
illumination through the noetic or epistemonic faculty of direct cognition,
and they sought, therefore, after the divine light or fire, through which
such understanding can be obtained. This is that light or fire of the mind,
which is spoken of in the Divine Poemander of Hermes Trismegistus thus
:
" Then, said I, Who art thou ? I am, quoth he, Poemander, the Mind of the
Great Lord . . . and I am always present with thee . . . and whatsoever
thou wouldst learn I will teach thee. . . . And straightway, in the twinkling
of an eye all things were opened to me; and I saw an infinite Light, all
things were become Light, both sweet and exceedingly pleasant. And I
was wonderfully delighted in the beholding it. . . . Then from that Light a
certain holy Word joined itself unto Nature, and out flew the pure and
unmixed fire . . . upward on high. It was exceedingly light, sharp and
operative withal, and the air, which was also Light, followed the spirit, and
mounted up with the Fire. . . . Then said he, I am that Light the Mind thy
God . . . and that bright and lightful Word from the Mind is the Son of God.
. . . Conceive well the Light in thy Mind, and Know It . . . (it) is innumerable
and the truly indefinite ornament or world, and . . . the fire is
comprehended or contained in and by a most great Power and
constrained to keep its station. . . . And let him that is endued with Mind
know himself to be immortal . . . let (him). . . mark, consider and know
himself well. Have not all men a mind? Have a heed what thou sayest, for
I, the Mind, come into men that are holy and good and pure and merciful,
and that live piously and religiously, and my presence is a help unto them
and forthwith they know all things . . . . But to the foolish, and evil, and
wicked, and envious, and covetous, and murderers, and profane, I am far
off, giving place to the revenging Demon."
CHAPTER II
Perhaps some of the finest expressions of the Fire Philosophy, which we
have had under consideration in the previous chapter, are to be found in
the Chaldean or Zoroastrian Oracles. These, unfortunately, exist only in a
fragmentary form as quotations in the books of various writers,
principally the later Platonists, but it has been established that although
such quotations are generally vaguely introduced as sayings of the
Chaldeans, the Oracles, the Gods, etc., they existed at one time as a
single poem. The date or origin of this is unknown, but the philosopher
Porphyry considered it to be very old. In any event it should be
remembered that the Chaldean Magi preserved their Occult wisdom by a
continual Oral Tradition from father to son, just as the Qabalah was
passed on in Israel.
From this Supreme and Unimaginable Source streams forth all Mercy
and Benignity, so that when Microprosopus, the Lesser Countenance,
looks upwards to Macroprosopus, the Vast Countenance, the Influx
passes over, and those below are mitigated. He is spoken of as Hoa, He,
not as Ateh, Thou, and He is beyond all time and space and form. Of Him
Eliphas Levi has aptly said: "He is the Space containing the Universe, but
the Universe is not His space."
But to continue:
"For not in Matter did the Fire which is in the Beyond first enclose His
power in acts, but in Mind; for the Former of the Fiery World is the Mind of
Mind. Who first sprang from Mind, clothing the one Fire with the other
Fire; binding them together so that He might mingle the Fountainous
Craters, while still preserving unsullied the Brilliance of His own Fire. And
thence a Fiery Whirlwind drawing down the Brilliance of the Flashing
Flame, penetrating the Abysses of the Universe; for thencefrom
downwards all extend their wondrous rays, abundantly animating Light,
Fire, Ether and the Universe. From Him leap forth all relentless thunders,
and the whirlwind-wrapped, storm-enrolled Bosoms of the All-Splendid
strength of Hecate, Father-begotten; and He Who encircleth the Brilliance
of Fire, and the strong Spirit of the Poles, all Fiery beyond."
One can sense here the tremendous, whirling, fiery life emanating those
archetypal forms, which were the inner worlds, on which the universe is
based. And while the Qabalisitic World of Atziluth, pure Deity, is the
Archetypal World, the World of Briah, composed of the Sephiroth
Chokmah and Binah, Wisdom and Understanding, the Father and Mother
—who, be it understood, are not themselves the Supreme, but, with
Kether, form the Three Supernals—is the Creative World, the Throne, as
we have said before. In Revelation (xxii, i) the River of Life is said to flow
forth from the Throne of God, and this is the same as the Qabalistic River
Nahar, which issues from Binah. The primary movement of creation, too,
is given in the name of the Order of Angels attributed to Kether, which is
Rashith Ha-Galgalim, the Beginnings of Whirling Movements.
"The Creator of all, self-operating, formed the World, and there was a
certain mass of Fire; and all these, self-operating, He produced, so that
the Kosmic body might be completely manifest and not appear
membranous. And He fixed a vast multitude of unwandering Stars, not by
a strain laborious and hurtful, but to uphold them with stability void of
movement, forcing Fire forwards unto Fire.
"As rays of Light his Locks flow forth, stretching to the confines of
space. The wholeness of the Sun is in the Supermundane Orders, for
therein a Solar World and endless Light subsist. And his disk is in the
Starless, above the Inerratic Sphere, and he is the centre of the Triple
World. The Sun is Fire, and the Dispenser of Fire, he is also the Channel of
the Higher Fire."
We also note the distinction between the "Sun visible to sense" as Philo
terms it, and the hidden Sun which is "the centre of the Triple World." In a
sense this Sun is Microprosopus, through Whom, as we have previously
indicated, the Divine Influx descends, so that He is "the Channel of the
Higher Fire."
And if we might enlarge yet a little farther, we would say that in these
and the preceding sections a distinction is made between the Mind in its
more potential aspect, and the Mind in operation, which is the Formative
Mind. These are the "Hidden" and "Manifested" Fires of Simon Magus,
mentioned in The Great Announcement, where he says:
"The hidden aspects of the Fire are concealed in the manifest, and the
manifest produced in the hidden. . . . And the manifested side of the Fire
has all things in itself which a man can perceive of things visible, or
which he unconsciously fails to perceive; whereas the hidden side is
every thing which one can conceive as intelligible, or which a man fails to
conceive." It is therefore called the Ever-living or Holy Fire, and was taken
to be both intelligible and immaterial as well as sensible and material,
according to its plane of operation.
And lest any should doubt that a Second Father is intended, let him hear
what follows:
"The Father hath hastily withdrawn Himself; but hath not shut up His
own Fire in His Intellectual Power. All things are sprung from that one
Fire. For all things did the Father of all perfect, and delivered them over to
the Second Mind, Whom all Races of Men call First. The Mind of the
Father, riding on subtile guiders, which glitter with the tracings of
inflexible and relentless Fire. The Soul of the All, being a brilliant Fire, by
the power of the Father remaineth Immortal, and is Mistress of Life and
filleth up the many recesses of the Bosom of the World. The Channels
being intermixed therein. She performeth the Works of Incorruptible Fire."
"But these are Mysteries which I evolve in the profound Abyss of the
Mind. Such a Fire existeth, extending through the rushings of Air, or even
a Fire Formless, whence cometh the Image of a Voice, or even a flashing
Light, abounding, revolving, whirling forth, crying aloud. Also there is the
Vision of the fire-flashing Courser of Light, or also a child borne aloft on
the shoulders of the celestial steed, fiery, or clothed with Gold, or naked,
or shooting with the bow shafts of Light, and standing on the shoulders
of the Horse. But if thy meditation prolongeth itself thou shalt unite all
these Symbols in the form of the Lion."
"Then when no longer are visible unto thee the Vault of the Heavens, the
Mass of the Earth ; when to thee the Stars have lost their Light, and the
Lamp of the Moon is veiled; when the Earth abideth not, and around thee
is the Lightning Flame; then call not before thyself the Visible Image of
the Soul of Nature! For thou must not behold it ere thy soul be purged by
the Sacred Rites. Since ever dragging down the Soul, and leading it from
Sacred Things, from the confines of Matter arise the terrestrial dog-faced
demons, never showing a true image unto mortal gaze.
"So therefore, first the Priest who governeth the Works of Fire, must
sprinkle with the Water of the loud-resounding Sea. And when, after all
the Phantoms, thou shalt see that Holy and Formless Fire; that Fire that
darts and flashes through the hidden depths of the Universe: Hear thou
the Voice of Fire."
Here the allusion is to the Sacred Trance, the Mantic state, when, after
the Alchemical Solution, the Soul or Spirit, withdrawing from the lower
vehicles, penetrates into the hidden worlds. Therefore the warning not to
attempt to draw the Veil of Isis until the necessary purgations have been
successfully performed, for She is not lightly to be profaned. Nor must
the soul be led away by the delusive and phantasmal appearances which
beset it on its passage through the Astral World "wherein continually lieth
a faithless Depth, delighting in unintelligible Images."
"Where the Paternal Monad is, the Monad is enlarged and generateth
Two. And beside Him is seated the Duad, and glittereth with Intellectual
Sections; also to govern all things and to Order everything not Ordered.
For in the whole Universe shineth the Triad, over which the Monad ruleth.
This Order is the beginning of all Sections.
"For the Mind of the Father said that all things should be cut into Three.
Whose Will assented, and then all things were so divided. For the Mind of
the Eternal Father said into Three, governing all things by Mind. And there
appeared in IT, in the Triad, Virtue, Wisdom and Multiscient Truth. Thus
floweth forth the Form of the Triad, being pre-existent. Not the First
Essence, but that whereby
all things are measured.
"For thou shalt know that all things bow before the Supernals. The first
course is sacred; but in the midst thereof another, the Third, Aerial, which
cherisheth Earth in Fire. And the Fountain of Fountains and of all
Fountains. The Matrix containing all. Thence abundantly springeth forth
the Generation of Multifarious Matter."
"If thou extendest the Fiery Mind to the work of Piety, thou wilt preserve
the flexible body.
"The Telestic life, through a Divine Fire, removeth all the stains, together
with every foreign and irrational nature which the Spirit of the Soul
attracteth from generation."
The Fiery Mind is that quality in Man which is the counterpart of the
Divine Understanding, Binah; that which, according to the Qabalistic
division of the Soul is termed Neshamah; while the flexible body would
appear to be what is more commonly called the Subtle Body. Telestic, as
we have elsewhere indicated, means perfecting, and was applied to the
Theurgical practices. Such a life, we learn, removes "all stains, together
with every foreign and irrational nature." Compare this with that saying of
St. Thomas Aquinas: "The Stone is One, the Medicine is One, to which we
add nothing, only in the preparation removing superfluities."
Much more might be said about this remarkable and inspiring poem, but
it would not fall properly within the limits of the inquiry we have proposed
for ourselves, and we must pass on to other and more immediate
correspondences, remarking only, in passing, that the passages we have
selected, are those which actually bear closely upon our main theme; and
that the very scanty notes we have supplied, are designed particularly to
draw the attention of the reader to those ideas to which we shall have
occasion subsequently to refer.
CHAPTER III
We will now turn our attention to the Purificatory Fire, with its subsidiary
correlative the Sacrificial Fire, the prime object of which latter, except in
certain cases of a propitiatory nature, usually wrongly conceived, was as
a rule connected with the purging and cleansing of the spiritual nature,
symbolising the destruction of the impurities and defilements of the soul.
Porphyry, in his letter to Anebo (lamblichos, De Mysteriis), says that he is
in doubt in regard to the sacrifices, what utility or power they possess in
the world and with the Gods, and for what reason they are performed,
appropriate for the beings thus honoured, and advantageously for the
persons who present the gifts. He also adds that the Gods require that
the interpreters of the oracles observe strict abstinence from animal
substances, in order that they may not be made impure by the fumes
from the bodies ; yet they themselves are allured most of all by the fumes
of the sacrifices of animals.
In the first place he points out that the higher Divinities are not in any
way affected by such exhalations, and adds that their purpose "is by no
means to offer them for the sake of honour along in the same way that
we honour benefactors; nor for the sake of grateful acknowledgment of
benefits which the Gods have bestowed upon us; nor yet as a first-fruit or
gift by way of recompense for older gifts which the Gods have made to
us," going so far as to state that "the offering of anything belonging to the
realm of matter is alien and repugnant to the Divinities of the supra-
material world." With this we may well compare (Isa., i, 11-14): "To what
purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me saith the Lord? I
delight not in the blood of bullocks or of lambs or of goats. Who hath
required this at your hand? Bring no more vain oblations; incense is an
abomination unto me; your appointed feasts my soul hateth." And (Amos
v, 22): " Yea, though ye offer me your burnt offerings and meat offerings, I
will not accept them; neither will I regard the peace offerings of vour fat
beasts." Also (Jer. vi, 20); "To what purpose cometh there to me incense
from Sheba, and the sweet cane from a far country? Your burnt offerings
are not acceptable, nor your sacrifices sweet unto me." Lastly (ibid. vii,
22): "I spake not unto your fathers, nor commanded them in the day that I
brought them out of the land of Egypt concerning burnt offerings or
sacrifices."
Abammon points out that the true sacrificial fire is a type illustrating the
process—or one of the processes—which inducts the soul towards the
higher, for as fire transforms all hard and refractory materials to luminant
and tenuous bodies, so the characteristics in us become like the Gods.
We are therefore led up by the sacrificial Fire to the Fire of the Gods in the
same way that Fire rises to Fire, by leading and drawing upward those
qualities which drag downward and are opposed to the divine and
celestial essences.
Marsilio Picino, the Italian Platonist, says, according to Wilder, that the
Fire which is kindled by us is more like heaven than what is left behind. It
is made participant of light, which is something incorporeal, the most
powerful of all things, and, as if alive, perpetually moving, dividing
everything, yet not itself divisible; absorbing all things into itself, yet
evading every alien mixture; and suddenly, when it is fully set free, flying
back to the celestial fire which is latent everywhere.
"As the Gods cut the matter away with the electric fire, and separate
from it whatsoever things are non-material in their essence, but yet are
firmly held and fettered by it," says Abammon, "and as they likewise
evolve impassive natures from the impassible—so also that fire that is
with us, imitating the operation of the divine fire . . . releases us from the
bonds of generated existence, makes us like the Gods, and likewise
renders us fit for their friendship, and our material nature near to the non-
material essence."
This is what Plotinus means (Ennead iii., 6, sect. 5) when he says: "To
purify the soul is to isolate her, preventing her from attaching herself to
other things ... in raising her from the things here below to intelligible
entities; also to wean her from the body; for in that case she is no longer
sufficiently attached to it to be enslaved to it, resembling a light which is
not absorbed in the whirlwind (of matter).... To purify the soul is to ...
hinder her from inclining towards lower things, or from representing their
images to herself; it means annihilating the things from which she is thus
separated, so that she is no longer choked."
And the Holy Hierotheos, dealing with this point says (The Book of the
Holy Hierotheos, Discourse iii, 4): "Now concerning Holy Baptism, my son,
for my part I say that no man can be saved if he be not accounted worthy
of Holy Baptism; but it is easy for us to learn from our Lord that there is a
Second Baptism; for when he wished to teach the band of the Apostles
the secret of this Baptism, he spoke thus, 'For I have a Baptism to be
baptised with which ye know not.' "
We must here advise the reader that Hierotheos indicates that this
Baptism, which is of Fire, took place with the majority of mankind after
they had left the physical body, there being but few who, in life, could
attain to the degree of separation necessary to receive this Sacrament.
The quotation from the sayings of Jesus will not be found in the Gospels,
unless, as Mr. Marsh, the translator of the book, suggests, it is a
combination of Luke xii, 50 with John iv, 52. It may, however, come from
some other
collection.
We do not find any actual account of the Baptism of Fire in the Book of
the Holy Hierotheos, but in the Pistis Sophia,Book III, chap. 114, we read:
"Now, therefore, he who shall receive the mysteries of the baptism, then
the mystery of them becometh a great fire, exceedingly fierce and wise,
which burneth up the sins and entereth into the soul secretly and
consumeth all the sins which the counterfeiting spirit hath implanted in it.
And when it hath finished purifying all the sins which the counterfeiting
spirit hath implanted in the soul, it entereth into the body secretly and
pursueth all the pursuers secretly and separateth them off on the side of
the body. For it pursueth the counterfeiting spirit and the destiny and
separateth them off from the power and from the soul, and putteth them
on the side of the body, so that it separateth off the counterfeiting spirit
and the destiny of the body into one portion; the soul and the power, on
the other hand, it separateth into another. The mystery of the baptism on
the contrary, remaineth in the midst of the two, continually separating
them from one another, so that it maketh them clean and purifieth them,
in order that they may not be stained with matter."
This Fire, we learn later on (in the Fifth Book), is the Fire which He came
to cast on the earth (Luke xii, 49), and the Living Water—vide supra
concerning the River of Life—that the Samaritan woman should have
asked for (John iv, lo-n and 14); also the Cup of Wine of the Eucharist.
According to Hierotheos, this Baptism takes place after the second
Ascent, and after it there is nothing at all to prevent the Mind from
becoming in everything like Christ, for which reason it puts away the
designation of ' Mind ' and is called ' Christ,' and is considered worthy,
divinely and holily, to effect unification with the Good. Now this
unification is not the highest stage, as we have explained in our Theurgy,
for beyond it is what is termed ' Commingling.' We need, therefore, not be
surprised to learn that Christ is nothing else than the Mind that is purified,
and that at the unification Christ is no longer worshipped, "but those
Minds are worshipped which are accounted worthy of Unification; and
Christ is no longer their Head, because Christ is ' the Head of them that
sleep,' but of those that have been awakened Christ is no longer the
Head."
We must here point out that the Universal Essence is not the Supreme,
nor would we expect it to be so if this were the World of Briah as we have
asserted. But Hierotheos tells us that this Essence exists after
separation from One (which is Kether) and before the distinctions of
Form (Yetzirah). We note also the coincidence—if it be nothing more—of
the words used, comprehension and understanding, which are so similar
to Wisdom and Understanding, namely Chokmah and Binah, the
Sephiroth comprising this world of Briah, and further the desire of the
Soul to be united to the Tree of Life, which, in Revelation (xxii, 2) grew on
either side of the River.
Now a little earlier we have pointed out that Fire and the letter Shin are
symbols of the Ruach or Spirit, and it may be thought that we are here
contradicting ourselves by separating the two Baptisms. But we are not
guilty of any such carelessness, for as the First Baptism, that of Water, is,
by its cleansing nature, symbolic of the further purgation by Fire, so is the
Second Baptism, that of Fire, the type and symbol of the Third Baptism,
that of the Pneuma, Ruach, Spirit or Air, the last stage in the apotheosis
of Man. But with this last we are not immediately concerned and we must
leave this subject, despite its extraordinary interest, and proceed to
consider our next point.
CHAPTER IV
We come now to the stage where we must consider the Solar aspects of
fire, for it is but natural that among those who regarded fire in the way we
have attempted to indicate in the earlier chapters, the Sun should be
regarded as a very special symbol of the ideas they held. And this we find
to be the case in very many instances, and especially among the
Egyptians and Persians, to whom, principally, we will confine our
attention.
Ra, and the personification of his various forms, together are the
greatest of all the Gods of the Egyptians, and it is he who must be
regarded truly as the Father of the Gods. Solar worship in Egypt is of
extreme antiquity, and appears to have been universally practised, and at
a very early period the adoration of Ra was connected with the cult of
Heru, the Hawk-God, who personified the height of heaven, and seems to
have been a symbol and type of the Sun. Strictly speaking his worship is
probably the oldest in Egypt, older even than that of Ra himself, but from
all practical points of view the latter was the oldest of all the Gods of
Egypt, for the first act of creation was the appearance of his disk above
the abyss of the waters of creation.
This idea is, of course, almost identical with the Qabalistic doctrine of
the appearance of the Vast Countenance, the "Head desired by all
desires" of the Siphra Dtzenioutha or Book of Concealed Mystery, which
Head is, as it were, the first limitation of the boundless Light, although the
Sun is more usually typified by the sixth Sephira, Tiphareth or Beauty,
which represents Microprosopus, the Lesser Countenance. On the other
hand, the analogy is quite reasonable, for the Vast Countenance emerged,
as it were, above the Chaos or Ocean, the Waters of Creation, the Tohu
Ve-Bohu of Gen. i, 2, for this was the fragments of those prior worlds
which were unable to subsist until the Head, which is Kether, or the ten
Sephiroth of the World of Atziluth, was fully conformed.
But when we come to "the double hidden place," "the Soul who movest
onwards," " who art in the house of thine obelisk," we are irresistibly
reminded of the theories of Mr. Marsham Adams regarding the
connection between the so-called "Book of the Dead" and the Great
Pyramid. And here we touch upon the telestic side of our subject once
more, for according to Mr. Adams the Pyramid was used as a Temple of
Initiation, and the Grand Gallery corresponded to the Hall of the Two
Truths. What is this but " the double hidden place," and what is the Initiate
but "the Soul who movest onwards" ; and is not " the House of thine
Obelisk " the Pyramid itself?
On the other hand, the "doubly hidden and secret God" suggests the
Qabalistic " Concealed of Concealed," while the " Aged One" resembles
the " Ancient of Days." Further parallels, we have no doubt, will also occur
to the thoughtful and observant student, but we must pass on to other
considerations.
Apart from this, it is generally held by most students of the Zend and
Pahlavi books, that the Avestan tradition is in the main stream of
Mazdaean descent, and it has been suggested by Darmsteter that
Avestan Mazdaism is a development and an attempted systematisation
of the cult of the Zoroastrian Magi.
Mithra, even in the Zend books, is placed almost on an equality with the
Supreme, and in the earliest days was regarded as the God of Light and
Lord of the Heavenly Light. He is not the Sun, but the Sun is his Chariot or
Charioteer. He is also Heat and Life, and corresponds in some cases to
the Orphic Eros. He is Agathodaimon, the Good Spirit, and not merely
does he bestow material benefits, but spiritual. Mithraism was thus a
Mystery of Spiritual Regeneration and Rebirth, and from the one Ritual
which is preserved to us, we can see that it was a Magical Religion, using
Theurgic Practices as its basis, all else being but subordinate.
The Symbol of this force is, of course, the Serpent, with which we shall
have to deal in rather more detail a little later on. For the moment we will
merely point out that the Good Serpent, which is Fiery and even Solar,
reappears in Alchemy as the Lion, for the two are one, though the stages
they represent are different. As we said in our Theurgy (chapter iv, page
57): "In Astrology the sign Leo is the Kerubic Emblem of Fire, while the
form of the sign is the glyph of a serpent, and the Hebrew Letter Teth, to
which it is referred in the Sepher Yet^irah or Book of Formation (probably
the oldest book of the Qabalah), means a serpent and is also a glyph of
one. . . . Leo is also the Astrological House of the Sun."
Now one of the Grades of the Mithraic Initiation was called the Leontica
or Lion Grade, and in this was celebrated a honey-rite. It will be
remembered that in the story of Samson (Judges xiv, 8), "There was a
swarm of bees and honey in the carcase of the Lion." The letter Teth, to
which, as we have said, the Sign of Leo is referred, is stated to be the
Foundation of Taste, which is alleged to have some connection with
Samson's saying (ibid. 14): "Out of the strong came forth sweetness." We
may also remark that in the highest grade, that of the Fathers, the
Initiates were called Eagles or Hawks, which is reminiscent of the forms
of Ra and Horus.
Limits of space prevent any detailed description of the Mithra Ritual, but
the curious reader can refer to the complete translation published in the
Echoes from the Gnosis Series, by G. R. S. Mead. We will merely give two
short extracts from the invocations and pass on. They are taken from the
first and third invocatory utterances respectively.
"Hear me ... 0 Lord, Who with Thy Breath hast closed the Fiery Bars of
Heaven; Twin-bodied; Ruler of the Fire; Creator of the Light; 0 Holder of
the Keys; In-breather of the Fire; Fire-hearted One, Whose Breath gives
Light; Thou Who dost joy in Fire; Beauteous of Light; 0 Lord of Light,
Whose Body is of Fire; Light-giver, Fire-sower ; Fire-loosener, Whose Life
is in the Light; Fire-whirler, Who sett'st the Light in motion; Thou Thunder-
rouser; 0 Thou Light Glory, Light-increaser; Controller of the Light
Empyrean; 0 Thou Star-tamer!"
Now one of the most extraordinary and awe-inspiring of the sculptured
symbolical figures that we find in the ruins of the Mithraea, is that which
Mr. Mead has described as "the mysterious Aeon, transcending Gods and
men. He is the Ever-living One, the Lord of Life and Light—the Autozoon,
He that gives life to himself, and is the Source and Ender of all lives. He is
Zervan Akarana, Boundless Time, and also Infinite Space, the Ingenerable
and Ineffable, the Pantheos."
The body, which is that of a lion-headed man (the head being thickly
maned) is frequently engraved all over with the signs of the Zodiac, and
bears a bolt or solar emblem on its breast. The feet vary in form, being
sometimes human and sometimes animal. From the shoulders spring
two pairs of wings, the one pair pointing upwards, while the other pair
hang down. A great serpent is coiled round the body, usually in seven
coils, and the head of the serpent lies on, or overhangs the head of the
image—in one case bending round into the mouth. In either hand is a key,
and in the right hand there is also frequently a rod or sceptre.
Here the whole figure is human, and is surmounted by a globe. Only one
pair of wings are portrayed, and the Zodiacal signs form an oval
surround. The Serpent coils about the image, as in the previous case, and
the bolt, or solar emblem is on the breast. The left hand holds a long
staff, while the right is furnished with a torch. The feet are those of an ox,
and are standing in fire, while the globe surmounting the head rests in a
nest of fire.
Now while the sculptures may quite well have represented the Aeon or
the birth of Phanes-Dionysos or Mithra from the World-Egg, it is quite
conceivable that they were rather types of the Initiate, the awakened man,
and in particular the lion head suggests this when we remember that one
of the highest grades was the Leontica. Furthermore the Zodiacal
symbols, and the emblem of the Sun on the breast suggests the
deathless Solar Body, while the serpent may well be a representation of
the Speirema or Serpent Coil, now fully aroused, the wings pointing out
the spiritual and volatile nature. The keys, of course, would be those of
knowledge, and in the other figure are symbolised by the torch. The staff,
rod or sceptre, naturally enough, represents power.
This, again, is conjectural, but in any event the re-born man is the true
Microcosm, the image of the Creator. On the other hand, the serpent
suggests—especially when in conjunction with the Solar and Zodiacal
symbols present in both examples—a number of considerations which
we must now proceed to discuss.
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