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p. 29
The Ancient Mysteries
and Secret Societies
Part Three
THE most famous of the ancient
religious Mysteries were the Eleusinian, whose rites were celebrated every
five years in the city of Eleusis to honor Ceres (Demeter, Rhea, or Isis) and
her daughter, Persephone. The initiates of the Eleusinian School were famous
throughout Greece for the beauty of their philosophic concepts and the high
standards of morality which they demonstrated in their daily lives. Because of
their excellence, these Mysteries spread to Rome and Britain, and later the
initiations were given in both these countries. The Eleusinian Mysteries,
named for the community in Attica where the sacred dramas were first
presented, are generally believed to have been founded by Eumolpos about
fourteen hundred years before the birth of Christ, and through the Platonic
system of philosophy their principles have been preserved to modern times.
The rites of Eleusis, with
their Mystic interpretations of Nature's most precious secrets, overshadowed
the civilizations of their time and gradually absorbed many smaller schools,
incorporating into their own system whatever valuable information these lesser
institutions possessed. Heckethorn sees in the Mysteries of Ceres and Bacchus
a metamorphosis of the rites of Isis and Osiris, and there is every reason to
believe that all so-called secret schools of the ancient world were branches
from one philosophic tree which, with its root in heaven and its branches on
the earth, is--like the spirit of man--an invisible but ever-present cause of
the objectified vehicles that give it expression. The Mysteries were the
channels through which this one philosophic light was disseminated, and their
initiates, resplendent with intellectual and spiritual understanding, were the
perfect fruitage of the divine tree, bearing witness before the material world
of the recondite source of all Light and Truth.
The rites of Eleusis were
divided into what were called the Lesser and the Greater Mysteries. According
to James Gardner, the Lesser Mysteries were celebrated in the spring (probably
at the time of the vernal equinox) in the town of Agrć, and the Greater, in
the fall (the time of the autumnal equinox) at Eleusis or Athens. It is
supposed that the former were given annually and the latter every five years.
The rituals of the Eleusinians were highly involved, and to understand them
required a deep study of Greek mythology, which they interpreted in its
esoteric light with the aid of their secret keys.
The Lesser Mysteries were
dedicated to Persephone. In his Eleusinian and Bacchic Mysteries,
Thomas Taylor sums up their purpose as follows: "The Lesser Mysteries were
designed by the ancient theologists, their founders, to signify occultly the
condition of the unpurified soul invested with an earthy body, and enveloped
in a material and physical nature."
The legend used in the Lesser
rites is that of the abduction of the goddess Persephone, the daughter of
Ceres, by Pluto, the lord of the underworld, or Hades. While Persephone is
picking flowers in a beautiful meadow, the earth suddenly opens and the gloomy
lord of death, riding in a magnificent chariot, emerges from its somber depths
and, grasping her in his arms, carries the screaming and struggling goddess to
his subterranean palace, where he forces her to become his queen.
It is doubtful whether many of
the initiates themselves understood the mystic meaning of this allegory, for
most of them apparently believed that it referred solely to the succession of
the seasons. It is difficult to obtain satisfactory information concerning the
Mysteries, for the candidates were bound by inviolable oaths never to reveal
their inner secrets to the profane. At the beginning of the ceremony of
initiation, the candidate stood upon the skins of animals sacrificed for the
purpose, and vowed that death should seal his lips before he would divulge the
sacred truths which were about to be communicated to him. Through indirect
channels, however, some of their secrets have been preserved. The teachings
given to the neophytes were substantially as follows:
The soul of man--often called
Psyche, and in the Eleusinian Mysteries symbolized by Persephone--is
essentially a spiritual thing. Its true home is in the higher worlds, where,
free from the bondage of material form and material concepts, it is said to be
truly alive and self-expressive. The human, or physical, nature of man,
according to this doctrine, is a tomb, a quagmire, a false and impermanent
thing, the source of all sorrow and suffering. Plato describes the body as the
sepulcher of the soul; and by this he means not only the human form but also
the human nature.
The gloom and depression of the
Lesser Mysteries represented the agony of the spiritual soul unable to express
itself because it has accepted the limitations and illusions of the human
environment. The crux of the Eleusinian argument was that man is neither
better nor wiser after death than during life. If he does not rise above
ignorance during his sojourn here, man goes at death into eternity to wander
about forever, making the same mistakes which he made here. If he does not
outgrow the desire for material possessions here, he will carry it with him
into the invisible world, where, because he can never gratify the desire, he
will continue in endless agony. Dante's Inferno is symbolically
descriptive of the sufferings of those who never freed their spiritual natures
from the cravings, habits, viewpoints, and limitations of their Plutonic
personalities. Those who made no endeavor to improve themselves (whose souls
have slept) during their physical lives, passed at death into Hades, where,
lying in rows, they slept through all eternity as they had slept through life.
To the Eleusinian philosophers,
birch into the physical world was death in the fullest sense of the word, and
the only true birth was that of the spiritual soul of man rising out of the
womb of his own fleshly nature. "The soul is dead that slumbers," says
Longfellow, and in this he strikes the keynote of the Eleusinian Mysteries.
Just as Narcissus, gazing at himself in the water (the ancients used this
mobile element to symbolize the transitory, illusionary, material universe)
lost his life trying to embrace a reflection, so man, gazing into the mirror
of Nature and accepting as his real self the senseless clay that he sees
reflected, loses the opportunity afforded by physical life to unfold his
immortal, invisible Self.
An ancient initiate once said
that the living are ruled by the dead. Only those conversant with the
Eleusinian concept of life could understand that statement. It means that the
majority of people are not ruled by their living spirits but by their
senseless (hence dead) animal personalities. Transmigration and reincarnation
were taught in these Mysteries, but in a somewhat unusual manner. It was
believed that at midnight the invisible worlds were closest to the Terrestrial
sphere and that souls coming into material existence slipped in during the
midnight hour. For this reason many of the Eleusinian
THE RAPE OF PERSEPHONE.
From Thomassin's Recucil des
Figures, Groupes, Themes, Fontaines, Vases et autres Ornements.
Pluto, the lord of the underworld,
represents the body intelligence of man; and the rape of Persephone is
symbolic of the divine nature assaulted and defiled by the animal soul and
dragged downward into the somber darkness of Hades, which is here used as a
synonym for the material, or objective, sphere of consciousness.
In his Disquisitions upon the Painted
Greek Vases, James Christie presents Meursius' version of the occurrences
taking place during the nine days required for the enactment of the Greater
Eleusinian Rites. The first day was that of general meeting, during which
those to be initiated were questioned concerning their several qualifications.
The second day was spent in a procession to the sea, possibly for the
submerging of a image of the presiding goddess. The third day was opened by
the sacrifice of a mullet. On the fourth day the mystic basket containing
certain sacred symbols was brought to Eleusis, accompanied by a number of
female devotees carrying smaller baskets. On the evening of the fifth day
there was a torch race, on the sixth a procession led by a statue of Iacchus,
and on the seventh an athletic contest. The eighth day was devoted to a
repetition of the ceremonial for the benefit of any who might have been
prevented from coming sooner. The ninth and last day was devoted to the
deepest philosophical issues of the Eleusinia, during which an urn or jar--the
symbol of Bacchus--was exhibited as an emblem of supreme importance.
p. 30
ceremonies were performed at
midnight. Some of those sleeping spirits who had failed to awaken their higher
natures during the earth life and who now floated around in the invisible
worlds, surrounded by a darkness of their own making, occasionally slipped
through at this hour and assumed the forms of various creatures.
The mystics of Eleusis also
laid stress upon the evil of suicide, explaining that there was a profound
mystery concerning this crime of which they could not speak, but warning their
disciples that a great sorrow comes to all who take their own lives. This, in
substance, constitutes the esoteric doctrine given to the initiates of the
Lesser Mysteries. As the degree dealt largely with the miseries of those who
failed to make the best use of their philosophic opportunities, the chambers
of initiation were subterranean and the horrors of Hades were vividly depicted
in a complicated ritualistic drama. After passing successfully through the
tortuous passageways, with their trials and dangers, the candidate received
the honorary title of Mystes. This meant one who saw through a veil or
had a clouded vision. It also signified that the candidate had been brought up
to the veil, which would be torn away in the higher degree. The modern word
mystic, as referring to a seeker after truth according to the dictates of
the heart along the path of faith, is probably derived from this ancient word,
for faith is belief in the reality of things unseen or veiled.
The Greater Mysteries (into
which the candidate was admitted only after he had successfully passed through
the ordeals of the Lesser, and not always then) were sacred to Ceres, the
mother of Persephone, and represent her as wandering through the world in
quest of her abducted daughter. Ceres carried two torches, intuition and
reason, to aid her in the search for her lost child (the soul). At last she
found Persephone not far from Eleusis, and out of gratitude taught the people
there to cultivate corn, which is sacred to her. She also founded the
Mysteries. Ceres appeared before Pluto, god of the souls of the dead, and
pleaded with him to allow Persephone to return to her home. This the god at
first refused to do, because Persephone had eaten of the pomegranate, the
fruit of mortality. At last, however, he compromised and agreed to permit
Persephone to live in the upper world half of the year if she would stay with
him in the darkness of Hades for the remaining half.
The Greeks believed that
Persephone was a manifestation of the solar energy, which in the winter months
lived under the earth with Pluto, but in the summer returned again with the
goddess of productiveness. There is a legend that the flowers loved Persephone
and that every year when she left for the dark realms of Pluto, the plants and
shrubs would die of grief. While the profane and uninitiated had their own
opinions on these subjects, the truths of the Greek allegories remained safely
concealed by the priests, who alone recognized the sublimity of these great
philosophic and religious parables.
Thomas Taylor epitomizes the
doctrines of the Greater Mysteries in the following statement: "The Greater
(Mysteries) obscurely intimated, by mystic and splendid visions, the felicity
of the soul both here and hereafter when purified from the defilement of a
material nature, and constantly elevated to the realities of intellectual
(spiritual) vision."
Just as the Lesser Mysteries
discussed the prenatal epoch of man when the consciousness in its nine days (embryologically,
months) was descending into the realm of illusion and assuming the veil of
unreality, so the Greater Mysteries discussed the principles of spiritual
regeneration and revealed to initiates not only the simplest but also the most
direct and complete method of liberating their higher natures from the bondage
of material ignorance. Like Prometheus chained to the top of Mount Caucasus,
man's higher nature is chained to his inadequate personality. The nine days of
initiation were also symbolic of the nine spheres through which the human soul
descends during the process of assuming a terrestrial form. The secret
exercises for spiritual unfoldment given to disciples of the higher degrees
are unknown, but there is every reason to believe that they were similar to
the Brahmanic Mysteries, since it is known that the Eleusinian ceremonies were
closed with the Sanskrit words "Konx Om Pax."
That part of the allegory
referring to the two six-month periods during one of which Persephone must
remain with Pluto, while during the other she may revisit the upper world,
offers material for deep consideration. It is probable that the Eleusinians
realized that the soul left the body during steep, or at least was made
capable of leaving by the special training which undoubtedly they were in a
position to give. Thus Persephone would remain as the queen of Pluto's realm
during the waking hours, but would ascend to the spiritual worlds during the
periods of sleep. The initiate was taught how to intercede with Pluto to
permit Persephone (the initiate's soul) to ascend from the darkness of his
material nature into the light of understanding. When thus freed from the
shackles of clay and crystallized concepts, the initiate was liberated not
only for the period of his life but for all eternity, for never thereafter was
he divested of those soul qualities which after death were his vehicles for
manifestation and expression in the so-called heaven world.
In contrast to the idea of
Hades as a state of darkness below, the gods were said to inhabit the tops of
mountains, a well-known example being Mount Olympus, where the twelve deities
of the Greek pantheon were said to dwell together. In his initiatory
wanderings the neophyte therefore entered chambers of ever-increasing
brilliancy to portray the ascent of the spirit from the lower worlds into the
realms of bliss. As the climax to such wanderings he entered a great vaulted
room, in the center of which stood a brilliantly illumined statue of the
goddess Ceres. Here, in the presence of the hierophant and surrounded by
priests in magnificent robes, he was instructed in the highest of the secret
mysteries of the Eleusis. At the conclusion of this ceremony he was hailed as
an Epoptes, which means one who has beheld or seen directly. For this
reason also initiation was termed autopsy. The Epoptes was then given
certain sacred books, probably written in cipher, together with tablets of
stone on which secret instructions were engraved.
In The Obelisk in
Freemasonry, John A. Weisse describes the officiating personages of the
Eleusinian Mysteries as consisting of a male and a female hierophant who
directed the initiations; a male and a female torchbearer; a male herald; and
a male and a female altar attendant. There were also numerous minor officials.
He states that, according to Porphyry, the hierophant represents Plato's
Demiurgus, or Creator of the world; the torch bearer, the Sun; the altar
man, the Moon; the herald, Hermes, or Mercury; and the other officials, minor
stars.
From the records available, a
number of strange and apparently supernatural phenomena accompanied the
rituals. Many initiates claim to have actually seen the living gods
themselves. Whether this was the result of religious ecstasy or the actual
cooperation of invisible powers with the visible priests must remain a
mystery. In The Metamorphosis, or Golden Ass, Apuleius thus describes
what in all probability is his initiation into the Eleusinian Mysteries:
"I approached to the confines
of death, and having trod on the threshold of Proserpine I, returned from it,
being carried through all the elements. At midnight I saw the sun shining with
a splendid light; and I manifestly drew near to, the gods beneath, and the
gods above, and proximately adored them."
Women and children were
admitted to the Eleusinian Mysteries, and at one time there were literally
thousands of initiates. Because this vast host was not prepared for the
highest spiritual and mystical doctrines, a division necessarily took place
within the society itself. The higher teachings were given to only a limited
number of initiates who, because of superior mentality, showed a comprehensive
grasp of their underlying philosophical concepts. Socrates refused to be
initiated into the Eleusinian Mysteries, for knowing its principles without
being a member of the order he realized that membership would seal his tongue.
That the Mysteries of Eleusis were based upon great and eternal truths is
attested by the veneration in which they were held by the great minds of the
ancient world. M. Ouvaroff asks, "Would Pindar, Plato, Cicero, Epictetus, have
spoken of them with such admiration, if the hierophant had satisfied himself
with loudly proclaiming his own opinions, or those of his order?"
The garments in which
candidates were initiated were preserved for many years and were believed to
possess almost sacred properties. Just as the soul can have no covering save
wisdom and virtue, so the candidates--being as yet without true
knowledge--were presented to the Mysteries unclothed, being first: given the
skin of an animal and later a consecrated robe to symbolize the philosophical
teachings received by the initiate. During the course of initiation the
candidate
CERES, THE PATRON OF THE MYSTERIES.
From a mural painting in
Pompeii.
Ceres, or Demeter, was the
daughter of Kronos and Rhea, and by Zeus the mother of Persephone. Some
believe her to be the goddess of the earth, but more correctly she is the
deity protecting agriculture in general and corn in particular. The Poppy is
sacred to Ceres and she is often shown carrying or ornamented by a garland of
these flowers. In the Mysteries, Ceres represented riding in a chariot drawn
by winged serpents.
p. 31
THE PROCESSIONAL OF THE BACCHIC RITES.
From Ovid's Metamorphosis.
In the initiation, of the Bacchic
Mysteries, the rôle of Bacchus is played by the candidate who, set upon by
priests in the guise of the Titans, is slain and finally restored to life
amidst great rejoicing. The Bacchic Mysteries were given every three years,
and like the Eleusinian Mysteries, were divided into two degrees. The
initiates were crowned with myrtle and ivy, plants which were sacred to
Bacchus.
In the Anacalypsis, Godfrey
Higgins conclusively establishes Bacchus (Dionysos) as one of the early pagan
forms of the Christos myth, "The birthplace of Bacchus, called Sabazius or
Sabaoth, was claimed by several places in Greece; but on Mount Zelmisus, in
Thrace, his worship seems to have been chiefly celebrated. He was born of a
virgin on the 25th of December; he performed great miracles for the good of
mankind; particularly one in which he changed water into wine; he rode in a
triumphal procession on an ass; he was put to death by the Titans, and rose
again from the dead on the 25th of March: he was always called the Saviour. In
his mysteries, he was shown to the people, as an infant is by the Christians
at this day, on Christmas Day morning in Rome."
While Apollo most generally represents
the sun, Bacchus is also a form of solar energy, for his resurrection was
accomplished with the assistance of Apollo. The resurrection of Bacchus
signifies merely the extraction or disentanglement of the various Parts of the
Bacchic constitution from the Titanic constitution of the world. This is
symbolized by the smoke or soot rising from the burned bodies of the Titans.
The soul is symbolized by smoke because it is extracted by the fire of the
Mysteries. Smoke signifies the ascension of the soul, far evolution is the
process of the soul rising, like smoke, from the divinely consumed material
mass. At me time the Bacchic Rites were of a high order, but later they became
much degraded . The Bacchanalia, or orgies of Bacchus, are famous in
literature.
p. 32
passed through two gates. The
first led downward into the lower worlds and symbolized his birth into
ignorance. The second led upward into a room brilliantly lighted by unseen
lamps, in which was the statue of Ceres and which symbolized the upper world,
or the abode of Light and Truth. Strabo states that the great temple of
Eleusis would hold between twenty and thirty thousand people. The caves
dedicated by Zarathustra also had these two doors, symbolizing the avenues of
birth and death.
The following paragraph from
Porphyry gives a fairly adequate conception of Eleusinian symbolism: "God
being a luminous principle, residing in the midst of the most subtile fire, he
remains for ever invisible to the eyes of those who do not elevate themselves
above material life: on this account, the sight of transparent bodies, such as
crystal, Parian marble, and even ivory, recalls the idea of divine light; as
the sight of gold excites an idea of its purity, for gold cannot he sullied.
Some have thought by a black stone was signified the invisibility of the
divine essence. To express supreme reason, the Divinity was represented under
the human form--and beautiful, for God is the source of beauty; of different
ages, and in various attitudes, sitting or upright; of one or the other sex,
as a virgin or a young man, a husband or a bride, that all the shades and
gradations might be marked. Every thing luminous was subsequently attributed
to the gods; the sphere, and all that is spherical, to the universe, to the
sun and the moon--sometimes to Fortune and to Hope. The circle, and all
circular figures, to eternity--to the celestial movements; to the circles and
zones of the heavens. The section of circles, to the phases of the moon; and
pyramids and obelisks, to the igneous principle, and through that to the gods
of Heaven. A cone expresses the sun, a cylinder the earth; the phallus and
triangle (a symbol of the matrix) designate generation." (From Essay on the
Mysteries of Eleusis by M. Ouvaroff.)
The Eleusinian Mysteries,
according to Heckethorn, survived all others and did not cease to exist as an
institution until nearly four hundred years after Christ, when they were
finally suppressed by Theodosius (styled the Great), who cruelly destroyed all
who did not accept the Christian faith. Of this greatest of all philosophical
institutions Cicero said that it taught men not only how to live but also how
to die.
THE ORPHIC MYSTERIES
Orpheus, the Thracian bard, the
great initiator of the Greeks, ceased to be known as a man and was celebrated
as a divinity several centuries before the Christian Era. "As to Orpheus
himself * * *, " writes Thomas Taylor, "scarcely a vestige of his life is to
be found amongst the immense ruins of time. For who has ever been able to
affirm any thing with certainty of his origin, his age, his country, and
condition? This alone may be depended on, from general assent, that there
formerly lived a person named Orpheus, who was the founder of theology among
the Greeks; the institutor of their lives and morals; the first of prophets,
and the prince of poets; himself the offspring of a Muse; who taught the
Greeks their sacred rites and mysteries, and from whose wisdom, as from a
perennial and abundant fountain, the divine muse of Homer and the sublime
theology of Pythagoras and Plato flowed." (See The Mystical Hymns of
Orpheus.)
Orpheus was founder of the
Grecian mythological system which he used as the medium for the promulgation
of his philosophical doctrines. The origin of his philosophy is uncertain. He
may have got it from the Brahmins, there being legends to the effect that he
got it was a Hindu, his name possibly being derived from ὀρφανῖος, meaning
"dark." Orpheus was initiated into the Egyptian Mysteries, from which he
secured extensive knowledge of magic, astrology, sorcery, and medicine. The
Mysteries of the Cabiri at Samothrace were also conferred upon him, and these
undoubtedly contributed to his knowledge of medicine and music.
The romance of Orpheus and
Eurydice is one of the tragic episodes of Greek mythology and apparently
constitutes the outstanding feature
p. 32
of the Orphic Rite. Eurydice,
in her attempt to escape from a villain seeking to seduce her, died from the
venom of a poisonous serpent which stung her in the heel. Orpheus, penetrating
to the very heart of the underworld, so charmed Pluto and Persephone with the
beauty of his music that they agreed to permit Eurydice to return to life if
Orpheus could lead her back to the sphere of the living without once looking
round to see if she were following. So great was his fear, however, that she
would stray from him that he turned his head, and Eurydice with a heartbroken
cry was swept back into the land of death.
Orpheus wandered the earth for
a while disconsolate, and there are several conflicting accounts of the manner
of his death. Some declare that he was slain by a bolt of lightning; others,
that failing to save his beloved Eurydice, he committed suicide. The generally
accepted version of his death, however, is that he was torn to pieces by
Ciconian women whose advances he had spurned. In the tenth book of Plato's
Republic it is declared that, because of his sad fate at the hands of
women, the soul that had once been Orpheus, upon being destined to live again
in the physical world, chose rather to return in the body of a swan than be
born of woman. The head of Orpheus, after being torn from his body, was cast
with his lyre into the river Hebrus, down which it floated to the sea, where,
wedging in a cleft in a rock, it gave oracles for many years. The lyre, after
being stolen from its shrine and working the destruction of the thief, was
picked up by the gods and fashioned into a constellation.
Orpheus has long been sung as
the patron of music. On his seven-stringed lyre he played such perfect
harmonies that the gods themselves were moved to acclaim his power. When he
touched the strings of his instrument the birds and beasts gathered about him,
and as he wandered through the forests his enchanting melodies caused even the
ancient trees with mighty effort to draw their gnarled roots from out the
earth and follow him. Orpheus is one of the many Immortals who have sacrificed
themselves that mankind might have the wisdom of the gods. By the symbolism of
his music he communicated the divine secrets to humanity, and several authors
have declared that the gods, though loving him, feared that he would overthrow
their kingdom and therefore reluctantly encompassed his destruction.
As time passed on the
historical Orpheus became hopelessly confounded with the doctrine he
represented and eventually became the symbol of the Greek school of the
ancient wisdom. Thus Orpheus was declared to be the son of Apollo, the divine
and perfect truth, and Calliope, the Muse of harmony and rhythm. In other
words, Orpheus is the secret doctrine (Apollo) revealed through music
(Calliope). Eurydice is humanity dead from the sting of the serpent of false
knowledge and imprisoned in the underworld of ignorance. In this allegory
Orpheus signifies theology, which wins her from the king of the dead but fails
to accomplish her resurrection because it falsely estimates and mistrusts the
innate understanding within the human soul. The Ciconian women who tore
Orpheus limb from limb symbolize the various contending theological factions
which destroy the body of Truth. They cannot accomplish this, however, until
their discordant cries drown out the harmony drawn by Orpheus from his magic
lyre. The head of Orpheus signifies the esoteric doctrines of his cult. These
doctrines continue to live and speak even after his body (the cult) has been
destroyed. The lyre is the secret teaching of Orpheus; the seven strings are
the seven divine truths which are the keys to universal knowledge. The
differing accounts of his death represent the various means used to destroy
the secret teachings: wisdom can die in many ways at the same time. The
allegory of Orpheus incarnating in the white swan merely signifies that the
spiritual truths he promulgated will continue and will be taught by the
illumined initiates of all future ages. The swan is the symbol of the
initiates of the Mysteries; it is a symbol also of the divine power which is
the progenitor of the world.
THE BACCHIC AND
DIONYSIAC RITES
The Bacchic Rite centers around
the allegory of the youthful Bacchus (Dionysos or Zagreus) being torn to
pieces by the Titans. These giants accomplished the destruction of Bacchus by
causing him to become fascinated by his own image in a mirror. After
dismembering him, the Titans first boiled the pieces in water and afterwards
roasted them. Pallas rescued the heart of the murdered god, and by this
precaution Bacchus (Dionysos) was enabled to spring forth again in all his
former glory. Jupiter, the Demiurgus, beholding the crime of the Titans,
hurled his thunderbolts and slew them, burning their bodies to ashes with
heavenly fire. Our of the ashes of the Titans--which also contained a portion
of the flesh of Bacchus, whose body they had partly devoured--the human race
was created. Thus the mundane life of every man was said to contain a portion
of the Bacchic life.
For this reason the Greek
Mysteries warned against suicide. He who attempts to destroy himself raises
his hand against the nature of Bacchus within him, since man's body is
indirectly the tomb of this god and consequently must be preserved with the
greatest care.
Bacchus (Dionysos) represents
the rational soul of the inferior world. He is the chief of the Titans--the
artificers of the mundane spheres. The Pythagoreans called him the Titanic
monad. Thus Bacchus is the all-inclusive idea of the Titanic sphere and
the Titans--or gods of the fragments--the active agencies by means of
which universal substance is fashioned into the pattern of this idea. The
Bacchic state signifies the unity of the rational soul in a state of
self-knowledge, and the Titanic state the diversity of the rational soul
which, being scattered throughout creation, loses the consciousness of its own
essential one-ness. The mirror into which Bacchus gazes and which is the cause
of his fall is the great sea of illusion--the lower world fashioned by the
Titans. Bacchus (the mundane rational soul), seeing his image before him,
accepts the image as a likeness of himself and ensouls the likeness; that is,
the rational idea ensouls its reflection--the irrational universe. By
ensouling the irrational image it implants in it the urge to become like its
source, the rational image. Therefore the ancients said that man does not know
the gods by logic or by reason but rather by realizing the presence of the
gods within himself.
After Bacchus gazed into the
mirror and followed his own reflection into matter, the rational soul of the
world was broken up and distributed by the Titans throughout the mundane
sphere of which it is the essential nature, but the heart, or source, of it
they could not: scatter. The Titans took the dismembered body of Bacchus and
boiled it in water--symbol of immersion in the material universe--which
represents the incorporation of the Bacchic principle in form. The pieces were
afterwards roasted to signify the subsequent ascension of the spiritual nature
out of form.
When Jupiter, the father of
Bacchus and the Demiurgus of the universe, saw that the Titans were hopelessly
involving the rational or divine idea by scattering its members through the
constituent parts of the lower world, he slew the Titans in order that the
divine idea might not be entirely lost. From the ashes of the Titans he formed
mankind, whose purpose of existence was to preserve and eventually to release
the Bacchic idea, or rational soul, from the Titanic fabrication. Jupiter,
being the Demiurgus and fabricator of the material universe, is the third
person of the Creative Triad, consequently the Lord of Death, for death exists
only in the lower sphere of being over which he presides. Disintegration takes
place so that reintegration may follow upon a higher level of form or
intelligence. The thunderbolts of Jupiter are emblematic of his disintegrative
power; they reveal the purpose of death, which is to rescue the rational soul
from the devouring power of the irrational nature.
Man is a composite creature,
his lower nature consisting of the fragments of the Titans and his higher
nature the sacred, immortal flesh (life) of Bacchus. Therefore man is capable
of either a Titanic (irrational) or a Bacchic (rational) existence. The Titans
of Hesiod, who were twelve in number, are probably analogous to the celestial
zodiac, whereas the Titans who murdered and dismembered Bacchus represent the
zodiacal powers distorted by their involvement in the material world. Thus
Bacchus represents the sun who is dismembered by the signs of the zodiac and
from whose body the universe is formed. When the terrestrial forms were
created from the various parts of his body the sense of wholeness was lost and
the sense of separateness established. The heart of Bacchus, which was saved
by Pallas, or Minerva, was lifted out of the four elements symbolized by his
dismembered body and placed in the ether. The heart of Bacchus is the immortal
center of the rational soul.
After the rational soul had
been distributed throughout creation and the nature of man, the Bacchic
Mysteries were instituted for the purpose of disentangling it from the
irrational Titanic nature. This disentanglement was the process of lifting the
soul out of the state of separateness into that of unity. The various parts
and members of Bacchus were collected from the different corners of the earth.
When all the rational parts are gathered Bacchus is resurrected.
The Rites of Dionysos were very
similar to those of Bacchus, and by many these two gods are considered as one.
Statues of Dionysos were carried in the Eleusinian Mysteries, especially the
lesser degrees. Bacchus, representing the soul of the mundane sphere, was
capable of an infinite multiplicity of form and designations. Dionysos
apparently was his solar aspect.
The Dionysiac Architects
constituted an ancient secret society, in principles and doctrines much like
the modern Freemasonic Order. They were an organization of builders bound
together by their secret knowledge of the relationship between the earthly and
the divine sciences of architectonics. They were supposedly employed by King
Solomon in the building of his Temple, although they were not Jews, nor did
they worship the God of the Jews, being followers of Bacchus and Dionysos. The
Dionysiac Architects erected many of the great monuments of antiquity. They
possessed a secret language and a system of marking their stones. They had
annual convocations and sacred feasts. The exact nature of their doctrines is
unknown. It is believed that CHiram Abiff was an initiate of this society.
Next: Atlantis and the Gods
of Antiquity