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p. 49
The Sun, A Universal
Deity
THE adoration of the sun was
one of the earliest and most natural forms of religious expression. Complex
modern theologies are merely involvements and amplifications of this simple
aboriginal belief. The primitive mind, recognizing the beneficent power of the
solar orb, adored it as the proxy of the Supreme Deity. Concerning the origin
of sun worship, Albert Pike makes the following concise statement in his
Morals and Dogma: "To them [aboriginal peoples] he [the sun] was the
innate fire of bodies, the fire of Nature. Author of Life, heat, and ignition,
he was to them the efficient cause of all generation, for without him there
was no movement, no existence, no form. He was to them immense, indivisible,
imperishable, and everywhere present. It was their need of light, and of his
creative energy, that was felt by all men; and nothing was more fearful to
them than his absence. His beneficent influences caused his identification
with the Principle of Good; and the BRAHMA of the Hindus, and MITHRAS of the
Persians, and ATHOM, AMUN, PHTHA, and OSIRIS, of the Egyptians, the BEL of the
Chaldeans, the ADONAI of the Phnicians, the ADONIS and APOLLO of the Greeks,
became but personifications of the Sun, the regenerating Principle, image of
that fecundity which perpetuates and rejuvenates the world's existence."
Among all the nations of
antiquity, altars, mounds, and temples were dedicated to the worship of the
orb of day. The ruins of these sacred places yet remain, notable among them
being the pyramids of Yucatan and Egypt, the snake mounds of the American
Indians, the Zikkurats of Babylon and Chaldea, the round towers of Ireland,
and the massive rings of uncut stone in Britain and Normandy. The Tower of
Babel, which, according to the Scriptures, was built so that man might reach
up to God, was probably an astronomical observatory.
Many early priests and
prophets, both pagan and Christian, were versed in astronomy and astrology;
their writings are best understood when read in the light of these ancient
sciences. With the growth of man's knowledge of the constitution and
periodicity of the heavenly bodies, astronomical principles and terminology
were introduced into his religious systems. The tutelary gods were given
planetary thrones, the celestial bodies being named after the deities assigned
to them. The fixed stars were divided into constellations, and through these
constellations wandered the sun and its planets, the latter with their
accompanying satellites.
THE SOLAR TRINITY
The sun, as supreme among the
celestial bodies visible to the astronomers of antiquity, was assigned to the
highest of the gods and became symbolic of the supreme authority of the
Creator Himself. From a deep philosophic consideration of the powers and
principles of the sun has come the concept of the Trinity as it is understood
in the world today. The tenet of a Triune Divinity is not peculiar to
Christian or Mosaic theology, but forms a conspicuous part of the dogma of the
greatest religions of both ancient and modern times. The Persians, Hindus,
Babylonians, and Egyptians had their Trinities. In every instance these
represented the threefold form of one Supreme Intelligence. In modern Masonry,
the Deity is symbolized by an equilateral triangle, its three sides
representing the primary manifestations of the Eternal One who is Himself
represented as a tiny flame, called by the Hebrews Yod (י). Jakob Böhme,
the Teutonic mystic, calls the Trinity The Three Witnesses, by means of
which the Invisible is made known to the visible, tangible universe.
The origin of the Trinity is
obvious to anyone who will observe the daily manifestations of the sun. This
orb, being the symbol of all Light, has three distinct phases: rising, midday,
and setting. The philosophers therefore divided the life of all things into
three distinct parts: growth, maturity, and decay. Between the twilight of
dawn and the twilight of evening is the high noon of resplendent glory. God
the Father, the Creator of the world, is symbolized by the dawn. His color is
blue, because the sun rising in the morning is veiled in blue mist. God the
Son he Illuminating One sent to bear witness of His Father before all the
worlds, is the celestial globe at noonday, radiant and magnificent, the maned
Lion of Judah, the Golden-haired Savior of the World. Yellow is His color and
His power is without end. God the Holy Ghost is the sunset phase, when the orb
of day, robed in flaming red, rests for a moment upon the horizon line and
then vanishes into the darkness of the night to wandering the lower worlds and
later rise again triumphant from the embrace of darkness.
To the Egyptians the sun was
the symbol of immortality, for, while it died each night, it rose again with
each ensuing dawn. Not only has the sun this diurnal activity, but it also has
its annual pilgrimage, during which time it passes successively through the
twelve celestial houses of the heavens, remaining in each for thirty days.
Added to these it has a third path of travel, which is called the
precession of the equinoxes, in which it retrogrades around the zodiac
through the twelve signs at the rate of one degree every seventy-two years.
Concerning the annual passage
of the sun through the twelve houses of the heavens, Robert Hewitt Brown, 32°,
makes the following statement: "The Sun, as he pursued his way among these
'living creatures' of the zodiac, was said, in allegorical language, either to
assume the nature of or to triumph over the sign he entered. The sun thus
became a Bull in Taurus, and was worshipped as such by the Egyptians under the
name of Apis, and by the Assyrians as Bel, Baal, or Bul. In Leo the sun became
a Lion-slayer, Hercules, and an Archer in Sagittarius. In Pisces, the Fishes,
he was a fish--Dagon, or Vishnu, the fish-god of the Philistines and Hindoos."
A careful analysis of the
religious systems of pagandom uncovers much evidence of the fact that its
priests served the solar energy and that their Supreme Deity was in every case
this Divine Light personified. Godfrey Higgins, after thirty years of inquiry
into the origin of religious beliefs, is of the opinion that "All the Gods of
antiquity resolved themselves into the solar fire, sometimes itself as God, or
sometimes an emblem or shekinah of that higher principle, known by the name of
the creative Being or God."
The Egyptian priests in many of
their ceremonies wore the skins of lions, which were symbols of the solar orb,
owing to the fact that the sun is exalted, dignified, and most fortunately
placed in the constellation of Leo, which he rules and which was at one time
the keystone of the celestial arch. Again, Hercules is the Solar Deity, for as
this mighty hunter performed his twelve labors, so the sun, in traversing the
twelve houses of the zodiacal band, performs during his pilgrimage twelve
essential and benevolent labors for the human race and for Nature in general,
Hercules, like the Egyptian priests, wore the skin of a lion for a girdle.
Samson, the Hebrew hero, as his
THE LION OF THE SUN.
From Maurice's Indian
Antiquities.
The sun rising over the back of
the lion or, astrologically, in the back of the lion, has always been
considered symbolic of power and rulership. A symbol very similar to the one
above appears on the flag of Persia, whose people have always been sun
worshipers. Kings and emperors have frequently associated their terrestrial
power with the celestial Power of the solar orb, and have accepted the sun, or
one of its symbolic beasts or birds, as their emblem. Witness the lion of the
Great Mogul and the eagles of Cæsar and Napoleon.
THE WINGED GLOBE OF EGYPT.
From Maurice's Indian
Antiquities.
This symbol, which appears over
the Pylons or gates of many Egyptian palaces and temples, is emblematic of the
three persons of the Egyptian Trinity. The wings, the serpents, and the solar
orb are the insignia of Ammon, Ra, and Osiris.
p. 50
name implies, is also a solar
deity. His fight with the Nubian lion, his battles with the Philistines, who
represent the Powers of Darkness, and his memorable feat of carrying off the
gates of Gaza, all refer to aspects of solar activity. Many of the ancient
peoples had more than one solar deity; in fact, all of the gods and goddesses
were supposed to partake, in part at least, of the sun's effulgence.
The golden ornaments used by
the priestcraft of the various world religions are again a subtle reference to
the solar energy, as are also the crowns of kings. In ancient times, crowns
had a number of points extending outward like the rays of the sun, but modern
conventionalism has, in many cases, either removed the points or else bent:
them inward, gathered them together, and placed an orb or cross upon the point
where they meet. Many of the ancient prophets, philosophers, and dignitaries
carried a scepter, the upper end of which bore a representation of the solar
globe surrounded by emanating rays. All the kingdoms of earth were but copies
of the kingdoms of Heaven, and the kingdoms of Heaven were best symbolized by
the solar kingdom, in which the sun was the supreme ruler, the planets his
privy council, and all Nature the subjects of his empire.
Many deities have been
associated with the sun. The Greeks believed that Apollo, Bacchus, Dionysos,
Sabazius, Hercules, Jason, Ulysses, Zeus, Uranus, and Vulcan partook of either
the visible or invisible attributes of the sun. The Norwegians regarded Balder
the Beautiful as a solar deity, and Odin is often connected with the celestial
orb, especially because of his one eye. Among the Egyptians, Osiris, Ra,
Anubis, Hermes, and even the mysterious Ammon himself had points of
resemblance with the solar disc. Isis was the mother of the sun, and even
Typhon, the Destroyer, was supposed to be a form of solar energy. The Egyptian
sun myth finally centered around the person of a mysterious deity called
Serapis. The two Central American deities, Tezcatlipoca and
Quetzalcoatl, while often associated with the winds, were also undoubtedly
solar gods.
In Masonry the sun has many
symbols. One expression of the solar energy is Solomon, whose name SOL-OM-ON
is the name for the Supreme Light in three different languages. Hiram Abiff,
the CHiram (Hiram) of the Chaldees, is also a solar deity, and the story of
his attack and murder by the Ruffians, with its solar interpretation, will be
found in the chapter The Hiramic Legend. A striking example of the
important part which the sun plays in the symbols and rituals of Freemasonry
is given by George Oliver, D.D., in his Dictionary of Symbolical Masonry,
as follows:
"The sun rises in the east, and
in the east is the place for the Worshipful Master. As the sun is the source
of all light and warmth, so should the Worshipful Master enliven and warm the
brethren to their work. Among the ancient Egyptians the sun was the symbol of
divine providence." The hierophants of the Mysteries were adorned with many.
insignia emblematic of solar power. The sunbursts of gilt embroidery on the
back of the vestments of the Catholic priesthood signify that the priest is
also an emissary and representative of Sol Invictus.
CHRISTIANITY AND THE
SUN
For reasons which they
doubtless considered sufficient, those who chronicled the life and acts of
Jesus found it advisable to metamorphose him into a solar deity. The
historical Jesus was forgotten; nearly all the salient incidents recorded in
the four Gospels have their correlations in the movements, phases, or
functions of the heavenly bodies.
Among other allegories borrowed
by Christianity from pagan antiquity is the story of the beautiful, blue-eyed
Sun God, with His golden hair falling upon His shoulders, robed from head to
foot in spotless white and carrying in His arms the Lamb of God, symbolic of
the vernal equinox. This handsome youth is a composite of Apollo, Osiris,
Orpheus, Mithras, and Bacchus, for He has certain characteristics in common
with each of these pagan deities.
The philosophers of Greece and
Egypt divided the life of the sun during the year into four parts; therefore
they symbolized the Solar Man by four different figures. When He was born in
the winter solstice, the Sun God was symbolized as a dependent infant who in
some mysterious manner had managed to escape the Powers of Darkness seeking to
destroy Him while He was still in the cradle of winter. The sun, being weak at
this season of the year, had no golden rays (or locks of hair), but the
survival of the light through the darkness of winter was symbolized by one
tiny hair which alone adorned the head of the Celestial Child. (As the birth
of the sun took place in Capricorn, it was often represented as being suckled
by a goat.)
At the vernal equinox, the sun
had grown to be a beautiful youth. His golden hair hung in ringlets on his
shoulders and his light, as Schiller said, extended to all parts of infinity.
At the summer solstice, the sun became a strong man, heavily bearded, who, in
the prime of maturity, symbolized the fact that Nature at this period of the
year is strongest and most fecund. At the autumnal equinox, the sun was
pictured as an aged man, shuffling along with bended back and whitened locks
into the oblivion of winter darkness. Thus, twelve months were assigned to the
sun as the length of its life. During this period it circled the twelve signs
of the zodiac in a magnificent triumphal march. When fall came, it entered,
like Samson, into the house of Delilah (Virgo), where its rays were cut off
and it lost its strength. In Masonry, the cruel winter months are symbolized
by three murderers who sought to destroy the God of Light and Truth.
The coming of the sun was
hailed with joy; the time of its departure was viewed as a period to be set
aside for sorrow and unhappiness. This glorious, radiant orb of day, the true
light "which lighteth every man who cometh into the world," the supreme
benefactor, who raised all things from the dead, who fed the hungry
multitudes, who stilled the tempest, who after dying rose again and restored
all things to life--this Supreme Spirit of humanitarianism and philanthropy is
known to Christendom as Christ, the Redeemer of worlds, the Only Begotten of
The Father, the Word made Flesh, and the Hope of Glory.
THE BIRTHDAY OF THE SUN
The pagans set aside the 25th
of December as the birthday of the Solar Man. They rejoiced, feasted, gathered
in processions, and made offerings in the temples. The darkness of winter was
over and the glorious son of light was returning to the Northern Hemisphere.
With his last effort the old Sun God had torn down the house of the
Philistines (the Spirits of Darkness) and had cleared the way for the new sun
who was born that day from the depths of the earth amidst the symbolic beasts
of the lower world.
Concerning this season of
celebration, an anonymous Master of Arts of Balliol College, Oxford, in his
scholarly treatise, Mankind Their Origin and Destiny, says: "The Romans
also had their solar festival, and their games of the circus in honor of the
birth of the god of day. It took place the eighth day before the kalends of
January--that is, on December 25. Servius, in his commentary on verse 720 of
the seventh book of the Æneid, in which Virgil speaks of the new sun, says
that, properly speaking, the sun is new on the 8th of the Kalends of
January-that is, December 25. In the time of Leo I. (Leo, Serm. xxi., De Nativ.
Dom. p. 148), some of the Fathers of the Church said that 'what rendered the
festival (of Christmas) venerable was less the birth of Jesus Christ than the
return, and, as they expressed it, the new birth of the sun.' It was on the
same day that the birth of the Invincible Sun (Natalis solis invicti), was
celebrated at Rome, as can be seen in the Roman calendars, published in the
reign of Constantine and of Julian (Hymn to the Sun, p. 155). This epithet 'Invictus'
is the same as the Persians gave to this same god, whom they worshipped by the
name of Mithra, and whom they caused to be born in a grotto (Justin. Dial. cum
Trips. p. 305), just as he is represented as being born in a stable, under the
name of Christ, by the Christians."
Concerning the Catholic Feast
of the Assumption and its parallel in astronomy, the same author adds: "At the
end of eight months, when the sun-god, having increased, traverses the eighth
sign, he absorbs the celestial Virgin in his fiery course, and she disappears
in the midst of the luminous rays and the glory of her son. This phenomenon,
which takes place every year about the middle of August, gave rise to a
festival which still exists, and in which it is supposed that the mother of
Christ, laying aside her earthly life, is associated with the glory of her
son, and is placed at his side in the heavens. The Roman calendar of Columella
(Col. 1. II. cap. ii. p. 429) marks the death or disappearance of Virgo at
this period. The sun, he says, passes into Virgo on the thirteenth day before
the kalends of September. This is where the Catholics place the Feast of the
Assumption, or the reunion of the Virgin to her Son. This feast
THE THREE SUNS.
From Lilly's Astrological
Predictions for 1648, 1649, and 1650.)
The following description of
this phenomenon appears in a letter written by Jeremiah Shakerley in
Lancashire, March 4th, 1648:--"On Monday the 28th of February last, there
arose with the Sun two Parelii, on either side one; their distance from him
was by estimation, about ten degrees; they continued still of the same
distance from the Zenith, or height above the Horizon, that the Sun did; and
from the parts averse to the Sun, there seemed to issue out certain bright
rays, not unlike those which the Sun sendeth from behind a cloud, but
brighter. The parts of these Parelii which were toward the Sun, were of a mixt
colour, wherein green and red were most predominant. A little above them was a
thin rainbow, scarcely discernible, of a bright colour, with the concave
towards the Sun, and the ends thereof seeming to touch the Parelii: Above
that, in a clear diaphanous ayr, [air], appeared another conspicuous Rainbow,
beautified with divers colours; it was as neer as I could discern to the
Zenith; it seemed of something a lesser radius than the other, they being back
to back, yet a pretty way between. At or neer the apparent time of the full
Moon, they vanished, leaving abundance of terror and amazement in those that
saw them. (See William Lilly.)
p. 51
was formerly called the feast
of the Passage of the Virgin (Beausobre, tome i. p. 350); and in the Library
of the Fathers (Bibl. Part. vol. II. part ii. p. 212) we have an account of
the Passage of the Blessed Virgin. The ancient Greeks and Romans fix the
assumption of Astraea, who is also this same Virgin, on that day."
This Virgin mother, giving
birth to the Sun God which Christianity has so faithfully preserved, is a
reminder of the inscription concerning her Egyptian prototype, Isis, which
appeared on the Temple of Sais: "The fruit which I have brought forth is
the Sun." While the Virgin was associated with the moon by the early
pagans, there is no doubt that they also understood her position as a
constellation in the heavens, for nearly all the peoples of antiquity credit
her as being the mother of the sun, and they realized that although the moon
could not occupy that position, the sign of Virgo could, and did, give birth
to the sun out of her side on the 25th day of December. Albertus Magnus
states, "We know that the sign of the Celestial Virgin rose over the Horizon
at the moment at which we fix the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Among certain of the Arabian
and Persian astronomers the three stars forming the sword belt of Orion were
called the Magi who came to pay homage to the young Sun God. The author of
Mankind--Their Origin and Destiny contributes the following additional
information: "In Cancer, which had risen to the meridian at midnight, is the
constellation of the Stable and of the Ass. The ancients called it Præsepe
Jovis. In the north the stars of the Bear are seen, called by the Arabians
Martha and Mary, and also the coffin of Lazarus. "Thus the esotericism of
pagandom was embodied in Christianity, although its keys are lost. The
Christian church blindly follows ancient customs, and when asked for a reason
gives superficial and unsatisfactory explanations, either forgetting or
ignoring the indisputable fact that each religion is based upon the secret
doctrines of its predecessor.
THE THREE SUNS
The solar orb, like the nature
of man, was divided by the ancient sages into three separate bodies. According
to the mystics, there are three suns in each solar system, analogous to the
three centers of life in each individual constitution. These are called three
lights: the spiritual sun, the intellectual or soular
sun, and the material sun (now symbolized in Freemasonry by three
candles). The spiritual sun manifests the power of God the Father; the soular
sun radiates the life of God the Son; and the material sun is the vehicle of
manifestation for God the Holy Spirit. Man's nature was divided by the mystics
into three distinct parts: spirit, soul, and body. His physical body was
unfolded and vitalized by the material sun; his spiritual nature was
illuminated by the spiritual sun; and his intellectual nature was redeemed by
the true light of grace--the soular sun. The alignment of these three
globes in the heavens was one explanation offered for the peculiar fact that
the orbits of the planets are not circular but elliptical.
The pagan priests always
considered the solar system as a Grand Man, and drew their analogy of
these three centers of activity from the three main centers of life in the
human body: the brain, the heart, and the generative system. The
Transfiguration of Jesus describes three tabernacles, the largest being in the
center (the heart), and a smaller one on either side (the brain and the
generative system). It is possible that the philosophical hypothesis of the
existence of the three suns is based upon a peculiar natural phenomenon which
has occurred many times in history. In the fifty- first year after Christ
three suns were seen at once in the sky and also in the sixty-sixth year. In
the sixty-ninth year, two suns were seen together. According to William Lilly,
between the years 1156 and 1648 twenty similar occurrences were recorded.
Recognizing the sun as the
supreme benefactor of the material world, Hermetists believed that there was a
spiritual sun which ministered to the needs of the invisible and divine part
of Nature--human and universal. Anent this subject, the great Paracelsus
wrote: "There is an earthly sun, which is the cause of all heat, and all who
are able to see may see the sun; and those who are blind and cannot see him
may feel his heat. There is an Eternal Sun, which is the source of all wisdom,
and those whose spiritual senses have awakened to life will see that sun and
be conscious of His existence; but those who have not attained spiritual
consciousness may yet feel His power by an inner faculty which is called
Intuition."
Certain Rosicrucian scholars
have given special appellations to these three phases of the sun: the
spiritual sun they called Vulcan; the soular and intellectual sun,
Christ and Lucifer respectively; and the material sun, the Jewish Demiurgus
Jehovah. Lucifer here represents the intellectual mind without the
illumination of the spiritual mind; therefore it is "the false light. " The
false light is finally overcome and redeemed by the true light of the soul,
called the Second Logos or Christ. The secret processes by which
the Luciferian intellect is transmuted into the Christly intellect constitute
one of the great secrets of alchemy, and are symbolized by the process of
transmuting base metals into gold.
In the rare treatise The
Secret Symbols of The Rosicrucians, Franz Hartmann defines the sun
alchemically as: "The symbol of Wisdom. The Centre of Power or Heart of
things. The Sun is a centre of energy and a storehouse of power. Each living
being contains within itself a centre of life, which may grow to be a Sun. In
the heart of the regenerated, the divine power, stimulated by the Light of the
Logos, grows into a Sun which illuminates his mind." In a note, the same
author amplifies his description by adding: "The terrestrial sun is the image
or reflection of the invisible celestial sun; the former is in the realm of
Spirit what the latter is in the realm of Matter; but the latter receives its
power from the former."
In the majority of cases, the
religions of antiquity agree that the material visible sun was a reflector
rather than a source of power. The sun was sometimes represented as a shield
carried on the arm of the Sun God, as for example, Frey, the Scandinavian
Solar Deity. This sun reflected the light of the invisible spiritual
sun, which was the true source of life, light, and truth. The physical nature
of the universe is receptive; it is a realm of effects. The invisible causes
of these effects belong to the spiritual world. Hence, the spiritual world is
the sphere of causation; the material world is the sphere of effects;
while the intellectual--or soul--world is the sphere of mediation. Thus
Christ, the personified higher intellect and soul nature, is called "the
Mediator" who, by virtue of His position and power, says: "No man cometh to
the Father, but by me."
What the sun is to the solar
system, the spirit is to the bodies of man; for his natures, organs, and
functions are as planets surrounding the central life (or sun) and living upon
its emanations. The solar power in man is divided into three parts, which are
termed the threefold human spirit of man. All three of these spiritual natures
are said to be radiant and transcendent; united, they form the Divinity in
man. Man's threefold lower nature--consisting of his physical organism, his
emotional nature, and his mental faculties--reflects the light of his
threefold Divinity and bears witness of It in the physical world. Man's three
bodies are symbolized by an upright triangle; his threefold spiritual nature
by an inverted triangle. These two triangles, when united in the form of a
six-pointed star, were called by the Jews "the Star of David," "the Signet of
Solomon," and are more commonly known today as "the Star of Zion." These
triangles symbolize the spiritual and material universes linked together in
the constitution of the human creature, who partakes of both Nature and
Divinity. Man's animal nature partakes of the earth; his divine nature of the
heavens; his human nature of the mediator.
THE CELESTIAL
INHABITANTS OF THE SUN
The Rosicrucians and the
Illuminati, describing the angels, archangels, and other celestial creatures,
declared that they resembled small suns, being centers of radiant energy
surrounded by streamers of Vrilic force. From these outpouring streamers of
force is derived the popular belief that angels have wings. These wings are
corona-like fans of light, by means of which the celestial creatures propel
themselves through the subtle essences of the superphysical worlds.
True mystics are unanimous in
their denial of the theory that the angels and archangels are human in form,
as so often pictured. A human figure would be utterly useless in the ethereal
substances through which they manifest. Science has long debated the
probability of the other planers being inhabited. Objections to the idea are
based upon the argument that creatures with human organisms could nor possibly
exist in the environments of Mars, Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune. This argument
fails to take into account Nature's universal law of adjustment to
environment. The ancients asserted that life originated from the sun, and that
everything when bathed in the light of the solar orb was capable of absorbing
the solar life elements and later radiating them as flora and fauna. One
philosophical
SURYA, THE REGENT OF THE SUN.
From Moor's Hindu Pantheon.
Moor describes this figure as follows:
"The cast is nine inches in height, representing the glorious god of
day-holding the attributes of VISHNU, seated on a seven-headed serpent; his
car drawn by a seven-headed horse, driven by the legless ARUN, a
personification of the dawn, or AURORA." (See Moor's Hindu Pantheon.)
p. 52
concept regarded the sun as a
parent and the planers as embryos still connected to the solar body by means
of ethereal umbilical cords which served as channels to convey life and
nourishment to the planets.
Some secret orders have taught
that the sun was inhabited by a race of creatures with bodies composed of a
radiant, spiritual ether not unlike in its constituency the actual glowing
ball of the sun itself. The solar heat had no harmful effect upon them,
because their organisms were sufficiently refined and sensitized to harmonize
with the sun's tremendous vibratory rate. These creatures resemble miniature
suns, being a little larger than a dinner plate in size, although some of the
more powerful are considerably larger. Their color is the golden white light
of the sun, and from them emanate four streamers of Vril. These streamers are
often of great length and are in constant motion. A peculiar palpitation is to
be noted throughout the structure of the globe and is communicated in the form
of ripples to the emanating streamers. The greatest and most luminous of these
spheres is the Archangel Michael; and the entire order of solar life, which
resemble him and dwell upon the sun, are called by modern Christians "the
archangels" or "the spirits of the light.
THE SUN IN ALCHEMICAL
SYMBOLOGY
Gold is the metal of the sun
and has been considered by many as crystallized sunlight. When gold is
mentioned in alchemical tracts, it may be either the metal itself or the
celestial orb which is the source, or spirit, of gold. Sulphur because of its
fiery nature was also associated with the sun.
As gold was the symbol of
spirit and the base metals represented man's lower nature, certain alchemists
were called "miners" and were pictured with picks and shovels digging into the
earth in search of the precious metal--those finer traits of character buried
in the earthiness of materiality and ignorance. The diamond concealed in the
heart of the black carbon illustrated the same principle. The Illuminati used
a pearl hidden in the shell of an oyster at the bottom of the sea to signify
spiritual powers. Thus the seeker after truth became a pearl-fisher: he
descended into the sea of material illusion in search of understanding, termed
by the initiates "the Pearl of Great Price."
When the alchemists stated that
every animate and inanimate thing in the universe contained the seeds of gold,
they meant that even the grains of sand possessed a spiritual nature, for gold
was the spirit of all things. Concerning these seeds of spiritual gold the
following Rosicrucian axiom is significant: "A seed is useless and impotent
unless it is put in its appropriate matrix." Franz Hartmann comments on this
axiom with these illuminating words: "A soul cannot develop and progress
without an appropriate body, because it is the physical body that furnishes
the material for its development." (See In the Pronaos of the Temple of
Wisdom.)
The purpose of alchemy was not
to make something out of nothing but rather to fertilize and nurture the seed
which was already present. Its processes did nor actually create gold but
rather made the ever-present seed of gold grow and flourish. Everything which
exists has a spirit--the seed of Divinity within itself--and regeneration is
not the process of attempting to place something where it previously had not
existed. Regeneration actually means the unfoldment of the omnipresent
Divinity in man, that this Divinity may shine forth as a sun and illumine all
with whom it comes in contact.
THE MIDNIGHT SUN
Apuleius said when describing
his initiation (vide ante): "At midnight I saw the sun shining with a
splendid light." The midnight sun was also part of the mystery of alchemy. It
symbolized the spirit in man shining through the darkness of his human
organisms. It also referred to the spiritual sun in the solar system, which
the mystic could see as well at midnight as at high noon, the material earth
bring powerless to obstruct the rays of this Divine orb. The mysterious lights
which illuminated the temples of the Egyptian Mysteries during the nocturnal
hours were said by some to he reflections of the spiritual sun gathered by the
magical powers of the priests. The weird light seen ten miles below the
surface of the earth by I-AM-THE-MAN in that remarkable Masonic allegory
Etidorhpa (Aphrodite spelt backward) may well refer to the mysterious
midnight sun of the ancient rites.
Primitive conceptions
concerning the warfare between the principles of Good and Evil were often
based upon the alternations of day and night. During the Middle Ages, the
practices of black magic were confined to the nocturnal hours; and those who
served the Spirit of Evil were called black magicians, while those who served
the Spirit of Good were called white magicians. Black and white were
associated respectively with night and day, and the endless conflict of light
and shadow is alluded to many times in the mythologies of various peoples.
The Egyptian Demon, Typhon, was
symbolized as part crocodile and part: hog because these animals are gross and
earthy in both appearance and temperament. Since the world began, living
things have feared the darkness; those few creatures who use it as a shield
for their maneuvers were usually connected with the Spirit of Evil.
Consequently cats, bats, toads, and owls are associated with witchcraft. In
certain parts of Europe it is still believed that at night black magicians
assume the bodies of wolves and roam around destroying. From this notion
originated the stories of the werewolves. Serpents, because they lived in the
earth, were associated with the Spirit of Darkness. As the battle between Good
and Evil centers around the use of the generative forces of Nature, winged
serpents represent the regeneration of the animal nature of man or those Great
Ones in whom this regeneration is complete. Among the Egyptians the sun's rays
are often shown ending in human hands. Masons will find a connection between
these hands and the well-known Paw of the Lion which raises all things
to life with its grip.
SOLAR COLORS
The theory so long held of
three primary and four secondary colors is purely exoteric, for since the
earliest periods it has been known that there are seven, and not three,
primary colors, the human eye being capable of estimating only three of them.
Thus, although green can be made by combining blue and yellow, there is also a
true or primary green which is not a compound. This can he proved by breaking
up the spectrum with a prism. Helmholtz found that the so-called secondary
colors of the spectrum could not be broken up into their supposed primary
colors. Thus the orange of the spectrum, if passed through a second prism,
does not break up into red and yellow but remains orange.
Consciousness, intelligence,
and force are fittingly symbolized by the colors blue, yellow, and red. The
therapeutic effects of the colors, moreover, are in harmony with this concept,
for blue is a fine, soothing, electrical color; yellow, a vitalizing and
refining color; and red, an agitating and heat-giving color. It has also been
demonstrated that minerals and plants affect the human constitution according
to their colors. Thus a yellow flower generally yields a medicine that affects
the constitution in a manner similar to yellow light or the musical tone mi.
An orange flower will influence in a manner similar to orange light and, being
one of the so-called secondary colors, corresponds either to the tone re
or to the chord of do and mi.
The ancients conceived the
spirit of man to correspond with the color blue, the mind with yellow, and the
body with red. Heaven is therefore blue, earth yellow, and hell--or the
underworld--red. The fiery condition of the inferno merely symbolizes the
nature of the sphere or plane of force of which it is composed. In the Greek
Mysteries the irrational sphere was always considered as red, for it
represented that condition in which the consciousness is enslaved by the lusts
and passions of the lower nature. In India certain of the gods--usually
attributes of Vishnu--are depicted with blue skin to signify their divine and
supermundane constitution. According to esoteric philosophy, blue is the true
and sacred color of the sun. The apparent orange-yellow shade of this orb is
the result of its rays being immersed in the substances of the illusionary
world.
In the original symbolism of
the Christian Church, colors were of first importance and their use was
regulated according to carefully prepared rules. Since the Middle Ages,
however, the carelessness with which colors have been employed has resulted in
the loss of their deeper emblematic meanings. In its primary aspect, white or
silver signified life, purity, innocence, joy, and light; red, the suffering
and death of Christ and His saints, and also divine love, blood, and warfare
or suffering; blue, the heavenly sphere and the states of godliness and
contemplation; yellow or gold, glory, fruitfulness, and goodness; green,
fecundity, youthfulness, and prosperity; violet, humility, deep affection, and
sorrow; black, death, destruction, and humiliation. In early church art the
colors of robes and ornaments also revealed whether a saint had been martyred,
as well as the character of the work that he had done to deserve canonization.
In addition to the colors of
the spectrum there are a vast number of vibratory color waves, some too low
and others too high to be registered by the human optical apparatus. It is
appalling to contemplate man's colossal ignorance concerning these vistas of
abstract space. As in the past man explored unknown continents, so in the
future, armed with curious implements fashioned for the purpose, he will
explore these little known fastnesses of light, color, sound, and
consciousness.
THE SOLAR FACE.
From Montfaucon's
Antiquities.
The corona of the sun is here
shown in the form of a lion's mane. This is a subtle reminder of the fact that
at one time the summer solstice took place in the sign of Leo, the Celestial
Lion.
Next: The Zodiac and Its Signs