NYHETER
Pingst gör studiebesök i
Vatikanen
Saxat ur
tidningen Dagen.
Dialogen
mellan Pingst och Katolska kyrkan i Sverige går in i en ny fas. I maj görs ett
gemensamt studiebesök i Vatikanen. Det har aldrig hänt tidigare. -En del kanske
höjer på ögonbrynen, men i klassisk ekumenik är sådana resor en viktig del,
säger Anders Arborelius, biskop i Katolska kyrkan i Sverige.
Inte heller
Pelle Hörnmark, föreståndare i Pingst, tycker att besöket i Rom är märkligt:
-Jag ser det
som en naturlig fortsättning på de samtal vi haft under flera år, säger han om
dialogen som började 2003 och sedan dess pågått med träffar ett par gånger
varje år.
-Rom är
Katolska kyrkans hjärta i världen. Om vi vill förstå hur de tänker är det
värdefullt att vara med på en sådan resa, säger Pelle Hörnmark.
Sedan han
tillträdde som pingstföreståndare för knappt tre år sedan har han inte deltagit
i samtalen utan valt att koncentrera sig på att jobba inåt i Pingst. Men nu ser
han fram emot att vara delaktig i den fortsatta processen.
Anders Arborelius,
som tillsammans med Sten-Gunnar Hedin tog initiativet till dialogen, hoppas att
besöket ska bidra till en större förståelse och insikt i hur Katolska kyrkan
fungerar:
-Dessutom
tror jag att det kommer att leda till att Vatikanen får upp ögonen för den
fördjupade ekumenik som Katolska kyrkan i Sverige har med Pingst, säger Anders
Arborelius.
Han menar
att dialogen med Pingst inte är särskilt ifrågasatt bland katoliker i Sverige:
-Nej, jag
tror inte det. De flesta katoliker ser det som något normalt och viktigt. Vi
har flera dialoger på gång samtidigt, bland annat med Svenska missionskyrkan
som vi också gjort resor med, säger han.
Inte rädd för samtal
Pelle
Hörnmark är medveten om att det finns de inom Pingst som anser att man inte
borde ha en dialog med Katolska kyrkan.
Själv håller
han dock inte med:
-Bara den
som är otrygg är rädd för ett samtal, säger han.
Resan till
Rom ser Pelle Hörnmark som ytterligare en möjlighet att bygga ett förtroende
mellan pingstvänner och katoliker i Sverige.
-Som jag uppfattar
saken handlar det inte om en åsiktsgemenskap utan om att få en större
förståelse för våra likheter och olikheter samt att söka Andens gemenskap med
varandra. Och det åstadkommer man genom att umgås, säger Pelle Hörnmark.
Bygga personliga relationer
Han jämför
med den dialog Pingst har med Ortodoxa kyrkan i Sverige och som förra året
mynnade ut i en gemensam resa:
-I december
åkte några ledare från Pingst och Ortodoxa kyrkan till Jerusalem med ett
liknande syfte. Det vill säga att upptäcka mer av det vi har gemensamt och att
bygga personliga relationer.
Vad ser du
själv mest fram emot med resan till Rom?
-Dels att
bygga relationer mellan oss som ledare i Pingst och i Katolska kyrkan. Dels att
få större kunskaper om Katolska kyrkan. Det är inga specifika frågor jag söker
svar på utan det handlar mer om att få en känsla och en uppfattning om vilka de
är och vad de står för.
Har du varit
i Rom tidigare?
-Ja, flera
gånger men bara som turist. Att få en chans att se insidan blir förstås en helt
annan upplevelse än att enbart vara med på guidade turer, säger Pelle Hörnmark.
Visar på olika ansikten
Fredrik
Emanuelson, tillförordnad talesperson för Katolska biskopsämbetet och
Stockholms katolska stift, har bott och studerat i Rom i flera år och är den
som ansvarar för programmet på resan.
-Vi har
planerat detta i ungefär ett år och är angelägna om att visa Katolska kyrkans
många olika ansikten.
För att
underlätta förståelsen och ge en bred bild av Katolska kyrkan har besöket
delats upp på tre olika nivåer: den globala, akademiska och lokala Katolska
kyrkan.
-Vi har valt
ett sådant upplägg eftersom det är lätt att få intrycket att Katolska kyrkan
enbart är påven och Vatikanen. Så är det naturligtvis inte och det är viktigt
för oss att förmedla, säger han.
Det blir
bland annat ett besök på Påvliga rådet för främjandet av de kristnas enhet,
eller Enhetsrådet som det brukar kallas, och på Angelicum som är ett av de
katolska universiteten.
Tanken är
att också hinna med att besöka ett av de bästa ekumeniska biblioteken i
världen, Centro pro unione.
-Vi planerar
dessutom att stifta bekantskap med en av de största katolska gemenskaperna i
världen, Sant’Egidio, en lekmannarörelse med fokus på att leva evangeliet
tillsammans och att engagera sig socialt, säger Fredrik Emanuelson.
Utökat teologiskt utbyte
När Anders
Arborelius beskriver vad åtta års dialog med Pingst betytt så nämner han dels
ett utökat teologiskt utbyte och dels ett närmande på det personliga planet.
-Vi
katoliker har också blivit inspirerade av pingstvännernas inställning till
utåtriktat arbete. Vi har upptäckt betydelsen av att gemensamt föra ut det
kristna budskapet i det sekulariserade Sverige, säger Anders Arborelius.
Inte bara gräl mellan kristna
Den
fortsatta processen med Pingst ser han positivt på. Han tror på teologiska
samtal, både om det som förenar och som skiljer. Han hoppas också på
utåtriktade satsningar tillsammans.
-I svensk
offentlig debatt beskrivs vi kristna ofta som ständigt grälande med varandra.
Men dialogen mellan Katolska kyrkan och Pingst tycker jag är ett bevis på att
vi är konstruktiva.
-Och att vi
gör en gemensam resa till Rom betyder att vi också kan samverka på många andra
områden, säger Anders Arborelius.
FAKTA: Resan
till Rom
Tolv
personer, sex från vardera Pingst och Katolska kyrkan, åker till Rom.
Från Pingst
är det pingstföreståndaren Pelle Hörnmark, pastorerna Sten-Gunnar
Hedin, Dan Salomonsson och Uno Solinger,
teologen Peter Halldorf, samt Dagens förre chefredaktör Olof
Djurfeldt.
Katolska
kyrkans delegation består av biskop Anders Arborelius,
biskopsvikarie Fredrik Emanuelson, diakon Erik Kennet
Pålsson, dominikansyster Veronica Tournier, universitetslärareJonas
Holmstrand samt överläkare Michael Alvarsson.
Resan
genomförs den 16-19 maj.
Saxat ur
Bengts Blogg, katolskt fönster.
Ekumeniken
utvecklas på flera fronter. Innan Pelle Hörnmark stack iväg till Rom fick vi
höra att han predikat på Livets ords söndagsgudstjänst, vilket var historiskt
och vittnar om att relationerna håller på att utvecklas mellan Pingst och
Livets Ord. Ulf Ekman har ju för övrigt också varit i Rom på ett studiebesök
tillsammans med flera av sina pastorer. I dagens läge kan man säga att
relationerna mellan Livets Ord och Katolska kyrkan är mycket goda. Den sista
tioårsperioden har ju inneburit en ny fas i pastor Ulfs utveckling där han helt
ändrat attityd till de gamla samfunden. Vi har ofta sett katoliker som talare
på Livets Ords konferenser, och Ulf Ekman talade själv på den Nordiska katolska karismatiska konferensen i
höstas.
Så i
triangeln Katolska kyrkan – Pingst – Livets Ord bedrivs just nu en
intensiv andlig ekumenik som jag tror kommer att visa sig mycket fruktbärande. Jag tror alla tre
samfunden har en likartad syn på hur man bedriver ekumenik. Det handlar om att
lära känna varandra och göra det man kan gemensamt, men utan att kompromissa
med det som är väsentligt och grundläggande för den egna tron. De tio punkter som Charles Whitehead listade som ekumenikens
grunder vid Nordiska karismatiska konferensen i Stockholm i höstas
tror jag alla skriver under på.
Den formel
som påve Benedikt XVI (kardinal Ratzinger då intervjun gjordes) uttryckt i intervjuboken Gud och Världen tror jag
också mycket väl fångar in vad ekumenik handlar om. Ratzinger svarar på
journalisten Peter Seewalds fråga ”Kyrkan ber för de kristnas
återförening. Men vem ska egentligen ansluta
sig till vem?”:
——-
Alexander Hislop reveals that many Roman
Catholic teachings did not originate with Christ or the Bible, but were adopted
from ancient pagan Babylonian religion, and given Christian names.
Learn the true origins of:
The Mother and Child
The Mass
The Wafer (Eucharist)
Purgatory
The Sovereign Pontiff
Prayers for the Dead
The Rosary
The Sign of the Cross
The Confessional
Clothing and Crowning of Images
Priests, Monks, and Nuns
Relic Worship
Worship of the Sacred Heart
Extreme Unction
and much more!
Although difficult reading, this book accurately provides a fascinating
historical in-depth examination of the shocking similarities between the
practices of ancient Babylonian religion and those of today’s Roman Catholic
church.
See how a religion that was started by Nimrod and his wife spread to
various regions, taking on different names, but keeping the same pagan rituals
and trappings. These same rituals embody the Catholic church of today.
Similar items:
50 Years in the ”Church” of
Rome
Answers to my Catholic Friends
Understanding Roman Catholicism
Rev 18:20 Rejoice over her, thou heaven,
and ye holy apostles and prophets; for God hath avenged you on
her.
SB
Revelation 18:1-24
Contents: Last
form of apostate Christendom and the warning to God’s people. The human and the
angelic views of Babylon.
Conclusion: As
there is to be an ecclesiastical (church) Babylon (“confusion”) heading up in
the great Tribulation period, so there is also a great political
Babylon, the pride of the great men of the earth, which shall likewise come to
a terrible and an everlasting end, when Christ shall return in glory. This
great system, back of which is anti-Christ, will bitterly hate any who would
glorify any god but materialism and the beast and will be guilty of the blood
of many prophets and saints who have stood true to the ever-lasting Gospel.
Key Word: Babylon’s
fall, Rev_18:2, Rev_18:21.
JFB
Revelation 18:20
holy apostles — So C
reads. But A, B, Vulgate, Syriac, Coptic, and Andreas read,
“Ye saints and ye apostles.”
avenged you on her — Greek, “judged
your judgment on (literally, exacting it from) her.” “There is more
joy in heaven at the harlot’s downfall than at that of the two beasts. For
the most heinous of all sin is the sin of those who know God’s word of grace,
and keep it not. The worldliness of the Church is the most worldly
of all worldliness. Hence, Babylon, in Revelation, has not only
Israel’s sins, but also the sins of the heathen; and John dwells longer on the
abominations and judgments of the harlot than on those of the beast. The
term ‘harlot’ describes the false Church’s essential character. She
retains her human shape as the woman, does not become a beast: she
has the form of godliness, but denies its power. Her rightful lord
and husband, Jehovah-Christ, and the joys and goods of His house, are no longer
her all in all, but she runs after the visible and vain things of the
world, in its manifold forms. The fullest form of her whoredom
is, where the Church wishes to be itself a worldly power, uses politics and
diplomacy, makes flesh her arm, uses unholy means for holy ends, spreads her
dominion by sword or money, fascinates men by sensual ritualism, becomes
‘mistress of ceremonies’ to the dignitaries of the world, flatters prince or
people, and like Israel, seeks the help of one world power against the danger
threatening from another” [Auberlen].
Judgment, therefore, begins with the harlot, as in
privileges the house of God.
——-
Where did the practices and beliefs of Roman Catholicism come from? In this
scholarly classic, first published over eighty years ago, Alexander
Hislop reveals that many Roman Catholic teachings did not originate with Christ
or the Bible, but were adopted from ancient pagan Babylonian religion, and
given Christian names.
The Two Babylons
or The Papal Worship Proved to be
the Worship of Nimrod and His Wife
By the Late Rev. Alexander Hislop
First published as a pamphlet in 1853–greatly expanded in 1858
Contents
Introduction
Chapter I
Distinctive Character of the Two Systems (35k)
Chapter II
Objects of Worship
Section I. Trinity in Unity (22k)
Section II. The Mother and Child, and the Original
of the Child (14k)
- Sub-Section I. The Child in Assyria (57k)
- Sub-Section II. The Child in Egypt (22k)
- Sub-Section III. The Child in Greece (28k)
- Sub-Seciton IV. The Death of the Child (10k)
- Sub-Section V. The Deification of the Child (61k)
Section III. The Mother of the
Child (73k)
Chapter III
Festivals
Section I. Christmas and Lady-day (35k)
Section II. Easter (41k)
Section III. The Nativity of St. John (42k)
Section IV. The Feast of the Assumption (11k)
See Chapter V, Section IV regarding Cupid (St. Valentine’s Day)
Chapter IV
Doctrine and Discipline
Section I. Baptismal Regeneration (47k)
Section II. Justification by Works (39k)
Section III. The Sacrifice of the Mass (25k)
Section IV. Extreme Unction (6k)
Section V. Purgatory and Prayers for the Dead (10k)
Chapter V
Rites and Ceremonies
Section I. Idol Procession (15k)
Section II. Relic Worship (16k)
Section III. The Clothing and Crowning of Images (17k)
Section IV. The Rosary and the Worship of the
Sacred Heart (10k)
Section V. Lamps and Wax-Candles (18k)
Section VI. The Sign of the Cross (21k)
Chapter VI
Religious Orders
Section I. The Sovereign Pontiff (36k)
Section II. Priests, Monks, and Nuns (19k)
Chapter VII
The Two Developments Historically and Prophetically Considered
Section I. The Great Red Dragon (79k)
Section II. The Beast from the Sea (44k)
Section III. The Beast from the Earth (22k)
Section IV. The Image of the Beast (26k)
Section V. The Name of the Beast, the Number of His
Name–the Invisible Head of the Papacy (47k)
Conclusion (28k)
The Two Babylons
Alexander Hislop
Introduction
”And upon
her forehead was a name written, MYSTERY, BABYLON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF
HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH.”–Revelation 17:5
There is this great difference between the works of men and the works of
God, that the same minute and searching investigation, which displays the defects
and imperfections of the one, brings out also the beauties of the other. If the
most finely polished needle on which the art of man has been expended be
subjected to a microscope, many inequalities, much roughness and clumsiness,
will be seen. But if the microscope be brought to bear on the flowers of the
field, no such result appears. Instead of their beauty diminishing, new
beauties and still more delicate, that have escaped the naked eye, are
forthwith discovered; beauties that make us appreciate, in a way which
otherwise we could have had little conception of, the full force of the Lord’s
saying, ”Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not,
neither do they spin: and yet I say unto you, That even Solomon, in all his
glory, was not arrayed like one of these.” The same law appears also in
comparing the Word of God and the most finished productions of men. There are
spots and blemishes in the most admired productions of human genius. But the
more the Scriptures are searched, the more minutely they are studied, the more
their perfection appears; new beauties are brought into light every day; and
the discoveries of science, the researches of the learned, and the labours of
infidels, all alike conspire to illustrate the wonderful harmony of all the
parts, and the Divine beauty that clothes the whole.
If this be the case with Scripture in general, it is especially the case
with prophetic Scripture. As every spoke in the wheel of Providence revolves,
the prophetic symbols start into still more bold and beautiful relief. This is
very strikingly the case with the prophetic language that forms the groundwork
and corner-stone of the present work. There never has been any
difficulty in the mind of any enlightened Protestant in identifying the woman
”sitting on seven mountains,” and having on her forehead the name written,
”Mystery, Babylon the Great,” with the Roman apostacy. ”No other city
in the world has ever been celebrated, as the city of Rome has, for its
situation on seven hills. Pagan poets and orators, who had not thought of
elucidating prophecy, have alike characterised it as ‘the seven hilled
city.’”
seven (n.)
Old English seofon, from Proto-Germanic *sebun (cf.
Old Saxon sibun, Old Norse sjau, Swedish sju,
Danish syv, Old Frisian sowen, siugun,
Middle Dutch seven, Dutch zeven, Old High German sibun,
German sieben, Gothic sibun), from PIE *septm ”seven”
(cf. Sanskrit sapta, Avestan hapta, Hittite shipta,
Greek hepta, Latin septem, Old Church Slavonic sedmi,
Lithuanian septyni, Old Irish secht, Welsh saith).
Long regarded as a number of perfection (e.g. seven wonders; seven
sleepers, the latter translating Latin septem dormientes; seven
against Thebes, etc.), but that notion is late in Old English and in German
a nasty, troublesome woman could be eine böse Sieben ”an evil
seven” (1662).
Magical power or healing skill associated since 16c. with the seventh
son ["The seuenth Male Chyld by iust order (neuer a Gyrle or
Wench being borne betweene)," Thomas Lupton, "A Thousand Notable
Things," 1579]. The typical number for ”very great, strong,” e.g. seven-league
boots in the fairy story of Hop o’my Thumb. The Seven Years’
War (1756-63) is also the Third Silesian War.
The Seven Stars (Old English sibunsterri),
usually refers to the Pleiades, though in 15c. and after this name occasionally
was given to the Big Dipper (which also has seven stars), or the seven planets
of classical astronomy. Popular as a tavern sign, it might also (with six in a
circle, one in the center) be a Masonic symbol.
FOOL: … The reason why the
seven stars are no more than seven is a pretty reason.
LEAR: Because they are not eight?
FOOL: Yes, indeed: thou wouldst make a good fool.
["King Lear," Act I, Scene V]
Thus Virgil refers to it: ”Rome has both become the most beautiful (city)
in the world, and alone has surrounded for herself seven heights with a wall.”
Propertius, in the same strain, speaks of it (only adding another trait, which
completes the Apocalyptic picture) as ”The lofty city on seven hills, which
governs the whole world.” Its ”governing the whole world” is just the
counterpart of the Divine statement–”which reigneth over the kings of the
earth” (Rev 17:18). To call Rome the city ”of the seven hills” was by
its citizens held to be as descriptive as to call it by its own proper name.
Hence Horace speaks of it by reference to its seven hills alone, when he
addresses, ”The gods who have set their affections on the seven hills.”
Martial, in like manner, speaks of ”The seven dominating mountains.” In
times long subsequent, the same kind of language was in current use; for when
Symmachus, the prefect of the city, and the last acting Pagan Pontifex
Maximus, as the Imperial substitute, introduces by letter one
friend of his to another, he calls him ”De septem montibus virum”–”a man
from the seven mountains,” meaning thereby, as the commentators interpret
it, ”Civem Romanum, ”A Roman Citizen.” Now, while this characteristic of
Rome has ever been well marked and defined, it has always been easy to
show, that the Church which has its seat and headquarters on the seven
hills of Rome might most appropriately be called ”Babylon,” inasmuch as it is
the chief seat of idolatry under the New Testament, as the ancient Babylon was
the chief seat of idolatry under the Old. But recent discoveries in
Assyria, taken in connection with the previously well-known but ill-understood
history and mythology of the ancient world, demonstrate that there is a vast
deal more significance in the name Babylon the Great than this. It has
been known all along that Popery was baptised Paganism; but God is now making
it manifest, that the Paganism which Rome has baptised is, in all its essential
elements, the very Paganism which prevailed in the ancient literal Babylon,
when Jehovah opened before Cyrus the two-leaved gates of brass, and cut in
sunder the bars of iron.
That new and unexpected light, in some way or other, should be cast, about
this very period, on the Church of the grand Apostacy, the very language and
symbols of the Apocalypse might have prepared us to anticipate. In the
Apocalyptic visions, it is just before the judgment upon her that, for the
first time, John sees the Apostate Church with the name Babylon the Great
”written upon her forehead” (Rev 17:5). What means the writing of that name ”on
the forehead”? Does it not naturally indicate that, just before judgment
overtakes her, her real character was to be so thoroughly developed, that
everyone who has eyes to see, who has the least spiritual discernment, would be
compelled, as it were, on ocular demonstration, to recognise the wonderful
fitness of the title which the Spirit of God had affixed to her. Her judgment
is now evidently hastening on; and just as it approaches, the Providence of
God, conspiring with the Word of God, by light pouring in from all quarters,
makes it more and more evident that Rome is in very deed the Babylon of the
Apocalypse; that the essential character of her system, the grand objects of
her worship, her festivals, her doctrine and discipline, her rites and
ceremonies, her priesthood and their orders, have all been derived from ancient
Babylon; and, finally, that the Pope himself is truly and properly the lineal
representative of Belshazzar. In the warfare that has been waged against the
domineering pretensions of Rome, it has too often been counted enough merely to
meet and set aside her presumptuous boast, that she is the mother and mistress
of all churches–the one Catholic Church, out of whose pale there is no
salvation. If ever there was excuse for such a mode of dealing with her, that
excuse will hold no longer. If the position I have laid down can be
maintained, she must be stripped of the name of a Christian Church
altogether; for if it was a Church of Christ that was convened on that
night, when the pontiff-king of Babylon, in the midst of his thousand lords,
”praised the gods of gold, and of silver, and of wood, and of stone” (Dan 5:4),
then the Church of Rome is entitled to the name of a Christian Church; but not
otherwise. This to some, no doubt, will appear a very startling position; but
it is one which it is the object of this work to establish; and let the reader
judge for himself, whether I do not bring ample evidence to substantiate my
position.
The Two Babylons
Alexander Hislop
Chapter I
Distinctive Character of the Two Systems
In leading proof of the Babylonian character of the Papal Church the first
point to which I solicit the reader’s attention, is the character of MYSTERY
which attaches alike to the modern Roman and the ancient Babylonian systems.
The gigantic system of moral corruption and idolatry described in this passage
under the emblem of a woman with a ”GOLDEN CUP IN HER HAND” (Rev 17:4), ”making
all nations DRUNK with the wine of her fornication” (Rev 17:2; 18:3), is
divinely called ”MYSTERY, Babylon the Great” (Rev 17:5). That Paul’s ”MYSTERY
of iniquity,” as described in 2 Thessalonians 2:7, has its counterpart in the
Church of Rome, no man of candid mind, who has carefully examined the subject,
can easily doubt. Such was the impression made by that account on the mind of
the great Sir Matthew Hale, no mean judge of evidence, that he used to say,
that if the apostolic description were inserted in the public ”Hue and Cry” any
constable in the realm would be warranted in seizing, wherever he found him,
the bishop of Rome as the head of that ”MYSTERY of iniquity.” Now, as the
system here described is equally characterised by the name of ”MYSTERY,” it may
be presumed that both passages refer to the same system. But the language
applied to the New Testament Babylon, as the reader cannot fail to see,
naturally leads us back to the Babylon of the ancient world. As the Apocalyptic
woman has in her hand A CUP, wherewith she intoxicates the nations, so was it
with the Babylon of old. Of that Babylon, while in all its glory, the Lord thus
spake, in denouncing its doom by the prophet Jeremiah: ”Babylon hath been a
GOLDEN CUP in the Lord’s hand, that made all the earth drunken: the nations
have drunken of her wine; therefore the nations are mad” (Jer 51:7). Why this
exact similarity of language in regard to the two systems? The natural
inference surely is, that the one stands to the other in the relation of type
and antitype. Now, as the Babylon of the Apocalypse is characterised by the
name of ”MYSTERY,” so the grand distinguishing feature of the ancient
Babylonian system was the Chaldean ”MYSTERIES,” that formed so essential a part
of that system. And to these mysteries, the very language of the Hebrew
prophet, symbolical though of course it is, distinctly alludes, when he speaks
of Babylon as a ”golden CUP.” To drink of ”mysterious beverages,” says
Salverte, was indispensable on the part of all who sought initiation in these
Mysteries. These ”mysterious beverages” were composed of ”wine, honey, water,
and flour.” From the ingredients avowedly used, and from the nature of others
not avowed, but certainly used, there can be no doubt that they were of an
intoxicating nature; and till the aspirants had come under their power, till
their understandings had been dimmed, and their passions excited by the
medicated draught, they were not duly prepared for what they were either to
hear or to see. If it be inquired what was the object and design of these
ancient ”Mysteries,” it will be found that there was a wonderful analogy
between them and that ”Mystery of iniquity” which is embodied in the Church of
Rome. Their primary object was to introduce privately, by little and little,
under the seal of secrecy and the sanction of an oath, what it would not have
been safe all at once and openly to propound. The time at which they were
instituted proved that this must have been the case. The Chaldean Mysteries can
be traced up to the days of Semiramis, who lived only a few centuries after the
flood, and who is known to have impressed upon them the image of her own
depraved and polluted mind. *
* AMMIANUS MARCELLINUS compared with JUSTINUS, Historia and EUSEBIUS’
Chronicle. Eusebius says that Ninus and Semiramis reigned in the time of
Abraham.
That beautiful but abandoned queen of Babylon was not only herself a
paragon of unbridled lust and licentiousness, but in the Mysteries which she
had a chief hand in forming, she was worshipped as Rhea, the great ”MOTHER” of
the gods, with such atrocious rites as identified her with Venus, the MOTHER of
all impurity, and raised the very city where she had reigned to a bad eminence
among the nations, as the grand seat at once of idolatry and consecrated
prostitution. *
* A correspondent has pointed out a reference by Pliny to the cup of
Semiramis, which fell into the hands of the victorious Cyrus. Its gigantic
proportions must have made it famous among the Babylonians and the nations with
whom they had intercourse. It weighed fifteen talents, or 1200 pounds. PLINII,
Hist. Nat.
Thus was this Chaldean queen a fit and remarkable prototype of the ”Woman”
in the Apocalypse, with the golden cup in her hand, and the name on her
forehead, ”Mystery, Babylon the Great, the MOTHER of harlots and abominations
of the earth.” The Apocalyptic emblem of the Harlot woman with the cup in her
hand was even embodied in the symbols of idolatry, derived from ancient
Babylon, as they were exhibited in Greece; for thus was the Greek Venus
originally represented, (see note below)
and it is singular that in our own day, and so far as appears for the first
time, the Roman Church has actually taken this very symbol as her own chosen
emblem. In 1825, on occasion of the jubilee, Pope Leo XII struck a medal,
bearing on the one side his own image, and on the other, that of the Church of
Rome symbolised as a ”Woman,” holding in her left hand a cross, and in her
right a CUP, with the legend around her, ”Sedet super universum,” ”The whole
world is her seat.” Now the period when Semiramis lived,–a period when the
patriarchal faith was still fresh in the minds of men, when Shem was still
alive, * to rouse the minds of the faithful to rally around the banner for the
truth and cause of God, made it hazardous all at once and publicly to set up
such a system as was inaugurated by the Babylonian queen.
* For the age of Shem see Genesis 11:10, 11. According to this, Shem lived
502 years after the flood, that is, according to the Hebrew chronology, till BC
1846. The age of Ninus, the husband of Semiramis, as stated in a former note,
according to Eusebius, synchronised with that of Abraham, who was born BC 1996.
It was only about nine years, however, before the end of the reign of Ninus,
that the birth of Abraham is said to have taken place. (SYNCELLUS)
Consequently, on this view, the reign of Ninus must have terminated, according
to the usual chronology, about BC 1987. Clinton, who is of high authority in
chronology, places the reign of Ninus somewhat earlier. In his Fasti Hellenici
he makes his age to have been BC 2182. Layard (in his Nineveh and its Remains)
subscribes to this opinion. Semiramis is said to have survived her husband
forty-two years. (SYNCELL) Whatever view, therefore, be adopted in regard to
the age of Ninus, whether that of Eusebius, or that at which Clinton and Layard
have arrived, it is evident that Shem long survived both Ninus and his wife. Of
course, this argument proceeds on the supposition of the correctness of the
Hebrew chronology. For conclusive evidence on that subject, see note 2 below.
We know, from the statements in Job, that among patriarchal tribes that had
nothing whatever to do with Mosaic institutions, but which adhered to the pure
faith of the patriarchs, idolatry in any shape was held to be a crime, to be
visited with signal and summary punishment on the heads of those who practised
it. ”If I beheld the sun,” said Job, ”when it shined, or the moon walking in
brightness; and my heart hath been secretly enticed, and * my mouth hath kissed
my hand; this also were an iniquity to be punished by the judge; for I should have
denied the God that is above” (Job 31:26-28).
* That which I have rendered ”and” is in the authorised version ”or,” but
there is no reason for such a rendering, for the word in the original is the
very same as that which connects the previous clause, ”and my heart,” &c.
Now if this was the case in Job’s day, much more must it have been the case
at the earlier period when the Mysteries were instituted. It was a matter,
therefore, of necessity, if idolatry were to be brought in, and especially such
foul idolatry as the Babylonian system contained in its bosom, that it should
be done stealthily and in secret. *
* It will be seen by-and-by what cogent reason there was, in point of fact,
for the profoundest secrecy in the matter. See Chapter II
Even though introduced by the hand of power, it might have produced a
revulsion, and violent attempts might have been made by the uncorrupted portion
of mankind to put it down; and at all events, if it had appeared at once in all
its hideousness, it would have alarmed the consciences of men, and defeated the
very object in view. That object was to bind all mankind in blind and absolute
submission to a hierarchy entirely dependent on the sovereigns of Babylon. In
the carrying out of this scheme, all knowledge, sacred and profane, came to be
monopolised by the priesthood, who dealt it out to those who were initiated in
the ”Mysteries” exactly as they saw fit, according as the interests of the
grand system of spiritual despotism they had to administer might seem to
require. Thus the people, wherever the Babylonian system spread, were bound
neck and heel to the priests. The priests were the only depositaries of
religious knowledge; they only had the true tradition by which the writs and
symbols of the public religion could be interpreted; and without blind and
implicit submission to them, what was necessary for salvation could not be
known. Now compare this with the early history of the Papacy, and with its
spirit and modus operandi throughout, and how exact was the coincidence! Was it
in a period of patriarchal light that the corrupt system of the Babylonian
”Mysteries” began? It was in a period of still greater light that that unholy
and unscriptural system commenced, that has found such rank development in the
Church of Rome. It began in the very age of the apostles, when the primitive
Church was in its flower, when the glorious fruits of Pentecost were everywhere
to be seen, when martyrs were sealing their testimony for the truth with their
blood. Even then, when the Gospel shone so brightly, the Spirit of God bore
this clear and distinct testimony by Paul: ”THE MYSTERY OF INIQUITY DOTH
ALREADY WORK” (2 Thess 2:7). That system of iniquity which then began it was
divinely foretold was to issue in a portentous apostacy, that in due time would
be awfully ”revealed,” and would continue until it should be destroyed ”by the
breath of the Lord’s mouth, and consumed by the brightness of His coming.” But
at its first introduction into the Church, it came in secretly and by stealth,
with ”all DECEIVABLENESS of unrighteousness.” It wrought ”mysteriously” under
fair but false pretences, leading men away from the simplicity of the truth as
it is in Jesus. And it did so secretly, for the very same reason that idolatry
was secretly introduced in the ancient Mysteries of Babylon; it was not safe,
it was not prudent to do otherwise. The zeal of the true Church, though
destitute of civil power, would have aroused itself, to put the false system
and all its abettors beyond the pale of Christianity, if it had appeared openly
and all at once in all its grossness; and this would have arrested its
progress. Therefore it was brought in secretly, and by little and little, one
corruption being introduced after another, as apostacy proceeded, and the backsliding
Church became prepared to tolerate it, till it has reached the gigantic height
we now see, when in almost every particular the system of the Papacy is the
very antipodes of the system of the primitive Church. Of the gradual
introduction of all that is now most characteristic of Rome, through the
working of the ”Mystery of iniquity,” we have very striking evidence, preserved
even by Rome itself, in the inscriptions copied from the Roman catacombs. These
catacombs are extensive excavations underground in the neighbourhood of Rome,
in which the Christians, in times of persecution during the first three
centuries, celebrated their worship, and also buried their dead. On some of the
tombstones there are inscriptions still to be found, which are directly in the
teeth of the now well-known principles and practices of Rome. Take only one
example: What, for instance, at this day is a more distinguishing mark of the
Papacy than the enforced celibacy of the clergy? Yet from these inscriptions we
have most decisive evidence, that even in Rome, there was a time when no such
system of clerical celibacy was known. Witness the following, found on
different tombs:
1. ”To Basilius, the presbyter, and Felicitas, his wife. They made this for
themselves.”
2. ”Petronia, a priest’s wife, the type of modesty. In this place I lay my
bones. Spare your tears, dear husband and daughter, and believe that it is
forbidden to weep for one who lives in God.” (DR. MAITLAND’S Church in the
Catacombs) A prayer here and there for the dead: ”May God refresh thy spirit,”
proves that even then the Mystery of iniquity had begun to work; but
inscriptions such as the above equally show that it had been slowly and
cautiously working,–that up to the period to which they refer, the Roman Church
had not proceeded the length it has done now, of absolutely ”forbidding its
priests to ‘marry.’” Craftily and gradually did Rome lay the foundation of its
system of priestcraft, on which it was afterwards to rear so vast a
superstructure. At its commencement, ”Mystery” was stamped upon its system.
But this feature of ”Mystery” has adhered to it throughout its whole
course. When it had once succeeded in dimming the light of the Gospel,
obscuring the fulness and freeness of the grace of God, and drawing away the
souls of men from direct and immediate dealings with the One Grand Prophet and
High Priest of our profession, a mysterious power was attributed to the clergy,
which gave them ”dominion over the faith” of the people–a dominion directly
disclaimed by apostolic men (2 Cor 1:24), but which, in connection with the
confessional, has become at least as absolute and complete as was ever
possessed by Babylonian priest over those initiated in the ancient Mysteries.
The clerical power of the Roman priesthood culminated in the erection of the
confessional. That confessional was itself borrowed from Babylon. The
confession required of the votaries of Rome is entirely different from the
confession prescribed in the Word of God. The dictate of Scripture in regard to
confession is, ”Confess your faults one to another” (James 5:16), which implies
that the priest should confess to the people, as well as the people to the
priest, if either should sin against the other. This could never have served
any purpose of spiritual despotism; and therefore, Rome, leaving the Word of
God, has had recourse to the Babylonian system. In that system, secret
confession to the priest, according to a prescribed form, was required of all
who were admitted to the ”Mysteries”; and till such confession had been made,
no complete initiation could take place. Thus does Salverte refer to this
confession as observed in Greece, in rites that can be clearly traced to a
Babylonian origin: ”All the Greeks, from Delphi to Thermopylae, were initiated
in the Mysteries of the temple of Delphi. Their silence in regard to everything
they were commanded to keep secret was secured both by the fear of the
penalties threatened to a perjured revelation, and by the general CONFESSION
exacted of the aspirants after initiation–a confession which caused them
greater dread of the indiscretion of the priest, than gave him reason to dread
their indiscretion.” This confession is also referred to by Potter, in his
”Greek Antiquities,” though it has been generally overlooked. In his account of
the Eleusinian mysteries, after describing the preliminary ceremonies and
instructions before the admission of the candidates for initiation into the
immediate presence of the divinities, he thus proceeds: ”Then the priest that
initiated them called the Hierophant, proposed certain QUESTIONs, as, whether
they were fasting, &c., to which they returned answers in a set form.” The
etcetera here might not strike a casual reader; but it is a pregnant etcetera,
and contains a great deal. It means, Are you free from every violation of
chastity? and that not merely in the sense of moral impurity, but in that
factitious sense of chastity which Paganism always cherishes. Are you free from
the guilt of murder?–for no one guilty of slaughter, even accidentally, could
be admitted till he was purged from blood, and there were certain priests,
called Koes, who ”heard confessions” in such cases, and purged the guilt away.
The strictness of the inquiries in the Pagan confessional is evidently implied
in certain licentious poems of Propertius, Tibullus, and Juvenal. Wilkinson, in
his chapter on ”Private Fasts and Penance,” which, he says, ”were strictly
enforced,” in connection with ”certain regulations at fixed periods,” has
several classical quotations, which clearly prove whence Popery derived the
kind of questions which have stamped that character of obscenity on its
confessional, as exhibited in the notorious pages of Peter Dens. The pretence
under which this auricular confession was required, was, that the solemnities
to which the initiated were to be admitted were so high, so heavenly, so holy,
that no man with guilt lying on his conscience, and sin unpurged, could
lawfully be admitted to them. For the safety, therefore of those who were to be
initiated, it was held to be indispensable that the officiating priest should
thoroughly probe their consciences, lest coming without due purgation from
previous guilt contracted, the wrath of the gods should be provoked against the
profane intruders. This was the pretence; but when we know the essentially
unholy nature, both of the gods and their worship, who can fail to see that
this was nothing more than a pretence; that the grand object in requiring the
candidates for initiation to make confession to the priest of all their secret
faults and shortcomings and sins, was just to put them entirely in the power of
those to whom the inmost feelings of their souls and their most important
secrets were confided? Now, exactly in the same way, and for the very same
purposes, has Rome erected the confessional. Instead of requiring priests and
people alike, as the Scripture does, to ”confess their faults one to another,”
when either have offended the other, it commands all, on pain of perdition, to
confess to the priest, * whether they have transgressed against him or no,
while the priest is under no obligation to confess to the people at all.
* BISHOP HAY’S Sincere Christian. In this work, the following question and
answer occur: ”Q. Is this confession of our sins necessary for obtaining
absolution? A. It is ordained by Jesus Christ as absolutely necessary for this
purpose.” See also Poor Man’s Manual, a work in use in Ireland.
Without such confession, in the Church of Rome, there can be no admission
to the Sacraments, any more than in the days of Paganism there could be
admission without confession to the benefit of the Mysteries. Now, this
confession is made by every individual, in SECRECY AND IN SOLITUDE, to the
priest sitting in the name and clothed with the authority of God, invested with
the power to examine the conscience, to judge the life, to absolve or condemn
according to his mere arbitrary will and pleasure. This is the grand pivot on
which the whole ”Mystery of iniquity,” as embodied in the Papacy, is made to
turn; and wherever it is submitted to, admirably does it serve the design of
binding men in abject subjection to the priesthood.
In conformity with the principle out of which the confessional grew, the
Church, that is, the clergy, claimed to be the sole depositaries of the true
faith of Christianity. As the Chaldean priests were believed alone to possess
the key to the understanding of the Mythology of Babylon, a key handed down to
them from primeval antiquity, so the priests of Rome set up to be the sole
interpreters of Scripture; they only had the true tradition, transmitted from
age to age, without which it was impossible to arrive at its true meaning.
They, therefore, require implicit faith in their dogmas; all men were bound to
believe as the Church believed, while the Church in this way could shape its
faith as it pleased. As possessing supreme authority, also, over the faith,
they could let out little or much, as they judged most expedient; and ”RESERVE”
in teaching the great truths of religion was as essential a principle in the
system of Babylon, as it is in Romanism or Tractariansim at this day. * It was
this priestly claim to dominion over the faith of men, that ”imprisoned the
truth in unrighteousness” ** in the ancient world, so that ”darkness covered
the earth, and gross darkness the people.” It was the very same claim, in the
hands of the Roman priests, that ushered in the dark ages, when, through many a
dreary century, the Gospel was unknown, and the Bible a sealed book to millions
who bore the name of Christ. In every respect, then, we see how justly Rome
bears on its forehead the name, ”Mystery, Babylon the Great.”
* Even among the initiated there was a difference. Some were admitted only
to the ”Lesser Mysteries”; the ”Greater” were for a favoured few. WILKINSON’S
Ancient Egyptians
** Romans 1:18. The best interpreters render the passage as given above. It
will be observed Paul is expressly speaking of the heathen.
Notes
Woman with Golden Cup
In Pausanias we find an account of a goddess represented in the very
attitude of the Apocalyptic ”Woman.” ”But of this stone [Parian marble]
Phidias,” says he, ”made a statue of Nemesis; and on the head of the goddess
there is a crown adorned with stags, and images of victory of no great
magnitude. In her left hand, too, she holds a branch of an ash tree, and in her
right A CUP, in which Ethiopians are carved.” (PAUSANIAS, Attica) Pausanias
declares himself unable to assign any reason why ”the Ethiopians” were carved
on the cup; but the meaning of the Ethiopians and the stags too will be
apparent to all who read further. We find, however, from statements made in the
same chapter, that though Nemesis is commonly represented as the goddess of
revenge, she must have been also known in quite a different character. Thus
Pausanias proceeds, commenting on the statue: ”But neither has this statue of
the goddess wings. Among the Smyrneans, however, who possess the most holy
images of Nemesis, I perceived afterwards that these statues had wings. For, as
this goddess principally pertains to lovers, on this account they may be
supposed to have given wings to Nemesis, as well as to love,” i.e., Cupid. The
giving of wings to Nemesis, the goddess who ”principally pertained to lovers,”
because Cupid, the god of love, bore them, implies that, in the opinion of
Pausanias, she was the counterpart of Cupid, or the goddess of love–that is,
Venus. While this is the inference naturally to be deduced from the words of
Pausanias, we find it confirmed by an express statement of Photius, speaking of
the statue of Rhamnusian Nemesis: ”She was at first erected in the form of
Venus, and therefore bore also the branch of an apple tree.” (PHOTII, Lexicon)
Though a goddess of love and a goddess of revenge might seem very remote in
their characters from one another, yet it is not difficult to see how this must
have come about. The goddess who was revealed to the initiated in the
Mysteries, in the most alluring manner, was also known to be most unmerciful
and unrelenting in taking vengeance upon those who revealed these Mysteries;
for every such one who was discovered was unsparingly put to death. (POTTER’S
Antiquities, ”Eleusinia”) Thus, then, the cup-bearing goddess was at once
Venus, the goddess of licentiousness, and Nemesis, the stern and unmerciful one
to all who rebelled against her authority. How remarkable a type of the woman,
whom John saw, described in one aspect as the ”Mother of harlots,” and in
another as ”Drunken with the blood of the saints”!
____________________
Hebrew Chronology
Dr. Hales has attempted to substitute the longer chronology of the
Septuagint for the Hebrew chronology. But this implies that the Hebrew Church,
as a body, was not faithful to the trust committed to it in respect to the
keeping of the Scriptures, which seems distinctly opposed to the testimony of
our Lord in reference to these Scriptures (John 5:39; 10:35), and also to that
of Paul (Rom 3:2), where there is not the least hint of unfaithfulness. Then we
can find a reason that might induce the translators of the Septuagint in
Alexandria to 83 lengthen out the period of the ancient history of the world;
we can find no reason to induce the Jews in Palestine to shorten it. The
Egyptians had long, fabulous eras in their history, and Jews dwelling in Egypt
might wish to make their sacred history go as far back as they could, and the
addition of just one hundred years in each case, as in the Septuagint, to the
ages of the patriarchs, looks wonderfully like an intentional forgery; whereas
we cannot imagine why the Palestine Jews should make any change in regard to
this matter at all. It is well known that the Septuagint contains innumerable
gross errors and interpolations.
Bunsen casts overboard all Scriptural chronology whatever, whether Hebrew,
Samaritan, or Greek, and sets up the unsupported dynasties of Manetho, as if
they were sufficient to over-ride the Divine word as to a question of
historical fact. But, if the Scriptures are not historically true, we can have
no assurance of their truth at all. Now it is worthy of notice that, though
Herodotus vouches for the fact that at one time there were no fewer than twelve
contemporaneous kings in Egypt, Manetho, as observed by Wilkinson, has made no
allusion to this, but has made his Thinite, Memphite, and Diospolitan dynasties
of kings, and a long etcetera of other dynasties, all successive!
The period over which the dynasties of Manetho extend, beginning with
Menes, the first king of these dynasties, is in itself a very lengthened
period, and surpassing all rational belief. But Bunsen, not content with this,
expresses his very confident persuasion that there had been long lines of
powerful monarchs in Upper and Lower Egypt, ”during a period of from two to
four thousand years,” even before the reign of Menes. In coming to such a
conclusion, he plainly goes upon the supposition that the name Mizraim, which
is the Scriptural name of the land of Egypt, and is evidently derived from the
name of the son of Ham, and grandson of Noah, is not, after all, the name of a
person, but the name of the united kingdom formed under Menes out of ”the two
Misr,” ”Upper and Lower Egypt,” which had previously existed as separate
kingdoms, the name Misrim, according to him, being a plural word. This
derivation of the name Mizraim, or Misrim, as a plural word, infallibly leaves
the impression that Mizraim, the son of Ham, must be only a mythical personage.
But there is no real reason for thinking that Mizraim is a plural word, or that
it became the name of ”the land of Ham,” from any other reason than because that
land was also the land of Ham’s son. Mizraim, as it stands in the Hebrew of
Genesis, without the points, is Metzrim; and Metzr-im signifies ”The encloser
or embanker of the sea” (the word being derived from Im, the same as Yam, ”the
sea,” and Tzr, ”to enclose,” with the formative M prefixed).
If the accounts which ancient history has handed down to us of the original
state of Egypt be correct, the first man who formed a settlement there must
have done the very thing implied in this name. Diodorus Siculus tells us that,
in primitive times, that which, when he wrote, ”was Egypt, was said to have
been not a country, but one universal sea.” Plutarch also says (De Iside) that
Egypt was sea. From Herodotus, too, we have very striking evidence to the same
effect. He excepts the province of Thebes from his statement; but when it is
seen that ”the province of Thebes” did not belong to Mizraim, or Egypt proper,
which, says the author of the article ”Mizraim” in Biblical Cyclopoedia,
”properly denotes Lower Egypt”; the testimony of Herodotus will be seen
entirely to agree with that of Diodorus and Plutarch. His statement is, that in
the reign of the first king, ”the whole of Egypt (except the province of
Thebes) was an extended marsh. No part of that which is now situate beyond the
lake Moeris was to be seen, the distance between which lake and the sea is a
journey of seven days.” Thus all Mizraim or Lower Egypt was under water.
This state of the country arose from the unrestrained overflowing of the
Nile, which, to adopt the language of Wilkinson, ”formerly washed the foot of
the sandy mountains of the Lybian chain.” Now, before Egypt could be fit for
being a suitable place for human abode–before it could become what it
afterwards did become, one of the most fertile of all lands, it was
indispensable that bounds should be set to the overflowings of the sea (for by
the very name of the Ocean, or Sea, the Nile was anciently called–DIODORUS),
and that for this purpose great embankments should enclose or confine its
waters. If Ham’s son, then, led a colony into Lower Egypt and settled it there,
this very work he must have done. And what more natural than that a name should
be given him in memory of his great achievement? and what name so exactly
descriptive as Metzr-im, ”The embanker of the sea,” or as the name is found at
this day applied to all Egypt (WILKINSON), Musr or Misr? Names always tend to
abbreviation in the mouths of a people, and, therefore, ”The land of Misr” is
evidently just ”The land of the embanker.” From this statement it follows that
the ”embanking of the sea”–the ”enclosing” of it within certain bounds, was the
making of it as a river, so far as Lower Egypt was concerned. Viewing the
matter in this light, what a meaning is there in the Divine language in Ezekiel
29:3, where judgments are denounced against the king of Egypt, the
representative of Metzr-im, ”The embanker of the sea,” for his pride: ”Behold,
I am against thee, Pharaoh, king of Egypt, the great dragon that lieth in the
midst of his rivers, which saith, My river is mine own, I have made it for
myself.”
When we turn to what is recorded of the doings of Menes, who, by Herodotus,
Manetho, and Diodorus alike, is made the first historical king of Egypt, and
compare what is said of him, with this simple explanation of the meaning of the
name of Mizraim, how does the one cast light on the other? Thus does Wilkinson
describe the great work which entailed fame on Menes, ”who,” says he, ”is
allowed by universal consent to have been the first sovereign of the country.”
”Having diverted the course of the Nile, which formerly washed the foot of the
sandy mountains of the Lybian chain, he obliged it to run in the centre of the
valley, nearly at an equal distance between the two parallel ridges of
mountains which border it on the east and west; and built the city of Memphis
in the bed of the ancient channel. This change was effected by constructing a
dyke about a hundred stadia above the site of the projected city, whose lofty
mounds and strong EMBANKMENTS turned the water to the eastward, and effectually
CONFINED the river to its new bed. The dyke was carefully kept in repair by
succeeding kings; and, even as late as the Persian invasion, a guard was always
maintained there, to overlook the necessary repairs, and to watch over the
state of the embankments.” (Egyptians)
When we see that Menes, the first of the acknowledged historical kings of
Egypt, accomplished that very achievement which is implied in the name of
Mizraim, who can resist the conclusion that menes and Mizraim are only two
different names for the same person? And if so, what becomes of Bunsen’s vision
of powerful dynasties of sovereigns ”during a period of from two to four
thousand years” before the reign of Menes, by which all Scriptural chronology respecting
Noah and his sons was to be upset, when it turns out that Menes must have been
Mizraim, the grandson of Noah himself? Thus does Scripture contain, within its
own bosom, the means of vindicating itself; and thus do its minutest
statements, even in regard to matters of fact, when thoroughly understood, shed
surprising light on the dark parts of the history of the world.
The Two Babylons
Alexander Hislop
Chapter II
Section I
Trinity in Unity
If there be this general coincidence between the systems of Babylon and
Rome, the question arises, Does the coincidence stop here? To this the answer
is, Far otherwise. We have only to bring the ancient Babylonian Mysteries to
bear on the whole system of Rome, and then it will be seen how immensely the
one has borrowed from the other. These Mysteries were long shrouded in
darkness, but now the thick darkness begins to pass away. All who have paid the
least attention to the literature of Greece, Egypt, Phoenicia, or Rome are
aware of the place which the ”Mysteries” occupied in these countries, and that,
whatever circumstantial diversities there might be, in all essential respects
these ”Mysteries” in the different countries were the same. Now, as the
language of Jeremiah, already quoted, would indicate that Babylon was the
primal source from which all these systems of idolatry flowed, so the
deductions of the most learned historians, on mere historical grounds have led
to the same conclusion. From Zonaras we find that the concurrent testimony of
the ancient authors he had consulted was to this effect; for, speaking of
arithmetic and astronomy, he says: ”It is said that these came from the
Chaldees to the Egyptians, and thence to the Greeks.” If the Egyptians and
Greeks derived their arithmetic and astronomy from Chaldea, seeing these in
Chaldea were sacred sciences, and monopolised by the priests, that is
sufficient evidence that they must have derived their religion from the same
quarter. Both Bunsen and Layard in their researches have come to substantially
the same result. The statement of Bunsen is to the effect that the religious
system of Egypt was derived from Asia, and ”the primitive empire in Babel.”
Layard, again, though taking a somewhat more favourable view of the system of
the Chaldean Magi, than, I am persuaded, the facts of history warrant,
nevertheless thus speaks of that system: ”Of the great antiquity of this
primitive worship there is abundant evidence, and that it originated among the
inhabitants of the Assyrian plains, we have the united testimony of sacred and
profane history. It obtained the epithet of perfect, and was believed to be the
most ancient of religious systems, having preceded that of the Egyptians.” ”The
identity,” he adds, ”of many of the Assyrian doctrines with those of Egypt is
alluded to by Porphyry and Clemens”; and, in connection with the same subject,
he quotes the following from Birch on Babylonian cylinders and monuments: ”The
zodiacal signs…show unequivocally that the Greeks derived their notions and
arrangements of the zodiac [and consequently their Mythology, that was
intertwined with it] from the Chaldees. The identity of Nimrod with the
constellation Orion is not to be rejected.” Ouvaroff, also, in his learned work
on the Eleusinian mysteries, has come to the same conclusion. After referring
to the fact that the Egyptian priests claimed the honour of having transmitted
to the Greeks the first elements of Polytheism, he thus concludes: ”These
positive facts would sufficiently prove, even without the conformity of ideas,
that the Mysteries transplanted into Greece, and there united with a certain
number of local notions, never lost the character of their origin derived from
the cradle of the moral and religious ideas of the universe. All these separate
facts–all these scattered testimonies, recur to that fruitful principle which
places in the East the centre of science and civilisation.” If thus we have
evidence that Egypt and Greece derived their religion from Babylon, we have
equal evidence that the religious system of the Phoenicians came from the same
source. Macrobius shows that the distinguishing feature of the Phoenician
idolatry must have been imported from Assyria, which, in classic writers,
included Babylonia. ”The worship of the Architic Venus,” says he, ”formerly
flourished as much among the Assyrians as it does now among the Phenicians.”
Now to establish the identity between the systems of ancient Babylon and
Papal Rome, we have just to inquire in how far does the system of the Papacy
agree with the system established in these Babylonian Mysteries. In prosecuting
such an inquiry there are considerable difficulties to be overcome; for, as in
geology, it is impossible at all points to reach the deep, underlying strata of
the earth’s surface, so it is not to be expected that in any one country we
should find a complete and connected account of the system established in that
country. But yet, even as the geologist, by examining the contents of a fissure
here, an upheaval there, and what ”crops out” of itself on the surface elsewhere,
is enabled to determine, with wonderful certainty, the order and general
contents of the different strata over all the earth, so is it with the subject
of the Chaldean Mysteries. What is wanted in one country is supplemented in
another; and what actually ”crops out” in different directions, to a large
extent necessarily determines the character of much that does not directly
appear on the surface. Taking, then, the admitted unity and Babylonian
character of the ancient Mysteries of Egypt, Greece, Phoenicia, and Rome, as
the clue to guide us in our researches, let us go on from step to step in our
comparison of the doctrine and practice of the two Babylons–the Babylon of the
Old Testament and the Babylon of the New.
And here I have to notice, first, the identity of the objects of worship in
Babylon and Rome. The ancient Babylonians, just as the modern Romans,
recognised in words the unity of the Godhead; and, while worshipping
innumerable minor deities, as possessed of certain influence on human affairs,
they distinctly acknowledged that there was ONE infinite and almighty Creator,
supreme over all. Most other nations did the same. ”In the early ages of
mankind,” says Wilkinson in his ”Ancient Egyptians,” ”The existence of a sole
and omnipotent Deity, who created all things, seems to have been the universal
belief; and tradition taught men the same notions on this subject, which, in
later times, have been adopted by all civilised nations.” ”The Gothic
religion,” says Mallet, ”taught the being of a supreme God, Master of the
Universe, to whom all things were submissive and obedient.” (Tacti. de Morib.
Germ.) The ancient Icelandic mythology calls him ”the Author of every thing
that existeth, the eternal, the living, and awful Being; the searcher into
concealed things, the Being that never changeth.” It attributeth to this deity
”an infinite power, a boundless knowledge, and incorruptible justice.” We have
evidence of the same having been the faith of ancient Hindostan. Though modern
Hinduism recognises millions of gods, yet the Indian sacred books show that
originally it had been far otherwise. Major Moor, speaking of Brahm, the
supreme God of the Hindoos, says: ”Of Him whose Glory is so great, there is no
image” (Veda). He ”illumines all, delights all, whence all proceeded; that by
which they live when born, and that to which all must return” (Veda). In the
”Institutes of Menu,” he is characterised as ”He whom the mind alone can
perceive; whose essence eludes the external organs, who has no visible parts,
who exists from eternity…the soul of all beings, whom no being can comprehend.”
In these passages, there is a trace of the existence of Pantheism; but the very
language employed bears testimony to the existence among the Hindoos at one
period of a far purer faith.
Nay, not merely had the ancient Hindoos exalted ideas of the natural
perfections of God, but there is evidence that they were well aware of the
gracious character of God, as revealed in His dealings with a lost and guilty
world. This is manifest from the very name Brahm, appropriated by them to the
one infinite and eternal God. There has been a great deal of unsatisfactory
speculation in regard to the meaning of this name, but when the different
statements in regard to Brahm are carefully considered, it becomes evident that
the name Brahm is just the Hebrew Rahm, with the digamma prefixed, which is
very frequent in Sanscrit words derived from Hebrew or Chaldee. Rahm in Hebrew
signifies ”The merciful or compassionate one.” But Rahm also signifies the WOMB
or the bowels; as the seat of compassion. Now we find such language applied to
Brahm, the one supreme God, as cannot be accounted for, except on the
supposition that Brahm had the very same meaning as the Hebrew Rahm. Thus, we
find the God Crishna, in one of the Hindoo sacred books, when asserting his
high dignity as a divinity and his identity with the Supreme, using the
following words: ”The great Brahm is my WOMB, and in it I place my foetus, and
from it is the procreation of all nature. The great Brahm is the WOMB of all
the various forms which are conceived in every natural womb.” How could such
language ever have been applied to ”The supreme Brahm, the most holy, the most
high God, the Divine being, before all other gods; without birth, the mighty Lord,
God of gods, the universal Lord,” but from the connection between Rahm ”the
womb” and Rahm ”the merciful one”? Here, then, we find that Brahm is just the
same as ”Er-Rahman,” ”The all-merciful one,”–a title applied by the Turks to
the Most High, and that the Hindoos, notwithstanding their deep religious
degradation now, had once known that ”the most holy, most high God,” is also
”The God of Mercy,” in other words, that he is ”a just God and a Saviour.” And
proceeding on this interpretation of the name Brahm, we see how exactly their
religious knowledge as to the creation had coincided with the account of the
origin of all things, as given in Genesis. It is well known that the Brahmins,
to exalt themselves as a priestly, half-divine caste, to whom all others ought
to bow down, have for many ages taught that, while the other castes came from
the arms, and body and feet of Brahma–the visible representative and
manifestation of the invisible Brahm, and identified with him–they alone came
from the mouth of the creative God. Now we find statements in their sacred
books which prove that once a very different doctrine must have been taught.
Thus, in one of the Vedas, speaking of Brahma, it is expressly stated that ”ALL
beings” ”are created from his MOUTH.” In the passage in question an attempt is
made to mystify the matter; but, taken in connection with the meaning of the
name Brahm, as already given, who can doubt what was the real meaning of the
statement, opposed though it be to the lofty and exclusive pretensions of the
Brahmins? It evidently meant that He who, ever since the fall, has been
revealed to man as the ”Merciful and Gracious One” (Exo 34:6), was known at the
same time as the Almighty One, who in the beginning ”spake and it was done,”
”commanded and all things stood fast,” who made all things by the ”Word of His
power.” After what has now been said, any one who consults the ”Asiatic
Researches,” may see that it is in a great measure from a wicked perversion of
this Divine title of the One Living and True God, a title that ought to have
been so dear to sinful men, that all those moral abominations have come that
make the symbols of the pagan temples of India so offensive to the eye of
purity. *
* While such is the meaning of Brahm, the meaning of Deva, the generic name
for ”God” in India, is near akin to it. That name is commonly derived from the
Sanscrit, Div, ”to shine,”–only a different form of Shiv, which has the same
meaning, which again comes from the Chaldee Ziv, ”brightness or splendour” (Dan
2:31); and, no doubt, when sun-worship was engrafted on the Patriarchal faith,
the visible splendour of the deified luminary might be suggested by the name.
But there is reason to believe that ”Deva” has a much more honourable origin,
and that it really came originally from the Chaldee, Thav, ”good,” which is
also legitimately pronounced Thev, and in the emphatic form is Theva or Thevo,
”The Good.” The first letter, represented by Th, as shown by Donaldson in his
New Cratylus, is frequently pronounced Dh. Hence, from Dheva or Theva, ”The
Good,” naturally comes the Sanscrit, Deva, or, without the digamma, as it
frequently is, Deo, ”God,” the Latin, Deus, and the Greek, Theos, the digamma
in the original Thevo-s being also dropped, as novus in Latin is neos in Greek.
This view of the matter gives an emphasis to the saying of our Lord (Matt
19:17): ”There is none good but One, that is (Theos) God”–”The Good.”
So utterly idolatrous was the Babylonian recognition of the Divine unity,
that Jehovah, the Living God, severely condemned His own people for giving any
countenance to it: ”They that sanctify themselves, and purify themselves in the
gardens, after the rites of the ONLY ONE, * eating swine’s flesh, and the
abomination, and the mouse, shall be consumed together” (Isa 66:17).
* The words in our translation are, ”behind one tree,” but there is no word
in the original for ”tree”; and it is admitted by Lowth, and the best
orientalists, that the rendering should be, ”after the rites of Achad,” i.e.
”The Only One.” I am aware that some object to making ”Achad” signify, ”The
Only One,” on the ground that it wants the article. But how little weight is in
this, may be seen from the fact that it is this very term ”Achad,” and that
without the article, that is used in Deuteronomy, when the Unity of the Godhead
is asserted in the most emphatic manner, ”Hear, O Israel, Jehovah our God is
one Jehovah,” i.e., ”only Jehovah.” When it is intended to assert the Unity of
the Godhead in the strongest possible manner, the Babylonians used the term
”Adad.” Macrobii Saturnalia.
In the unity of that one Only God of the Babylonians, there were three
persons, and to symbolise that doctrine of the Trinity, they employed, as the
discoveries of Layard prove, the equilateral triangle, just as it is well known
the Romish Church does at this day. *
* LAYARD’s Babylon and Nineveh. The Egyptians also used the triangle as a
symbol of their ”triform divinity.”
In both cases such a comparison is most degrading to the King Eternal, and
is fitted utterly to pervert the minds of those who contemplate it, as if there
was or could be any similitude between such a figure and Him who hath said, ”To
whom will ye liken God, and what likeness will ye compare unto Him?”
The Papacy has in some of its churches, as, for instance, in the monastery
of the so-called Trinitarians of Madrid, an image of the Triune God, with three
heads on one body. * The Babylonians had something of the same. Mr. Layard, in
his last work, has given a specimen of such a triune divinity, worshipped in
ancient Assyria. **
* PARKHURST’S Hebrew Lexicon, ”Cherubim.” From the following extract from
the Dublin Catholic Layman, a very able Protestant paper, describing a Popish
picture of the Trinity, recently published in that city, it will be seen that
something akin to this mode of representing the Godhead is appearing nearer
home: ”At the top of the picture is a representation of the Holy Trinity. We
beg to speak of it with due reverence. God the Father and God the Son are
represented as a MAN with two heads, one body, and two arms. One of the heads
is like the ordinary pictures of our Saviour. The other is the head of an old
man, surmounted by a triangle. Out of the middle of this figure is proceeding
the Holy Ghost in the form of a dove. We think it must be painful to any
Christian mind, and repugnant to Christian feeling, to look at this figure.”
(17th July, 1856)
** Babylon and Nineveh. Some have said that the plural form of the name of
God, in the Hebrew of Genesis, affords no argument of the doctrine of plurality
of persons in the Godhead, because the same word in the plural is applied to
heathen divinities. But if the supreme divinity in almost all ancient heathen
nations was triune, the futility of this objection must be manifest.
In India, the supreme divinity, in like manner, in one of the most ancient
cave-temples, is represented with three heads on one body, under the name of
”Eko Deva Trimurtti,” ”One God, three forms.” *
* Col. KENNEDY’S Hindoo Mythology. Col. Kennedy objects to the application
of the name ”Eko Deva” to the triform image in the cave-temple at Elephanta, on
the ground that that name belongs only to the supreme Brahm. But in so doing he
is entirely inconsistent, for he admits that Brahma, the first person in that
triform image, is identified with the supreme Brahm; and further, that a curse
is pronounced upon all who distinguish between Brahma, Vishnu, and Seva, the
three divinities represented by that image.
In Japan, the Buddhists worship their great divinity, Buddha, with three
heads, in the very same form, under the name of ”San Pao Fuh.” All these have
existed from ancient times. While overlaid with idolatry, the recognition of a
Trinity was universal in all the ancient nations of the world, proving how
deep-rooted in the human race was the primeval doctrine on this subject, which
comes out so distinctly in Genesis. *
* The threefold invocation of the sacred name in the blessing of Jacob
bestowed on the sons of Joseph is very striking: ”And he blessed Joseph, and
said, God, before whom my fathers Abraham and Isaac did walk the God which fed
me all my life long unto this day, the Angel which redeemed me from all evil,
bless the lads” (Gen 48:15,16). If the angel here referred to had not been God,
Jacob could never have invoked him as on an equality with God. In Hosea 12:3-5,
”The Angel who redeemed” Jacob is expressly called God: ”He (Jacob) had power
with God: yea, he had power over the Angel, and prevailed; he wept and made
supplication unto him: he found him in Bethel, and there he spake with us; even
the Lord God of Hosts; The Lord is his memorial.”
When we look at the symbols in the triune figure of Layard, already
referred to, and minutely examine them, they are very instructive. Layard
regards the circle in that figure as signifying ”Time without bounds.” But the
hieroglyphic meaning of the circle is evidently different. A circle in Chaldea
was zero; * and zero also signified ”the seed.”
* In our own language we have evidence that Zero had signified a circle
among the Chaldeans; for what is Zero, the name of the cypher, but just a
circle? And whence can we have derived this term but from the Arabians, as
they, without doubt, had themselves derived it from the Chaldees, the grand
original cultivators at once of arithmetic, geometry, and idolatry? Zero, in
this sense, had evidently come from the Chaldee, zer, ”to encompass,” from
which, also, no doubt, was derived the Babylonian name for a great cycle of
time, called a ”saros.” (BUNSEN) As he, who by the Chaldeans was regarded as
the great ”Seed,” was looked upon as the sun incarnate, and as the emblem of
the sun was a circle (BUNSEN), the hieroglyphical relation between zero, ”the
circle,” and zero, ”the seed,” was easily established.
Therefore, according to the genius of the mystic system of Chaldea, which
was to a large extent founded on double meanings, that which, to the eyes of
men in general, was only zero, ”a circle,” was understood by the initiated to
signify zero, ”the seed.” Now, viewed in this light, the triune emblem of the
supreme Assyrian divinity shows clearly what had been the original patriarchal
faith. First, there is the head of the old man; next, there is the zero, or
circle, for ”the seed”; and lastly, the wings and tail of the bird or dove; *
showing, though blasphemously, the unity of Father, Seed, or Son, and Holy
Ghost.
* From the statement in Genesis 1:2, that ”the Spirit of God fluttered on
the face of the deep” (for that is the expression in the original), it is
evident that the dove had very early been a Divine emblem for the Holy Spirit.
While this had been the original way in which Pagan idolatry had
represented the Triune God, and though this kind of representation had survived
to Sennacherib’s time, yet there is evidence that, at a very early period, an
important change had taken place in the Babylonian notions in regard to the
divinity; and that the three persons had come to be, the Eternal Father, the
Spirit of God incarnate in a human mother, and a Divine Son, the fruit of that
incarnation.
The Two Babylons
Alexander Hislop
Chapter II
Section II
The Mother and Child, and the Original of the Child
While this was the theory, the first perons in the Godhead was practically
overlooked. As the Great Invisible, taking no immediate concern in human affairs,
he was ”to be worshipped through silence alone,” that is, in point of fact, he
was not worshipped by the multitude at all. The same thing is strikingly
illustrated in India at this day. Though Brahma, according to the sacred books,
is the first person of the Hindoo Triad, and the religiion of Hindostan is
callec by his name, yet he is never worshipped, and there is scarcely a single
Temple in all India now in existence of those that were formerly erected to his
honour. So also is it in those countries of Europe where the Papal system is
most completely developed. In Papal Italy, as travellers universally admit
(except where the Gospel has recently entered), all appearance of worshipping
the King Eternal and Invisible is almost extinct, while the Mother and the
Child are the grand objects of worship. Exactly so, in this latter respect,
also was it in ancient Babylon. The Babylonians, in their popular religion,
supremely worshipped a Goddess Mother and a Son, who was represented in
pictures and in images as an infant or child in his mother’s arms. From
Babylon, this worship of the Mother and the Child spread to the ends of the
earth. In Egypt, the Mother and the Child were worshipped under the names of
Isis and Osiris. * In India, even to this day, as Isi and Iswara; ** in Asia,
as Cybele and Deoius; in Pagan Rome, as Fortuna and Jupiter-puer, or Jupiter,
the boy; in Greece, as Ceres, the Great Mother, with the babe at her breast, or
as Irene, the goddess of Peace, with the boy Plutus in her arms; and even in
Thibet, in China, and Japan, the Jesuit missionaries were astronished to find
the counterpart of Madonna *** and her child as devoutly worshipped as in Papal
Rome itself; Shing Moo, the Holy Mother in China, being represented with a
child in her arms, and a glory around her, exactly as if a Roman Catholic
artist had been employed to set her up. ****
* Osiris, as the child called most frequently Horus. BUNSEN.
** KENNEDY’S Hindoo Mythology. Though Iswara is the husband of Isi, he is
also represnted as an infant at her breast.
*** The very name by which the Italians commonly designate the Virgin, is
just the translation of one of the titles of the Babylonian goddess. As Baal or
Belus was the name of the great male divinity of Babylon, so the female
divinity was called Beltis. (HESYCHIUS, Lexicon) This name has been found in
Nineveh applied to the ”Mother of the gods” (VAUX’S Nineveh and Persepolis);
and in a speech attributed to Nebuchadnezzar, preserved in EUSEBII Proeparatio
Evangelii, both titles ”Belus and Beltis” are conjoined as the titles of the
great Babylonian god and goddess. The Greek Belus, as representing the highest
title of the Babylonian god, was undoubtedly Baal, ”The Lord.” Beltis,
therefore, as the title of the female divinity, was equivalent to ”Baalti,”
which, in English, is ”My Lady,” in Latin, ”Mea Domina,” and, in Italina, is
corrupted into the well known ”Madonna.” In connection with this, it may be
observed, that the name of Juno, the classical ”Queen of Heaven,” which, in
Greek, was Hera, also signified ”The Lady”; and that the peculiar title of
Cybele or Rhea at Rome, was Domina or ”The Lady.” (OVID, Fasti) Further, there
is strong reason to believe, that Athena, the well known name of Minerva at
Athens, had the very same meaning. The Hebrew Adon, ”The Lord,” is, with the
points, pronounced Athon. We have evidence that this name was known to the
Asiatic Greeks, from whom idolatry, in a large measure, came into European
Greece, as a name of God under the form of ”Athan.” Eustathius, in a note on
the Periergesis of Dionysius, speaking of local names in the district of
Laodicea, says the ”Athan is god.” The feminine of Athan, ”The Lord,” is Athan,
”The Lady,” which in the Attic dialect, is Athena. No doubt, Minerva is
commonly represented as a virgin; but, for all that, we learn from Strabo that
at Hierapytna in Crete (the coins of which city, says Muller, Dorians have the
Athenian symbols of Minerva upon them), she was said to be the mother of the
Corybantes by Helius, or ”The Sun.” It is certain that the Egyptian Minerva,
who was the prototype of the Athenian goddess, was a mother, and was styled
”Goddess Mother,” or ”Mother of the Gods.”
**** CRABB’S Mythology. Gutzlaff thought that Shing Moo must have been
borrowed from a Popish source; and there can be no doubt, that in the
individual case to which he refers, the Pagan and the Christian stories had
been amalgamated. But Sir. J. F. Davis shows that the Chinese of Canton find
such an analogy between their own Pagan goddess Kuanyin and the Popish Madonna,
that, in conversing with Europeans, they frequently call either of them
indifferently by the same title. DAVIS’ China. The first Jesuit missionaries to
China also wrote home to Europe, that they found mention in the Chinese sacred
books–books unequivocally Pagan–of a mother and child, very similar to their
own Madonna and child at home.
One of the names of the Chinese Holy Mother is Ma Tsoopo; in regard to
which, see note below.
Note
Shing Moo and Ma Tsoopo of
China
The name of Shing Moo, applied by the Chinese to their ”Holy Mother,”
compared with another name of the same goddess in another province of China,
strongly favours the conclusion that Shing Moo is just a synonym for one of the
well known names of the goddess-mother of Babylon. Gillespie (in his Land of
Sinim) states that the Chinese goddess-mother, or ”Queen of Heaven,” in the
province of Fuh-kien, is worshipped by seafaring people under the name of Ma
Tsoopo. Now, ”Ama Tzupah” signifies the ”Gazing Mother”; and there is much reason
to believe that Shing Moo signifies the same; for Mu was one of the forms in
which Mut or Maut, the name of the great mother, appeared in Egypt (BUNSEN’S
Vocabulary); and Shngh, in Chaldee, signifies ”to look” or ”gaze.” The Egyptian
Mu or Maut was symbolised either by a vulture, or an eye surrounded by a
vulture’s wings (WILKINSON). The symbolic meaning of the vulture may be learned
from the Scriptural expression: ”There is a path which no fowl knoweth, and
which the vulture’s eye hath not seen” (Job 28:7). The vulture was noted for
its sharp sight, and hence, the eye surrounded by the vulture’s wings showed
that, for some reason or other, the great mother of the gods in Egypt had been
known as ”The gazer.” But the idea contained in the Egyptian symbol had
evidently been borrowed from Chaldea; for Rheia, one of the most noted names of
the Babylonian mother of the gods, is just the Chaldee form of the Hebrew
Rhaah, which signifies at once ”a gazing woman” and a ”vulture.” The Hebrew
Rhaah itself is also, according to a dialectical variation, legitimately
pronounced Rheah; and hence the name of the great goddess-mother of Assyria was
sometimes Rhea, and sometimes Rheia. In Greece, the same idea was evidently
attached to Athena or Minerva, whom we have seen to have been by some regarded
as the Mother of the children of the sun. For one of her distinguishing titles
was Ophthalmitis (SMITH’S Classical Dictionary, ”Athena”), thereby pointing her
out as the goddess of ”the eye.” It was no doubt to indicate the same thing
that, as the Egyptian Maut wore a vulture on her head, so the Athenian Minerva
was represented as wearing a helmet with two eyes, or eye-holes, in the front
of the helmet. (VAUX’S Antiquities)
Having thus traced the gazing mother over the earth, is it asked, What can
have given origin to such a name as applied to the mother of the gods? A
fragment of Sanchuniathon, in regard to the Phoenician mythology, furnishes us
with a satisfactory reply. There it is said that Rheia conceived by Kronos, who
was her own brother, and yet was known as the father of the gods, and in
consequence brought forth a son who was called Muth, that is, as Philo-Byblius
correctly interprets the word, ”Death.” As Sanchuniathon expressly
distinguishes this ”father of the gods” from ”Hypsistos,” The Most High, * we
naturally recall what Hesiod says in regard to his Kronos, the father of the
gods, who, for a certain wicked deed, was called Titan, and cast down to hell.
(Theogonia)
* In reading Sanchuniathon, it is necessary to bear in mind what
Philo-Byblius, his translator, states at the end of the Phenician History–viz.,
that history and mythology were mingled together in that work.
The Kronos to whom Hesiod refers is evidently at bottom a different Kronos
from the human father of the gods, or Nimrod, whose history occupies so large a
place in this work. He is plainly none other than Satan himself; the name
Titan, or Teitan, as it is sometimes given, being, as we have elsewhere
concluded, only the Chaldee form of Sheitan, the common name of the grand
Adversary among the Arabs, in the very region where the Chaldean Mysteries were
originally concocted,–that Adversary who was ultimately the real father of all
the Pagan gods,–and who (to make the title of Kronos, ”the Horned One,” appropriate
to him also) was symbolised by the Kerastes, or Horned serpent. All ”the
brethren” of this father of the gods, who were implicated in his rebellion
against his own father, the ”God of Heaven,” were equally called by the
”reproachful” name ”Titans”; but, inasmuch as he was the ringleader in the
rebellion, he was, of course, Titan by way of eminence. In this rebellion of
Titan, the goddess of the earth was concerned, and the result was that
(removing the figure under which Hesiod has hid the fact) it became naturally
impossible that the God of Heaven should have children upon earth–a plain
allusion to the Fall.
Now, assuming that this is the ”Father of the gods,” by whom Rhea, whose
common title is that of the Mother of the gods, and who is also identified with
Ge, or the Earth-goddess, had the child called Muth, or Death, who could this
”Mother of the gods” be, but just our Mother Eve? And the name Rhea, or ”The
Gazer,” bestowed on her, is wondrously significant. It was as ”the gazer” that
the mother of mankind conceived by Satan, and brought forth that deadly birth,
under which the world has hitherto groaned. It was through her eyes that the
fatal connection was first formed between her and the grand Adversary, under
the form of a serpent, whose name, Nahash, or Nachash, as it stands in the
Hebrew of the Old Testament, also signifies ”to view attentively,” or ”to gaze”
(Gen 3:6) ”And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and pleasant
to the eyes,” &c., ”she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat; and gave
also unto her husband with her, and he did eat.” Here, then, we have the
pedigree of sin and death; ”Lust, when it had conceived, brought forth sin; and
sin, when it was finished, brought forth death” (James 1:15). Though Muth, or
Death, was the son of Rhea, this progeny of hers came to be regarded, not as
Death in the abstract, but as the god of death; therefore, says Philo-Byblius,
Muth was interpreted not only as death, but as Pluto. (SANCHUN) In the Roman
mythology, Pluto was regarded as on a level, for honour, with Jupiter (OVID,
Fasti); and in Egypt, we have evidence that Osiris, ”the seed of the woman,”
was the ”Lord of heaven,” and king of hell, or ”Pluto” (WILKINSON; BUNSEN); and
it can be shown by a large induction of particulars (and the reader has
somewhat of the evidence presented in this volume), that he was none other than
the Devil himself, supposed to have become incarnate; who, though through the
first transgression, and his connection with the woman, he had brought sin and
death into the world, had, nevertheless, by means of them, brought innumerable
benefits to mankind. As the name Pluto has the very same meaning as Saturn,
”The hidden one,” so, whatever other aspect this name had, as applied to the
father of the gods, it is to Satan, the Hidden Lord of hell, ultimately that
all came at last to be traced back; for the different myths about Saturn, when
carefully examined, show that he was at once the Devil, the father of all sin
and idolatry, who hid himself under the disguise of the serpent,–and Adam, who
hid himself among the trees of the garden,–and Noah, who lay hid for a whole
year in the ark,–and Nimrod, who was hid in the secrecy of the Babylonian
Mysteries. It was to glorify Nimrod that the whole Chaldean system of iniquity
was formed. He was known as Nin, ”the son,” and his wife as Rhea, who was
called Ammas, ”The Mother.” The name Rhea, as applied to Semiramis, had another
meaning from what it had when applied to her, who was really the primeval
goddess, the ”mother of gods and men.” But yet, to make out the full majesty of
her character, it was necessary that she should be identified with that
primeval goddess; and, therefore, although the son she bore in her arms was
represented as he who was born to destroy death, yet she was often represented
with the very symbols of her who brought death into the world. And so was it
also in the different countries where the Babylonian system spread.
The Two Babylons
Alexander Hislop
Chapter II
Section II
Sub-Section I
The Child in Assyria
The original of that mother, so widely worshipped, there is reason to
believe, was Semiramis, * already referred to, who, it is well known, was
worshipped by the Babylonians, and other eastern nations, and that under the
name of Rhea, the great Goddess ”Mother.”
* Sir H. Rawlinson having found evidence at Nineveh, of the existence of a
Semiramis about six or seven centuries before the Christian era, seems inclined
to regard her as the only Semiramis that ever existed. But this is subversive
of all history. The fact that there was a Semiramis in the primeval ages of the
world, is beyond all doubt, although some of the exploits of the latter queen
have evidently been attributed to her predecessor. Mr. Layard dissents from
Sir. H. Rawlinson’s opinion.
It was from the son, however, that she derived all her glory and her claims
to deification. That son, though represented as a child in his mother’s arms,
was a person of great stature and immense bodily powers, as well as most
fascinating manners. In Scripture he is referred to (Eze 8:14) under the name
of Tammuz, but he is commonly known among classical writers under the name of
Bacchus, that is, ”The Lamented one.” *
* From Bakhah ”to weep” or ”lament.” Among the Phoenicians, says Hesychius,
”Bacchos means weeping.” As the women wept for Tammuz, so did they for Bacchus.
To the ordinary reader the name of Bacchus suggests nothing more than
revelry and drunkenness, but it is now well known, that amid all the
abominations that attended his orgies, their grand design was professedly ”the
purification of souls,” and that from the guilt and defilement of sin. This
lamented one, exhibited and adored as a little child in his mother’s arms,
seems, in point of fact, to have been the husband of Semiramis, whose name,
Ninus, by which he is commonly known in classical history, literally signified
”The Son.” As Semiramis, the wife, was worshipped as Rhea, whose grand
distinguishing character was that of the great goddess ”Mother,” * the
conjunction with her of her husband, under the name of Ninus, or ”The Son,” was
sufficient to originate the peculiar worship of the ”Mother and Son,” so
extensively diffused among the nations of antiquity; and this, no doubt, is the
explanation of the fact which has so much puzzled the inquirers into ancient
history, that Ninus is sometimes called the husband, and sometimes the son of
Semiramis.
* As such Rhea was called by the Greeks, Ammas. Ammas is evidently the
Greek form of the Chaldee Ama, ”Mother.”
This also accounts for the origin of the very same confusion of
relationship between Isis and Osiris, the mother and child of the Egyptians;
for as Bunsen shows, Osiris was represented in Egypt as at once the son and
husband of his mother; and actually bore, as one of his titles of dignity and
honour, the name ”Husband of the Mother.” * This still further casts light on
the fact already noticed, that the Indian God Iswara is represented as a babe
at the breast of his own wife Isi, or Parvati.
* BUNSEN. It may be observed that this very name ”Husband of the Mother,”
given to Osiris, seems even at this day to be in common use among ourselves,
although there is not the least suspicion of the meaning of the term, or whence
it has come. Herodotus mentions that when in Egypt, he was astonished to hear
the very same mournful but ravishing ”Song of Linus,” sung by the Egyptians
(although under another name), which he had been accustomed to hear in his own
native land of Greece. Linus was the same god as the Bacchus of Greece, or
Osiris of Egypt; for Homer introduces a boy singing the song of Linus, while
the vintage is going on (Ilias), and the Scholiast says that this son was sung
in memory of Linus, who was torn in pieces by dogs. The epithet ”dogs,” applied
to those who tore Linus in pieces, is evidently used in a mystical sense, and
it will afterwards been seen how thoroughly the other name by which he is
known–Narcissus–identifies him with the Greek Bacchus and Egyptian Osiris. In
some places in Egypt, for the song of Linus or Osiris, a peculiar melody seems
to have been used. Savary says that, in the temple of Abydos, ”the priest
repeated the seven vowels in the form of hymns, and that musicians were forbid
to enter it.” (Letters) Strabo, whom Savary refers to, calls the god of that
temple Memnon, but we learn from Wilkinson that Osiris was the great god of
Abydos, whence it is evident that Memnon and Osiris were only different names
of the same divinity. Now the name of Linus or Osiris, as the ”husband of his
mother,” in Egypt, was Kamut (BUNSEN). When Gregory the Great introduced into
the Church of Rome what are now called the Gregorian Chants, he got them from
the Chaldean mysteries, which had long been established in Rome; for the Roman
Catholic priest, Eustace, admits that these chants were largely composed of
”Lydian and Phrygian tunes” (Classical Tour), Lydia and Phrygia being among the
chief seats in later times of those mysteries, of which the Egyptian mysteries
were only a branch. These tunes were sacred–the music of the great god, and in
introducing them Gregory introduced the music of Kamut. And thus, to all
appearance, has it come to pass, that the name of Osiris or Kamut, ”the husband
of the mother,” is in every-day use among ourselves as the name of the musical
scale; for what is the melody of Osiris, consisting of the ”seven vowels”
formed into a hymn, but–the Gamut?
Now, this Ninus, or ”Son,” borne in the arms of the Babylonian Madonna, is
so described as very clearly to identify him with Nimrod. ”Ninus, king of the
Assyrians,” * says Trogus Pompeius, epitomised by Justin, ”first of all changed
the contented moderation of the ancient manners, incited by a new passion, the
desire of conquest. He was the first who carried on war against his neighbours,
and he conquered all nations from Assyria to Lybia, as they were yet
unacquainted with the arts of war.”
* The name, ”Assyrians,” as has already been noticed, has a wide latitude
of meaning among the classic authors, taking in the Babylonians as well as the
Assyrians proper.
This account points directly to Nimrod, and can apply to no other. The
account of Diodorus Siculus entirely agrees with it, and adds another trait
that goes still further to determine the identity. That account is as follows:
”Ninus, the most ancient of the Assyrian kings mentioned in history, performed
great actions. Being naturally of a warlike disposition, and ambitious of glory
that results from valour, he armed a considerable number of young men that were
brave and vigorous like himself, trained them up a long time in laborious
exercises and hardships, and by that means accustomed them to bear the fatigues
of war, and to face dangers with intrepidity.” As Diodorus makes Ninus ”the
most ancient of the Assyrian kings,” and represents him as beginning those wars
which raised his power to an extraordinary height by bringing the people of
Babylonia under subjection to him, while as yet the city of Babylon was not in
existence, this shows that he occupied the very position of Nimrod, of whom the
Scriptural account is, that he first ”began to be mighty on the earth,” and
that the ”beginning of his kingdom was Babylon.” As the Babel builders, when
their speech was confounded, were scattered abroad on the face of the earth,
and therefore deserted both the city and the tower which they had commenced to
build, Babylon as a city, could not properly be said to exist till Nimrod, by
establishing his power there, made it the foundation and starting-point of his
greatness. In this respect, then, the story of Ninus and of Nimrod exactly
harmonise. The way, too, in which Ninus gained his power is the very way in
which Nimrod erected his. There can be no doubt that it was by inuring his
followers to the toils and dangers of the chase, that he gradually formed them
to the use of arms, and so prepared them for aiding him in establishing his
dominions; just as Ninus, by training his companions for a long time ”in
laborious exercises and hardships,” qualified them for making him the first of
the Assyrian kings.
The conclusions deduced from these testimonies of ancient history are
greatly strengthened by many additional considerations. In Genesis 10:11, we
find a passage, which, when its meaning is properly understood, casts a very
steady light on the subject. That passage, as given in the authorised version,
runs thus: ”Out of that land went forth Asshur, and builded Nineveh.” This
speaks of it as something remarkable, that Asshur went out of the land of
Shinar, while yet the human race in general went forth from the same land. It
goes upon the supposition that Asshur had some sort of divine right to that
land, and that he had been, in a manner, expelled from it by Nimrod, while no
divine right is elsewhere hinted at in the context, or seems capable of proof.
Moreover, it represents Asshur as setting up in the IMMEDIATE NEIGHBOURHOOD of
Nimrod as mighty a kingdom as Nimrod himself, Asshur building four cities, one
of which is emphatically said to have been ”great” (v 12); while Nimrod, on
this interpretation, built just the same number of cities, of which none is
specially characterised as ”great.” Now, it is in the last degree improbable
that Nimrod would have quietly borne so mighty a rival so near him. To obviate
such difficulties as these, it has been proposed to render the words, ”out of
that land he (Nimrod) went forth into Asshur, or Assyria.” But then, according
to ordinary usage of grammar, the word in the original should have been
”Ashurah,” with the sign of motion to a place affixed to it, whereas it is
simply Asshur, without any such sign of motion affixed. I am persuaded that the
whole perplexity that commentators have hitherto felt in considering this
passage, has arisen from supposing that there is a proper name in the passage,
where in reality no proper name exists. Asshur is the passive participle of a
verb, which, in its Chaldee sense, signifies ”to make strong,” and,
consequently, signifies ”being strengthened,” or ”made strong.” Read thus, the
whole passage is natural and easy (v 10), ”And the beginning of his (Nimrod’s)
kingdom was Babel, and Erech, and Accad, and Calneh.” A beginning naturally
implies something to succeed, and here we find it (v 11): ”Out of that land he
went forth, being made strong, or when he had been made strong (Ashur), and
builded Nineveh,” &c. Now, this exactly agrees with the statement in the
ancient history of Justin: ”Ninus strengthened the greatness of his acquired
dominion by continued possession. Having subdued, therefore, his neighbours,
when, by an accession of forces, being still further strengthened, he went
forth against other tribes, and every new victory paved the way for another, he
subdued all the peoples of the East.” Thus, then, Nimrod, or Ninus, was the
builder of Nineveh; and the origin of the name of that city, as ”the habitation
of Ninus,” is accounted for, * and light is thereby, at the same time, cast on
the fact, that the name of the chief part of the ruins of Nineveh is Nimroud at
this day.
* Nin-neveh, ”The habitation of Ninus.”
Now, assuming that Ninus is Nimrod, the way in which that assumption
explains what is otherwise inexplicable in the statements of ancient history
greatly confirms the truth of that assumption itself. Ninus is said to have
been the son of Belus or Bel, and Bel is said to have been the founder of
Babylon. If Ninus was in reality the first king of Babylon, how could Belus or
Bel, his father, be said to be the founder of it? Both might very well be, as
will appear if we consider who was Bel, and what we can trace of his doings. If
Ninus was Nimrod, who was the historical Bel? He must have been Cush; for ”Cush
begat Nimrod” (Gen 10:8); and Cush is generally represented as having been a
ringleader in the great apostacy. * But again, Cush, as the son of Ham, was
Her-mes or Mercury; for Hermes is just an Egyptian synonym for the ”son of
Ham.” **
* See GREGORIUS TURONENSIS, De rerum Franc. Gregory attributes to Cush what
was said more generally to have befallen his son; but his statement shows the
belief in his day, which is amply confirmed from other sources, that Cush had a
pre-eminent share in leading mankind away from the true worship of God.
** The composition of Her-mes is, first, from ”Her,” which, in Chaldee, is
synonymous with Ham, or Khem, ”the burnt one.” As ”her” also, like Ham,
signified ”The hot or burning one,” this name formed a foundation for covertly
identifying Ham with the ”Sun,” and so deifying the great patriarch, after
whose name the land of Egypt was called, in connection with the sun. Khem, or
Ham, in his own name was openly worshipped in later ages in the land of Ham
(BUNSEN); but this would have been too daring at first. By means of ”Her,” the
synonym, however, the way was paved for this. ”Her” is the name of Horus, who
is identified with the sun (BUNSEN), which shows the real etymology of the name
to be from the verb to which I have traced it. Then, secondly, ”Mes,” is from
Mesheh (or, without the last radical, which is omissible), Mesh, ”to draw
forth.” In Egyptian, we have Ms in the sense of ”to bring forth” (BUNSEN,
Hieroglyphical Signs), which is evidently a different form of the same word. In
the passive sense, also, we find Ms used (BUNSEN, Vocabulary). The radical
meaning of Mesheh in Stockii Lexicon, is given in Latin ”Extraxit,” and our
English word ”extraction,” as applied to birth or descent, shows that there is
a connection between the generic meaning of this word and birth. This
derivation will be found to explain the meaning of the names of the Egyptian
kings, Ramesses and Thothmes, the former evidently being ”The son of Ra,” or
the Sun; the latter in like manner, being ”The son of Thoth.” For the very same
reason Her-mes is the ”Son of Her, or Ham,” the burnt one–that is, Cush.
Now, Hermes was the great original prophet of idolatry; for he was
recognised by the pagans as the author of their religious rites, and the
interpreter of the gods. The distinguished Gesenius identifies him with the
Babylonian Nebo, as the prophetic god; and a statement of Hyginus shows that he
was known as the grand agent in that movement which produced the division of
tongues. His words are these: ”For many ages men lived under the government of
Jove [evidently not the Roman Jupiter, but the Jehovah of the Hebrews], without
cities and without laws, and all speaking one language. But after that Mercury
interpreted the speeches of men (whence an interpreter is called Hermeneutes),
the same individual distributed the nations. Then discord began.” *
* HYGINUS, Fab. Phoroneus is represented as king at this time.
Here there is a manifest enigma. How could Mercury or Hermes have any need
to interpret the speeches of mankind when they ”all spake one language”? To
find out the meaning of this, we must go to the language of the Mysteries.
Peresh, in Chaldee, signifies ”to interpret”; but was pronounced by old
Egyptians and by Greeks, and often by the Chaldees themselves, in the same way
as ”Peres,” to ”divide.” Mercury, then, or Hermes, or Cush, ”the son of Ham,”
was the ”DIVIDER of the speeches of men.” He, it would seem, had been the
ringleader in the scheme for building the great city and tower of Babel; and,
as the well known title of Hermes,–”the interpreter of the gods,” would
indicate, had encouraged them, in the name of God, to proceed in their
presumptuous enterprise, and so had caused the language of men to be divided,
and themselves to be scattered abroad on the face of the earth. Now look at the
name of Belus or Bel, given to the father of Ninus, or Nimrod, in connection
with this. While the Greek name Belus represented both the Baal and Bel of the
Chaldees, these were nevertheless two entirely distinct titles. These titles
were both alike often given to the same god, but they had totally different
meanings. Baal, as we have already seen, signified ”The Lord”; but Bel
signified ”The Confounder.” When, then, we read that Belus, the father of
Ninus, was he that built or founded Babylon, can there be a doubt, in what
sense it was that the title of Belus was given to him? It must have been in the
sense of Bel the ”Confounder.” And to this meaning of the name of the Babylonian
Bel, there is a very distinct allusion in Jeremiah 1:2, where it is said ”Bel
is confounded,” that is, ”The Confounder is brought to confusion.” That Cush
was known to Pagan antiquity under the very character of Bel, ”The Confounder,”
a statement of Ovid very clearly proves. The statement to which I refer is that
in which Janus ”the god of gods,” * from whom all the other gods had their
origin, is made to say of himself: ”The ancients…called me Chaos.”
* Janus was so called in the most ancient hymns of the Salii. (MACROB,
Saturn.)
Now, first this decisively shows that Chaos was known not merely as a state
of confusion, but as the ”god of Confusion.” But, secondly, who that is at all
acquainted with the laws of Chaldaic pronunciation, does not know that Chaos is
just one of the established forms of the name of Chus or Cush? * Then, look at
the symbol of Janus, ** whom ”the ancients called Chaos,” and it will be seen
how exactly it tallies with the doings of Cush, when he is identified with Bel,
”The Confounder.” That symbol is a club; and the name of ”a club” in Chaldee
comes from the very word which signifies ”to break in pieces, or scatter
abroad.” ***
* The name of Cush is also Khus, for sh frequently passes in Chaldee into
s; and Khus, in pronunciation, legitimately becomes Khawos, or, without the
digamma, Khaos.
** From Sir WM. BETHAM’S Etruscan Literature and Antiquities Investigated,
1842. The Etruscan name on the reverse of a medal–Bel-athri, ”Lord of spies,”
is probably given to Janus, in allusion to his well known title ”Janus Tuens,”
which may be rendered ”Janus the Seer,” or ”All-seeing Janus.”
*** In Proverbs 25:18, a maul or club is ”Mephaitz.” In Jeremiah 51:20, the
same word, without the Jod, is evidently used for a club (though, in our
version, it is rendered battle-axe); for the use of it is not to cut asunder,
but to ”break in pieces.” See the whole passage.
He who caused the confusion of tongues was he who ”broke” the previously
united earth (Gen 11:1) ”in pieces,” and ”scattered” the fragments abroad. How
significant, then, as a symbol, is the club, as commemorating the work of Cush,
as Bel, the ”Confounder”? And that significance will be all the more apparent
when the reader turns to the Hebrew of Genesis 11:9, and finds that the very
word from which a club derives its name is that which is employed when it is
said, that in consequence of the confusion of tongues, the children of men were
”scattered abroad on the face of all the earth.” The word there used for
scattering abroad is Hephaitz, which, in the Greek form becomes Hephaizt, * and
hence the origin of the well known but little understood name of Hephaistos, as
applied to Vulcan, ”The father of the gods.” **
* There are many instances of a similar change. Thus Botzra becomes in
Greek, Bostra; and Mitzraim, Mestraim.
** Vulcan, in the classical Pantheon, had not commonly so high a place, but
in Egypt Hephaistos, or Vulcan, was called ”Father of the gods.” (AMMIANUS
MARCELLINUS)
Hephaistos is the name of the ringleader in the first rebellion, as ”The
Scatterer abroad,” as Bel is the name of the same individual as the ”Confounder
of tongues.” Here, then, the reader may see the real origin of Vulcan’s Hammer,
which is just another name for the club of Janus or Chaos, ”The god of
Confusion”; and to this, as breaking the earth in pieces, there is a covert
allusion in Jeremiah 1:23, where Babylon, as identified with its primeval god,
is thus apostrophised: ”How is the hammer of the whole earth cut asunder and
broken”! Now, as the tower-building was the first act of open rebellion after
the flood, and Cush, as Bel, was the ringleader in it, he was, of course, the
first to whom the name Merodach, ”The great Rebel,” * must have been given,
and, therefore, according to the usual parallelism of the prophetic language,
we find both names of the Babylonian god referred to together, when the
judgment on Babylon is predicted: ”Bel is confounded: Merodach is broken in
pieces” (Jer 1:2).
* Merodach comes from Mered, to rebel; and Dakh, the demonstrative pronoun
affixed, which makes it emphatic, signifying ”That” or ”The great.”
The judgment comes upon the Babylonian god according to what he had done.
As Bel, he had ”confounded” the whole earth, therefore he is ”confounded.” As
Merodach, by the rebellion he had stirred up, he had ”broken” the united world
in pieces; therefore he himself is ”broken in pieces.”
So much for the historical character of Bel, as identified with Janus or
Chaos, the god of confusion, with his symbolical club. *
* While the names Bel and Hephaistos had the origin above referred to, they
were not inappropriate names also, though in a different sense, for the
war-gods descending from Cush, from whom Babylon derived its glory among the
nations. The warlike deified kings of the line of Cush gloried in their power
to carry confusion among their enemies, to scatter their armies, and to ”break
the earth in pieces” by their resistless power. To this, no doubt, as well as
to the acts of the primeval Bel, there is allusion in the inspired denunciations
of Jeremiah on Babylon. The physical sense also of these names was embodied in
the club given to the Grecian Hercules–the very club of Janus–when, in a
character quite different from that of the original Hercules, he was set up as
the great reformer of the world, by mere physical force. When two-headed Janus
with the club is represented, the two-fold representation was probably intended
to represent old Cush, and young Cush or Nimrod, as combined. But the two-fold
representation with other attributes, had reference also to another ”Father of
the gods,” afterwards to be noticed, who had specially to do with water.
Proceeding, then, on these deductions, it is not difficult to see how it
might be said that Bel or Belus, the father of Ninus, founded Babylon, while,
nevertheless, Ninus or Nimrod was properly the builder of it. Now, though Bel
or Cush, as being specially concerned in laying the first foundations of
Babylon, might be looked upon as the first king, as in some of the copies of
”Eusebius’ Chronicle” he is represented, yet it is evident, from both sacred
history and profane, that he could never have reigned as king of the Babylonian
monarchy, properly so called; and accordingly, in the Armenian version of the
”Chronicle of Eusebius,” which bears the undisputed palm for correctness and
authority, his name is entirely omitted in the list of Assyrian kings, and that
of Ninus stands first, in such terms as exactly correspond with the Scriptural
account of Nimrod. Thus, then, looking at the fact that Ninus is currently made
by antiquity the son of Belus, or Bel, when we have seen that the historical
Bel is Cush, the identity of Ninus and Nimrod is still further confirmed.
But when we look at what is said of Semiramis, the wife of Ninus, the
evidence receives an additional development. That evidence goes conclusively to
show that the wife of Ninus could be none other than the wife of Nimrod, and,
further, to bring out one of the grand characters in which Nimrod, when
deified, was adored. In Daniel 11:38, we read of a god called Ala Mahozine
*–i.e., the ”god of fortifications.”
* In our version, Ala Mahozim is rendered alternatively ”god of forces,” or
”gods protectors.” To the latter interpretation, there is this insuperable
objection, that Ala is in the singular. Neither can the former be admitted; for
Mahozim, or Mauzzim, does not signify ”forces,” or ”armies,” but ”munitions,”
as it is also given in the margin–that is ”fortifications.” Stockius, in his
Lexicon, gives us the definition of Mahoz in the singular, rober, arx, locus
munitus, and in proof of the definition, the following examples:–Judges 6:26,
”And build an altar to the Lord thy God upon the top of this rock” (Mahoz, in
the margin ”strong place”); and Daniel 11:19, ”Then shall he turn his face to the
fort (Mahoz) of his own land.”
Who this god of fortifications could be, commentators have found themselves
at a loss to determine. In the records of antiquity the existence of any god of
fortifications has been commonly overlooked; and it must be confessed that no
such god stands forth there with any prominence to the ordinary reader. But of
the existence of a goddess of fortifications, every one knows that there is the
amplest evidence. That goddess is Cybele, who is universally represented with a
mural or turreted crown, or with a fortification, on her head. Why was Rhea or
Cybele thus represented? Ovid asks the question and answers it himself; and the
answer is this: The reason he says, why the statue of Cybele wore a crown of
towers was, ”because she first erected them in cities.” The first city in the
world after the flood (from whence the commencement of the world itself was
often dated) that had towers and encompassing walls, was Babylon; and Ovid
himself tells us that it was Semiramis, the first queen of that city, who was
believed to have ”surrounded Babylon with a wall of brick.” Semiramis, then,
the first deified queen of that city and tower whose top was intended to reach
to heaven, must have been the prototype of the goddess who ”first made towers
in cities.” When we look at the Ephesian Diana, we find evidence to the very
same effect. In general, Diana was depicted as a virgin, and the patroness of
virginity; but the Ephesian Diana was quite different. She was represented with
all the attributes of the Mother of the gods, and, as the Mother of the gods,
she wore a turreted crown, such as no one can contemplate without being
forcibly reminded of the tower of Babel. Now this tower-bearing Diana is by an
ancient scholiast expressly identified with Semiramis. *
* A scholiast on the Periergesis of Dionysius, says Layard (Nineveh and its
Remains), makes Semiramis the same as the goddess Artemis or Despoina. Now,
Artemis was Diana, and the title of Despoina given to her, shows that it was in
the character of the Ephesian Diana she was identified with Semiramis; for
Despoina is the Greek for Domina, ”The Lady,” the peculiar title of Rhea or
Cybele, the tower-bearing goddess, in ancient Rome. (OVID, Fasti)
When, therefore, we remember that Rhea or Cybele, the tower-bearing
goddess, was, in point of fact, a Babylonian goddess, and that Semiramis, when
deified, was worshipped under the name of Rhea, there will remain, I think, no
doubt as to the personal identity of the ”goddess of fortifications.”
Now there is no reason to believe that Semiramis alone (though some have
represented the matter so) built the battlements of Babylon. We have the
express testimony of the ancient historian, Megasthenes, as preserved by
Abydenus, that it was ”Belus” who ”surrounded Babylon with a wall.” As ”Bel,”
the Confounder, who began the city and tower of Babel, had to leave both
unfinished, this could not refer to him. It could refer only to his son Ninus,
who inherited his father’s title, and who was the first actual king of the
Babylonian empire, and, consequently Nimrod. The real reason that Semiramis,
the wife of Ninus, gained the glory of finishing the fortifications of Babylon,
was, that she came in the esteem of the ancient idolaters to hold a
preponderating position, and to have attributed to her all the different
characters that belonged, or were supposed to belong, to her husband. Having
ascertained, then, one of the characters in which the deified wife was
worshipped, we may from that conclude what was the corresponding character of
the deified husband. Layard distinctly indicates his belief that Rhea or
Cybele, the ”tower-crown” goddess, was just the female counterpart of the
”deity presiding over bulwarks or fortresses” and that this deity was Ninus, or
Nimrod, we have still further evidence from what the scattered notices of
antiquity say of the first deified king of Babylon, under a name that
identifies him as the husband of Rhea, the ”tower-bearing” goddess. That name
is Kronos or Saturn. *
* In the Greek mythology, Kronos and Rhea are commonly brother and sister.
Ninus and Semiramis, according to history, are not represented as standing in
any such relation to one another; but this is no objection to the real identity
of Ninus and Kronos; for, 1st, the relationships of the divinities, in most
countries, are peculiarly conflicting–Osiris, in Egypt, is represented at
different times, not only as the son and husband of Isis, but also as her
father and brother (BUNSEN); then, secondly, whatever the deified mortals might
be before deification, on being deified they came into new relationships. On
the apotheosis of husband and wife, it was necessary for the dignity of both
that both alike should be represented as of the same celestial origin–as both
supernaturally the children of God. Before the flood, the great sin that
brought ruin on the human race was, that the ”Sons of God” married others than
the daughters of God,–in other words, those who were not spiritually their
”sisters.” (Gen 6:2,3) In the new world, while the influence of Noah prevailed,
the opposite practice must have been strongly inculcated; for a ”son of God” to
marry any one but a daughter of God, or his own ”sister” in the faith, must
have been a misalliance and a disgrace. Hence, from a perversion of a spiritual
idea, came, doubtless, the notion of the dignity and purity of the royal line
being preserved the more intact through the marriage of royal brothers and
sisters. This was the case in Peru (PRESCOTT), in India (HARDY), and in Egypt
(WILKINSON). Hence the relation of Jupiter to Juno, who gloried that she was
”soror et conjux”–”sister and wife”–of her husband. Hence the same relation
between Isis and her husband Osiris, the former of whom is represented as
”lamenting her brother Osiris.” (BUNSEN) For the same reason, no doubt, was
Rhea, made the sister of her husband Kronos, to show her divine dignity and
equality.
It is well known that Kronos, or Saturn, was Rhea’s husband; but it is not
so well known who was Kronos himself. Traced back to his original, that
divinity is proved to have been the first king of Babylon. Theophilus of
Antioch shows that Kronos in the east was worshipped under the names of Bel and
Bal; and from Eusebius we learn that the first of the Assyrian kings, whose
name was Belus, was also by the Assyrians called Kronos. As the genuine copies
of Eusebius do not admit of any Belus, as an actual king of Assyria, prior to
Ninus, king of the Babylonians, and distinct from him, that shows that Ninus,
the first king of Babylon, was Kronos. But, further, we find that Kronos was
king of the Cyclops, who were his brethren, and who derived that name from him,
* and that the Cyclops were known as ”the inventors of tower-building.”
* The scholiast upon EURIPIDES, Orest, says that ”the Cyclops were so called
from Cyclops their king.” By this scholiast the Cyclops are regarded as a
Thracian nation, for the Thracians had localised the tradition, and applied it
to themselves; but the following statement of the scholiast on the Prometheus
of Aeschylus, shows that they stood in such a relation to Kronos as proves that
he was their king: ”The Cyclops…were the brethren of Kronos, the father of
Jupiter.”
The king of the Cyclops, ”the inventors of tower-building,” occupied a
position exactly correspondent to that of Rhea, who ”first erected (towers) in
cities.” If, therefore, Rhea, the wife of Kronos, was the goddess of
fortifications, Kronos or Saturn, the husband of Rhea, that is, Ninus or
Nimrod, the first king of Babylon, must have been Ala mahozin, ”the god of
fortifications.” (see note below)
The name Kronos itself goes not a little to confirm the argument. Kronos
signifies ”The Horned one.” As a horn is a well known Oriental emblem for power
or might, Kronos, ”The Horned one,” was, according to the mystic system, just a
synonym for the Scriptural epithet applied to Nimrod–viz., Gheber, ”The mighty
one” (Gen 10:8), ”He began to be mighty on the earth.” The name Kronos, as the
classical reader is well aware, is applied to Saturn as the ”Father of the
gods.” We have already had another ”father of the gods” brought under our
notice, even Cush in his character of Bel the Confounder, or Hephaistos, ”The
Scatterer abroad”; and it is easy to understand how, when the deification of
mortals began, and the ”mighty” Son of Cush was deified, the father, especially
considering the part which he seems to have had in concocting the whole
idolatrous system, would have to be deified too, and of course, in his
character as the Father of the ”Mighty one,” and of all the ”immortals” that
succeeded him. But, in point of fact, we shall find, in the course of our
inquiry, that Nimrod was the actual Father of the gods, as being the first of
deified mortals; and that, therefore, it is in exact accordance with historical
fact that Kronos, the Horned, or Mighty one, is, in the classic Pantheon, known
by that title.
The meaning of this name Kronos, ”The Horned one,” as applied to Nimrod,
fully explains the origin of the remarkable symbol, so frequently occurring
among the Nineveh sculptures, the gigantic HORNED man-bull, as representing the
great divinities in Assyria. The same word that signified a bull, signified
also a ruler or prince. *
* The name for a bull or ruler, is in Hebrew without points, Shur, which in
Chaldee becomes Tur. From Tur, in the sense of a bull, comes the Latin Taurus;
and from the same word, in the sense of a ruler, Turannus, which originally had
no evil meaning. Thus, in these well known classical words, we have evidence of
the operation of the very principle which caused the deified Assyrian kings to
be represented under the form of the man-bull.
Hence the ”Horned bull” signified ”The Mighty Prince,” thereby pointing
back to the first of those ”Mighty ones,” who, under the name of Guebres,
Gabrs, or Cabiri, occupied so conspicuous a place in the ancient world, and to
whom the deified Assyrian monarchs covertly traced back the origin of their
greatness and might. This explains the reason why the Bacchus of the Greeks was
represented as wearing horns, and why he was frequently addressed by the
epithet ”Bull-horned,” as one of the high titles of his dignity. Even in
comparatively recent times, Togrul Begh, the leader of the Seljukian Turks, who
came from the neighbourhood of the Euphrates, was in a similar manner represented
with three horns growing out of his head, as the emblem of his sovereignty.
This, also, in a remarkable way accounts for the origin of one of the
divinities worshipped by our Pagan Anglo-Saxon ancestors under the name of
Zernebogus. This Zernebogus was ”the black, malevolent, ill-omened divinity,”
in other words, the exact counterpart of the popular idea of the Devil, as
supposed to be black, and equipped with horns and hoofs. This name analysed
casts a very singular light on the source from whence has come the popular
superstition in regard to the grand Adversary. The name Zer-Nebo-Gus is almost
pure Chaldee, and seems to unfold itself as denoting ”The seed of the prophet
Cush.” We have seen reason already to conclude that, under the name Bel, as
distinguished from Baal, Cush was the great soothsayer or false prophet
worshipped at Babylon. But independent inquirers have been led to the
conclusion that Bel and Nebo were just two different titles for the same god,
and that a prophetic god. Thus does Kitto comment on the words of Isaiah 46:1
”Bel boweth down, Nebo stoopeth,” with reference to the latter name: ”The word
seems to come from Nibba, to deliver an oracle, or to prophesy; and hence would
mean an ‘oracle,’ and may thus, as Calmet suggests (‘Commentaire Literal’), be
no more than another name for Bel himself, or a characterising epithet applied
to him; it being not unusual to repeat the same thing, in the same verse, in
equivalent terms.” ”Zer-Nebo-Gus,” the great ”seed of the prophet Cush,” was,
of course, Nimrod; for Cush was Nimrod’s father. Turn now to Layard, and see
how this land of ours and Assyria are thus brought into intimate connection. In
a woodcut, first we find ”the Assyrian Hercules,” that is ”Nimrod the giant,”
as he is called in the Septuagint version of Genesis, without club, spear, or
weapons of any kind, attacking a bull. Having overcome it, he sets the bull’s
horns on his head, as a trophy of victory and a symbol of power; and
thenceforth the hero is represented, not only with the horns and hoofs above,
but from the middle downwards, with the legs and cloven feet of the bull. Thus
equipped he is represented as turning next to encounter a lion. This, in all
likelihood, is intended to commemorate some event in the life of him who first began
to be mighty in the chase and in war, and who, according to all ancient
traditions, was remarkable also for bodily power, as being the leader of the
Giants that rebelled against heaven. Now Nimrod, as the son of Cush, was black,
in other words, was a Negro. ”Can the Ethiopian change his skin?” is in the
original, ”Can the Cushite” do so? Keeping this, then, in mind, it will be seen
that in that figure disentombed from Nineveh, we have both the prototype of the
Anglo-Saxon Zer-Nebo-Gus, ”the seed of the prophet Cush,” and the real original
of the black Adversary of mankind, with horns and hoofs. It was in a different
character from that of the Adversary that Nimrod was originally worshipped; but
among a people of a fair complexion, as the Anglo-Saxons, it was inevitable
that, if worshipped at all, it must generally be simply as an object of fear;
and so Kronos, ”The Horned one,” who wore the ”horns,” as the emblem both of
his physical might and sovereign power, has come to be, in popular
superstition, the recognised representative of the Devil.
In many and far-severed countries, horns became the symbols of sovereign
power. The corona or crown, that still encircles the brows of European
monarchs, seems remotely to be derived from the emblem of might adopted by
Kronos, or Saturn, who, according to Pherecydes, was ”the first before all
others that ever wore a crown.” The first regal crown appears to have been only
a band, in which the horns were set. From the idea of power contained in the
”horn,” even subordinate rulers seem to have worn a circlet adorned with a
single horn, in token of their derived authority. Bruce, the Abyssinian
traveller gives examples of Abyssinian chiefs thus decorated, in regard to whom
he states that the horn attracted his particular attention, when he perceived
that the governors of provinces were distinguished by this head-dress. In the
case of sovereign powers, the royal head-band was adorned sometimes with a
double, sometimes with a triple horn. The double horn had evidently been the
original symbol of power or might on the part of sovereigns; for, on the
Egyptian monuments, the heads of the deified royal personages have generally no
more than the two horns to shadow forth their power. As sovereignty in Nimrod’s
case was founded on physical force, so the two horns of the bull were the
symbols of that physical force. And, in accordance with this, we read in
Sanchuniathon that ”Astarte put on her own head a bull’s head as the ensign of
royalty.” By-and-by, however, another and a higher idea came in, and the
expression of that idea was seen in the symbol of the three horns. A cap seems
in course of time to have come to be associated with the regal horns. In
Assyria the three-horned cap was one of the ”sacred emblems,” in token that the
power connected with it was of celestial origin,–the three horns evidently
pointing at the power of the trinity. Still, we have indications that the
horned band, without any cap, was anciently the corona or royal crown. The
crown borne by the Hindoo god Vishnu, in his avatar of the Fish, is just an
open circle or band, with three horns standing erect from it, with a knob on
the top of each horn. All the avatars are represented as crowned with a crown
that seems to have been modelled from this, consisting of a coronet with three
points, standing erect from it, in which Sir William Jones recognises the
Ethiopian or Parthian coronet. The open tiara of Agni, the Hindoo god of fire,
shows in its lower round the double horn, made in the very same way as in Assyria,
proving at once the ancient custom, and whence that custom had come. Instead of
the three horns, three horn-shaped leaves came to be substituted; and thus the
horned band gradually passed into the modern coronet or crown with the three
leaves of the fleur-de-lis, or other familiar three-leaved adornings.
Among the Red Indians of America there had evidently been something
entirely analogous to the Babylonian custom of wearing the horns; for, in the
”buffalo dance” there, each of the dancers had his head arrayed with buffalo’s
horns; and it is worthy of especial remark, that the ”Satyric dance,” * or
dance of the Satyrs in Greece, seems to have been the counterpart of this Red
Indian solemnity; for the satyrs were horned divinities, and consequently those
who imitated their dance must have had their heads set off in imitation of
theirs.
* BRYANT. The Satyrs were the companions of Bacchus, and ”danced along with
him” (Aelian Hist.) When it is considered who Bacchus was, and that his
distinguishing epithet was ”Bull-horned,” the horns of the ”Satyrs” will appear
in their true light. For a particular mystic reason the Satyr’s horn was
commonly a goat’s horn, but originally it must have been the same as Bacchus’.
When thus we find a custom that is clearly founded on a form of speech that
characteristically distinguished the region where Nimrod’s power was wielded,
used in so many different countries far removed from one another, where no such
form of speech was used in ordinary life, we may be sure that such a custom was
not the result of mere accident, but that it indicates the wide-spread
diffusion of an influence that went forth in all directions from Babylon, from
the time that Nimrod first ”began to be mighty on the earth.”
There was another way in which Nimrod’s power was symbolised besides by the
”horn.” A synonym for Gheber, ”The mighty one,” was ”Abir,” while ”Aber” also
signified a ”wing.” Nimrod, as Head and Captain of those men of war, by whom he
surrounded himself, and who were the instruments of establishing his power, was
”Baal-aberin,” ”Lord of the mighty ones.” But ”Baal-abirin” (pronounced nearly
in the same way) signified ”The winged one,” * and therefore in symbol he was
represented, not only as a horned bull, but as at once a horned and winged bull–as
showing not merely that he was mighty himself, but that he had mighty ones
under his command, who were ever ready to carry his will into effect, and to
put down all opposition to his power; and to shadow forth the vast extent of
his might, he was represented with great and wide-expanding wings.
* This is according to a peculiar Oriental idiom, of which there are many
examples. Thus, Baal-aph, ”lord of wrath,” signifies ”an angry man”;
Baal-lashon, ”lord of tongue,” ”an eloquent man”; Baal-hatsim, ”lord of
arrows,” ”an archer”; and in like manner, Baal-aberin, ”lord of wings,”
signifies ”winged one.”
To this mode of representing the mighty kings of Babylon and Assyria, who
imitated Nimrod and his successors, there is manifest allusion in Isaiah 8:6-8
”Forasmuch as this people refuseth the waters of Shiloah that go softly, and
rejoice in Rezin and Remaliah’s son; now therefore, behold, the Lord bringeth
up upon them the waters of the river, strong and mighty, even the king of
Assyria, and all his glory; and he shall come up over all his banks. And he
shall pass through Judah; he shall overflow and go over; he shall reach even
unto the neck; and the STRETCHING OUT OF HIS WINGS shall FILL the breadth of
thy land, O Immanuel.” When we look at such figures, with their great extent of
expanded wing, as symbolising an Assyrian king, what a vividness and force does
it give to the inspired language of the prophet! And how clear is it, also,
that the stretching forth of the Assyrian monarch’s WINGS, that was to ”fill
the breadth of Immanuel’s land,” has that very symbolic meaning to which I have
referred–viz., the overspreading of the land by his ”mighty ones,” or hosts of
armed men, that the king of Babylon was to bring with him in his overflowing
invasion! The knowledge of the way in which the Assyrian monarchs were
represented, and of the meaning of that representation, gives additional force
to the story of the dream of Cyrus the Great, as told by Herodotus. Cyrus, says
the historian, dreamt that he saw the son of one of his princes, who was at the
time in a distant province, with two great ”wings on his shoulders, the one of
which overshadowed Asia, and the other Europe,” from which he immediately
concluded that he was organising rebellion against him. The symbols of the
Babylonians, whose capital Cyrus had taken, and to whose power he had
succeeded, were entirely familiar to him; and if the ”wings” were the symbols
of sovereign power, and the possession of them implied the lordship over the
might, or the armies of the empire, it is easy to see how very naturally any
suspicions of disloyalty affecting the individual in question might take shape
in the manner related, in the dreams of him who might harbour these suspicions.
Now, the understanding of this equivocal sense of ”Baal-aberin” can alone
explain the remarkable statement of Aristophanes, that at the beginning of the
world ”the birds” were first created, and then after their creation, came the
”race of the blessed immortal gods.” This has been regarded as either an
atheistical or nonsensical utterance on the part of the poet, but, with the
true key applied to the language, it is found to contain an important
historical fact. Let it only be borne in mind that ”the birds”–that is, the
”winged ones”–symbolised ”the Lords of the mighty ones,” and then the meaning
is clear, viz., that men first ”began to be mighty on the earth”; and then,
that the ”Lords” or Leaders of ”these mighty ones” were deified. The knowledge
of the mystic sense of this symbol accounts also for the origin of the story of
Perseus, the son of Jupiter, miraculously born of Danae, who did such wondrous
things, and who passed from country to country on wings divinely bestowed on
him. This equally casts light on the symbolic myths in regard to Bellerophon,
and the feats which he performed on his winged horse, and their ultimate
disastrous issue; how high he mounted in the air, and how terrible was his
fall; and of Icarus, the son of Daedalus, who, flying on wax-cemented wings
over the Icarian Sea, had his wings melted off through his too near approach to
the sun, and so gave his name to the sea where he was supposed to have fallen.
The fables all referred to those who trode, or were supposed to have trodden,
in the steps of Nimrod, the first ”Lord of the mighty ones,” and who in that
character was symbolised as equipped with wings.
Now, it is remarkable that, in the passage of Aristophanes already referred
to, that speaks of the birds, or ”the winged ones,” being produced before the
gods, we are informed that he from whom both ”mighty ones” and gods derived
their origin, was none other than the winged boy Cupid. *
* Aristophanes says that Eros or Cupid produced the ”birds” and ”gods” by
”mingling all things.” This evidently points to the meaning of the name Bel,
which signifies at once ”the mingler” and ”the confounder.” This name properly
belonged to the father of Nimrod, but, as the son was represented as identified
with the father, we have evidence that the name descended to the son and others
by inheritance.
Cupid, the son of Venus, occupied, as will afterwards be proved, in the
mystic mythology the very same position as Nin, or Ninus, ”the son,” did to
Rhea, the mother of the gods. As Nimrod was unquestionably the first of ”the
mighty ones” after the Flood, this statement of Aristophanes, that the boy-god
Cupid, himself a winged one, produced all the birds or ”winged ones,” while
occupying the very position of Nin or Ninus, ”the son,” shows that in this
respect also Ninus and Nimrod are identified. While this is the evident meaning
of the poet, this also, in a strictly historical point of view, is the
conclusion of the historian Apollodorus; for he states that ”Ninus is Nimrod.”
And then, in conformity with this identity of Ninus and Nimrod, we find, in one
of the most celebrated sculptures of ancient Babylon, Ninus and his wife
Semiramis represented as actively engaged in the pursuits of the chase,–”the
quiver-bearing Semiramis” being a fit companion for ”the mighty Hunter before
the Lord.”
Note
Ala-Mahozim
The name ”Ala-Mahozim” is never, as far as I know, found in any ancient
uninspired author, and in the Scripture itself it is found only in a prophecy.
Considering that the design of prophecy is always to leave a certain obscurity
before the event, though giving enough of light for the practical guidance of
the upright, it is not to be wondered at that an unusual word should be
employed to describe the divinity in question. But, though this precise name be
not found, we have a synonym that can be traced home to Nimrod. In
Sanchuniathon, ”Astarte, traveling about the habitable world,” is said to have
found ”a star falling through the air, which she took up and consecrated in the
holy island Tyre.” Now what is this story of the falling star but just another
version of the fall of Mulciber from heaven, or of Nimrod from his high estate?
for as we have already seen, Macrobius shows (Saturn.) that the story of
Adonis–the lamented one–so favourite a theme in Phoenicia, originally came from
Assyria. The name of the great god in the holy island of Tyre, as is well
known, was Melkart (KITTO’S Illus. Comment.), but this name, as brought from
Tyre to Carthage, and from thence to Malta (which was colonised from Carthage),
where it is found on a monument at this day, cast no little light on the
subject. The name Melkart is thought by some to have been derived from
Melek-eretz, or ”king of the earth” (WILKINSON); but the way in which it is
sculptured in Malta shows that it was really Melek-kart, ”king of the walled
city.” Kir, the same as the Welsh Caer, found in Caer-narvon, &c.,
signifies ”an encompassing wall,” or a ”city completely walled round”; and Kart
was the feminine form of the same word, as may be seen in the different forms
of the name of Carthage, which is sometimes Car-chedon, and sometimes Cart-hada
or Cart-hago. In the Book of Proverbs we find a slight variety of the feminine
form of Kart, which seems evidently used in the sense of a bulwark or a
fortification. Thus (Prov 10:15) we read: ”A rich man’s wealth is his strong
city (Karit), that is, his strong bulwark or defence.” Melk-kart, then, ”king
of the walled city,” conveys the very same idea as Ala-Mahozim. In GRUTER’S
Inscriptions, as quoted by Bryant, we find a title also given to Mars, the
Roman war-god, exactly coincident in meaning with that of Melkart. We have
elsewhere seen abundant reason to conclude that the original of Mars was
Nimrod. The title to which I refer confirms this conclusion, and is contained
in a Roman inscription on an ancient temple in Spain. This title shows that the
temple was dedicated to ”Mars Kir-aden,” the lord of ”The Kir,” or ”walled
city.” The Roman C, as is well known, is hard, like K; and Adon, ”Lord,” is
also Aden. Now, with this clue to guide us, we can unravel at once what has
hitherto greatly puzzled mythologists in regard to the name of Mars Quirinus as
distinguished from Mars Gradivus. The K in Kir is what in Hebrew or Chaldee is
called Koph, a different letter from Kape, and is frequently pronounced as a Q.
Quir-inus, therefore, signifies ”belonging to the 93 walled city,” and refers
to the security which was given to cities by encompassing walls. Gradivus, on
the other hand, comes from ”Grah,” ”conflict,” and ”divus,” ”god”–a different
form of Deus, which has been already shown to be a Chaldee term; and therefore
signifies ”God of battle.” Both these titles exactly answer to the two
characters of Nimrod as the great city builder and the great warrior, and that
both these distinctive characters were set forth by the two names referred to,
we have distinct evidence in FUSS’S Antiquities. ”The Romans,” says he,
”worshipped two idols of the kind [that is, gods under the name of Mars], the
one called Quirinus, the guardian of the city and its peace; the other called
Gradivus, greedy of war and slaughter, whose temple stood beyond the city’s
boundaries.”
The Two Babylons
Alexander Hislop
Chapter II
Section II
Sub-Section II
The Child In Egypt
When we turn to Egypt we find remarkable evidence of the same thing there
also. Justin, as we have already seen, says that ”Ninus subdued all nations, as
far as Lybia,” and consequently Egypt. The statement of Diodorus Siculus is to
the same effect, Egypt being one of the countries that, according to him, Ninus
brought into subjection to himself. In exact accordance with these historical
statements, we find that the name of the third person in the primeval triad of
Egypt was Khons. But Khons, in Egyptian, comes from a word that signifies ”to
chase.” Therefore, the name of Khons, the son of Maut, the goddess-mother, who
was adorned in such a way as to identify her with Rhea, the great
goddess-mother of Chaldea, * properly signifies ”The Huntsman,” or god of the
chase.
* The distinguishing decoration of Maut was the vulture head-dress. Now the
name of Rhea, in one of its meanings, signifies a vulture.
As Khons stands in the very same relation to the Egyptian Maut as Ninus
does to Rhea, how does this title of ”The Huntsman” identify the Egyptian god
with Nimrod? Now this very name Khons, brought into contact with the Roman
mythology, not only explains the meaning of a name in the Pantheon there, that
hitherto has stood greatly in need of explanation, but causes that name, when
explained, to reflect light back again on this Egyptian divinity, and to
strengthen the conclusion already arrived at. The name to which I refer is the
name of the Latin god Consus, who was in one aspect identified with Neptune,
but who was also regarded as ”the god of hidden counsels,” or ”the concealer of
secrets,” who was looked up to as the patron of horsemanship, and was said to
have produced the horse. Who could be the ”god of hidden counsels,” or the
”concealer of secrets,” but Saturn, the god of the ”mysteries,” and whose name
as used at Rome, signified ”The hidden one”? The father of Khons, or Ohonso (as
he was also called), that is, Amoun, was, as we are told by Plutarch, known as
”The hidden God”; and as father and son in the same triad have ordinarily a
correspondence of character, this shows that Khons also must have been known in
the very same character of Saturn, ”The hidden one.” If the Latin Consus, then,
thus exactly agreed with the Egyptian Khons, as the god of ”mysteries,” or
”hidden counsels,” can there be a doubt that Khons, the Huntsman, also agreed with
the same Roman divinity as the supposed producer of the horse? Who so likely to
get the credit of producing the horse as the great huntsman of Babel, who no
doubt enlisted it in the toils of the chase, and by this means must have been
signally aided in his conflicts with the wild beasts of the forest? In this
connection, let the reader call to mind that fabulous creature, the Centaur,
half-man, half-horse, that figures so much in the mythology of Greece. That
imaginary creation, as is generally admitted, was intended to commemorate the
man who first taught the art of horsemanship. *
* In illustration of the principle that led to the making of the image of
the Centaur, the following passage may be given from PRESCOTT’S Mexico, as
showing the feelings of the Mexicans on first seeing a man on horseback: ”He
[Cortes] ordered his men [who were cavalry] to direct their lances at the faces
of their opponents, who, terrified at the monstrous apparition–for they
supposed the rider and the horse, which they had never before seen, to be one
and the same–were seized with a panic.”
But that creation was not the offspring of Greek fancy. Here, as in many
other things, the Greeks have only borrowed from an earlier source. The Centaur
is found on coins struck in Babylonia, showing that the idea must have
originally come from that quarter. The Centaur is found in the Zodiac, the
antiquity of which goes up to a high period, and which had its origin in
Babylon. The Centaur was represented, as we are expressly assured by Berosus,
the Babylonian historian, in the temple of Babylon, and his language would seem
to show that so also it had been in primeval times. The Greeks did themselves
admit this antiquity and derivation of the Centaur; for though Ixion was
commonly represented as the father of the Centaurs, yet they also acknowledge
that the primitive Centaurus was the same as Kronos, or Saturn, the father of
the gods. *
* Scholiast in Lycophron, BRYANT. The Scholiast says that Chiron was the
son of ”Centaurus, that is, Kronos.” If any one objects that, as Chiron is said
to have lived in the time of the Trojan war, this shows that his father Kronos
could not be the father of gods and men, Xenophon answers by saying ”that
Kronos was the brother of Jupiter.” De Venatione
But we have seen that Kronos was the first King of Babylon, or Nimrod;
consequently, the first Centaur was the same. Now, the way in which the Centaur
was represented on the Babylonian coins, and in the Zodiac, viewed in this
light, is very striking. The Centaur was the same as the sign Sagittarius, or
”The Archer.” If the founder of Babylon’s glory was ”The mighty Hunter,” whose
name, even in the days of Moses, was a proverb–(Gen 10:9, ”Wherefore, it is
said, Even as Nimrod, the mighty hunter before the Lord”)–when we find the
”Archer” with his bow and arrow, in the symbol of the supreme Babylonian
divinity, and the ”Archer,” among the signs of the Zodiac that originated in
Babylon, I think we may safely conclude that this Man-horse or Horse-man Archer
primarily referred to him, and was intended to perpetuate the memory at once of
his fame as a huntsman and his skill as a horse-breaker. (see note below)
Now, when we thus compare the Egyptian Khons, the ”Huntsman,” with the
Latin Consus, the god of horse-races, who ”produced the horse,” and the Centaur
of Babylon, to whom was attributed the honour of being the author of
horsemanship, while we see how all the lines converge in Babylon, it will be
very clear, I think, whence the primitive Egyptian god Khons has been derived.
Khons, the son of the great goddess-mother, seems to have been generally
represented as a full-grown god. The Babylonian divinity was also represented
very frequently in Egypt in the very same way as in the land of his
nativity–i.e., as a child in his mother’s arms. *
* One of the symbols with which Khons was represented, shows that even he
was identified with the child-god; ”for,” says Wilkinson, ”at the side of his
head fell the plaited lock of Harpocrates, or childhood.”
This was the way in which Osiris, ”the son, the husband of his mother,” was
often exhibited, and what we learn of this god, equally as in the case of
Khons, shows that in his original he was none other than Nimrod. It is admitted
that the secret system of Free Masonry was originally founded on the Mysteries
of the Egyptian Isis, the goddess-mother, or wife of Osiris. But what could
have led to the union of a Masonic body with these Mysteries, had they not had
particular reference to architecture, and had the god who was worshipped in them
not been celebrated for his success in perfecting the arts of fortification and
building? Now, if such were the case, considering the relation in which, as we
have already seen, Egypt stood to Babylon, who would naturally be looked up to
there as the great patron of the Masonic art? The strong presumption is, that
Nimrod must have been the man. He was the first that gained fame in this way.
As the child of the Babylonian goddess-mother, he was worshipped, as we have
seen, in the character of Ala mahozim, ”The god of fortifications.” Osiris, in
like manner, the child of the Egyptian Madonna, was equally celebrated as ”the
strong chief of the buildings.” This strong chief of the buildings was
originally worshipped in Egypt with every physical characteristic of Nimrod. I
have already noticed the fact that Nimrod, as the son of Cush, was a Negro.
Now, there was a tradition in Egypt, recorded by Plutarch, that ”Osiris was
black,” which, in a land where the general complexion was dusky, must have
implied something more than ordinary in its darkness. Plutarch also states that
Horus, the son of Osiris, ”was of a fair complexion,” and it was in this way,
for the most part, that Osiris was represented. But we have unequivocal
evidence that Osiris, the son and husband of the great goddess-queen of Egypt,
was also represented as a veritable Negro. In Wilkinson may be found a
representation of him with the unmistakable features of the genuine Cushite or
Negro. Bunsen would have it that this is a mere random importation from some of
the barbaric tribes; but the dress in which this Negro god is arrayed tells a
different tale. That dress directly connects him with Nimrod. This
Negro-featured Osiris is clothed from head to foot in a spotted dress, the
upper part being a leopard’s skin, the under part also being spotted to
correspond with it. Now the name Nimrod * signifies ”the subduer of the
leopard.”
* ”Nimr-rod”; from Nimr, a ”leopard,” and rada or rad ”to subdue.”
According to invariable custom in Hebrew, when two consonants come together as
the two rs in Nimr-rod, one of them is sunk. Thus Nin-neveh, ”The habitation of
Ninus,” becomes Nineveh. The name Nimrod is commonly derived from Mered, ”to
rebel”; but a difficulty has always been found in regard to this derivation, as
that would make the name Nimrod properly passive not ”the rebel,” but ”he who
was rebelled against.” There is no doubt that Nimrod was a rebel, and that his
rebellion was celebrated in ancient myths; but his name in that character was
not Nimrod, but Merodach, or, as among the Romans, Mars, ”the rebel”; or among
the Oscans of Italy, Mamers (SMITH), ”The causer of rebellion.” That the Roman
Mars was really, in his original, the Babylonian god, is evident from the name
given to the goddess, who was recognised sometimes as his ”sister,” and
sometimes as his ”wife”–i.e., Bellona, which, in Chaldee, signifies, ”The
Lamenter of Bel” (from Bel and onah, to lament). The Egyptian Isis, the sister
and wife of Osiris, is in like manner represented, as we have seen, as
”lamenting her brother Osiris.” (BUNSEN)
This name seems to imply, that as Nimrod had gained fame by subduing the
horse, and so making use of it in the chase, so his fame as a huntsman rested
mainly on this, that he found out the art of making the leopard aid him in
hunting the other wild beasts. A particular kind of tame leopard is used in
India at this day for hunting; and of Bagajet I, the Mogul Emperor of India, it
is recorded that in his hunting establishment he had not only hounds of various
breeds, but leopards also, whose ”collars were set with jewels.” Upon the words
of the prophet Habakkuk 1:8, ”swifter than leopards,” Kitto has the following
remarks:–”The swiftness of the leopard is proverbial in all countries where it
is found. This, conjoined with its other qualities, suggested the idea in the
East of partially training it, that it might be employed in hunting…Leopards
are now rarely kept for hunting in Western Asia, unless by kings and governors;
but they are more common in the eastern parts of Asia. Orosius relates that one
was sent by the king of Portugal to the Pope, which excited great astonishment
by the way in which it overtook, and the facility with which it killed, deer
and wild boars. Le Bruyn mentions a leopard kept by the Pasha who governed
Gaza, and the other territories of the ancient Philistines, and which he
frequently employed in hunting jackals. But it is in India that the cheetah, or
hunting leopard, is most frequently employed, and is seen in the perfection of
his power.” This custom of taming the leopard, and pressing it into the service
of man in this way, is traced up to the earliest times of primitive antiquity.
In the works of Sir William Jones, we find it stated from the Persian legends,
that Hoshang, the father of Tahmurs, who built Babylon, was the ”first who bred
dogs and leopards for hunting.” As Tahmurs, who built Babylon, could be none
other than Nimrod, this legend only attributes to his father what, as his name
imports, he got the fame of doing himself. Now, as the classic god bearing the
lion’s skin is recognised by that sign as Hercules, the slayer of the Nemean
lion, so in like manner, the god clothed in the leopard’s skin would naturally
be marked out as Nimrod, the ”leopard-subduer.” That this leopard skin, as
appertaining to the Egyptian god, was no occasional thing, we have clearest
evidence. Wilkinson tells us, that on all high occasions when the Egyptian high
priest was called to officiate, it was indispensable that he should do so
wearing, as his robe of office, the leopard’s skin. As it is a universal
principle in all idolatries that the high priest wears the insignia of the god
he serves, this indicates the importance which the spotted skin must have had
attached to it as a symbol of the god himself. The ordinary way in which the
favourite Egyptian divinity Osiris was mystically represented was under the
form of a young bull or calf–the calf Apis–from which the golden calf of the
Israelites was borrowed. There was a reason why that calf should not commonly
appear in the appropriate symbols of the god he represented, for that calf
represented the divinity in the character of Saturn, ”The HIDDEN one,” ”Apis”
being only another name for Saturn. *
* The name of Apis in Egyptian is Hepi or Hapi, which is evidently from the
Chaldee ”Hap,” ”to cover.” In Egyptian Hap signifies ”to conceal.” (BUNSEN)
The cow of Athor, however, the female divinity corresponding to Apis, is
well known as a ”spotted cow,” (WILKINSON) and it is singular that the Druids
of Britain also worshipped ”a spotted cow” (DAVIES’S Druids). Rare though it
be, however, to find an instance of the deified calf or young bull represented
with the spots, there is evidence still in existence, that even it was
sometimes so represented. When we find that Osiris, the grand god of Egypt,
under different forms, was thus arrayed in a leopard’s skin or spotted dress,
and that the leopard-skin dress was so indispensable a part of the sacred robes
of his high priest, we may be sure that there was a deep meaning in such a
costume. And what could that meaning be, but just to identify Osiris with the
Babylonian god, who was celebrated as the ”Leopard-tamer,” and who was
worshipped even as he was, as Ninus, the CHILD in his mother’s arms?
Note
Meaning of the Name Centaurus
The ordinary classical derivation of this name gives little satisfaction;
for, even though it could be derived from words that signify ”Bull-killers”
(and the derivation itself is but lame), such a meaning casts no light at all
on the history of the Centaurs. Take it as a Chaldee word, and it will be seen
at once that the whole history of the primitive Kentaurus entirely agrees with
the history of Nimrod, with whom we have already identified him. Kentaurus is
evidently derived from Kehn, ”a priest,” and Tor, ”to go round.” ”Kehn-Tor,”
therefore, is ”Priest of the revolver,” that is, of the sun, which, to
appearance, makes a daily revolution round the earth. The name for a priest, as
written, is just Khn, and the vowel is supplied according to the different
dialects of those who pronounce it, so as to make it either Kohn, Kahn, or
Kehn. Tor, ”the revolver,” as applied to the sun, is evidently just another
name for the Greek Zen or Zan applied to Jupiter, as identified with the sun,
which signifies the ”Encircler” or ”Encompasser,”–the very word from which
comes our own word ”Sun,” which, in Anglo-Saxon, was Sunna (MALLET, Glossary),
and of which we find distinct traces in Egypt in the term snnu (BUNSEN’S
Vocab.), as applied to the sun’s orbit. The Hebrew Zon or Zawon, to ”encircle,”
from which these words come, in Chaldee becomes Don or Dawon, and thus we
penetrate the meaning of the name given by the Boeotians to the ”Mighty
hunter,” Orion. That name was Kandaon, as appears from the following words of the
Scholiast on Lycophron, quoted in BRYANT: ”Orion, whom the Boeotians call also
Kandaon.” Kahn-daon, then, and Kehn-tor, were just different names for the same
office–the one meaning ”Priest of the Encircler,” the other, ”Priest of the
revolver”–titles evidently equivalent to that of Bol-kahn, or ”Priest of Baal,
or the Sun,” which, there can be no doubt, was the distinguishing title of
Nimrod. As the title of Centaurus thus exactly agrees with the known position
of Nimrod, so the history of the father of the Centaurs does the same. We have
seen already that, though Ixion was, by the Greeks, made the father of that
mythical race, even they themselves admitted that the Centaurs had a much
higher origin, and consequently that Ixion, which seems to be a Grecian name,
had taken the place of an earlier name, according to that propensity
particularly noticed by Salverte, which has often led mankind ”to apply to
personages known in one time and one country, myths which they have borrowed
from another country and an earlier epoch” (Des Sciences). Let this only be
admitted to be the case here–let only the name of Ixion be removed, and it will
be seen that all that is said of the father of the Centaurs, or
Horsemen-archers, applies exactly to Nimrod, as represented by the different
myths that refer to the first progenitor of these Centaurs. First, then,
Centaurus is represented as having been taken up to heaven (DYMOCK ”Ixion”),
that is, as having been highly exalted through special favour of heaven; then,
in that state of exaltation, he is said to have fallen in love with Nephele,
who passed under the name of Juno, the ”Queen of Heaven.” The story here is
intentionally confused, to mystify the vulgar, and the order of events seems
changed, which can easily be accounted for. As Nephele in Greek signifies ”a
cloud,” so the offspring of Centaurus are said to have been produced by a
”cloud.” But Nephele, in the language of the country where the fable was
originally framed, signified ”A fallen woman,” and it is from that ”fallen
woman,” therefore, that the Centaurs are really said to have sprung. Now, the
story of Nimrod, as Ninus, is, that he fell in love with Semiramis when she was
another man’s wife, and took her for his own wife, whereby she became doubly
fallen–fallen as a woman *– and fallen from the primitive faith in which she
must have been brought up; and it is well known that this ”fallen woman” was,
under the name of Juno, or the Dove, after her death, worshipped among the
Babylonians.
* Nephele was used, even in Greece, as the name of a woman, the degraded
wife of Athamas being so called. (SMITH’S Class. Dict., ”Athamas”)
Centaurus, for his presumption and pride, was smitten with lightning by the
supreme God, and cast down to hell (DYMOCK, ”Ixion”). This, then, is just
another version of the story of Phaethon, Aesculapius, and Orpheus, who were
all smitten in like manner and for a similar cause. In the infernal world, the
father of the Centaurs is represented as tied by serpents to a wheel which
perpetually revolves, and thus makes his punishment eternal (DYMOCK). In the
serpents there is evidently reference to one of the two emblems of the
fire-worship of Nimrod. If he introduced the worship of the serpent, as I have
endeavoured to show, there was poetical justice in making the serpent an
instrument of his punishment. Then the revolving wheel very clearly points to
the name Centaurus itself, as denoting the ”Priest of the revolving sun.” To
the worship of the sun in the character of the ”Revolver,” there was a very distinct
allusion not only in the circle which, among the Pagans, was the emblem of the
sun-god, and the blazing wheel with which he was so frequently represented
(WILSON’S Parsi Religion), but in the circular dances of the Bacchanalians.
Hence the phrase, ”Bassaridum rotator Evan”–”The wheeling Evan of the
Bacchantes” (STATIUS, Sylv.). Hence, also, the circular dances of the Druids as
referred to in the following quotation from a Druidic song: ”Ruddy was the sea
beach whilst the circular revolution was performed by the attendants and the
white bands in graceful extravagance” (DAVIES’S Druids). That this circular
dance among the Pagan idolaters really had reference to the circuit of the sun,
we find from the distinct statement of Lucian in his treatise On Dancing,
where, speaking of the circular dance of the ancient Eastern nations, he says,
with express reference to the sun-god, ”it consisted in a dance imitating this
god.” We see then, here, a very specific reason for the circular dance of the
Bacchae, and for the ever-revolving wheel of the great Centaurus in the
infernal regions.
continue in part 2