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Ancient Mysteries of Egypt and Greece
D. McLaren
In the explanation of the first T.B. it is stated that
" the usages and customs of Freemasonry correspond
in a great degree with the Mysteries of Ancient
Egypt," and there are some Brethren who in their
belief in the antiquity of our Order, would derive
its origin from these Mysteries.
It is generally believed that Egypt was the home
of the Mysteries, and I desire, as far as time will
permit, to trace shortly how these Egyptian
Mysteries gradually found their way into, and
influenced the native religions of the nations with
which Egypt came in contact.
Probably, no other nation of that time was
better fitted by its mental structure, as revealed by
what little we know of its literature, and the
comparatively advanced state of its knowledge to
become the home of mysteries.
The amount of knowledge acquired by the
priestly caste and revealed only to those chosen
by them to share in that knowledge was very
extensive and, for these times, very accurate.
Living in a country where a yearly division of land
was necessary owing to the varying amounts of
the Nile floods, a knowledge of geometry was
gradually attained which included not only the
geometry of areas, but also of solids and conic
sections.
Dr. Gow says in reference to this subject:
"Beyond question, Egyptian geometry such as
it was, was the germ from which grew that
magnificent science to which every Englishman
is indebted for his first lessons in right seeing and
thinking."
The scholars of the Nile Valley also possessed
knowledge of the rudiments of Trigonometry,
and their approximation of the value of "pi" was
not improved for many centuries. Ahmes, a
scribe of the Hyksos Dynasty, 1900 B.C., gave the
value of pi=1.1605, a remarkably good
approximation for the period when geometry was
little more than mensuration.
"In matters arithmetical, they possessed a knowledge
of the three progressions. Arithmetical,
Geometrical, and Harmonic. In astronomy,
without the help of accurate instruments of
observation at the disposal of modern observers
of the heavens, they had measured the obliquity
of the ecliptic, had explained the solar and lunar
eclipses, and at a very early date were in possession
of a knowledge of the precession of the equinoxes.
In arts and manufactures they attained a very
high standard of excellence: as potters, they had
few rivals, and they knew how to blow glass,
they used saws, levers, and balances, and were
skilful builders of ships. The gigantic and wonderful
Hall of Karnack and the Pillars of Luxor, not
to mention the Pyramids, testify that as masons
they accomplished feats which could hardly be
achieved in our mechanical and scientific age,
and it is not too much to assert that the measurements
that Greece handed on to Rome and to
Europe, in the middle ages, were derived from
Egypt."
After the interesting paper read before the
Association last year in " The Life of Sethos,"
by W. Bro. R. E. Wallace James, I do not consider
it necessary to deal with any one of the Egyptian
Mysteries in particular. In general, a candidate
for these mysteries and after purification by washing
and a rime spent in darkness, had to give his assent
to the rules of the society, and an oath of fidelity
was required of him, after which he was restored
to light. A password was given to him and signs
of recognition, and he was instructed in the names
and attributes of the gods, and received instruction
in the then known sciences. In some cases the
highest honour granted was participation in the
election of a king, a belief in the immortality of
the soul was, no doubt, communicated to those
admitted to their mysteries. On the walls of the
Temple of Phylae were recorded the death,
resurrection, and ascension and deification of the
god to whom it was sacred.
Not much is known of these mysteries, and
what we do know of them is derived from the
writings of the Greeks, and chiefly those oflamblicus.
But it may safely be said that they never, in Egypt,
developed any centres of orgiastic license, such as
made a byword of the Bacchanalia, at Rome, and
the Dionysiac ceremonies in Thrace.
All this knowledge was the possessions of the
priest-astronomers who selfishly acquired a predominant
power by a silence outside their order,
even on these purely scientific matters.
As regards their religion, Egypt suffered from
a superfluity of Gods and Goddesses. It has been
said that an enumeration of them would result
" in compilations resembling census returns."
Herodotus tells us how a pharaoh of the 12th
dynasty undertook to build the Labyrinth as a
temple to accommodate all the gods and found it
necessary to construct no fewer than three thousand
apartments.
The first mention of a pharaoh is found in. Genesis
xii, 10, where Abraham, the founder of the Hebrew
nation, had migrated from Babylonia into the Land
of Canaan, from which famine forced him to visit
the fertile land of Egypt. This took place when
Egypt was ruled over by the Hyksos or Shepherd
King, in the reign of the lyth dynasty.
A little more than 200 years after, during the
i8th dynasty, that is 100 years before the reign of
Tut-Ank-Amen, Jacob and his sons were driven
by famine to Egypt, to join Joseph, who had
married Asenath, the daughter of a high priest of
On, whose name was Potipherah, meaning the
Gift of the Sun God, where was granted them
some land lying between where Cairo now stands
and where the Suez Canal has been constructed -
the Land of Goschen. This may truly be termed
the cradle of the Jewish race, for when the time
came for them to leave the land, their nation had
increased from 3 score and 6 to 2,000,000, counting
men, women, and children. Moses, the leader of
the exodus, under the name Osarsiph (according
to some authorities), is said to have held the office
of High Priest of On. No one of the Hebrews by
training and education could have been better
qualified to act as leader, as the laws laid down by
him for a guidance in morals and hygiene have
not been surpassed. These things became possible
to him, no doubt, through his training for the
priesthood. The exodus took place in the 5th
year of the reign of Menephta, 1486 B.C.
The next point of contact between a Hebrew
leader and an Egyptian pharaoh is recorded in
I Kings iii, i, when Solomon is stated to have
married an Egyptian princess, a daughter of one of
the Pharaohs. Some authorities say that it was
from this marriage, and his dealings with his wife's
nation, that Solomon obtained his chief ideas of
the plan of the Temple at Jerusalem, dedicated
•widely in dates prior to 1000 B.C. Mr. Davidson,
who recently published an exhaustive research
volume on the great Pyramids and Egyptian
chronology, appears to refute both schools and to
establish a complete synchronism of ancient writers
in accord with Archbishop Usher's bible dates.
For my present purpose, namely of tracing the
historical points of contact where the influences
of Egyptian knowledge and beliefs on the surrounding
peoples and more especially on the
Jewish and Greek nations, occurred I shall adopt
that of Mr. Davidson.
It is generally agreed that Lower and Upper
Egypt became united into one kingdom under
a powerful and warlike chief who became the
first Pharaoh and whose name was Menes,
about 3500 B.C. His capital was situated at
Memphis. It was also known that during the
twelfth dynasty Egypt, which had formerly been
entirely agricultural, now became famous in
commerce and came into touch with Europe, as a
considerable amount of their trade was carried on
with the Island of Crete. Since 1894, archaeologists
have been carrying on excavations in that island
and their discoveries have upset the previous
knowledge of historians for they find that, at the
time of their trading with the Egyptians, the
inhabitants of that island were more advanced in
their arts and sciences than were the Babylonians
and the Egyptians. Here, however, is the first
point of historical contact between Egypt and
Europe, probably 2000 B.C., but of more interest
to us as Masons is the intercourse of Egyptians
and the Jews. In the Bible zoo references are
made to Egypt and ten pharaohs are mentioned,
although unfortunately their names are not
mentioned.
The next point of contact between a Hebrew
leader and an Egyptian pharaoh is recorded in
I Kings iii, i, when Solomon is stated to have
married an Egyptian princess, a daughter of one of
the Pharaohs. Some authorities say that it was
from this marriage, and his dealings with his wife's
nation, that Solomon obtained his chief ideas of
the plan of the Temple at Jerusalem, dedicated
entered the Sign of Pisces a little before 200 B.C.
Moreover, at this date {i.e. about 250 B.C.),
civilisation began to hide itself in symbolism and secret
societies and that is why some of the knowledge
enshrined in the Greek mysteria and Roman
Collegia passed into the Christian Church and the
New Testament, so quietly, and is still so little
recognized there. St. Paul says that he was "a
Stewart on the Mysteries." About 50 B.C. Augustus
imposed Rome's Imperium on the fertile province
of Cleopatra.
This knowledge acquired in Egypt became the
common possession of the pupils who sat at the
feet of these doctors of Egyptian philosophy.
Facts show clearly a contact between Egypt and
Greece lasting some 1500 years.
In addition, Greek tradition fixes the foundation
of Tyre and Sidon by Phoenix from Thebes, in
Egypt, the foundation of Athens by Cecrops,
from Sais, in Egypt, of Thebes in Central Greece
by Cadmus, from Egyptian Thebes, and of Argos
by Danaus from Libya about 1582 B.C.
Tradition refers the institution of the Greek
Mysteries to Orpheus or Dionysus whose legendary
date I believe to be 1600 B.C. The chief of these,
the Eleusinian Mysteries in Attica, was said to
have been imported by King Erechtheus,, who in
a time of scarcity, like Jacob's sons, sought corn
for his country in Egypt, and to have been instituted
according to the writers, Diodorus and Isocrates,
by order of Demeter, the Great Mother, herself.
Historically, it would seem that the mysteries
were re-established, consequent upon the invasion
of Greece, about 1000 years B.C., by fierce Dorian
tribes from the north. Greek and Phoenician colonies
began to intermingle as early as 700 B.C., perhaps
earlier, and Greece's great struggle against Persia
at Marathon, 490 B.C., is evidence of much
connection with the East via the Ionian Islands
and Asia Minor. Certainly from the fifth century
B.C., the Egyptian Trinity of Isis, Osiris and Horus,
•were represented in Greece by Demeter, Dionysus
and Apollo respectively.
It is not to be assumed that Greek initiates,
though they took vows of secrecy, were as uncommunicative,
in their best period, to the educated
world, as were the Egyptians. Such a babbling
race, as gave democratic ideas to Europe, was
well able to throw out hints, before the dark hand
of pagan Rome made secret societies dangerous
and as a matter of fact, the Eleusinian schools
were open to all free men, indiscriminately, and
included the most distinguished statesmen and
philosophers of the 5th and 4th centuries B.C.
Egypt is almost certainly the home of mysteries
but the Greeks imparted to their representations,
a measure of art and beauty.
The public observances of the initiates consisted
of sacrificial ceremonies (orgia) and purifications
to avoid some calamity in this life ; but private
and personal purifications were enjoined, against
danger in a life to come. At Athens, violation of
the mysteries was indictable under the jurisdiction
of the Archon or chief magistrate with a jury of
initiates. The mysteries celebrated were those of
Zeus in Crete, Hera in Argolis, Athene and
Dionysus (i.e. Bacchus) in Athens, Artemis (i.e.
Diana) in Arcadia, Hecate in Egina, and those of
the Cabiri in Samothrace. But by far the most famous,
and the only ones with which I shall deal, were those
at Attica in honour of Demeter and Persephone,
mother and daughter. These were considered
most holy and venerable throughout Greece, and
laid hold on the popular imagination as did no
worship of the Olympians. The Homeric Hymn
to Demeter tells us that Demeter, sister and wife
of Zeus, had a daughter Persephone, whom Hades
(God of the Unseen) carried off while she gathered
flowers in the Nysian Plains in Asia Minor. Demeter,
Mother of Earth, and Goddess of the Seedtime
and Harvest, now cut off fruits from men till Zeus
sent Mercury, his winged messenger, to Hades,
to recover Persephone on condition that she had
eaten nothing in the Kingdom of Hades. But
Hades, that very morning, had caused her to eat
some grains of a pomegranate. Hence, she still
spends one half of the year with Hades and one
half only in the upper air.
Latin poets placed the seizure of Persephone in
the Asphodel Meadows of Sicilian Enna.
This legend has a wonderful fascination, and if
it can be said to enshrine any divine truth it would
be that of a divine mother and daughter, a feminine
counterpart of the Christian father and son, the
daughter also " descending into hell " till rescued
by the son in the form of the word (Mercury).
Now I think that all religions, anciently, were
based on prophecy of a divine feminine revelation.
To the ancients, a goddess mother was no difficulty.
Demeter, Cybele, Isis, Magna Mater, and the
Virgin Mother are all akin: and only Protestants
in cold latitudes would see anything strange in a
" Jerusalem, Mother of us all." However that
may be, the worship of Demeter and Persephone
was of Catholic acceptance in Greece and by
numerous testimonies was of a moralizing and
uplifting nature. This is borne witness to by the
Greek writers, Pindar, Sophocles, Isocrates, Plutarch,
and Plato. The mysteries were of two kinds, the
Lesser and the Greater. Both kinds included
spectacles as grand and impressive as painting,
sculpture, music, and dancing could make them.
The priests were called kerukes or heralds. The
lesser Eleusinia were held at Agrae, on the Ilissus
Stream, in honour of the daughter, Persephone,
alone.
Only Barbarians were excluded. The initiated
were named Mysta; and they had to wait a year
before admittance to the greater mysteries. The
candidate took and washed a sow, then sacrificed
it, symbolizing that he purposed not to " return
like a sow to his wallowing in the mire." He was
then sprinkled with water by a priest (Hydranos),
and a Mystagogus (Hierophant or Prophet) adminis-
tered an oath of secrecy. He was not admitted
at once to Demeter's Shrine, but remained during
subsequent instruction in the porch or vestibule.
Aristotle, however, asserts that no instruction was
given to the Mysta; but that while in a state of
receptivity—a psychic state—their emotions and
character were acted upon. The rape of Persephone
having taken place in the winter, the lesser mysteries
were held in February.
The greater mysteries were held annually for
nine days in September, Athens being thronged
with visitors from all parts. The first day was
that of assembling. On the second, a solemn
" Pomp" or procession wended its way to the
coast with the cry " Mystae, to the sea," and purificatory
rites were performed. The third day was a
day of fasting. In the evening a frugal meal was
taken of sesame and honey, and sacrifices offered
of fish and barley. Some maintain that there was a.
nine days' fast. On the fourth a procession displayed
the "Sacred Things of Demeter," including
pomegranates and poppy seeds in a basket. The
fifth day became famous. The Mystse, led by
torch bearer, went in the dark evening with torches
to the Temple of Demeter at Eleusis to search
(in imitation of her) for Persephone. Claudian
gives a poetic picture of the shores and Bay of
Eleusis, lit up by a myriad lamps in the gloom.
They remained all night. The sixth day was sacred
to lacchus, son ofDemeter, the Bacchus or Dionysus
"Lord of Earth." His statue was carried along
the sacred road amid joyous shouts: 30,000
spectators was nothing uncommon. In the night
of the sixth and seventh the Mystse were initiated
into the greater mysteries and became " Seers"
(Epoptse), " Seers of Future Things," as St. Paul
says, using the same word. In the lighted sanctuary
they were shown (Autopsy) what none but Epopta
ever saw; a dramatic representation to the accompaniment
of ancient hymns of the death and
resurrection of the Holy Child, lacchus and of the
life of the gods. These mystic sights are described
as divinely ineffable. On the same night, they
performed a sacrament with the words, "I have
fasted and I have drunk the Kukeon. I have taken
from the chest. After tasting I have deposited
in the basket and from the basket into the chest."
The words of dismissal were "konx ompax."
On the seventh day they returned to Athens with
happy jests, in imitation of those with which the
sorrows of Demeter had been lightened. "A
mystical drama," says Clement of Alexandria.
Athletic games were held, the prize being a full
corn in the ear. On the eighth were initiated those
who were unable to be present on the sixth. The
ninth was the day of full cups. Two cups were
filled with water or wine and the contents were
thrown, one to the east, and one to the west.
These Eleusinian mysteries long survived the
independence of Greece. The general belief of
the ancients was that they opened a comforting
prospect of a future life. The most Holy and perfect
of the rites was to show an ear of corn mowed down
in silence. One can not but think of the text,
"Except a corn of wheat fall to the ground and die."
In my opinion it is certain that the mysteries were,
in a measure, a "praeparatio evangelica" for had
1 time I could indicate very much mystery phraseology
in the Epistles and Book of Revelations.
Gradually, the Egyptian gods, notwithstanding
fierce persecution raged for a time against their
worshippers, ousted the old religion of Rome,
until its Emperors were found filling their houses
with the Egyptian Gods and building temples
to them in the public parks of Rome, while soldiers
of the Sixth Legion indulged in Isiac worship in
York.
And so it comes, as Dill, in his "Roman Society "
says: "The scenes which were so common at Rome,
or Pompeii, or Corinth, the procession of shaven,
white-robed priests and acolytes marching to the
sound of chants and barbaric music, with the sacred
images and symbols of a worship which had been
cradled on the Nile ages before the time of Romulus
were reproduced in the remote villages on
|be edge of the Sahara and the Atlantic, in the valleys
of the Alps or the Yorkshire dales."
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