THE
HISTORICAL
JESUS
AND
MYTHICAL
CHRIST.
____________
(All necessary references to the original
authorities may be found in the Author's
"NATURAL
GENESIS.")
[Note: This title was first published in 1886 by the Star
Publishing Company, Springfield, Mass., and comprised the whole of the
section 'Typology of Equinoctial Christology' from Massey's Natural
Genesis, Vol. II. It included also the Glossary, Index, and
References that he did not print in his later, abbreviated private issue
of this Lecture that is presented here.
See also THE
NAME AND NATURE
OF THE CHRIST.]
Ed.—readers of this paper might also be interested in the
contrasting view given by Thomas Cooper in
THE
BRIDGE OF HISTORY
OVER THE GULF OF
TIME.
|
|
Gerald Massey, from a carte-de-visite,
by John & Charles Watkins, ca. 1858. |
IN presenting my readers with some of the data which show that much of the
Christian History was pre-extant as Egyptian Mythology, I have to ask you to
bear in mind that the facts, like other foundations, have been buried out of
sight for thousands of years in a hieroglyphical language, that was never really
read by Greek or Roman, and could not be read until the lost clue was discovered
by Champollion, almost the other day! In this way the original sources of our Mytholatry and Christology remained as hidden as those of the Nile, until the
century in which we live. The mystical matter enshrouded in this language was
sacredly entrusted to the keeping of the buried dead, who have faithfully
preserved it as their Book of Life, which was placed beneath their pillows, or
clasped to their bosoms, in their coffins and their tombs.
2. Secondly, although I am able to read the hieroglyphics,
nothing offered to you is based on my translation. I work too warily for that!
The transcription and literal rendering of the hieroglyphic texts herein
employed are by scholars of indisputable authority. There is no loophole of
escape that way. I lectured upon the subject of Jesus many years ago.
At that time I did not know how we had been misled, or that the "Christian
scheme" (as it is aptly called) in the New Testament is a fraud, founded on a
fable in the Old!
3. I then accepted the Canonical Gospels as containing a
veritable human history, and assumed, as others do, that the history proved
itself. Finding that Jesus, or Jehoshua Ben-Pandira, was an historical
character, known to the Talmud, I made the common mistake of supposing that this
proved the personal existence of the Jesus found portrayed in the Canonical
Gospels. But after you have heard my story, and weighed the evidence now for the
first time collected and presented to the public, you will not wonder that I
should have changed my views, or that I should be impelled to tell the truth to
others, as it now appears to myself; although I am only able to summarize here,
in the briefest manner possible, a few of the facts that I have dealt with
exhaustively elsewhere.
4. The personal existence of Jesus as Jehoshua Ben-Pandira can
be established beyond a doubt. One account affirms that, according to a genuine
Jewish tradition "that man (who is not to be named) was a disciple of
Jehoshua Ben-Perachia." It also says, "He was born in the fourth year
of the reign of the Jewish King Alexander Jannæus, notwithstanding the
assertions of his followers that he was born in the reign of Herod." That
would be more than a century earlier than the date of birth assigned to the
Jesus of the Gospels! But it can be further shown that Jehoshua Ben-Pandira may
have been born considerably earlier even than the year 102 B.C.,
although the point is not of much consequence here. Jehoshua, son of Perachia,
was a president of the Sanhedrin—the
fifth, reckoning from Ezra as the first: one of those who in the line of descent
received and transmitted the oral law, as it was said, direct from Sinai. There
could not be two of that name. This Ben-Perachia had begun to teach as a Rabbi
in the year 154 B.C. We may therefore reckon that he was not
born later than 180-170 B.C., and that it could hardly
be later than 100 B.C. when he went down into Egypt with
his pupil. For it is related that he fled there in consequence of a persecution
of the Rabbis, feasibly conjectured to refer to the civil war in which the
Pharisees revolted against King Alexander Jannæus, and consequently about 105 B.C.
If we put the age of his pupil, Jehoshua Ben-Pandira, at fifteen years, that
will give us an approximate date, extracted without pressure, which shows that
Jehoshua Ben-Pandira may have been born about the year 120 B.C.
But twenty years are a matter of little moment here.
5. According to the Babylonian Gemara to the Mishna of Tract
"Shabbath," this Jehoshua, the son of Pandira and Stada, was stoned to
death as a wizard, in the city of Lud, or Lydda, and afterwards crucified by
being hanged on a tree, on the eve of the Passover. This is the manner of death
assigned to Jesus in the Book of Acts. The Gemara says there exists a tradition
that on the rest-day before the Sabbath they crucified Jehoshua, on the rest-day
of the Passah (the day before the Passover). The year of his death, however, is
not given in that account; but there are reasons for thinking it could not have
been much earlier nor later than B.C. 70, because this
Jewish King Jannæus reigned from the year 106 to 79 B.C.
He was succeeded in the government by his widow Salomè, whom the Greeks called
Alexandra, and who reigned for some nine years. Now the traditions, especially
of the first "Toledoth Jehoshua," relate that the Queen of Jannæus,
and the mother of Hyrcanus, who must therefore be Salomè, in spite of her being
called by another name, showed favour to Jehoshua and his teaching; that she was
a witness of his wonderful works and powers of healing, and tried to save him
from the hands of his sacerdotal enemies, because he was related to her; but
that during her reign, which ended in the year 71 B.C., he
was put to death. The Jewish writers and Rabbis with whom I have talked always
deny the identity of the Talmudic Jehoshua and the Jesus of the Gospels. "This," observes Rabbi Jechiels, "which has been related to
Jehoshua Ben-Perachia and his pupil, contains no reference whatever to him whom
the Christians honour as God!" Another Rabbi, Salman Zevi, produced ten
reasons for concluding that the Jehoshua of the Talmud was not he who was
afterwards called Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus of Nazareth (and of the Canonical
Gospels) was unknown to Justus, to the Jew of Celsus, and to Josephus, the
supposed reference to him by the latter being an undoubted forgery.
6. The "blasphemous writings of the Jews about Jesus,"
as Justin Martyr calls them, always refer to Jehoshua Ben-Pandira, and not to
the Jesus of the Gospels. It is Ben-Pandira they mean when they say they have
another and a truer account of the birth and life, the wonder-working and death
of Jehoshua or Jesus. This repudiation is perfectly honest and soundly based. The only Jesus known to the Jews was Jehoshua Ben-Pandira, who had learnt the
arts of magic in Egypt, and who was put to death by them as a sorcerer. This was
likewise the only Jesus known to Celsus, the writer of the "True
Logos," a work which the Christians managed to get rid of bodily, with so
many other of the anti-Christian evidences.
7. Celsus observes that he was not a pure Word, not a true
Logos, but a man who had learned the arts of sorcery in Egypt. So, in the
Clementines, it is in the character of Ben-Pandira that Jesus is said to rise
again as the magician. But here is the conclusive fact: The Jews know nothing of
Jesus, the Christ of the Gospels, as an historical character; and when the
Christians of the fourth century trace his pedigree, by the hand of Epiphanius,
they are forced to derive their Jesus from Pandira! Epiphanius gives the
genealogy of the Canonical Jesus in this wise:—
Jacob,
called Pandira, Mary=Joseph—Cleopas, Jesus. |
8.
This proves that in the fourth century the pedigree of Jesus was traced to
Pandira, the father of that Jehoshua who was the pupil of Ben-Perachia, and who
becomes one of the magicians in Egypt, and who was crucified as a magician on
the eve of the Passover by the Jews, in the time of Queen Alexandra, who had
ceased to reign in the year 70 B.C.—the
Jesus, therefore, who lived and died more than a century too soon.
9. Thus, the Jews do not identify
Jehoshua Ben-Pandira with the Gospel Jesus, of whom they, his supposed
contemporaries, know nothing, but protest against the assumption as an
impossibility; whereas the Christians do identify their Jesus as the
descendant of Pandira. It was he or nobody; yet he was neither the son of Joseph
nor the Virgin Mary, nor was he crucified at Jerusalem. It is
not the Jews, then, but the Christians, who fuse two supposed historic
characters into one! There being but one history acknowledged or known on
either side, it follows that the Jesus of the Gospels is the Jehoshua of the
Talmud, or is not at all, as a Person. This shifts the historic basis altogether; it antedates the human history by more than a hundred years, and it
at once destroys the historic character of the Gospels, together with that of
any other personal Jesus than Ben-Pandira. In short, the Jewish history of the
matter will be found to corroborate the mythical. As Epiphanius knew of no other
historical Jesus than the descendant of Pandira, it is possible that this is the
Jesus whose tradition is reported by Irenæus.
10. Irenæus was born in the early part
of the second century, between 120 and 140 A.D. He was
Bishop of Lyons, France, and a personal acquaintance of Polycarp; and he repeats
a tradition testified to by the elders, which he alleges was directly derived
from John, the "disciple of the Lord," to the effect that Jesus was
not crucified at 33 years of age, but that he passed through every age, and
lived on to be an oldish man. Now, in accordance with the dates given, Jehoshua
Ben-Pandira may have been between 50 and 60 years of age when put to death, and
his tradition alone furnishes a clue to the Nihilistic statement of Irenæus.
11. When the true tradition of Ben-Pandira
is recovered, it shows that he was the sole historical Jesus who was hung on a
tree by the Jews, not crucified in the Roman fashion, and authenticates the
claim now to be made on behalf of the astronomical allegory to the
dispensational Jesus, the Kronian Christ, the mythical Messiah of the Canonical
Gospels, and the Jesus of Paul, who was not the carnalized Christ. For I hold
that the Jesus of the "other Gospel," according to the Apostles Cephas
and James, who was utterly repudiated by Paul, was none other than Ben-Pandira,
the Nazarene, of whom James was a follower, according to a comment on him found
in the Book Abodazura. Anyway, there are two Jesuses, or Jesus and the Christ,
one of whom is repudiated by Paul.
12. But Jehoshua, the son of Pandira,
can never be converted into Jesus Christ, the son of a virgin mother, as an
historic character. Nor can the dates given ever be reconciled with contemporary
history. The historical Herod, who sought to slay the young child Jesus, is
known to have died four years before the date of the Christian era, assigned for
the birth of Jesus.
13. So much for the historic Jesus. And
now for the mythical Christ. Here we can tread on firmer ground.
14. The mythical Messiah was always
born of a Virgin Mother—a factor unknown in
natural phenomena, and one that cannot be historical, one that can only be
explained by means of the Mythos, and those conditions of primitive sociology
which are mirrored in mythology and preserved in theology. The virgin mother has
been represented in Egypt by the maiden Queen, Mut-em-ua, the future mother of
Amenhept III some 16 centuries B.C.,
who impersonated the eternal virgin that produced the eternal child.
15. Four consecutive scenes reproduced
in my book are found portrayed upon the innermost walls of the Holy of
Holies in the Temple of Luxor, which was built by Amenhept III., a Pharaoh
of the 17th dynasty. The first scene on the left hand shows the God Taht, the
Lunar Mercury, the Annunciator of the Gods, in the act of hailing the Virgin
Queen, and announcing to her that she is to give birth to the coming Son. In the
next scene the God Kneph (in conjunction with Hathor) gives the new life. This
is the Holy Ghost or Spirit that causes the Immaculate Conception, Kneph being
the spirit by name in Egyptian. The natural effects are made apparent in the
virgin's swelling form.
16. Next the mother is seated on the
mid-wife's stool, and the newborn child is supported in the hands of one of the
nurses. The fourth scene is that of the Adoration. Here the child is enthroned,
receiving homage from the Gods and gifts from men. Behind the deity Kneph, on
the right, three spirits—the Three Magi, or
Kings of the Legend, are kneeling and offering presents with their right hand,
and life with their left. The child thus announced, incarnated, born, and
worshipped, was the Pharaonic representative of the Aten Sun in Egypt, the God
Adon of Syria, and Hebrew Adonai; the child-Christ of the Aten Cult; the
miraculous conception of the ever-virgin mother, personated by Mut-em-ua, as
mother of the "only one," and representative of the divine mother of
the youthful Sun-God.
17. These scenes, which were mythical
in Egypt, have been copied or reproduced as historical in the Canonical Gospels,
where they stand like four corner-stones to the Historic Structure, and prove
that the foundations are mythical.
18. Jesus was not only born of the
mythical motherhood; his descent on the maternal side is traced in accordance
with this origin of the mythical Christ. The virgin was also called the harlot,
because she represented the pre-monogamic stage of intercourse; and Jesus
descends from four forms of the harlot —Thamar,
Rahab, Ruth and Bathsheba—each of whom is a
form of the "stranger in Israel," and is not a Hebrew woman. Such
history, however, does not show that illicit intercourse was the natural mode of
the divine descent; nor does it imply unparalleled human profligacy. It only
proves the Mythos.
19. In human
sociology the son of the mother preceded the father, as son of the woman who was
a mother, but not a wife. This character is likewise claimed for Jesus, who is
made to declare that he was earlier than Abraham, who was the typical Great
Father of the Jews; whether considered to be mythical or historical. Jesus
states emphatically that he existed before Abraham was. This is only possible to
the mythical Christ, who preceded the father as son of the virgin mother; and we
shall find it so throughout. All that is non-natural and impossible as human
history, is possible, natural and explicable as Mythos.
20. It can be
explained by the Mythos, because it originated in that which alone accounts for
it. For it comes to this at last: the more hidden the meaning in the Gospel
history, the more satisfactorily is it explained by the Mythos; and the more
mystical the Christian doctrine, the more easily can it be proved to be
mythical.
21. The birth of
Christ is astronomical. The birthday is determined by the full moon of Easter.
This can only occur once every 19 years, as we have it illustrated by the Epact
or Golden Number of the Prayer Book. Understand me! Jesus, the Christ, can only
have a birthday, or resurrection, once in 19 years, in accordance with the Metonic Cycle, because his parents are the sun and moon; and those appear in the
earliest known representation of the Man upon the Cross! This proves the
astronomical and non-human nature of the birth itself, which is identical with
that of the full moon of Easter in Egypt.
22. Casini, the
French Astronomer, has demonstrated the fact that the date assigned for the
birth of the Christ is an Astronomical epoch in which the middle conjunction of
the moon with the sun happened on the 24th March, at half-past one o'clock in
the morning, at the meridian of Jerusalem, the very day of the middle equinox. The following day (the 25th) was the day of the Incarnation, according to
Augustine, but the date of the Birth, according to Clement Alexander. For two
birth days are assigned to Jesus by the Christian Fathers, one at the Winter
Solstice, the other at the Vernal Equinox. These, which cannot both be
historical, are based on the two birthdays of the double Horus in Egypt. Plutarch tells us that Isis was delivered of Horus, the child, about the time of
the winter Solstice, and that the festival of the second or adult Horus followed
the Vernal Equinox. Hence, the Solstice and spring Equinox were both assigned to
the one birth of Jesus by the Christolators; and again, that which is impossible
as human history is the natural fact in relation to the two Horuses, the dual
form of the Solar God in Egypt.
23. And here, in
passing, we may point out the astronomical nature of the Crucifixion. The Gospel
according to John brings on a tradition so different from that of the Synoptics
as to invalidate the human histor y of both. The Synoptics say that Jesus was
crucified on the 15th of the month Nisan. John affirms that it was on the 14th
of the month. This serious rift runs through the very foundation! As human
history it cannot be explained. But there is an explanation possible, which, if
accepted, proves the Mythos. The Crucifixion (or Crossing) was, and still is,
determined by the full moon of Easter. This, in the lunar reckoning, would be on
the 14th in the month of 28 days; in the solar month of 30 days it was reckoned
to occur on the 15th of the month. Both unite, and the rift closes in proving
the Crucifixion to have been Astronomical, just as it was in Egypt, where the
two dates can be identified.
24. Plutarch also
tells us how the Mithraic Cult had been particularly established in Rome about
the year 70 B.C. And Mithras was fabled as having been
born in a cave. Wherever Mithras was worshipped the cave was consecrated as his
birthplace. The cave can be identified, and the birth of the Messiah in that
cave, no matter under what name he was born, can be definitely dated. The
"Cave of Mithras" was the birthplace of the Sun in the Winter
Solstice, when this occurred on the 25th of December in the sign of the
Sea-Goat, with the Vernal Equinox in the sign of the Ram. Now the Akkadian name
of the tenth month, that of the Sea-Goat, which answers roughly to our December,
the tenth by name, is Abba Uddu, that is, the "Cave of Light;"
the cave of re-birth for the Sun in the lowest depth at the Solstice, figured as
the Cave of Light. This cave was continued as the birthplace of the Christ. You
will find it in all the Gospels of the Infancy, and Justin Martyr says,
"Christ was born in the Stable, and afterwards took refuge in the
Cave." He likewise vouches for the fact that Christ was born on the same
day that the Sun was re-born in Stabulo Augiæ, or, in the Stable of
Augias. Now the cleansing of this Stable was the sixth labour of Herakles, his
first being in the sign of the Lion; and Justin was right; the Stable and Cave
are both figured in the same Celestial Sign. But mark this! The Cave was the
birthplace of the Solar Messiah from the year 2410 to the year 255 B.C.;
at which latter date the Solstice passed out of the Sea-Goat into the sign of
the Archer; and no Messiah, whether called Mithras, Adon, Tammuz, Horus or
Christ, could have been born in the Cave of Abba Uddu or the Stable of
Augias on the 25th of December after the year 255 B.C.,
therefore, Justin had nothing but the Mithraic tradition of the by-gone birthday
to prove the birth of the Historical Christ 255 years later!
25. In their
mysteries the Sarraceni celebrated the Birth of the babe in the Cave or
Subterranean Sanctuary, from which the Priest issued, and cried:—"The
Virgin has brought forth: The Light is about to begin to grow again!"—on
the Mother-night of the year. And the Sarraceni were not supporters of
Historic Christianity.
26. The birthplace
of the Egyptian Messiah at the Vernal Equinox was figured in Apt, or Apta, the
corner; but Apta is also the name of the Crib and the Manger; hence the Child
born in Apta, was said to be born in a manger; and this Apta as Crib or Manger
is the hieroglyphic sign of the Solar birthplace. Hence the Egyptians exhibited
the Babe in the Crib or Manger in the streets of Alexandria. The birthplace was
indicated by the colure of the Equinox, as it passed from sign to sign. It was
also pointed out by the Star in the East. When the birthplace was in the sign of
the Bull, Orion was the Star that rose in the East to tell where the young
Sun-God was re-born. Hence it is called the "Star of Horus." That was
then the Star of the "Three Kings" who greeted the Babe; for the
"Three Kings" is still a name of the three stars in Orion's Belt. Here
we learn that the legend of the "Three Kings" is at least 6,000 years
old.
27. In the course of
Precession, about 255 B.C., the vernal birthplace passed
into the sign of the Fishes, and the Messiah who had been represented for 2155
years by the Ram or Lamb, and previously for other 2155 years by
the Apis Bull, was now imaged as the Fish, or the "Fish-man," called
Ichthys in Greek. The original Fish-man—the
An of Egypt, and the Oan of Chaldea—probably
dates from the previous cycle of precession, or 26,000 years earlier; and about
255 B.C., the Messiah, as the Fish-man, was to come up
once more as the Manifestor from the celestial waters. The coming Messiah is
called Dag, the Fish, in the Talmud; and the Jews at one time connected his
coming with some conjunction, or occurrence, in the sign of the Fishes! This
shows the Jews were not only in possession of the astronomical allegory, but
also of the tradition by which it could be interpreted. It was the Mythical and Kronian Messiah alone who was, or could be, the subject of prophecy that might
be fulfilled—prophecy that was fulfilled as
it is in the Book of Revelation—when the
Equinox entered, the cross was re-erected, and the foundations of a new heaven
were laid in the sign of the Ram, 2410 B.C.; and, again,
when the Equinox entered the sign of the Fishes, 255 B.C. Prophecy
that will be again fulfilled when the Equinox enters the sign of the
Waterman about the end of this century, to which the Samaritans are still
looking forward for the coming of their Messiah, who has not yet arrived for
them. The Christians alone ate the oyster; the Jews and Samaritans only got an
equal share of the empty shells! The uninstructed Jews, the idiotai, at
one time thought the prophecy which was astronomical, and solely related to the
cycles of time, was to have its fulfilment in human history. But they found out
their error, and bequeathed it unexplained to the still more ignorant
Christians. The same tradition of the Coming One is extant amongst the
Millenarians and Adventists, as amongst the Moslems. It is the tradition of El-Mahdi,
the prophet who is to come in the last days of the world to conquer all the
world, and who was lately descending the Soudan with the old announcement the
"Day of the Lord is at hand," which shows that the astronomical
allegory has left some relics of the true tradition among the Arabs, who were at
one time learned in astronomical lore.
28. The Messiah, as
the Fish-man, is foreseen by Esdras ascending out of the sea as the "same
whom God the highest hath kept a great season, which by his own self shall
deliver the creature." The ancient Fish-man only came up out of the sea to
converse with men and teach them in the daytime. "When the sun set,"
says Berosus, "it was the custom of this Being to plunge again into the
sea, and abide all night in the deep." So the man foreseen by Esdras is
only visible by day.
29. As it is said,
"E'en so can no man upon earth see my son, or those that be with him, but
in the daytime." This is parodied or fulfilled in the account of Ichthys,
the Fish, the Christ who instructs men by day, but retires to the lake of
Galilee, where he demonstrates his solar nature by walking the waters at night,
or at the dawn of day.
30. We are told that
his disciples being on board a ship, "when even was come, in the fourth
watch of the night, Jesus went unto them walking upon the sea." Now the
fourth watch began at three o'clock, and ended at six o'clock. Therefore, this
was about the proper time for a solar God
to appear walking upon the waters, or coming up out of them as the Oannes. Oannes is said to have taken no food whilst he was with men: "In the
daytime he used to converse with men, but took no food at that season." So
Jesus, when his disciples prayed him, saying "Master, eat," said unto
them, "I have meat to eat that you know not of. My meat is to do the will
of Him that sent me."
31. This is the
perfect likeness of the character of Oannes, who took no food, but whose time
was wholly spent in teaching men. Moreover, the mythical Fish-man is made to
identify himself. When the Pharisees sought a "sign from heaven,"
Jesus said, "There shall no sign be given but the sign of Jonas. For as
Jonas became a sign unto the Ninevites, so shall also the son of man be to this
generation."
32. The sign of
Jonas is that of the Oan, or Fish-man of Nineveh, whether we take it direct from
the monuments, or from the Hebrew history of Jonah, or from the Zodiac.
33. The voice of the
secret wisdom here says truly that those who are looking for signs, can have no
other than that of the returning Fish-man, Ichthys, Oannes, or Jonah: and
assuredly, there was no other sign or date—than
those of Ichthys, the Fish who was re-born of the fish-goddess, Atergatis, in
the sign of the Fishes, 255 B.C., after whom the primitive
Christians were called little fishes, or Pisciculi.
34. This date of 255
B.C. was the true day of birth, or rather of re-birth for
the celestial Christ, and there was no valid reason for changing the time of the
world.
35. The Gospels
contain a confused and confusing record of early Christian belief: things most
truly believed (Luke) concerning certain mythical matters, which were ignorantly
mistaken for human and historical. The Jesus of our Gospels is but little of a
human reality, in spite of all attempts to naturalize the Mythical Christ, and
make the story look rational.
36. The Christian
religion was not founded on a man, but on a divinity; that is, a mythical
character. So far from being derived from the model man, the typical Christ was
made up from the features of various Gods, after a fashion somewhat like those
"pictorial averages" portrayed by Mr. Galton, in which the traits of
several persons are photographed and fused in a portrait of a dozen different
persons, merged into one that is not anybody. And as fast as the composite
Christ falls to pieces, each feature is claimed, each character is gathered up
by the original owner, as with the grasp of gravitation.
37. It is not I that
deny the divinity of Jesus the Christ; I assert it! He never was, and never
could be, any other than a divinity; that is, a character non-human, and
entirely mythical, who had been the pagan divinity of various pagan myths, that
had been pagan during thousands of years before our Era.
38. Nothing is more
certain, according to honest evidence, than that the Christian scheme of
redemption is founded on a fable misinterpreted; that the prophecy of fulfilment
was solely astronomical, and the Coming One as the Christ who came
in the end of an age, or of the world, was but a
metaphorical figure, a type of time, from the first, which never could take form
in historic personality, any more than Time in Person could come out of a
clock-case when the hour strikes; that no Jesus could become a Nazarene by being
born at, or taken to, Nazareth; and that the history in our Gospels is from
beginning to end the identifiable story of the Sun-God, and the Gnostic Christ
who never could be made flesh. When we did not know the one it was possible to
believe the other; but when once we truly know, then the false belief is no
longer possible.
39. The mythical
Messiah was Horus in the Osirian Mythos; Har-Khuti in the Sut-Typhonian; Khunsu
in that of Amen-Ra; Iu in the cult of Atum-Ra; and the Christ of the Gospels is
an amalgam of all these characters. |
The Christ is the Good Shepherd!
So was Horus.
Christ is the Lamb of God!
So was Horus.
Christ is the Bread of Life!
So was Horus.
Christ is the Truth and the Life!
So was Horus.
Christ is the Fan-bearer!
So was Horus.
Christ is the Lord!
So was Horus. |
40. Christ is the Way and the Door of Life!
41. Horus was the
path by which they travelled out of the Sepulchre. He is the God whose name is
written with the hieroglyphic sign of the Road or Way.
42. Jesus is he that
should come; and Iu, the root of the name in Egyptian, means "to
come." Iu-em-hept, as the Su, the Son of Atum, or of Ptah, was the
"Ever-Coming One," who is always portrayed as the marching youngster,
in the act and attitude of coming. Horus included both sexes. The Child (or the
soul) is of either sex, and potentially, of both. Hence the hermaphrodital Deity; and Jesus, in Revelation, is the Young Man who has the female paps.
43. Iu-em-hept
signifies he who comes with peace. This is the character in which Jesus is
announced by the Angels! And when Jesus comes to his disciples after the
resurrection it is as the bringer of peace. "Learn of me and ye shall find
rest," says the Christ. Khunsu-Nefer-Hept is the Good Rest, Peace in Person! The Egyptian Jesus, Iu-em-Hept, was the second Atum; Paul's Jesus is the
second Adam. In one rendition of John's Gospel, instead of the
"only-begotten Son of God," a variant reading gives the
"only-begotten God," which has been declared an impossible rendering.
But the "only-begotten God" was an especial type in Egyptian
Mythology, and the phrase re-identifies the divinity whose emblem is the beetle. Hor-Apollo says, "To denote the only-begotten or a father, the Egyptians
delineate a scarabæus! By this they
symbolize an only-begotten, because the creature is self-produced, being unconceived by a female." Now the youthful manifestor of the Beetle-God was
this Iu-em-hept, the Egyptian Jesus. The very phraseology of John is common to
the Inscriptions, which tell of him who was the Beginner of Becoming from the
first, and who made all things, but who himself was not made. I quote verbatim. And not only was the Beetle-God continued in the "only-begotten God";
the beetle-type was also brought on as a symbol of the Christ. Ambrose and
Augustine, amongst the Christian Fathers, identified Jesus with, and as, the
"good Scarabæus," which further identifies the Jesus of John's Gospel
with the Jesus of Egypt, who was the Ever-Coming One, and the Bringer of Peace,
whom I have elsewhere shown to be the Jesus to whom the Book of Ecclesiasticus
is inscribed, and ascribed in the Apocrypha.
44. In accordance
with this continuation of the Kamite symbols, it was also maintained by some
sectaries that Jesus was a potter, and not a carpenter; and the fact is that
this only-begotten Beetle-God, who is portrayed sitting at the potter's wheel
forming the Egg, or shaping the vase-symbol of creation, was the Potter
personified, as well as the only-begotten God in Egypt.
45. The character
and teachings of the Canonical Christ are composed of contradictions which
cannot be harmonised as those of a human being, whereas they are always true to
the Mythos.
46. He is the Prince
of Peace, and yet he asserts that he came not to bring peace: "I came not
to send peace, but a sword," and not only is Iu-em-hept the Bringer of
Peace by name in one character; he is the Sword personified in the other. In
this he says, "I am the living image of Atum, proceeding from him as a
sword." Both characters belong to the mythical Messiah in the Ritual, who
also calls himself the "Great Disturber," and the "Great
Tranquilizer"—the "God
Contention," and the "God Peace." The Christ of the Canonical
Gospels has several prototypes, and sometimes the copy is derived or the trait
is caught from one original, and sometimes from the other. The Christ of Luke's
Gospel has a character entirely distinct from that of John's Gospel. Here he is
the Great Exorciser, and caster-out of demons. John's Gospel contains no case of
possession or obsession: no certain man who "had devils this long
time"; no child possessed with a devil; no blind and dumb man possessed
with a devil.
47. Other miracles
are performed by the Christ of John, but not these; because John's is a
different type of the Christ. And the original of the Great Healer in Luke's
Gospel may be found in the God Khunsu, who was the Divine Healer, the supreme
one amongst all the other healers and saviours, especially as the caster-out of
demons, and the expeller of possessing spirits. He is called in the texts the
"Great God, the driver away of possession."
48. In the Stele of
the "Possessed Princess," this God in his effigy is sent for by the
chief of Bakhten, that he may come and cast out a possessing spirit from the
king's daughter, who has an evil movement in her limbs. The demon recognises the divinity just as the devil recognises Jesus, the
expeller of evil spirits. Also the God Khunsu is Lord over the pig—a
type of Sut. He is portrayed in the disk of the full moon of Easter, in the act
of offering the pig as a sacrifice. Moreover, in the judgment scenes, when the
wicked spirits are condemned and sent back into the abyss, their mode of return
to the lake of primordial matter is by entering the bodies of swine. Says Horus
to the Gods, speaking of the condemned one: "When I sent him to his place
he went, and he has been transformed into a black pig." So when the
Exorcist in Luke's Gospel casts out Legion, the devils ask permission of the
Lord of the pig to be allowed to enter the swine, and he gives them leave. This,
and much more that might be adduced, tends to differentiate the Christ of Luke,
and to identify him with Khunsu, rather than with Iu-em-hept, the Egyptian
Jesus, who is reproduced in the Gospel according to John. In this way it can be
proved that the history of Christ in the Gospels is one long and complete
catalogue of likenesses to the Mythical Messiah, the Solar or Luni-Solar God.
49. The "Litany
of Ra," for example, is addressed to the Sun-God in a variety of
characters, many of which are assigned to the Christ of the Gospels. Ra is the
Supreme Power, the Beetle that rests in the Empyrean, who is born as his own
son. This, as already said, is the God in John's Gospel, who says:—"I
and the Father are one," and who is the father born as his own son;
for he says, in knowing and seeing the son, "from henceforth ye know him and
have seen him"; i.e., the Father.
50. Ra is designated
the "Soul that speaks." Christ is the Word. Ra is the destroyer of
venom. Jesus says:—"In my name they
shall take up serpents, and if they drink any deadly thing it shall not hurt
them." In one character Ra is the outcast. So Jesus had not where to lay
his head.
51. Ra is the
"timid one who sheds tears in the form of the Afflicted." He is called
Remi, the Weeper. This weeping God passes through "Rem-Rem," the place
of weeping, and there conquers on behalf of his followers. In the Ritual the God
says:—"I have desolated the place of Rem-Rem." This character is sustained by Jesus in the mourning over
Jerusalem that was to be desolated. The words of John, "Jesus wept,"
are like a carven statue of the "Afflicted One," as Remi, the Weeper. Ra is also the God who "makes the mummy come forth." Jesus makes the
mummy come forth in the shape of Lazarus; and in the Roman Catacombs the risen
Lazarus is not only represented as a mummy, but is an Egyptian mummy which has
been eviscerated and swathed for the eternal abode. Ra says to the mummy:
"Come forth!" and Jesus cries: "Lazarus, come forth!" Ra
manifests as "the burning one, he who sends destruction," or
"sends his fire into the place of destruction." "He sends fire
upon the rebels," his form is that of the "God of the furnace." Christ also comes in the person of this "burning one"; the sender of
destruction by fire. He is proclaimed by Matthew to be
the Baptiser with fire. He says, "I am come to send fire on the
earth."
52. He is portrayed as "God of the furnace," which shall "burn up the chaff with
unquenchable fire." He is to cast the rebellious into a "furnace of
fire," and send the condemned ones into everlasting fire. All this was
natural when applied to the Solar-God, and it is supposed to become supernatural
when misapplied to a supposed human being to whom it never could apply. The
Solar fire was the primary African fount of theological hell-fire and hell.
53. The
"Litany" of Ra collects the manifold characters that make up the total
God (termed Teb-temt), and the Gospels have gathered up the mythical remains;
thus the result is in each case identical, or entirely similar. From beginning
to end the Canonical Gospels contain the Drama of the Mysteries of the Luni-Solar
God, narrated as a human history. The scene on the Mount of Transfiguration is
obviously derived from the ascent of Osiris into the Mount of Transfiguration in
the Moon. The sixth day was celebrated as that of the change and transformation
of the Solar God in the lunar orb, which he re-entered on that day as the
regenerator of its light. With this we may compare the statement made by
Matthew, that "after six days Jesus went up into a high mountain apart, and
he was transfigured, and his face did shine as the sun (of course!), and his
garments became white as the light."
54. In Egypt the
year began soon after the Summer Solstice, when the sun descended from its
midsummer height, lost its force, and lessened in its size. This represented Osiris, who was born of the Virgin Mother as the child Horus, the diminished
infantile sun of Autumn; the suffering, wounded, bleeding Messiah, as he was
represented. He descended into hell, or hades, where he was transformed into the
virile Horus, and rose again as the sun of the resurrection at Easter. In these
two characters of Horus on the two horizons, Osiris furnished the dual type for
the Canonical Christ, which shows very satisfactorily HOW the
mythical prescribes the boundaries beyond which the historical does not, dare
not, go. The first was the child Horus, who always remained a child. In Egypt
the boy or girl wore the Horus-lock of childhood until 12 years of age. Thus
childhood ended about the twelfth year. But although adultship was then entered
upon by the youth, and the transformation of the boy into manhood began, the
full adultship was not attained until 30 years of age. The man of 30 years was
the typical adult. The age of adultship was 30 years, as it was in Rome under Lex
Pappia. The homme fait is the man whose years are triaded by tens,
and who is Khemt. As with the man, so it is with the God; and the second Horus, the same God in his second character, is the Khemt or Khem-Horus,
the typical adult of 30 years. The God up to twelve years was Horus, the
child of Isis, the mother's child, the weakling. The virile Horus (the sun in
its vernal strength), the adult of 30 years, was representative of the
Fatherhood, and this Horus is the anointed son of Osiris. These two characters
of Horus the child, and
Horus the adult of 30 years, are reproduced in the only two phases of the life
of Jesus in the Gospels. John furnishes no historic data for the time when the Word
was incarnated and became flesh; nor for the childhood of Jesus; nor for the
transformation into the Messiah. But Luke tells us that the child of twelve
years was the wonderful youth, and that he increased in wisdom and stature. This is the length of years assigned to Horus the child; and this phase of the
child-Christ's life is followed by the baptism and anointing, the descent of the
pubescent spirit with the consecration of the Messiah in Jordan, when Jesus "began
to be about 30 years of age."
55. The earliest
anointing was the consecration of puberty; and here at the full age of the
typical adult, the Christ, who was previously a child, the child of the Virgin
Mother, is suddenly made into the Messiah, as the Lord's anointed. And just as
the second Horus was regenerated, and this time begotten of the father, so in
the transformation scene of the baptism in Jordan, the father authenticates the
change into full adultship, with the voice from heaven saying:—"This
is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased;" the spirit of pubescence, or
the Ruach, being represented by the descending dove, called the spirit of
God. Thus from the time when the child-Christ was about twelve years of age,
until that of the typical homme fait of Egypt, which was the age assigned
to Horus when he became the adult God, there is no history. This is in exact
accordance with the Kamite allegory of the double-Horus. And the Mythos alone
will account for the chasm which is wide and deep enough to engulf a supposed
history of 18 years. Childhood cannot be carried beyond the 12th year, and the
child-Horus always remained a child; just as the child-Christ does in Italy, and
in German folk-tales. The mythical record founded on nature went no further, and
there the history consequently halts within the prescribed limits, to rebegin
with the anointed and regenerated Christ at the age of Khem-Horus, the adult of
30 years.
56. And these two
characters of Horus necessitated a double form of the mother, who divides into
the two divine sisters, Isis and Nephthys. Jesus also was bi-mater, or
dual-mothered; and the two sisters reappear in the Gospels as the two Marys,
both of whom are the mothers of Jesus. This again, which is impossible as human
history, is perfect according to the Mythos that explains it.
57. As the child-Horus,
Osiris comes down to earth; he enters matter, and becomes mortal. He is born
like the Logos, or "as a Word." His father is Seb, the earth, whose
consort is Nu, the heaven, one of whose names is MERI, the
Lady of Heaven; and these two are the prototypes of Joseph and Mary. He is said
to cross the earth a substitute, and to suffer vicariously as the Saviour,
Redeemer, and Justifier of men. In these two characters there was constant
conflict between Osiris and Typhon, the Evil Power, or Horus and Sut, the
Egyptian Satan. At the Autumn Equinox, the devil of darkness began to dominate;
this was the Egyptian Judas, who betrayed Osiris to his death at the last
supper. On the day of the Great Battle at the Vernal
Equinox, Osiris conquered as the ascending God, the Lord of the growing light. Both these struggles are portrayed in the Gospels. In the one Jesus is betrayed
to his death by Judas; in the other he rises superior to Satan. The latter
conflict followed immediately after the baptism. In this way:—When
the sun was half-way round, from the Lion sign, it crossed the River of the
Waterman, the Egyptian Iarutana, Hebrew Jordan, Greek Eridanus. In this water
the baptism occurred, and the transformation of the child-Horus into the virile
adult, the conqueror of the evil power, took place. Horus becomes hawk-headed,
just where the dove ascended and abode on Jesus. Both birds represented the
virile soul that constituted the anointed one at puberty. By this added power Horus vanquished Sut, and Jesus overcame Satan. Both the baptism and the contest
are referred to in the Ritual. "I am washed with the same water in which
the Good Opener (Un-Nefer) washes when he disputes with Satan, that
justification should be made to Un-Nefer, the Word made Truth," or the Word
that is Law.
58. The scene
between the Christ and the Woman at the Well may likewise be found in the
Ritual. Here the woman is the lady with the long hair, that is Nu, the consort
of Seb—and the five husbands can be
paralleled by her five star-gods born of Seb. Osiris drinks out of the well
"to take away his thirst." He also says: "I am creating the
water. I make way in the valley, in the Pool of the Great One. Make-road (or
road-maker) expresses what I am." "I am the Path by which they
traverse out of the sepulchre of Osiris."
59. So the Messiah
reveals himself as the source of living water, "that springeth up unto
Everlasting Life." Later on he says, "I am the way, the truth, the
life." "I am creating the water, discriminating the seat," says Horus. Jesus says, "The hour cometh when ye shall neither in this mountain
nor yet at Jerusalem worship the Father." Jesus claims that this well of
life was given to him by the Father. In the Ritual it says, "He is thine, O Osiris! A well, or flow, comes out of thy mouth to him!" Also, the
paternal source is acknowledged in another text. "I am the Father,
inundating when there is thirst, guarding the water. Behold me at it."
Moreover, in another chapter the well of living water becomes the Pool of Peace. The speaker says, "The well has come through me. I wash in the Pool of
Peace."
60. In Hebrew, the
Pool of Peace is the Pool of Salem, or Siloam. And here, not only is the pool
described at which the Osirified are made pure and healed; not only does the
Angel or God descend to the waters—the
"certain times" are actually dated. "The Gods of the pure waters
are there on the fourth hour of the night, and the eighth hour of the day,
saying, 'Pass away hence,' to him who has been cured."
61. An epitome of a
considerable portion of John's Gospel may be found in another
chapter of the Ritual—"Ye Gods come to
be my servants, I am the son of your Lord. Ye are mine through my Father, who
gave you to me. I have been among the servants of Hathor or Meri. I have been
washed by thee, O attendant!" Compare the washing of Jesus' feet by Marry.
62. The Osiris
exclaims, "I have welcomed the chief spirits in the service of the Lord of
things! I am the Lord of the fields when they are white," i.e., for
the reapers and the harvest. So the Christ now says to the disciples,
"Behold, I say unto you, Lift up your eyes and look on the fields, that are
white already unto the harvest."
63. "Then said
he unto his disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are
few. Pray ye, therefore, the Lord of the harvest that he send forth labourers
into his harvest. And he called unto him his twelve disciples." Now, if we
turn to the Egyptian "Book of Hades," the harvest, the Lord of the
harvest, and the reapers of the harvest are all portrayed: the twelve are also
there. In one scene they are preceded by a God leaning on a staff, who is
designated the Master of Joy—a surname of the
Messiah Horus when assimilated to the Soli-Lunar Khunsu; the twelve are
"they who labour at the harvest in the plains of Neter-Kar." A bearer
of a sickle shows the inscription: "These are the Reapers." The twelve
are divided into two groups of five and seven—the
original seven of the Aahenru; these seven are the reapers. The other five are
bending towards an enormous ear of corn, the image of the harvest, ripe and
ready for the sickles of the seven. The total twelve are called the "Happy
Ones," the bearers of food. Another title of the twelve is that of the
"Just Ones." The God says to the reapers, "Take your sickles!
Reap your grain! Honour to you, reapers." Offerings are made to them on
earth, as bearers of sickles in the fields of Hades. On the other hand, the
tares or the wicked are to be cast out and destroyed for ever. These twelve are
the apostles in their Egyptian phase.
64. In the chapters
on "Celestial Diet" in the Ritual, Osiris eats under the sycamore tree
of Hathor. He says, "Let him come from the earth. Thou hast brought these
seven loaves for me to live by, bringing the bread that Horus (the Christ)
makes. Thou hast placed, thou hast eaten rations. Let him call to the Gods for
them, or the Gods come with them to him."
65. This is
reproduced as miracle in the Gospels, performed when the multitude were fed upon
seven loaves. The seven loaves are found here, together with the calling upon
the Gods, or working the miracle of multiplying the bread.
66. In the next
chapter there is a scene of eating and drinking. The speaker, who impersonates
the Lord, says:—"I am the Lord of Bread
in Annu. My bread at the heaven was that of Ra; my bread on earth was that of Seb." The seven loaves represent the bread of Ra. Elsewhere the number
prescribed to be set on one table, as an offering, is five loaves. these are
also carried on the heads of five different persons in the scenes of the
under-world. Five loaves are the bread of Seb. Thus
five loaves represent the bread of earth, and seven the bread of heaven. Both
five and seven are sacred regulation numbers in the Egyptian Ritual. And in the
Gospel of Matthew the miracles are wrought with five loaves in the one case, and
seven in the other, when the multitudes are fed on celestial diet. This will
explain the two different numbers in one and the same Gospel miracle. In the
Canonical narrative there is a lad with five barley loaves and two fishes. In
the next chapter of the Ritual we possibly meet with the lad himself, as the
miracle-worker says:—"I have given
breath to the said youth."
67. The Gnostics
asserted truly that celestial persons and celestial scenes had been transferred
to earth in our Gospels; and it is only within the Pleroma (the heaven) or in
the Zodiac that we can at times identify the originals of both. And it is there
we must look for the "two fishes."
68. As the latest
form of the Manifestor was in the heaven of the twelve signs, that probably
determined the number of twelve basketsful of food remaining when the multitude
had all been fed. "They that ate the loaves were five thousand men;"
and five thousand was the exact number of the Celestials or Gods in the Assyrian
Paradise, before the revolt and fall from heaven. The scene of the miracle of
the loaves and fishes is followed by an attempt to take Jesus by force, but he
withdraws himself; and this is succeeded by the miracle of his walking on the
waters, and conquering the wind and waves. So is it in the Ritual. Chap. 57 is
that of the breath prevailing over the water in Hades. The speaker, having to
cross over, says: "O Hapi! let the Osiris prevail over the waters, like as
the Osiris prevailed against the taking by stealth, the night of the great
struggle." The Solar God was betrayed to his death by the Egyptian Judas,
on the "night of the taking by stealth," which was the night of the
last supper. The God is "waylaid by the conspirators, who have watched very
much." They are said to smell him out "by the eating of his
bread." So the Christ is waylaid by Judas, who "knew the place, for
Jesus often resorted thither," and by the Jews who had long watched to take
him.
69. The smelling of
Osiris by the eating of his bread is remarkably rendered by John at the eating
of the last supper. The Ritual has it:—"They
smell Osiris by the eating of his bread, transporting the evil of Osiris."
70. "And when
he had dipped the sop he gave it to Judas Iscariot, and after the sop Satan
entered into him." Then said Jesus to him into whom the evil or devil had
been transported, "That thou doest, do quickly." Osiris was the same,
beseeching burial. Here it is demonstrable that the non-historical Herod is a
form of the Apophis Serpent, called the enemy of the Sun. In Syriac, Herod is a
red dragon. Herod, in Hebrew, signifies a terror. Heru (Eg.) is to terrify, and
Herrut (Eg.) is the Snake, the typical reptile. The blood of the divine victim
that is poured forth by the Apophis Serpent at the sixth hour, on
"the night of smiting the profane," is literally shed by Herod, as the
Herrut or Typhonian Serpent.
71. The speaker, in
the Ritual asks: "Who art thou then, Lord of the Silent Body? I have come
to see him who is in the serpent, eye to eye, and face to face." "Lord
of the Silent Body" is a title of the Osiris. "Who art thou then, Lord
of the Silent Body?" is asked and left unanswered. This character is also
assigned to the Christ. The High Priest said unto him, "Answerest thou
nothing?" "But Jesus held his peace." Herod questioned him in
many words, but he answered him nothing. He acts the prescribed character of
"Lord of the Silent Body."
72. The transaction
in the sixth hour of the night of the Crucifixion is expressly inexplicable. In
the Gospel we read:—"Now from the sixth
hour there was darkness over all the land unto the ninth hour." The sixth
hour being midnight, that shows the solar nature of the mystery, which has been
transferred to the sixth hour of the day in the Gospel.
73. It is in the
seventh hour the mortal struggle takes place between the Osiris and the deadly
Apophis, or the great serpent, Haber, 450 cubits long, that fills the whole
heaven with its vast enveloping folds. The name of this seventh hour is
"that which wounds the serpent Haber." In this conflict with the evil
power thus portrayed the Sun-God is designated the "Conqueror of the
Grave," and is said to make his advance through the influence of Isis, who
aids him in repelling the serpent or devil of darkness. In the Gospel, Christ is
likewise set forth in the supreme struggle as "Conqueror of the
Grave," for "the graves were opened, and many bodies of the saints
which slept arose;" and Mary represents Isis, the mother, at the cross. It
is said of the great serpent, "There are those on earth who do not drink of
the waters of this serpent, Haber," which may be paralleled with the
refusal of the Christ to drink of the vinegar mingled with gall.
75. When the God has
overcome the Apophis Serpent, his old nightly, annual, and eternal enemy, he
exclaims, "I come! I have made my way! I have come like the sun, through
the gate of the one who likes to deceive and destroy, otherwise called the
'viper.' I have made my way! I have bruised the serpent, I have passed."
76. But the more
express representation in the mysteries was that of the annual sun as the Elder
Horus, or Atum. As Julius Firmicus says: "In the solemn celebration of the
mysteries, all things in order had to be done which the youth either did or
suffered in his death."
77. Diodorus Siculus
rightly identified the "whole fable of the underworld," that was
dramatised in Greece, as having been copied "from the ceremonies of the
Egyptian funerals," and so brought on from Egypt into Greece and Rome. One
part of this mystery was the portrayal of the suffering Sun-God in a feminine
phase. When the suffering sun was ailing and ill, he became female, such being a
primitive mode of expression. Luke describes the Lord in the Garden of
Gethsemane as being in a great agony, "and his sweat was, as it were, great
drops of blood falling to the ground." This experience the Gnostics
identified with the suffering of their own hemorrhoidal Sophia, whose passion is
the original of that which is celebrated during Passion week, the "week of
weeping in Abtu," and which constitutes the fundamental mystery of the Rosy
Cross, and the Rose of Silence.
78. In this agony
and bloody sweat the Christ simply fulfils the character of Osiris Tesh-Tesh,
the red sun, the Sun-God that suffers his agony and bloody sweat in Smen, whence
Gethsmen, or Gethsemane. Tesh means the bleeding, red, gory, separate,
cut, and wounded; tesh-tesh is the inert form of the God whose suffering, like that of
Adonis, was represented as feminine, which alone reaches a natural origin for
the type. He was also called Ans-Ra, or the sun bound up in linen.
79. So natural were the primitive mysteries!
80. My attention has
just been called to a passage in Lycophron, who lived under Ptolemy Philadelphus
between 310 and 246 B.C. In this Heracles is referred to
as |
" That
three-nighted lion, whom of old
Triton's fierce
dog with furious jaw devoured,
Within whose
bowels, tearing of his liver,
He rolled,
burning with heat, though without fire,
His head with
drops of sweat bedewed all o'er." |
This describes
the God suffering his agony and sweat, which is called the "bloody
flux" of Osiris. Here the nights are three in number. So the Son of Man was
to be three nights as well as three days in the "heart of the earth." In the Gospels this prophecy is not fulfilled; but if we include the
night of the bloody sweat, we have the necessary three nights, and the Mythos
becomes perfect. In this phase the suffering Sun was the Red Sun, whence the
typical Red Lion.
81. As Atum, the red
sun is described as setting from the Land of Life in all the colours of crimson,
or Pant, the red pool. This clothing of colours is represented as a
"gorgeous robe" by Luke; a purple robe by Mark; and a robe of scarlet
by Matthew. As he goes down at the Autumn Equinox, he is the crucified. His
mother, Nu, or Meri, the heaven, seeing her son, the Lord of Terror, greatest of
the terrible, setting from the Land of Life, with his hands drooping, she
becomes obscure, and there is great darkness over all the land, as at the
crucifixion described by Matthew, in which the passing of the Lord of Terror is
rendered by the terrible or "loud cry" of the Synoptic version. The
Sun-God causes the dead, or those in the earth, to live as he passes down into
the under-world, because, as he entered the earth, the tombs were opened, i.e.,
figuratively. But it is reproduced literally by Matthew.
82. The death of
Osiris, in the Ritual, is followed by the "Night of the Mystery of the
Great Shapes," and it is explained that the night of the Great Shapes is
when there has been made the embalming of the body of Osiris, "the Good
Being, justified for ever." In the chapter on "the night of the
laying-out" of the dead body of Osiris, it is said that "Isis rises on
the night of the laying-out of the dead body, to lament over her brother Osiris."
And again: "The night of the
laying-out" (of the dead Osiris) is mentioned, and again it is described as
that on which Isis had risen "to make a wail for her brother."
83. But this is also the night on which he conquers his
enemies, and "receives the birthplace of the Gods." "He tramples on the
bandages they make for their burial. He raises his soul, and conceals his
body." So the Christ is found to have unwound the linen bandages of burial, and
they saw the linen in one place, and the napkin in another. He too
conceals his body!
84. This is closely reproduced, or paralleled, in John's
Gospel, where it is Mary Magdalene who rises in the night and comes to the
sepulchre, "while it was yet dark," to find the Christ arisen, as the conqueror
of death and the grave. In John's version, after the body is embalmed in a
hundred pounds weight of spice, consisting of myrrh and aloes, we have the
"night of the mystery of the shapes": "For while it was yet dark, Mary Magdalene
coming to the sepulchre, and peering in, sees the two angels in white sitting,
the one at the head and the other at the feet, where the body had lately lain."
And in the chapter of "How a living being is not destroyed in hell, or the hour
of life ends not in Hades," there are two youthful Gods—"two youths of light,
who prevail as those who see the light," and the vignette shows the deceased
walking off. He has risen!
85. Matthew has only
one angel or splendid presence, whose appearance was as lightning, which agrees
with Shepi, the Splendid One, who "lights the sarcophagus," as a
representative of the divinity, Ra. The risen Christ, who is first seen and
recognised by Mary, says to her, "Touch me not, for I am not yet ascended
to my Father." The same scene is described by the Gnostics: when Sophia
rushes forward to embrace the Christ, who restrains her by exclaiming that he
must not be touched.
86. In the last
chapter of the "Preservation of the Body in Hades," there is much
mystical matter that looks plainer when written out in John's Gospel. It is said
of the regerminated or risen God—"May
the Osirian speak to thee?" The Osirian does not know. He (Osiris)
knows him. "Let him not grasp him." The Osirified "comes
out sound, Immortal is his name." "He has passed along the upper
roads" (that is, as a risen spirit).
87. "He it
is who grasps with his hand," and gives the palpable proof of continued
personality, as does the Christ, who says, "See my hands and my feet, that
it is I myself."
88. The Sun-God
re-arises on the horizon, where he issues forth, "saying to those who
belong to his race, Give me your arm." Says the Osirified deceased, "I
am made as ye are." "Let him explain it!" At his reappearance
the Christ demonstrates that he is made as they are; "See my hands and
feet, that it is I myself; handle me and see. And when he had said this he
showed them his hands and feet. Then he said to Thomas, Reach hither thy finger,
and see my hands, and reach hither thy hand and put it into my side." These
descriptions correspond to
that of the cut, wounded, and bleeding Sun-God, who says to his companions,
"Give me your arm; I am made as ye are."
89. In the Gospel of
the Hebrews he is made to exclaim, "For I am not a bodiless ghost." But in the original, when the risen one says to his companions, "Give me
your arm, I am made as ye are," he speaks as a spirit to spirits. Whereas
in the Gospels, the Christ has to demonstrate that he is not a spirit,
because the scene has been transferred into the earth-life.
90. The Gnostics
truly declared that all the supernatural transactions asserted in the Christian
Gospel "were counterparts (or representations) of what took place
above." That is, they affirmed the history to be mythical; the celestial
allegory made mundane; and they were in the right, as the Egyptian Gospel
proves. There are Healers, and Jehoshua Ben-Pandira may have been one. But,
because that is possible, we must not allow it to vouch for the impossible!
Thus, in the Gospels, the mythical is, and has to be, continually reproduced as
miracle. That which naturally pertains to the character of the Sun-God becomes
supernatural in appearance when brought down to earth. The Solar God descended
into the nether world as the restorer of the bound to liberty, the dead to life.
In this region the miracles were wrought, and the transformations took place. The evil spirits and destroying powers were exorcised from the
mummies; the halt
and the maimed were enabled to get up and go; the dead were raised, a mouth was
given to the dumb, and the blind were made to see.
91. This
"reconstitution of the deceased" is transferred to the earth-life,
whereupon "the blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the lepers are
cleansed, the deaf hear, and the dead are raised up" at the coming of the
Christ, who performed the miracles. The drama, which the Idiotai mistook for
human history, was performed by the Sun-God in another world.
92. I could keep on
all day, and all night, or give a dozen lectures, without exhausting my evidence
that the Canonical Gospels are only a later literalised réchauffé of the
Egyptian writings; the representations in the Mysteries, and the oral teachings
of the Gnostics which passed out of Egypt into Greece and Rome—for
there is plenty more proof where this comes from. I can but offer a specimen
brick of that which is elsewhere a building set four-square, and sound against
every blast that blows.
93. The Christian
dispensation is believed to have been ushered in by the birth of a child, and
the portrait of that child in the Roman Catacombs as the child of Mary is the
youthful Sun-God in the Mummy Image of the child-king, the Egyptian Karast, or
Christ. The alleged facts of our Lord's life as Jesus the Christ, were equally
the alleged facts of our Lord's life as the Horus of Egypt, whose very name
signifies the Lord.
94. The Christian
legends were first related of Horus the Messiah, the Solar Hero, the greatest
hero that ever lived in the mind of man—not in the flesh—the
only hero to whom the miracles were natural, because he was not human.
95. From beginning
to end the history is not human but divine, and the divine is the mythical. From
the descent of the Holy Ghost to overshadow Mary, to the ascension of the risen
Christ at the end of forty days, according to the drama of the pre-Christian
Mysteries, the subject-matter, the characters, occurrences, events, acts, and
sayings bear the impress of the mythical mould instead of the stamp of human
history. Right through, the ideas which shape the history were pre-extant, and
are identifiably pre-Christian; and so we see the strange sight to-day in Europe
of 100,000,000 of Pagans masquerading as Christians.
96. Whether you
believe it or not does not matter, the fatal fact remains that every trait and
feature which go to make up the Christ as Divinity, and every event or
circumstance taken to establish the human personality were pre-extant, and
pre-applied to the Egyptian and Gnostic Christ, who never could become flesh. The Jesus Christ with female paps, who is the Alpha and Omega of Revelation, was
the IU of Egypt, and the Iao of the Chaldeans. Jesus as the Lamb of God, and
Ichthys the Fish, was Egyptian. Jesus as the Coming One; Jesus born of the
Virgin Mother, who was overshadowed by the Holy Ghost; Jesus born of two
mothers, both of whose names are Mary; Jesus born in the manger—at
Christmas, and again at Easter; Jesus saluted by the three kings, or Magi; Jesus
of the transfiguration on the Mount; Jesus whose symbol in the Catacombs is the
eight-rayed Star—the Star of the East; Jesus
as the eternal Child; Jesus as God the Father, re-born as his own Son; Jesus as
the Child of twelve years; Jesus as the Anointed One of thirty years; Jesus in
his Baptism; Jesus walking on the Waters, or working his Miracles; Jesus as the
Caster-out of demons; Jesus as a Substitute, who suffered in a vicarious
atonement for sinful men; Jesus whose followers are the two brethren, the four
fishers, the seven fishers, the twelve apostles, the seventy (or seventy-two in
some texts) whose names were written in Heaven; Jesus who was administered to by
seven women; Jesus in his bloody sweat; Jesus betrayed by Judas; Jesus as
conqueror of the grave; Jesus the Resurrection and the Life; Jesus before
Herod;
in the Hades, and in his re-appearance to the women, and to the seven fishers;
Jesus who was crucified both on the 14th and 15th of the month Nisan; Jesus who
was also crucified in Egypt (as it is written in Revelation); Jesus as judge of
the dead, with the sheep on the right hand, and the goats on the left, is
Egyptian from first to last, in every phase, from the beginning to the end—
MAKE WHATSOEVER
YOU CAN OF JEHOSHUA BEN-PANDIRA.
97. In some of the
ancient Egyptian Temples the Christian iconoclasts, when tired of hacking and
hewing at the symbolic figures incised in the chambers of imagery, and defacing
the most prominent features of the
monuments, found they could not dig out the hieroglyphics and took to covering
them over with plaster or tempera; and this plaster, intended to hide the
meaning and stop the mouth of the stone Word, has served to preserve the ancient
writings, as fresh in hue and sharp in outline as when they were first cut and
coloured.
98. In a similar
manner the Temple of the ancient religion was invaded, and possession gradually
gained by connivance of Roman power; and that enduring fortress, not built, but
quarried out of the solid rock, was stuccoed all over the front, and made white
awhile with its look of brand-newness, and re-opened under the sign of another
name—that of the carnalised Christ. And all
the time each nook and corner were darkly alive with the presence and the proofs
of the earlier gods, and the pre-Christian origines, even though the
hieroglyphics remained unread until the time of Champollion! But stucco is
not for lasting wear, it cracks and crumbles; sloughs off and slinks away into
its natal insignificance; the rock is the sole true foundation; the rock is the
only record in which we can reach reality at last!
99. Wilkinson, the
Egyptologist, has actually said of Osiris on earth:—"Some
may be disposed to think that the Egyptians, being aware of the promises of the real
saviour, had anticipated that event, regarding it as though it had already
happened, and introduced that mystery into their religious system!" This
is what obstetrists term a false presentation; a birth feet-foremost. We
are also told by writers on the Catacombs, and the Christian Iconography, that
this figure is Osiris, as a type of Christ. This is Pan, Apollo, Aristeus, as a
type of Christ. This is Harpocrates, as a type of Christ. This is Mercury, but
as a type of Christ; this is the devil (for Sut-Mercury was the devil), as a
type of Christ; until long hearing of the facts reversed, perverted and
falsified, makes one feel as if under a nightmare which has lasted for eighteen
centuries, knowing the Truth to have been buried alive and made dumb all that
time; and believing that it has only to get voice and make itself heard to end
the lying once for all, and bring down the curtain of oblivion at last upon the
most pitiful drama of delusion ever witnessed on the human stage.
100. And here the
worst foes of the truth have ever been, and still are, the rationalisers of the
Mythos, such as the Unitarians. They have assumed the human history as the
starting point, and accepted the existence of a personal founder of Christianity
as the one initial and fundamental fact. They have done their best to humanise
the divinity of the Mythos, by discharging the supernatural and miraculous
element, in order that the narrative might be accepted as history. Thus they
have lost the battle from the beginning, by fighting it on the wrong ground.
101. The Christ is a
popular lay-figure that never lived, and a lay-figure of Pagan origin; a
lay-figure that was once the Ram, and afterwards the Fish; a lay-figure that in
human form was the portrait and image of a dozen different gods. The imagery of
the Catacombs shows that the types there represented are not the ideal figures
of the human reality! They
are the sole reality for six or seven centuries after A.D.,
because they had been so in the centuries long before. There is no man upon the
cross in the Catacombs of Rome for seven hundred years! The symbolism, the
allegories, the figures, and types, brought on by the Gnostics, remained there
just what they had been to the Romans, Greeks, Persians, and Egyptians. Yet, the
dummy ideal of Paganism is supposed to have become doubly real as the God who
was made flesh, to save mankind from the impossible "fall!" Remember
that the primary foundation-stone for a history in the New Testament is
dependent upon the Fall of Man being a fact in the Old; whereas it was only a
fable, which had its own mythical and unhistorical meaning.
102. When we try over
again that first step once taken in the dark, we find no foothold for us,
because there was no stair. The Fall is absolutely non-historical, and,
consequently, the first bit of standing-ground for an actual Christ, the
redeemer, is missing in the very beginning. Any one who set up, or was set up,
for an historical Saviour from a non-historical Fall, could only be an
historical impostor. But the Christ of the Gospels is not even that! He is in no
sense an historical personage. It is impossible to establish the existence
of an historical character, even as an impostor. For such an one the two
witnesses—Astronomical Mythology and
Gnosticism—completely prove an alibi for ever! From the first supposed
catastrophe to the final one, the figures of the celestial allegory were
ignorantly mistaken for matters of fact, and thus the orthodox Christolator is
left at last to climb to heaven with one foot resting on the ground of a
redemption that must be fallacious. It is a fraud founded on a fable!
103. Every time the
Christian turns to the East to bow his obeisance to the Christ, it is a
confession that the cult is Solar, the admission being all the more fatal
because it is unconscious. Every picture of the Christ, with the halo of glory,
and the accompanying Cross of the Equinox, proffers proof.
104. The Christian
doctrine of a resurrection furnishes evidence, absolutely conclusive, of the
Astronomical and Kronian nature of the origines! This is to occur, as it always
did, at the end of a cycle; or at the end of the world! Christian Revelation
knows nothing of immortality, except in the form of periodic renewal, dependent
on the "Coming One;" and the resurrection of the dead still depends on
the day of judgment and the last day, at the end of the world! They have no
other world. Their only other world is at the end of this.
105. Now there are no
fools living who would be fools big enough to cross the Atlantic Ocean in a
barque so rotten and unseaworthy as this in which they hope to cross the dark
River of Death, and, on a pier of cloud, be landed safe in Heaven. The Christian
Theology was responsible for substituting faith instead of knowledge; and the
European mind is only just beginning to recover from the mental paralysis
induced by that doctrine which came to its natural culmination in the Dark Ages. The Christian
religion is responsible for enthroning the cross of death in heaven, with a
deity on it, doing public penance for a private failure in the commencement of
creation. It has taught men to believe that the vilest spirit may be washed
white, in the atoning blood of the purest, offered up as a bribe to an avenging
God. It has divinized a figure of helpless human suffering, and a face of
pitiful pain; as if there were naught but a great heartache at the core of all
things; or the vast Infinite were but a veiled and sad-eyed sorrow that brings
visibly to birth in the miseries of human life. But "in the old Pagan world
men deified the beautiful, the glad;" as they will again, upon a loftier
pedestal, when the fable of this fictitious fall of man, and false redemption by
the cloud-begotten God, has passed away like a phantasm of the night, and men
awake to learn that they are here to wage ceaseless war upon sordid suffering,
remediable wrong, and preventable pain; here to put an end to them, not to
apotheosize an effigy of Sorrow to be adored as a type of the Eternal. For the
most beneficent is the most beautiful; the happiest are the healthiest; the most
God-like is most glad. The Christian Cult has fanatically fought for its false
theory, and waged incessant warfare against Nature and Evolution—Nature's
intention made somewhat visible—and against
some of the noblest instincts, during eighteen centuries. Seas of human blood
have been spilt to keep the barque of Peter afloat. Earth has been honeycombed
with the graves of the martyrs of Freethought. Heaven has been filled with a
horror of great darkness in the name of God.
106. Eighteen
centuries are a long while in the life-time of a lie, but a brief span in the
eternity of Truth. The Fiction is sure to be found out, and the Lie will fall at
last! At last! At last!!! |
No matter though
it towers to the sky,
And darkens
earth, you cannot make the lie
Immortal; though
stupendously enshrined
By art in every perfect mould of mind:
Angelo, Rafael,
Milton, Handel, all
Its pillars,
cannot stay it from the fall.
The Pyramid of
Imposture reared by Rome,
All of cement,
for an eternal home,
Must crumble
back to earth, and every gust
Shall revel in the desert of its dust;
And when the
prison of the Immortal, Mind,
Hath fallen to
set free the bound and blind,
No more shall life be one long dread of death;
Humanity shall
breathe with ampler breath,
Expand in
spirit, and in stature rise,
To match its
birthplace of the earth and skies. |
――――♦――――
PAUL THE GNOSTIC OPPONENT
OF PETER
|