From the consideration of the worldwide
belief in a past Golden Age, and the worldwide practice
of the Eucharist, in the sense indicated in the last
chapter, to that of the equally widespread belief in
a humandivine Saviour, is a brief and easy step.
Some thirty years ago, dealing with this subject,
I wrote as follows: “The true
Self of man consists in his organic relation with
the whole body of his fellows; and when the man abandons
his true Self he abandons also his true relation to
his fellows. The massMan must rule in each unitman,
else the unitman will drop off and die. But
when the outer man tries to separate himself from
the inner, the unitman from the massMan, then the
reign of individuality begins a false and
impossible individuality of course, but the only means
of coming to the consciousness of the true individuality.”
And further, “Thus this divinity in each creature,
being that which constitutes it and causes it to cohere
together, was conceived of as that creature’s
saviour, healer healer of wounds of body
and wounds of heart the Man within the man,
whom it was not only possible to know, but whom to
know and be united with was the alone salvation.
This, I take it, was the law of health and
of holiness as accepted at some elder time
of human history, and by us seen as through a glass
darkly.”
I think it is impossible not to see however
much in our pride of Civilization (!) we like to jeer
at the pettinesses of tribal life that
these elder people perceived as a matter of fact and
direct consciousness the redeeming presence (within
each unitmember of the group) of the larger life
to which he belonged. This larger life was a
reality “a Presence to be felt and
known”; and whether he called it by the name
of a Totemanimal, or by the name of a Naturedivinity,
or by the name of some gracious humanlimbed God some
Hercules, Mithra, Attis, Orpheus, or whatnot or
even by the great name of Humanity itself, it was
still in any case the Saviour, the living incarnate
Being by the realization of whose presence the little
mortal could be lifted out of exile and error and
death and suffering into splendor and life eternal.
It is impossible, I think, not to
see that the myriad worship of “Saviours”
all over the world, from China to Peru, can only be
ascribed to the natural working of some such law of
human and tribal psychology from earliest
times and in all races the same springing
up quite spontaneously and independently, and (so
far) unaffected by the mere contagion of local tradition.
To suppose that the Devil, long before the advent
of Christianity, put the idea into the heads of all
these earlier folk, is really to pay too great
a compliment both to the power and the ingenuity of
his Satanic Majesty though the ingenuity
with which the early Church did itself suppress
all information about these preChristian Saviours
almost rivals that which it credited to Satan!
And on the other hand to suppose this marvellous and
universal consent of belief to have sprung by mere
contagion from one accidental source would seem equally
farfetched and unlikely.
But almost more remarkable than the
worldencircling belief in humandivine Saviours is
the equally widespread legend of their birth from
Virginmothers. There is hardly a god as
we have already had occasion to see whose
worship as a benefactor of mankind attained popularity
in any of the four continents, Europe, Asia, Africa
and America who was not reported to have
been born from a Virgin, or at least from a mother
who owed the Child not to any earthly father, but to
an impregnation from Heaven. And this seems at
first sight all the more astonishing because the belief
in the possibility of such a thing is so entirely
out of the line of our modern thought. So that
while it would seem not unnatural that such a legend
should have, sprung up spontaneously in some odd benighted
corner of the world, we find it very difficult to
understand how in that case it should have spread
so rapidly in every direction, or if it
did not spread how we are to account for
its spontaneous appearance in all these widely
sundered regions.
I think here, and for the understanding
of this problem, we are thrown back upon a very early
age of human evolution the age of Magic.
Before any settled science or philosophy or religion
existed, there were still certain Things and
consequently also certain Words which had
a tremendous influence on the human mind, which in
fact affected it deeply. Such a word, for instance,
is ‘Thunder’; to hear thunder, to imitate
it, even to mention it, are sure ways of rousing superstitious
attention and imagination. Such another word is
‘Serpent,’ another ‘Tree,’
and so forth. There is no one who is insensible
to the reverberation of these and other such words
and images ; and among them, standing prominently
out, are the two ‘Mother’ and ‘Virgin.’
The word Mother touches the deepest springs of human
feeling. As the earliest word learnt and clung
to by the child, it twines itself with the heartstrings
of the man even to his latest day. Nor must we
forget that in a primitive state of society (the Matriarchate)
that influence was probably even greater than now;
for the father of the child being (often as not) unknown
the attachment to the mother was all the more intense
and undivided. The word Mother had a magic about
it which has remained even until today. But
if that word rooted itself deep in the heart of the
Child, the other word ‘virgin’ had an obvious
magic for the full grown and sexually mature Man a
magic which it, too, has never lost.
There is ample evidence that one of
the very earliest objects of human worship was the
Earth itself, conceived of as the fertile Mother of
all things. Gaia or Ge (the earth) had temples
and altars in almost all the cities of Greece.
Rhea or Cybele, sprung from the Earth, was “mother
of all the gods.” Demeter ("earth mother”)
was honored far and wide as the gracious patroness
of the crops and vegetation. Ceres, of course,
the same. Maia in the Indian mythology and Isis
in the Egyptian are forms of Nature and the Earthspirit,
represented as female; and so forth. The Earth,
in these ancient cults, was the mystic source of all
life, and to it, as a propitiation, life of all kinds
was sacrificed. (There are strange accounts of a huge
fire being made, with an altar to Cybele in the midst,
and of deer and fawns and wild animals, and birds and
sheep and corn and fruits being thrown pellmell into
the flames. ) It was, in a way, the most natural,
as it seems to have been the earliest and most spontaneous
of cults the worship of the Earthmother,
the allproducing eternal source of life, and on account
of her neverfailing everrenewed fertility conceived
of as an immortal Virgin.
But when the Saviourlegend sprang
up as indeed I think it must have sprung
up, in tribe after tribe and people after people,
independently then, whether it sprang from
the divinization of some actual man who showed the
way of light and deliverance to his fellows “sitting
in darkness,” or whether from the personification
of the tribe itself as a god, in either case the question
of the hero’s parentage was bound to arise.
If the ‘saviour’ was plainly a personification
of the tribe, it was obviously impossible to suppose
him the son of a mortal mother. In that case and
if the tribe was generally traced in the legends to
some primeval Animal or Mountain or thing of Nature it
was probably easy to think of him (the saviour) as,
born out of Nature’s womb, descended perhaps
from that pure Virgin of the World who is the Earth
and Nature, who rules the skies at night, and stands
in the changing phases of the Moon, and is worshiped
(as we have seen) in the great constellation Virgo.
If, on the other hand, he was the divinization of
some actual man, more or less known either personally
or by tradition to his fellows, then in all probability
the name of his mortal mother would be recognized
and accepted; but as to his father, that side of parentage
being, as we have said, generally very uncertain,
it would be easy to suppose some heavenly Annunciation,
the midnight visit of a God, and what is usually termed
a Virginbirth.
There are two elements to be remembered
here, as conspiring to this conclusion. One is
the condition of affairs in a remote matriarchial
period, when descent was reckoned always through the
maternal line, and the fatherhood in each generation
was obscure or unknown or commonly left out of account;
and the other is the fact so strange and
difficult for us to realize that among
some very primitive peoples, like the Australian aborigines,
the necessity for a woman to have intercourse with
a male, in order to bring about conception and childbirth,
was actually not recognized. Scientific observation
had not always got as far as that, and the matter
was still under the domain of Magic! A VirginMother
was therefore a quite imaginable (not to say ‘conceivable’)
thing; and indeed a very beautiful and fascinating
thing, combining in one image the potent magic of
two very wonderful words. It does not seem impossible
that considerations of this kind led to the adoption
of the doctrine or legend of the virginmother and
the heavenly father among so many races and in so
many localities even without any contagion
of tradition among them.
Anyhow, and as a matter of fact, the
worldwide dissemination of the legend is most remarkable.
Zeus, Father of the gods, visited Semele, it will
be remembered, in the form of a thunderstorm; and she
gave birth to the great saviour and deliverer Dionysus.
Zeus, again, impregnated Danae in a shower of gold;
and the child was Perseus, who slew the Gorgons (the
powers of darkness) and saved Andromeda (the human
soul ). Devaki, the radiant Virgin of the
Hindu mythology, became the wife of the god Vishnu
and bore Krishna, the beloved hero and prototype of
Christ. With regard to Buddha St. Jerome says
It is handed down among the Gymnosophists, of India that Buddha, the
founder of their system, was brought forth by a Virgin from her side. The
Egyptian Isis, with the child Horus, on her knee, was honored centuries before
the Christian era, and worshiped under the names of Our Lady, Queen of
Heaven, Star of the Sea, Mother of God, and so forth. Before her, Neith,
the Virgin of the World, whose figure bends from the sky over the earthly plains
and the children of men, was acclaimed as mother of the great god Osiris. The
saviour Mithra, too, was born of a Virgin, as we have had occasion to notice
before; and on the Mithrais monuments the mother suckling her child is a not
uncommon figure.
The old Teutonic goddess Hertha (the
Earth) was a Virgin, but was impregnated by the heavenly
Spirit (the Sky); and her image with a child in her
arms was to be seen in the sacred groves of Germany.
The Scandinavian Frigga, in much the same way,
being caught in the embraces of Odin, the Allfather,
conceived and bore a son, the blessed Balder, healer
and saviour of mankind. Quetzalcoatl, the (crucified)
saviour of the Aztecs, was the son of Chimalman, the
Virgin Queen of Heaven. Even the Chinese had a
mothergoddess and virgin with child in her arms ; and the ancient Etruscans
the same.
Finally, we have the curiously large
number of black virgin mothers who are or have
been worshiped. Not only cases like Devaki the
Indian goddess, or Isis the Egyptian, who would naturally
appear blackskinned or dark; but the large number
of images and paintings of the same kind, yet extant especially
in the Italian churches and passing for
representations of Mary and the infant Jesus.
Such are the wellknown image in the chapel at Loretto,
and images and paintings besides in the churches at
Genoa, Pisa, Padua, Munich and other places. It
is difficult not to regard these as very old Pagan
or preChristian relics which lingered on into Christian
times and were baptized anew as indeed
we know many relics and images actually were into
the service of the Church. “Great is Diana
of the Ephesians”; and there is I believe more
than one black figure extant of this Diana, who, though
of course a virgin, is represented with innumerable
breasts not unlike some of the archaic
statues of Artemis and Isis. At Paris, far on
into Christian times there was, it is said, on the
site of the present Cathedral of Notre Dame, a Temple
dedicated to ‘our Lady’ Isis; and images
belonging to the earlier shrine would in all probability
be preserved with altered name in the later.
All this illustrates not only the
wide diffusion of the doctrine of the Virginmother,
but its extreme antiquity. The subject is obscure,
and worthy of more consideration than has yet been
accorded it; and I do not feel able to add anything
to the tentative explanations given a page or two
back, except perhaps to suppose that the vision of
the Perfect Man hovered dimly over the mind of the
human race on its first emergence from the purely
animal stage; and that a quite natural speculation
with regard to such a being was that he would be born
from a Perfect Woman who according to early
ideas would necessarily be the Virgin Earth itself,
mother of all things. Anyhow it was a wonderful
Intuition, slumbering as it would seem in the breast
of early man, that the Great Earth after giving birth
to all living creatures would at last bring forth
a Child who should become the Saviour of the human
race.
There is of course the further theory,
entertained by some, that virginparturition a
kind of Parthenogenesis has as a matter
of fact occasionally occurred among mortal women,
and even still does occur. I should be the last
to deny the possibility of this (or of anything
else in Nature), but, seeing the immense difficulties
in the way of proof of any such asserted case,
and the absence so far of any thoroughly attested
and verified instance, it would, I think, be advisable
to leave this theory out of account at present.
But whether any of the explanations
spoken of are right or wrong, and whatever explanation
we adopt, there remains the fact of the universality
over the world of this legend affording
another instance of the practical solidarity and continuity
of the Pagan Creeds with Christianity.