THE MYSTERY WISDOM OF EGYPT
When leaving thy body behind
thee, thou soarest into the ether,
Then thou becomest a god,
immortal, not subject to death.
In this utterance of Empedocles (cf.
is epitomised what the ancient Egyptians thought
about the eternal element in man and its connection
with the divine. The proof of this may be found
in the so-called Book of the Dead, which has
been deciphered by the diligence of nineteenth-century
investigators (cf. Lepsius, Das Totenbuch
der alten Aegypter, Berlin, 1842). It is “the
greatest continuous literary work which has come down
to us from ancient Egypt.” All kinds of
instructions and prayers are contained in it, which
were put into the tomb of each deceased person to serve
as a guide when he was released from his mortal tenement.
The most intimate ideas of the Egyptians about the
Eternal and the origin of the world are contained
in this work. These ideas point to a conception
of the gods similar to that of Greek mysticism.
Osiris gradually became the favourite
and most universally recognised of the various deities
worshipped in different parts of Egypt. In him
were comprised the ideas about the other divinities.
Whatever the majority of the Egyptian people may have
thought about Osiris, the Book of the Dead
indicates that the priestly wisdom saw in him a being
that might be found in the human soul itself.
Everything said about death and the dead shows this
plainly. While the body is given to earth, and
kept by it, the eternal part of man enters upon the
path to the primordial eternal. It comes before
the tribunal of Osiris, and the forty-two judges of
the dead. The fate of the eternal part of man
depends on the verdict of these judges. If the
soul has confessed its sins and been deemed reconciled
to eternal justice, invisible powers approach it and
say: “The Osiris N. has been purified in
the pool which is south of the field of Hotep and
north of the field of Locusts, where the gods of verdure
purify themselves at the fourth hour of the night
and the eighth hour of the day with the image of the
heart of the gods, passing from night to day.”
Thus, within the eternal cosmic order, the eternal
part of man is addressed as an Osiris. After
the name Osiris comes the deceased person’s own
name. And the one who is being united with the
eternal cosmic order also calls himself “Osiris.”
“I am the Osiris N. Growing under the blossoms
of the fig-tree is the name of the Osiris N.”
Man therefore becomes an Osiris. Being Osiris
is only a perfect stage in human development.
It seems obvious that even the Osiris who is a judge
within the eternal cosmic order is nothing else but
a perfect man. Between being human and divine,
there is a difference in degree and number. The
mystic view of the mystery of “number”
underlies this. Osiris as a cosmic being is One,
yet on this account he exists undivided in each human
soul. Each person is an Osiris, yet the One Osiris
must be represented as a separate being. Man
is in course of development; at the end of his evolutionary
career, he becomes divine. In taking this view,
we must speak of divinity, or becoming divine, rather
than of a separate divine being, complete in himself.
It cannot be doubted but that according
to this view only he can really enter upon the Osiris
existence, who has reached the portals of the eternal
cosmic order as an Osiris. Thus, the highest life
which man can lead must consist in his changing himself
into Osiris. Even during mortal life, a true
man will live as a perfect Osiris as far as he can.
He becomes perfect when he lives as an Osiris, when
he passes through the experiences of Osiris.
In this way, we see the deeper significance of the
Osiris myth. It becomes the ideal of the man who
wishes to awaken the eternal within him.
Osiris is torn to pieces and killed
by Typhon. The fragments of his body are preserved
and cared for by his consort, Isis. After his
death he let a ray of his own light fall upon her,
and she bore him Horus. This Horus takes up the
earthly tasks of Osiris. He is the second Osiris,
still imperfect, but progressing towards the true Osiris.
The true Osiris is in the human soul,
which at first is of a transitory nature; but as such,
it is destined to give birth to the eternal.
Man may, therefore, regard himself as the tomb of Osiris.
The lower nature (Typhon) has killed the higher nature
in him. Love in his soul (Isis) must take care
of the dead fragments of his body, and then the higher
nature, the eternal soul (Horus) will be born, which
can progress to Osiris life. The man who is aspiring
to the highest kind of existence must repeat in himself,
as a microcosm, the macrocosmic universal Osiris process.
This is the meaning of Egyptian initiation. What
Plato (cf. describes as a cosmic process,
i.e., that the Creator has stretched the soul
of the world on the body of the world in the form
of a cross, and that the cosmic process is the release
of this crucified soul, this process had
to be enacted in man on a smaller scale if he was
to be qualified for Osiris life. The candidate
for initiation had to develop himself in such a way
that his soul-experience, his becoming an Osiris,
became blended into one with the cosmic Osiris process.
If we could look into the temples
of initiation in which people underwent the transformation
into Osiris, we should see that what took place represented
microcosmically the building of the cosmos. Man
who proceeded from the “Father” was to
give birth to the Son in himself. What he actually
bears within him, divinity hidden under a spell, was
to become manifest in him. This divinity is kept
down in him by the power of the earthly nature; this
lower nature must first be buried in order that the
higher nature may arise.
From this we are able to interpret
what we are told about the incidents of initiation.
The candidate was subjected to mysterious processes,
by means of which his earthly nature was killed, and
his higher part awakened. It is not necessary
to study these processes in detail, if we understand
their meaning. This meaning is contained in the
confession possible to every one who went through initiation.
He could say: “Before me was the endless
perspective at the end of which is the perfection
of the divine. I felt that the power of the divine
is within me. I buried what in me keeps down that
power. I died to earthly things. I was dead.
I had died as a lower man, I was in the nether-world.
I had intercourse with the dead, i.e., with
those who have already become part of the chain of
the eternal cosmic order. After my sojourn in
the nether-world, I arose from the dead. I overcame
death, but now I have become different. I have
nothing more to do with perishable nature. It
has in me become saturated with the Logos. I
now belong to those who live eternally, and who will
sit at the right hand of Osiris. I myself shall
be a true Osiris, part of the eternal cosmic order,
and judgment of life and death will be placed in my
hands.” The candidate for initiation had
to submit to the experience which made such a confession
possible to him. Thus this was an experience
of the highest kind.
Let us now imagine that a non-initiate
hears of such experiences. He cannot know what
has really taken place in the initiate’s soul.
In his eyes, the initiate died physically, lay in
the grave, and rose again. What is a spiritual
reality at a higher stage of existence appears when
expressed in the form of sense-reality as an event
which breaks through the order of nature. It
is a “miracle.” So far initiation
was a miracle. One who really wished to understand
it must have awakened within him powers to enable
him to stand on a higher plane of existence.
He must have approached these higher experiences through
a course of life specially adapted for the purpose.
In whatever way these prepared experiences were enacted
in individual cases, they are always found to be of
quite a definite type. And so an initiate’s
life is a typical one. It may be described independently
of the single personality. Or rather, an individual
could only be described as being on the way to the
divine if he had passed through these definite typical
experiences.
Such a personality was Buddha, living
in the midst of his disciples. As such an one
did Jesus appear to his community. Nowadays we
know of the parallelism that exists between the biographies
of Buddha and of Jesus. Rudolf Seydel has convincingly
proved this parallelism in his book, Buddha und
Christus. (Compare also the excellent essay by
Dr. Huebbe-Schleiden, “Jesus ein Buddhist.”)
We have only to follow out the two lives in detail
in order to see that all objections to the parallelism
are futile.
The birth of Buddha is announced by
a white elephant, which descends from heaven and declares
to the queen, Maya, that she will bring forth a divine
man, who “will attune all beings to love and
friendship, and will unite them in a close alliance.”
We read in St. Luke’s Gospel: “To
a virgin espoused to a man whose name was Joseph, of
the house of David; and the virgin’s name was
Mary. And the angel came in unto her, and said,
’Hail, thou that art highly favoured....
Behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring
forth a son, and shalt call his name Jesus. He
shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the
Highest.’”
The Brahmíns, or Indian priests,
who know what the birth of a Buddha means, interpret
Maya’s dream. They have a definite, typical
idea of a Buddha, to which the life of the personality
about to be born will have to correspond. Similarly
we read in Matthew ii. et seq., that when Herod
“had gathered all the chief priests and scribes
of the people together, he demanded of them where
Christ should be born.” The Brahmin Asita
says of Buddha: “This is the child which
will become Buddha, the redeemer, the leader to immortality,
freedom, and light.” Compare with this
Luke i: “And, behold, there was a man
in Jerusalem, whose name was Simeon; and the same
man was just and devout, waiting for the consolation
of Israel: and the Holy Ghost was upon him....
And when the parents brought in the child Jesus, to
do for him after the custom of the law, then took
he him up in his arms, and blessed God, and said,
Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace,
according to thy word: for mine eyes have seen
thy salvation, which thou hast prepared before the
face of all people; a light to lighten the Gentiles,
and the glory of thy people Israel.”
It is related of Buddha that at the
age of twelve he was lost, and found again under a
tree, surrounded by poets and sages of the olden time,
whom he was teaching. With this incident the following
passage in St. Luke corresponds: “Now his
parents went to Jerusalem every year at the feast
of the passover. And when he was twelve years
old, they went up to Jerusalem after the custom of
the feast. And when they had fulfilled the days,
as they returned, the child Jesus tarried behind in
Jerusalem; and Joseph and his mother knew not of it.
But they, supposing him to have been in the company,
went a day’s journey; and they sought him among
their kinsfolk and acquaintance. And when they
found him not, they turned back again to Jerusalem,
seeking him. And it came to pass that after three
days they found him in the temple, sitting in the
midst of the doctors, both hearing them, and asking
them questions. And all that heard him were astonished
at his understanding and answers” (Luke i-47).
After Buddha had lived in solitude,
and returned, he was received by the benediction of
a virgin, “Blessed is thy mother, blessed is
thy father, blessed is the wife to whom thou belongest.”
But he replied, “Only they are blessed who are
in Nirvana,” i.e., who have entered the
eternal cosmic order. In St. Luke’s Gospel
(x, we read: “And it came to pass,
as he spake these things, a certain woman of the company
lifted up her voice and said unto him, ’Blessed
is the womb that bare thee, and the paps which thou
hast sucked.’ But he said, ’Yea rather,
blessed are they that hear the word of God, and keep
it.’”
In the course of Buddha’s life,
the tempter comes to him and promises him all the
kingdoms of the earth. Buddha refuses everything
in the words: “I know well that I am destined
to have a kingdom, but I do not desire an earthly
one. I shall become Buddha and make all the world
exult with joy.” The tempter has to own
that his reign is over. Jesus answers the same
temptation in the words: “Get thee hence,
Satan, for it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord
thy God, and him only shalt thou serve. Then
the devil leaveth him” (Matthew i, 11).
This description of the parallelism might be extended
to many other points with the same result.
The life of Buddha ended sublimely.
On a journey, he felt ill; he came to the river Hiranja,
near Kuschinagara. There he lay down on a carpet
which his favourite disciple, Ananda, spread for him.
His body began to be luminous from within. He
died transfigured, his body irradiating light, saying,
“Nothing endures.”
The death of Buddha corresponds with
the transfiguration of Jesus. “And it came
to pass about eight days after these sayings, he took
Peter and John and James, and went up into a mountain
to pray. And as he prayed, the fashion of his
countenance was altered, and his raiment was white
and glistering.”
Buddha’s earthly life ends at
this point, but it is here that the most important
part of the life of Jesus begins, His suffering,
death, and resurrection. Other accounts of Buddha’s
death need not here be considered, even though they
reveal profound aspects.
The agreement in these two redemptive
lives leads to the same conclusion. The narratives
themselves indicate the nature of this conclusion.
When the priest-sages hear what kind of birth is to
take place, they know what is involved. They
know that they have to do with a Divine man; they
know beforehand what kind of personality it is who
is appearing. And therefore his course of life
can only correspond with what they know about the
life of a Divine man. In the wisdom of their
Mysteries such a life is traced out for all eternity.
It can only be as it must be; it comes
into manifestation like an eternal law of nature.
Just as a chemical substance can only behave in a
certain definite way, so a Buddha or a Christ can only
live in a certain definite way. His life is not
described merely by writing a casual biography; it
is much better described by giving the typical features
which are contained for all time in the wisdom of the
Mysteries. The Buddha legend is no more a biography
in the ordinary sense than the Gospels are meant to
be a biography in the ordinary sense of the Christ
Jesus. In neither is the merely accidental given;
both relate the course of life marked out for a world-redeemer.
The source of the two accounts is to be found in the
mystery traditions and not in outer physical history.
Jesus and Buddha are, to those who have recognised
their Divine nature, initiates in the most eminent
sense. Hence their lives are lifted out of things
transitory, and what is known about initiates applies
to them. The casual incidents in their lives are
not narrated. Of such it might be announced “In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was a God and the Word was made
flesh and dwelt among us.”
But the life of Jesus contains more
than that of Buddha. Buddha’s ends with
the Transfiguration; the most momentous part of the
life of Jesus begins after the Transfiguration.
In the language of initiates this means that Buddha
reached the point at which divine light begins to
shine in men. He faces mortal death. He becomes
the light of the world. Jesus goes farther.
He does not physically die at the moment when the
light of the world shines through him. At that
moment he is a Buddha. But at that very moment
he enters upon a stage which finds expression in a
higher degree of initiation. He suffers and dies.
What is earthly disappears. But the spiritual
element, the light of the world, does not. His
resurrection follows. He is revealed to his followers
as Christ. Buddha, at the moment of his Transfiguration,
flows into the blissful life of the Universal Spirit.
Christ Jesus awakens the Universal Spirit once more,
but in a human form, in present existence. Such
an event had formerly taken place at the higher stages
of initiation. Those initiated in the spirit of
the Osiris myth attained to such a resurrection.
In the life of Jesus, this “great” initiation
was added to the Buddha initiation. Buddha demonstrated
by his life that man is the Logos, and that he returns
to the Logos, to the light, when his earthly part
dies. In Jesus, the Logos himself became a person.
In him, the Word was made flesh.
Therefore, what was enacted in the
innermost recesses of the temples by the guardians
of the ancient Mysteries has been apprehended, through
Christianity, as a historical fact. The followers
of Christ Jesus confessed their belief in Him, the
initiate, of unique and supreme greatness. He
proved to them that the world is divine. In the
Christian community, the wisdom of the Mysteries was
indissolubly bound up with the personality of Christ
Jesus. That which man previously had sought to
attain through the Mysteries was now replaced by the
belief that Christ had lived on earth, and that the
faithful belonged to him.
Henceforward, part of what was formerly
only to be gained through mystical methods, could
be replaced, in the Christian community, by the conviction
that the divine had been manifested in the Word present
amongst them. Not that for which each individual
soul underwent a long preparation was now decisive,
but what those had heard and seen who were with Jesus,
and what was handed down by them. “That
which was from the beginning, which we have heard,
which ... our hands have handled, of the Word of life
... that which we have seen and heard declare we unto
you, that ye also may have fellowship with us.”
Thus do we read in the first Epistle of St. John.
And this immediate reality is to embrace all future
generations in a living bond of union, and as a church
is mystically to extend from race to race. It
is in this sense that the words of St. Augustine are
to be understood, “I should not believe the
Gospels unless the authority of the Catholic Church
induced me to do so.” Thus the Gospels do
not contain within themselves testimony to their truth,
but they are to be believed because they are founded
on the personality of Jesus, and because the Church
from that personality mysteriously draws the power
to make the truth of the Gospels manifest.
The Mysteries handed down traditionally
the means of arriving at truth; the Christian community
itself propagates the truth. To the confidence
in the mystical forces which spring up in the inmost
being of man, during initiation, was added the confidence
in the One, primordial Initiator.
The Mystics sought to become divine,
they wished to experience divinity. Jesus was
divine, we must hold fast to Him, and then we shall
become partakers of His divinity, in the community
founded by Him; this became Christian conviction.
What became divine in Jesus was made so for all His
followers. “Lo, I am with you alway, even
unto the end of the world.” The one who
was born in Bethlehem has an eternal character independent
of time. The Christmas anthem thus speaks of the
birth of Jesus, as if it took place each Christmas,
“Christ is born to-day, the Saviour has come
into the world to-day, to-day the angels are singing
on earth.”
In the Christ-experience is to be
seen a definite stage of initiation. When the
Mystic of pre-Christian times passed through this
Christ-experience, he was, through his initiation,
in a state which enabled him to perceive something
spiritually, in higher worlds, to
which no fact in the world of sense corresponded.
He experienced that which surrounds the Mystery of
Golgotha in the higher world. If the Christian
Mystic goes through this experience by initiation,
he at the same time beholds the historical event which
took place on Golgotha, and knows that in that event,
enacted within the physical world, there is the same
content as was formerly only in the supersensible facts
of the Mysteries. Thus there was poured out on
the Christian community, through the “Mysteries
of Golgotha,” that which formerly had been poured
out on the Mystics within the temples. And initiation
gives Christian Mystics the possibility of becoming
conscious of what is contained in the “Mystery
of Golgotha,” whereas faith makes man an unconscious
partaker of the mystical stream which flowed from the
events depicted in the New Testament, and which has
ever since been pervading the spiritual life of humanity.