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The Two Babylons
Alexander Hislop
Chapter V
Section III
The Clothing and Crowning of Images
In the Church of Rome, the
clothing and crowning of images form no insignificant part of the ceremonial.
The sacred images are not represented, like ordinary statues, with the garments
formed of the same material as themselves, but they have garments put on them
from time to time, like ordinary mortals of living flesh and blood. Great
expense is often lavished on their drapery; and those who present to them
splendid robes are believed thereby to gain their signal favour, and to lay up
a large stock of merit for themselves. Thus, in September, 1852, we find the
duke and Duchess of Montpensier celebrated in the Tablet, not only for
their charity in "giving 3000 reals in alms to the poor," but especially, and above all, for their piety in "presenting the Virgin with a
magnificent dress of tissue of gold, with white lace and a silver crown."
Somewhat about the same time the piety of the dissolute Queen of Spain was
testified by a similar benefaction, when she deposited at the feet of the Queen
of Heaven the homage of the dress and jewels she wore on a previous occasion of
solemn thanksgiving, as well as the dress in which she was attired when she was
stabbed by the assassin Merino. "The mantle," says the Spanish journal Espana, "exhibited the marks of the wound, and its ermine lining was
stained with the precious blood of Her Majesty. In the basket (that bore the
dresses) were likewise the jewels which adorned Her Majesty's head and breast.
Among them was a diamond stomacher, so exquisitely wrought, and so dazzling,
that it appeared to be wrought of a single stone." This is all sufficiently
childish, and presents human nature in a most humiliating aspect; but it is
just copied from the old Pagan worship. The same clothing and adorning of the
gods went on in Egypt, and there were sacred persons who alone could be
permitted to interfere with so high a function. Thus, in the Rosetta Stone we
find these sacred functionaries distinctly referred to: "The chief priests and
prophets, and those who have access to the adytum to clothe the
gods,...assembled in the temple at Memphis, established the following
decree." The "clothing of the gods" occupied an equally important place in the
sacred ceremonial of ancient Greece. Thus, we find Pausanias referring to a
present made to Minerva: "In after times Laodice, the daughter of Agapenor,
sent a veil to Tegea, to Minerva Alea." The epigram [inscription] on this
offering indicates, at the same time, the origin of Laodice:--
"Laodice, from Cyprus, the divine,
To her
paternal wide-extended land,
This veil--an offering to Minerva--sent."
Thus, also, when Hecuba, the
Trojan queen, in the instance already referred to, was directed to lead the
penitential procession through the streets of Troy to Minverva's temple, she
was commanded not to go empty-handed, but to carry along with her, as her most
acceptable offering:--
"The
largest mantle your full wardrobes hold,
Most prized for art, and laboured
o'er with gold."
The royal lady
punctually obeyed:--
"The
Phrygian queen to her rich wardrobe went,
Where treasured odours breathed
a costly scent;
There lay the vestures of no vulgar art;
Sidonian
maids embroidered every part,
Whom from soft Sydon youthful Paris bore,
With Helen touching on the Tyrian shore.
Here, as the Queen revolved
with careful eyes
The various textures and the various dyes,
She
chose a veil that shone superior far,
And glowed refulgent as the morning
star."
There is surely a wonderful
resemblance here between the piety of the Queen of Troy and that of the Queen
of Spain. Now, in ancient Paganism there was a mystery couched under the
clothing of the gods. If gods and goddesses were so much pleased by being
clothed, it was because there had once been a time in their history when they
stood greatly in need of clothing. Yes, it can be distinctly
established, as has been already hinted, that ultimately the great god and
great goddess of Heathenism, while the facts of their own history were
interwoven with their idolatrous system, were worshipped also as incarnations
of our great progenitors, whose disastrous fall stripped them of their primeval
glory, and made it needful that the hand Divine should cover their nakedness
with clothing specially prepared for them. I cannot enter here into an
elaborate proof of this point; but let the statement of Herodotus be pondered
in regard to the annual ceremony, observed in Egypt, of slaying a ram, and
clothing the FATHER OF THE GODS with its skin. Compare this statement with the
Divine record in Genesis about the clothing of the "Father of Mankind"
in a coat of sheepskin; and after all that we have seen of the deification of
dead men, can there be a doubt what it was that was thus annually commemorated?
Nimrod himself, when he was cut in pieces, was necessarily stripped. That
exposure was identified with the nakedness of Noah, and ultimately with that of
Adam. His sufferings were represented as voluntarily undergone for the
good of mankind. His nakedness, therefore, and the nakedness of the "Father of
the gods," of whom he was an incarnation, was held to be a voluntary humiliation too. When, therefore, his suffering was over, and his humiliation
past, the clothing in which he was invested was regarded as a meritorious
clothing, available not only for himself, but for all who were initiated in his
mysteries.
In the sacred rites of the
Babylonian god, both the exposure and the clothing that were represented as
having taken place, in his own history, were repeated on all his worshippers,
in accordance with the statement of Firmicus, that the initiated underwent what
their god had undergone. First, after being duly prepared by magic rites and
ceremonies, they were ushered, in a state of absolute nudity, into the
innermost recesses of the temple. This appears from the following statement of
Proclus: "In the most holy of the mysteries, they say that the mystics at first
meet with the many-shaped genera [i.e., with evil demons], which are hurled
forth before the gods: but on entering the interior parts of the temple,
unmoved and guarded by the mystic rites, they genuinely receive in their bosom
divine illumination, and, DIVESTED OF THEIR GARMENTS, participate, as they
would say, of a divine nature." When the initiated, thus "illuminated" and made
partakers of a "divine nature," after being "divested of their garments," were
clothed anew, the garments with which they were invested were looked upon as
"sacred garments," and possessing distinguished virtues. "The coat of skin"
with which the Father of mankind was divinely invested after he was made so
painfully sensible of his nakedness, was, as all intelligent theologians admit,
a typical emblem of the glorious righteousness of Christ--"the garment of
salvation," which is "unto all and upon all them that believe." The garments
put upon the initiated after their disrobing of their former clothes, were
evidently intended as a counterfeit of the same. "The garments of those
initiated in the Eleusinian Mysteries," says Potter, "were accounted sacred, and of no less efficacy to avert evils than charms and
incantations. They were never cast off till completely worn out." And of
course, if possible, in these "sacred garments" they were buried; for
Herodotus, speaking of Egypt, whence these mysteries were derived, tells us
that "religion" prescribed the garments of the dead.
The efficacy of "sacred
garments" as a means of salvation and delivering from evil in the unseen and
eternal world, occupies a foremost place in many religions. Thus the Parsees,
the fundamental elements of whose system came from the Chaldean Zoroaster,
believe that "the sadra or sacred vest" tends essentially to
"preserve the departed soul from the calamities accruing from Ahriman," or the
Devil; and they represent those who neglect the use of this "sacred
vest" as suffering in their souls, and "uttering the most dreadful and
appalling cries," on account of the torments inflicted on them "by all kinds of
reptiles and noxious animals, who assail them with their teeth and stings, and
give them not a moment's respite." What could have ever led mankind to
attribute such virtue to a "sacred vest"? If it be admitted that it is
just a perversion of the "sacred garment" put on our first parents, all is
clear. This, too, accounts for the superstitious feeling in the Papacy,
otherwise so unaccountable, that led so many in the dark ages to fortify
themselves against the fears of the judgment to come, by seeking to be buried
in a monk's dress. "To be buried in a friar's cast-off habit, accompanied by
letters enrolling the deceased in a monastic order, was accounted a sure
deliverance from eternal condemnation! In 'Piers the Ploughman's Creed,' a
friar is described as wheedling a poor man out of his money by assuring him
that, if he will only contribute to his monastery,
'St.
Francis himself shall fold thee in his cope,
And present thee to the
Trinity, and pray for thy sins.'"
In virtue of the same
superstitious belief, King John of England was buried in a monk's cowl; and
many a royal and noble personage besides, "before life and immortality" were
anew "brought to light" at the Reformation, could think of no better way to
cover their naked and polluted souls in prospect of death, than by wrapping
themselves in the garment of some monk or friar as unholy as themselves. Now,
all these refuges of lies, in Popery as well as Paganism, taken in connection
with the clothing of the saints of the one system, and of the gods of the
other, when traced to their source, show that since sin entered the world, man
has ever felt the need of a better righteousness than his own to cover him, and
that the time was when all the tribes of the earth knew that the only
righteousness that could avail for such a purpose was "the righteousness of
God," and that of "God manifest in the flesh."
Intimately connected with the
"clothing of the images of the saints" is also the "crowning" of them.
For the last two centuries, in the Popish communion, the festivals for crowning the "sacred images" have been more and more celebrated. In
Florence, a few years ago, the image of the Madonna with the child in her arms
was "crowned" with unusual pomp and solemnity. Now, this too arose out
of the facts commemorated in the history of Bacchus or Osiris. As Nimrod was
the first king after the Flood, so Bacchus was celebrated as the first who wore
a crown. *
* PLINY, Hist. Nat. Under the name of Saturn, also, the same thing was attributed
to Nimrod.
When, however, he fell into the hands of his enemies, as he
was stripped of all his glory and power, he was stripped also of his crown. The "Falling of the crown from the head of Osiris" was
specially commemorated in Egypt. That crown at different times was represented
in different ways, but in the most famous myth of Osiris it was represented as
a "Melilot garland." Melilot is a species of trefoil; and trefoil in the Pagan
system was one of the emblems of the Trinity. Among the Tractarians at this
day, trefoil is used in the same symbolical sense as it has long been in the
Papacy, from which Puseyism has borrowed it. Thus, in a blasphemous Popish
representation of what is called God the Father (of the fourteenth century), we
find him represented as wearing a crown with three points, each of which is
surmounted with a leaf of white clover (see figure 39).
But long before Tractarianism or Romanism was known, trefoil was a sacred
symbol. The clover leaf was evidently a symbol of high import among the ancient
Persians; for thus we find Herodotus referring to it, in describing the rites
of the Persian Magi--"If any (Persian) intends to offer to a god, he leads the
animal to a consecrated spot. Then, dividing the victim into parts, he boils
the flesh, and lays it upon the most tender herbs, especially TREFOIL. This
done, a magus--without a magus no sacrifice can be performed--sings a sacred
hymn." In Greece, the clover, or trefoil, in some form or other, had also
occupied an important place; for the rod of Mercury, the conductor of souls, to
which such potency was ascribed, was called "Rabdos Tripetelos," or "the three-leaved rod." Among the British Druids the white clover leaf was
held in high esteem as an emblem of their Triune God, and was borrowed from the
same Babylonian source as the rest of their religion. The Melilot, or trefoil
garland, then, with which the head of Osiris was bound, was the crown of the
Trinity--the crown set on his head as the representative of the Eternal--"The
crown of all the earth," in accordance with the voice divine at his birth, "The
Lord of all the earth is born."
Now, as that "Melilot
garland," that crown of universal dominion, fell "from his head" before his
death, so, when he rose to new life, the crown must be again set upon his head,
and his universal dominion solemnly avouched. Hence, therefore, came the solemn
crowning of the statues of the great god, and also the laying of the "chaplet"
on his altar, as a trophy of his recovered "dominion." But if the great god was
crowned, it was needful also that the great goddess should receive a similar
honour. Therefore it was fabled that when Bacchus carried his wife Ariadne to
heaven, in token of the high dignity bestowed upon her, he set a crown upon her
head; and the remembrance of this crowning of the wife of the Babylonian god is
perpetuated to this hour by the well-known figure in the sphere called Ariadnoea corona, or "Ariadne's crown." This is, beyond question, the
real source of the Popish rite of crowning the image of the Virgin.
From the fact that the Melilot
garland occupied so conspicuous a place in the myth of Osiris, and that the
"chaplet" was laid on his altar, and his tomb was "crowned" with flowers, arose
the custom, so prevalent in heathenism, of adorning the altars of the gods with
"chaplets" of all sorts, and with a gay profusion of flowers. Side by side with
this reason for decorating the altars with flowers, there was also another.
When in
"That
fair field
Of Enna, Proserpine gathering flowers,
Herself, a fairer
flower, by gloom Dis,
Was gathered;"
and all the flowers she had
stored up in her lap were lost, the loss thereby sustained by the world not
only drew forth her own tears, but was lamented in the Mysteries as a loss of
no ordinary kind, a loss which not only stripped her of her own spiritual
glory, but blasted the fertility and beauty of the earth itself. *
* OVID, Metamorphoses. Ovid speaks of the tears which Proserpine shed when, on
her robe being torn from top to bottom, all the flowers which she had been
gathering up in it fell to the ground, as showing only the simplicity of a
girlish mind. But this is evidently only for the uninitiated. The lamentations
of Ceres, which were intimately connected with the fall of these flowers, and
the curse upon the ground that immediately followed, indicated something
entirely different. But on that I cannot enter here.
That loss, however, the wife
of Nimrod, under the name of Astarte, or Venus, was believed to have more than
repaired. Therefore, while the sacred "chaplet" of the discrowned god was
placed in triumph anew on his head and on his altars, the recovered flowers
which Proserpine had lost were also laid on these altars along with it, in
token of gratitude to that mother of grace and goodness, for the beauty and
temporal blessings that the earth owed to her interposition and love. In Pagan
Rome especially this was the case. The altars were profusely adorned with
flowers. From that source directly the Papacy has borrowed the custom of
adorning the altar with flowers; and from the Papacy, Puseyism, in Protestant
England, is labouring to introduce the custom among ourselves. But, viewing it
in connection with its source, surely men with the slightest spark of Christian
feeling may well blush to think of such a thing. It is not only opposed to the
genius of the Gospel dispensation, which requires that they who worship God,
who is a Spirit, "worship Him in spirit and in truth"; but it is a direct
symbolising with those who rejoiced in the re-establishment of Paganism
in opposition to the worship of the one living and true God.
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