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The Two Babylons
Alexander Hislop
Chapter VII
Section I
The Two Developments Historically and Prophetically Considered
Hitherto we have considered
the history of the Two Babylons chiefly in detail. Now we are to view them as
organised systems. The idolatrous system of the ancient Babylon assumed
different phases in different periods of its history. In the prophetic
description of the modern Babylon, there is evidently also a development of
different powers at different times. Do these two developments bear any typical
relation to each other? Yes, they do. When we bring the religious history of
the ancient Babylonian Paganism to bear on the prophetic symbols that shadow
forth the organised working of idolatry in Rome, it will be found that it casts
as much light on this view of the subject as on that which has hitherto engaged
our attention. The powers of iniquity at work in the modern Babylon are
specifically described in chapters 12 and 13 of the Revelation; and they are as
follows:--I. The Great Red Dragon; II. The Beast that comes up out of the sea;
III. The Beast that ascendeth out of the earth; and IV. The Image of the Beast.
In all these respects it will be found, on inquiry, that, in regard to
succession and order of development, the Paganism of the Old Testament Babylon
was the exact type of the Paganism of the new.
Section 1 -
The Great Red Dragon
This formidable enemy of the
truth is particularly described in Revelation 12:3--
"And there
appeared another wonder in heaven, a great red dragon."
It is admitted on all hands
that this is the first grand enemy that in Gospel times assaulted the Christian
Church. If the terms in which it is described, and the deeds attributed to it,
are considered, it will be found that there is a great analogy between it and
the first enemy of all, that appeared against the ancient Church of God soon
after the Flood. The term dragon, according to the associations currently
connected with it, is somewhat apt to mislead the reader, by recalling to his
mind the fabulous dragons of the Dark Ages, equipped with wings. At the time
this Divine description was given, the term dragon had no such meaning among
either profane or sacred writers. "The dragon of the Greeks," says Pausanias,
"was only a large snake"; and the context shows that this is the very case
here; for what in the third verse is called a "dragon," in the fourteenth is
simply described as a "serpent." Then the word rendered "Red" properly means
"Fiery"; so that the "Red Dragon" signifies the "Fiery Serpent" or "Serpent of
Fire." Exactly so does it appear to have been in the first form of idolatry,
that, under the patronage of Nimrod, appeared in the ancient world. The
"Serpent of Fire" in the plains of Shinar seems to have been the grand object
of worship. There is the strongest evidence that apostacy among the sons of
Noah began in fire-worship, and that in connection with the symbol of the
serpent.
We have seen already, on
different occasions, that fire was worshipped as the enlightener and the
purifier. Now, it was thus at the very beginning; for Nimrod is singled out by
the voice of antiquity as commencing this fire-worship. The identity of
Nimrod and Ninus has already been proved; and under the name of Ninus, also, he
is represented as originating the same practice. In a fragment of Apollodorus
it is said that "Ninus taught the Assyrians to worship fire." The sun, as the
great source of light and heat, was worshipped under the name of Baal. Now, the
fact that the sun, under that name, was worshipped in the earliest ages of the
world, shows the audacious character of these first beginnings of apostacy. Men
have spoken as if the worship of the sun and of the heavenly bodies was a very
excusable thing, into which the human race might very readily and very
innocently fall. But how stands the fact? According to the primitive language
of mankind, the sun was called "Shemesh"--that is, "the Servant"--that name, no
doubt, being divinely given, to keep the world in mind of the great truth that,
however glorious was the orb of day, it was, after all, the appointed Minister of the bounty of the great unseen Creator to His creatures upon
earth. Men knew this, and yet with the full knowledge of it, they put the
servant in the place of the Master; and called the sun Baal--that is, the
Lord--and worshipped him accordingly. What a meaning, then, in the saying of
Paul, that,
"when they
knew God, they glorified Him not as God";
but
"changed
the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than
the Creator, who is God over all, blessed for ever."
The beginning, then, of
sun-worship, and of the worship of the host of heaven, was a sin against the
light--a presumptuous, heaven-daring sin. As the sun in the heavens was the
great object of worship, so fire was worshipped as its earthly
representative. To this primeval fire-worship Vitruvius alludes when he says
that "men were first formed into states and communities by meeting around
fires." And this is exactly in conformity with what we have already seen in
regard to Phoroneus, whom we have identified with Nimrod, that while he was
said to be the "inventor of fire," he was also regarded as the first that
"gathered mankind into communities."
Along with the sun, as the great fire-god, and, in due time,
identified with him, was the serpent worshipped. (see figure
52 ). "In the mythology of the primitive world," says Owen, "the serpent is
universally the symbol of the sun." In Egypt, one of the commonest symbols of
the sun, or sun-god, is a disc with a serpent around it. The original reason of
that identification seems just to have been that, as the sun was the great
enlightener of the physical world, so the serpent was held to have been
the great enlightener of the spiritual, by giving mankind the "knowledge
of good and evil." This, of course, implies tremendous depravity on the part of
the ring-leaders in such a system, considering the period when it began; but
such appears to have been the real meaning of the identification. At all
events, we have evidence, both Scriptural and profane, for the fact, that the
worship of the serpent began side by side with the worship of fire and the sun.
The inspired statement of Paul seems decisive on the subject. It was, he says,
"when men knew God, but glorified Him not as God," that they
changed the glory of God, not only into an image made like to corruptible man,
but into the likeness of "creeping things"--that is, of serpents (Rom 1:23). With this profane history exactly coincides. Of
profane writers, Sanchuniathon, the Phoenician, who is believed to have lived
about the time of Joshua, says--"Thoth first attributed something of the divine
nature to the serpent and the serpent tribe, in which he was followed by the
Phoenicians and Egyptians. For this animal was esteemed by him to be the most spiritual of all the reptiles, and of a FIERY nature, inasmuch as it
exhibits an incredible celerity, moving by its spirit, without either hands or
feet...Moreover, it is long-lived, and has the quality of RENEWING ITS
YOUTH...as Thoth has laid down in the sacred books; upon which accounts this
animal is introduced in the sacred rites and Mysteries."
Now, Thoth, it will be
remembered, was the counsellor of Thamus, that is, Nimrod. From this statement,
then, we are led to the conclusion that serpent-worship was a part of the
primeval apostacy of Nimrod. The "FIERY NATURE" of the serpent, alluded to in
the above extract, is continually celebrated by the heathen poets. Thus Virgil,
"availing himself," as the author of Pompeii remarks, "of the divine
nature attributed to serpents," describes the sacred serpent that came from the
tomb of Anchises, when his son Aeneas had been sacrificing before it, in such
terms as illustrate at once the language of the Phoenician, and the "Fiery
Serpent" of the passage before us:--
"Scarce had he finished, when, with speckled
pride,
A serpent from the tomb began to glide;
His hugy bulk on seven
high volumes rolled,
Blue was his breadth of back, but streaked with scaly
gold.
Thus, riding on his curls, he seemed to pass
A rolling fire
along, and singe the grass."
It is not wonderful, then, the
fire-worship and serpent-worship should be conjoined. The serpent, also, as
"renewing its youth" every year, was plausibly represented to those who wished
an excuse for idolatry as a meet emblem of the sun, the great regenerator, who
every year regenerates and renews the face of nature, and who, when deified,
was worshipped as the grand Regenerator of the souls of men.
In the chapter under
consideration, the "great fiery serpent" is represented with all the emblems of
royalty. All its heads are encircled with "crowns or diadems"; and so in Egypt,
the serpent of fire, or serpent of the sun, in Greek was called the Basilisk,
that is, the "royal serpent," to identify it with Moloch, which name,
while it recalls the ideas both of fire and blood, properly
signifies "the King." The Basilisk was always, among the Egyptians, and
among many nations besides, regarded as "the very type of majesty and
dominion." As such, its image was worn affixed to the head-dress of the
Egyptian monarchs; and it was not lawful for any one else to wear it. The sun
identified with this serpent was called "P'ouro," which signifies at one "the
Fire" and "the King," and from this very name the epithet "Purros," the
"Fiery," is given to the "Great seven-crowned serpent" of our text. *
* The word Purros
in the text does not exclude the idea of "Red," for the sun-god
was painted red to identify him with Moloch, at once the god of fire and god of blood.--(WILKINSON). The primary leading idea,
however, is that of Fire.
Thus was the Sun, the Great
Fire-god, identified with the Serpent. But he had also a human representative,
and that was Tammuz, for whom the daughters of Israel lamented, in other words
Nimrod. We have already seen the identity of Nimrod and Zoroaster. Now,
Zoroaster was not only the head of the Chaldean Mysteries, but, as all admit,
the head of the fire-worshippers.(see note below) The
title given to Nimrod, as the first of the Babylonian kings, by Berosus,
indicates the same thing. That title is Alorus, that is, "the god of fire." As
Nimrod, "the god of fire," was Molk-Gheber, or, "the Mighty king," inasmuch as
he was the first who was called Moloch, or King, and the first who began
to be "mighty" (Gheber) on the earth, we see at once how it was that the
"passing through the fire to Moloch" originated, and how the god of fire among
the Romans came to be called "Mulkiber." *
* Commonly
spelled Mulciber (OVID, Art. Am.); but the Roman c was hard. From
the epithet "Gheber," the Parsees, or fire-worshippers of India, are still
called "Guebres."
It was only after his death,
however, that he appears to have been deified. Then, retrospectively, he was
worshipped as the child of the Sun, or the Sun incarnate. In his own life-time,
however, he set up no higher pretensions than that of being Bol-Khan, or Priest
of Baal, from which the other name of the Roman fire-god Vulcan is evidently
derived. Everything in the history of Vulcan exactly agrees with that of
Nimrod. Vulcan was "the most ugly and deformed" of all the gods. Nimrod, over
all the world, is represented with the features and complexion of a negro.
Though Vulcan was so ugly, that when he sought a wife, "all the beautiful
goddesses rejected him with horror"; yet "Destiny, the irrevocable, interposed,
and pronounced the decree, by which [Venus] the most beautiful of the
goddesses, was united to the most unsightly of the gods." So, in spite of the
black and Cushite features of Nimrod, he had for his queen Semiramis, the most
beautiful of women. The wife of Vulcan was noted for her infidelities and
licentiousness; the wife of Nimrod was the very same. * Vulcan was the head and
chief of the Cyclops, that is, "the kings of flame." **
* Nimrod, as
universal king, was Khuk-hold, "King of the world." As such, the emblem of his
power was the bull's horns. Hence the origin of the Cuckhold's horns.
** Kuclops, from
Khuk, "king," and Lohb, "flame." The image of the great god was represented
with three eyes--one in the forehead; hence the story of the Cyclops
with the one eye in the forehead.
Nimrod was the head of the
fire-worshippers. Vulcan was the forger of the thunderbolts by which such havoc
was made among the enemies of the gods. Ninus, or Nimrod, in his wars with the
king of Bactria, seems to have carried on the conflict in a similar way. From
Arnobius we learn, that when the Assyrians under Ninus made war against the
Bactrians, the warfare was waged not only by the sword and bodily strength, but
by magic and by means derived from the secret instructions of the Chaldeans.
When it is known that the historical Cyclops are, by the historian Castor,
traced up to the very time of Saturn or Belus, the first king of Babylon, and
when we learn that Jupiter (who was worshipped in the very same character as
Ninus, "the child"), when fighting against the Titans, "received from the
Cyclops aid" by means of "dazzling lightnings and thunders," we may have some
pretty clear idea of the magic arts derived from the Chaldean Mysteries, which
Ninus employed against the Bactrian king. There is evidence that, down to a
late period, the priests of the Chaldean Mysteries knew the composition of the
formidable Greek fire, which burned under water, and the secret of which has
been lost; and there can be little doubt that Nimrod, in erecting his power,
availed himself of such or similar scientific secrets, which he and his
associates alone possessed.
In these, and other respects
yet to be noticed, there is an exact coincidence between Vulcan, the god of
fire of the Romans, and Nimrod, the fire-god of Babylon. In the case of the
classic Vulcan, it is only in his character of the fire-god as a physical agent
that he is popularly represented. But it was in his spiritual aspects, in
cleansing and regenerating the souls of men, that the fire-worship told most
effectually on the world. The power, the popularity, and skill of Nimrod, as
well as the seductive nature of the system itself, enabled him to spread the
delusive doctrine far and wide, as he was represented under the well-known name
of Phaethon, (see note below) as on the point of "setting
the whole world on fire," or (without the poetical metaphor) of involving all
mankind in the guilt of fire-worship. The extraordinary prevalence of the
worship of the fire-god in the early ages of the world, is proved by legends
found over all the earth, and by facts in almost every clime. Thus, in Mexico,
the natives relate, that in primeval times, just after the first age, the world
was burnt up with fire. As their history, like the Egyptian, was written in
Hieroglyphics, it is plain that this must be symbolically understood. In India,
they have a legend to the very same effect, though somewhat varied in its form.
The Brahmins say that, in a very remote period of the past, one of the gods
shone with such insufferable splendour, "inflicting distress on the universe by
his effulgent beams, brighter than a thousand worlds," * that, unless another
more potent god had interposed and cut off his head, the result would have been
most disastrous.
* SKANDA
PURAN, and PADMA PURAN, apud KENNEDY'S Hindoo Mythology, p. 275.
In the myth, this divinity is represented as the fifth head of Brahma; but as
this head is represented as having gained the knowledge that made him so
insufferably proud by perusing the Vedas produced by the other four heads of
Brahma, that shows that he must have been regarded as having a distinct
individuality.
In the Druidic Triads of the
old British Bards, there is distinct reference to the same event. They say that
in primeval times a "tempest of fire arose, which split the earth asunder to
the great deep," from which none escaped but "the select company shut up
together in the enclosure with the strong door," with the great "patriarch
distinguished for his integrity," that is evidently with Shem, the leader of
the faithful--who preserved their "integrity" when so many made shipwreck of
faith and a good conscience. These stories all point to one and the same
period, and they show how powerful had been this form of apostacy. The Papal
purgatory and the fires of St. John's Eve, which we have already considered,
and many other fables or practices still extant, are just so many relics of the
same ancient superstition.
It will be observed, however,
that the Great Red Dragon, or Great Fiery Serpent, is represented as standing
before the Woman with the crown of twelve stars, that is, the true Church of
God, "To devour her child as soon as it should be born." Now, this is in
exact accordance with the character of the Great Head of the system of
fire-worship. Nimrod, as the representative of the devouring fire to which
human victims, and especially children, were offered in sacrifice, was regarded
as the great child-devourer. Though, at his first deification, he was set up
himself as Ninus, or the child, yet, as the first of mankind that was deified,
he was, of course, the actual father of all the Babylonian gods; and,
therefore, in that character he was afterwards universally regarded.
*
* Phaethon,
though the child of the sun, is also called the Father of the gods.
(LACTANTIUS, De Falsa Religione) In Egypt, too, Vulcan was the Father of
the gods. (AMMIANUS MARCELLINUS)
As the Father of the gods, he
was, as we have seen, called Kronos; and every one knows that the classical
story of Kronos was just this, that, "he devoured his sons as soon as they
were born." Such is the analogy between type and antitype. This legend has
a further and deeper meaning; but, as applied to Nimrod, or "The Horned One,"
it just refers to the fact, that, as the representative of Moloch or Baal,
infants were the most acceptable offerings at his altar. We have ample and
melancholy evidence on this subject from the records of antiquity. "The
Phenicians," says Eusebius, "every year sacrificed their beloved and
only-begotten children to Kronos or Saturn, and the Rhodians also often did the
same." Diodorus Siculus states that the Carthaginians, on one occasion, when
besieged by the Sicilians, and sore pressed, in order to rectify, as they
supposed, their error in having somewhat departed from the ancient custom of
Carthage, in this respect, hastily "chose out two hundred of the noblest of
their children, and publicly sacrificed them" to this god. There is reason to
believe that the same practice obtained in our own land in the times of the
Druids. We know that they offered human sacrifices to their bloody gods. We
have evidence that they made "their children pass through the fire to
Moloch," and that makes it highly probable that they also offered them in
sacrifice; for, from Jeremiah 32:35, compared with Jeremiah 19:5, we find that
these two things were parts of one and the same system. The god whom the Druids
worshipped was Baal, as the blazing Baal-fires show, and the last-cited passage
proves that children were offered in sacrifice to Baal. When "the fruit
of the body" was thus offered, it was "for the sin of the soul." And it was a
principle of the Mosaic law, a principle no doubt derived from the patriarchal
faith, that the priest must partake of whatever was offered as a sin-offering
(Num 18:9,10). Hence, the priests of Nimrod or Baal were necessarily required
to eat of the human sacrifices; and thus it has come to pass that "Cahna-Bal,"
* the "Priest of Baal," is the established word in our own tongue for a
devourer of human flesh. **
* The word
Cahna is the emphatic form of Cahn. Cahn is "a priest," Cahna is
"the priest."
** From the
historian Castor (in Armenian translation of EUSEBIUS) we learn that it was
under Bel, or Belus, that is Baal, that the Cyclops lived; and the Scholiast on
Aeschylus states that these Cyclops were the brethren of Kronos, who was also
Bel or Bal, as we have elsewhere seen. The eye in their forehead shows that
originally this name was a name of the great god; for that eye in India and
Greece is found the characteristic of the supreme divinity. The Cyclops, then,
had been representatives of that God--in other words, priests, and priests of
Bel or Bal. Now, we find that the Cyclops were well-known as cannibals, Referre ritus Cyclopum, "to bring back the rites of the Cyclops,"
meaning to revive the practice of eating human flesh. (OVID, Metam.)
Now, the ancient traditions
relate that the apostates who joined in the rebellion of Nimrod made war upon
the faithful among the sons of Noah. Power and numbers were on the side of the
fire-worshippers. But on the side of Shem and the faithful was the mighty power
of God's Spirit. Therefore many were convinced of their sin, arrested in their
evil career; and victory, as we have already seen, declared for the saints. The
power of Nimrod came to an end, * and with that, for a time, the worship of the
sun, and the fiery serpent associated with it.
* The wars
of the giants against heaven, referred to in ancient heathen
writers, had primary reference to this war against the saints; for men
cannot make war upon God except by attacking the people of God. The ancient
writer Eupolemus, as quoted by Eusebius (Praeparatio Evang.), states,
that the builders of the tower of Babel were these giants; which
statement amounts nearly to the same thing as the conclusion to which we have
already come, for we have seen that the "mighty ones" of Nimrod were "the
giants" of antiquity. Epiphanius records that Nimrod was a ringleader among
these giants, and that "conspiracy, sedition, and tyranny were carried on under
him." From the very necessity of the case, the faithful must have suffered
most, as being most opposed to his ambitious and sacrilegious schemes. That
Nimrod's reign terminated in some very signal catastrophe, we have seen
abundant reason already to conclude. The following statement of Syncellus
confirms the conclusions to which we have already come as to the nature of that
catastrophe; referring to the arresting of the tower-building scheme, Syncellus
(Chronographia) proceeds thus: "But Nimrod would still obstinately stay
(when most of the other tower-builders were dispersed), and reside upon the
spot; nor could he be withdrawn from the tower, still having the command over
no contemptible body of men. Upon this, we are informed, that the tower, being
beat upon by violent winds, gave way, and by the just judgment of God, crushed
him to pieces." Though this could not be literally true, for the tower stood
for many ages, yet there is a considerable amount of tradition to the effect
that the tower in which Nimrod gloried was overthrown by wind, which
gives reason to suspect that this story, when properly understood, had a
real meaning in it. Take it figuratively, and remembering that the same word
which signifies the wind signifies also the Spirit of God, it
becomes highly probable that the meaning is, that his lofty and ambitious
scheme, by which, in Scriptural language, he was seeking to "mount up to
heaven," and "set his nest among the stars," was overthrown for a time by the
Spirit of God, as we have already concluded, and that, in that overthrow he
himself perished.
The case was exactly as stated
here in regard to the antitype (Rev 12:9): "The great dragon," or fiery
serpent, was "cast out of heaven to the earth, and his angels were cast out
with him"; that is, the Head of the fire-worship, and all his associates
and underlings, were cast down from the power and glory to which they had been
raised. Then was the time when the whole gods of the classic Pantheon of Greece
were fain to flee and hide themselves from the wrath of their adversaries. Then
it was, that, in India, Indra, the king of the gods, Surya, the god of the sun,
Agni, the god of fire, and all the rabble rout of the Hindu Olympus, were
driven from heaven, wandered over the earth, or hid themselves, in forests,
disconsolate, and ready to "perish of hunger." Then it was that Phaethon, while
driving the chariot of the sun, when on the point of setting the world on fire,
was smitten by the Supreme God, and cast headlong to the earth, while his
sisters, the daughters of the sun, inconsolably lamented him, as, "the women
wept for Tammuz." Then it was, as the reader must be prepared to see, that
Vulcan, or Molk-Gheber, the classic "god of fire," was so ignominiously hurled
down from heaven, as he himself relates in Homer, speaking of the wrath of the
King of Heaven, which in this instance must mean God Most High:--
"I
felt his matchless might,
Hurled headlong downwards from the ethereal
height;
Tossed all the day in rapid circles round,
Nor, till the sun
descended, touched the ground.
Breathless I fell, in giddy motion lost.
The Sinthians raised me on the Lemnian coast."
The lines, in which Milton
refers to this same downfall, though he gives it another application, still
more beautifully describe the greatness of the overthrow:--
"In
Ausonian land
Men called him Mulciber; and how he fell
From heaven,
they fabled. Thrown by angry Jove
Sheer o'er the crystal battlements; from
morn
To noon he fell, from noon to dewy eve,
A summer's day; and,
with the setting sun,
Dropped from the zenith, like a falling star.
On Lemnos, the Aegean isle."
Paradise Lost
These words very strikingly
show the tremendous fall of Molk-Gheber, or Nimrod, "the Mighty King," when
"suddenly he was cast down from the height of his power, and was deprived at
once of his kingdom and his life." *
* The Greek
poets speak of two downfalls of Vulcan. In the one case he was cast down by
Jupiter, in the other by Juno. When Jupiter cast him down, it was for
rebellion; when Juno did so, one of the reasons specially singled out for doing
so was his "malformation," that is, his ugliness. (HOMER'S Hymn to
Apollo) How exactly does this agree with the story of Nimrod: First he was
personally cast down, when, by Divine authority, he was slain. Then he was cast
down, in effigy, by Juno, when his image was degraded from the arms of the
Queen of Heaven, to make way for the fairer child.
Now, to this overthrow there
is very manifest allusion in the prophetic apostrophe of Isaiah to the king of
Babylon, exulting over his approaching downfall: "How art thou fallen from
heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning"! The Babylonian king pretended to be
a representative of Nimrod or Phaethon; and the prophet, in these words,
informs him, that, as certainly as the god in whom he gloried had been cast
down from his high estate, so certainly should he. In the classic story,
Phaethon is said to have been consumed with lightning (and, as we shall see
by-and-by, Aesculapius also died the same death); but the lightning is a mere
metaphor for the wrath of God, under which his life and his kingdom had
come to an end. When the history is examined, and the figure stripped off, it
turns out, as we have already seen, that he was judicially slain with the
sword. *
* Though
Orpheus was commonly represented as having been torn in pieces, he too
was fabled to have been killed by lightning. (PAUSANIAS, Boeotica) When
Zoroaster died, he also is said in the myth to have perished by lightning
(SUIDAS); and therefore, in accordance with that myth, he is represented as
charging his countrymen to preserve not his body, but his "ashes." The
death by lightning, however, is evidently a mere figure.
Such is the language of the
prophecy, and so exactly does it correspond with the character, and deeds, and
fate of the ancient type. How does it suit the antitype? Could the power of
Pagan Imperial Rome--that power that first persecuted the Church of Christ,
that stood by its soldiers around the tomb of the Son of God Himself, to devour
Him, if it had been possible, when He should be brought forth, as the first-begotten from the dead, * to rule all nations--be represented by a
"Fiery Serpent"?
* The birth
of the Man-child, as given above, is different from that usually given: but let
the reader consider if the view which I have taken does not meet all the
requirements of the case. I think there will be but few who will assent to the
opinion of Mr. Elliot, which in substance amounts to this, that the Man-child
was Constantine the Great, and that when Christianity, in his person sat down
on the throne of Imperial Rome, that was the fulfilment of the saying, that the
child brought forth by the woman, amid such pangs of travail, was "caught up to
God and His throne." When Constantine came to the empire, the Church indeed, as
foretold in Daniel 11:34, "was holpen with a little help"; but that was all.
The Christianity of Constantine was but of a very doubtful kind, the Pagans
seeing nothing in it to hinder but that when he died, he should be enrolled
among their gods. (EUTROPIUS) But even though it had been better, the
description of the woman's child is far too high for Constantine, or any
Christian emperor that succeeded him on the imperial throne. "The Man-child,
born to rule all nations with a rod of iron," is unequivocally Christ (see
Psalms 2:9; Rev 19:15). True believers, as one with Him in a subordinate sense,
share in that honour (Rev 2:27); but to Christ alone, properly, does
that prerogative belong; and I think it must be evident that it is His birth that is here referred to. But those who have contended for this view have
done injustice to their cause by representing this passage as referring to His literal birth in Bethlehem.
When Christ was
born in Bethlehem, no doubt Herod endeavoured to cut Him off, and Herod was a
subject of the Roman Empire. But it was not from any respect to Caesar that he
did so, but simply from fear of danger to his own dignity as King of Judea. So
little did Caesar sympathise with the slaughter of the children of Bethlehem,
that it is recorded that Augustus, on hearing of it, remarked that it was
"better to be Herod's hog than to be his child." (MACROBIUS, Saturnalia)
Then, even if it were admitted that Herod's bloody attempt to cut off the
infant Saviour was symbolised by the Roman dragon, "standing ready to devour
the child as soon as it should be born," where was there anything that could
correspond to the statement that the child, to save it from that dragon, "was
caught up to God and His Throne"? The flight of Joseph and Mary with the Child
into Egypt could never answer to such language. Moreover, it is worthy of
special note, that when the Lord Jesus was born in Bethlehem, He was born, in a
very important sense only as "King of the Jews." "Where is He
that is born King of the Jews?" was the inquiry of the wise men that came from
the East to seek Him. All His life long, He appeared in no other character; and
when He died, the inscription on His cross ran in these terms: "This is the
King of the Jews." Now, this was no accidental thing. Paul tells us (Rom 15:8)
that "Jesus Christ was a minister of the circumcision for the truth of
God, to confirm the promises made unto the fathers." Our Lord Himself plainly
declared the same thing. "I am not sent," said He to the Syrophoenician woman,
"save to the lost sheep of the house of Israel"; and, in sending out His
disciples during His personal ministry, this was the charge which He gave them:
"Go not in the way of the Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans enter
ye not." It was only when He was "begotten from the dead," and "declared
to be the Son of God with power," by His victory over the grave, that He was
revealed as "the Man-child, born to rule all nations." Then said He to His
disciples, when He had risen, and was about to ascend on high: "All power is
given unto Me in heaven and in earth: go ye therefore, and teach allnations." To this glorious "birth" from the tomb, and to the
birth-pangs of His Church that preceded it, our Lord Himself made distinct
allusion on the night before He was betrayed (John 16:20-22). "Verily, verily,
I say unto you, That ye shall weep and lament, but the world shall rejoice; and
ye shall be sorrowful, but your sorrow shall be turned into joy. A woman
when she is in travail hath sorrow, because her hour is come; but as soon
as she is delivered of the child, she remembereth no more the anguish, for joy
that a MAN is born into the world. And ye now therefore have sorrow; but
I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice." Here the grief of the
apostles, and, of course, all the true Church that sympathised with them during
the hour and power of darkness, is compared to the pangs of a travailing woman;
and their joy, when the Saviour should see them again after His resurrection,
to the joy of a mother when safely delivered of a Man-child. Can there
be a doubt, then, what the symbol before us means, when the woman is
represented as travailing in pain to be delivered of a "Man-child, that was to
rule all nations," and when it is said that that "Man-child was caught
up to God and His Throne"?
Nothing could more lucidly
show it forth. Among the lords many, and the gods many, worshipped in the
imperial city, the two grand objects of worship were the "Eternal Fire," kept
perpetually burning in the temple of Vesta, and the sacred Epidaurian Serpent.
In Pagan Rome, this fire-worship and serpent-worship were sometimes separate,
sometimes conjoined; but both occupied a pre-eminent place in Roman esteem. The
fire of Vesta was regarded as one of the grand safeguards of the empire. It was
pretended to have been brought from Troy by Aeneas, who had it confided to his
care by the shade of Hector, and was kept with the most jealous care by the
Vestal virgins, who, for their charge of it, were honoured with the highest
honours. The temple where it was kept, says Augustine, "was the most sacred and
most reverenced of all the temples of Rome." The fire that was so jealously
guarded in that temple, and on which so much was believed to depend, was
regarded in the very same light as by the old Babylonian fire-worshippers. It
was looked upon as the purifier, and in April every year, at the Palilia, or
feast of Pales, both men and cattle, for this purpose, were made to pass
through the fire. The Epidaurian snake, that the Romans worshipped along with
the fire, was looked on as the divine representation of Aesculapius, the child
of the Sun. Aesculapius, whom that sacred snake represented, was evidently,
just another name for the great Babylonian god. His fate was exactly the same
as that of Phaethon. He was said to have been smitten with lightning for
raising the dead. It is evident that this could never have been the case in a
physical sense, nor could it easily have been believed to be so. But view it in
a spiritual sense, and then the statement is just this, that he was believed to
raise men who were dead in trespasses and sins to newness of life. Now, this
was exactly what Phaethon was pretending to do, when he was smitten for setting
the world on fire. In the Babylonian system there was a symbolical death, that
all the initiated had to pass through, before they got the new life which was
implied in regeneration, and that just to declare that they had passed from
death unto life. As the passing through the fire was both a purgation from sin
and the means of regeneration, so it was also for raising the dead that
Phaethon was smitten. Then, as Aesculapius was the child of the Sun, so was
Phaethon. *
* The birth
of Aesculapius in the myth was just the same as that of Bacchus. His mother was
consumed by lightning, and the infant was rescued from the lightning that
consumed her, as Bacchus was snatched from the flames that burnt up his
mother.--LEMPRIERE
To symbolise this
relationship, the head of the image of Aesculapius was generally encircled with
rays. The Pope thus encircles the heads of the pretended images of Christ; but
the real source of these irradiations is patent to all acquainted either with
the literature or the art of Rome. Thus speaks Virgil of Latinus:--
"And
now, in pomp, the peaceful kings appear,
Four steeds the chariot of
Latinus bear,
Twelve golden beams around his temples play,
To mark
his lineage from the god of day."
The "golden beams" around the
head of Aesculapius were intended to mark the same, to point him out as the
child of the Sun, or the Sun incarnate. The "golden beams" around the heads of
pictures and images called by the name of Christ, were intended to show the
Pagans that they might safely worship them, as the images of their well-known
divinities, though called by a different name. Now Aesculapius, in a time of
deadly pestilence, had been invited from Epidaurus to Rome. The god, under the
form of a larger serpent, entered the ship that was sent to convey him to Rome,
and having safely arrived in the Tiber, was solemnly inaugurated as the
guardian god of the Romans. From that time forth, in private as well as in
public, the worship of the Epidaurian snake, the serpent that represented the
Sun-divinity incarnate, in other words, the "Serpent of Fire," became nearly
universal. In almost every house the sacred serpent, which was a harmless sort,
was to be found. "These serpents nestled about the domestic altars," says the
author of Pompeii, "and came out, like dogs or cats, to be patted by the
visitors, and beg for something to eat. Nay, at table, if we may build upon
insulated passages, they crept about the cups of the guests, and, in hot
weather, ladies would use them as live boas, and twist them round their necks
for the sake of coolness...These sacred animals made war on the rats and mice,
and thus kept down one species of vermin; but as they bore a charmed life, and
no one laid violent hands on them, they multiplied so fast, that, like the
monkeys of Benares, they became an intolerable nuisance. The frequent fires at
Rome were the only things that kept them under." The reader will find, in the
accompanying woodcut (see figure 53), a representation of
Roman fire-worship and serpent-worship at once separate and conjoined. The
reason of the double representation of the god I cannot here enter into, but it
must be evident, from the words of Virgil already quoted, that the figures
having their heads encircled with rays, represent the fire-god, or
Sun-divinity; and what is worthy of special note is, that these fire-gods are black, * the colour thereby identifying them with the Ethiopian or black Phaethon; while, as the author of Pompeii himself admits,
these same black fire-gods are represented by two huge serpents.
* "All the
faces in his (MAZOIS') engraving are quite black." (Pompeii) In India,
the infant Crishna (emphatically the black god), in the arms of the
goddess Devaki, is represented with the woolly hair and marked features of the
Negro or African race. (See figure 54)

Figure
53
Now, if this worship of the
sacred serpent of the Sun, the great fire-god, was so universal in Rome, what
symbol could more graphically portray the idolatrous power of Pagan Imperial
Rome than the "Great Fiery Serpent"? No doubt it was to set forth this very
thing that the Imperial standard itself--the standard of the Pagan Emperor of
Rome, as Pontifex Maximus, Head of the great system of fire-worship and
serpent-worship--was a serpent elevated on a lofty pole, and so coloured, as to
exhibit it as a recognised symbol of fire-worship. (see note
below)
As Christianity spread in the Roman Empire, the powers of
light and darkness came into collision (Rev 12:7,8): "Michael and his angels
fought against the dragon; and the dragon fought and his angels, and prevailed
not; neither was their place found any more in heaven. And the great dragon was
cast out;...he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with
him." The "great serpent of fire" was cast out, when, by the decree of
Gratian, Paganism throughout the Roman empire was abolished--when the fires of
Vesta were extinguished, and the revenues of the Vestal virgins were
confiscated--when the Roman Emperor (who though for more than a century and a
half a professor of Christianity, had been "Pontifex Maximus," the very head of
the idolatry of Rome, and as such, on high occasions, appearing invested with
all the idolatrous insignia of Paganism), through force of conscience abolished
his own office. While Nimrod was personally and literally slain by the
sword, it was through the sword of the Spirit that Shem overcame the system of fire-worship, and so bowed the hearts of men, as to cause it
for a time to be utterly extinguished. In like manner did the Dragon of fire,
in the Roman Empire, receive a deadly wound from a sword, and that the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God. There is thus far an
exact analogy between the type and the antitype.
But not only is there this
analogy. It turns out, when the records of history are searched to the bottom,
that when the head of the Pagan idolatry of Rome was slain with the sword by
the extinction of the office of Pontifex Maximus, the last Roman Pontifex
Maximus was the ACTUAL, LEGITIMATE, SOLE REPRESENTATIVE OF NIMROD and his
idolatrous system then existing. To make this clear, a brief glance at the
Roman history is necessary. In common with all the earth, Rome at a very early
prehistoric period, had drunk deep of Babylon's "golden cup." But above and
beyond all other nations, it had had a connection with the idolatry of Babylon
that put it in a position peculiar and alone. Long before the days of Romulus,
a representative of the Babylonian Messiah, called by his name, had fixed his
temple as a god, and his palace as a king, on one of those very heights which
came to be included within the walls of that city which Remus and his brother
were destined to found. On the Capitoline hill, so famed in after-days as the
great high place of Roman worship, Saturnia, or the city of Saturn, the great
Chaldean god, had in the days of dim and distant antiquity been erected. Some
revolution had then taken place--the graven images of Babylon had been
abolished--the erecting of any idol had been sternly prohibited, * and when the
twin founders of the now world-renowned city reared its humble walls, the city
and the palace of their Babylonian predecessor had long lain in ruins.
* PLUTARCH
(in Hist. Numoe) states, that Numa forbade the making of images, and
that for 170 years after the founding of Rome, no images were allowed in the
Roman temples.
The ruined state of this
sacred city, even in the remote age of Evander, is alluded to by Virgil.
Referring to the time when Aeneas is said to have visited that ancient Italian
king, thus he speaks:--
"Then
saw two heaps of ruins; once they stood
Two stately towns on either
side the flood;
Saturnia and Janicula's remains;
And either
place the founder's name retains."
The deadly wound, however,
thus given to the Chaldean system, was destined to be healed. A colony of
Etruscans, earnestly attached to the Chaldean idolatry, had migrated, some say
from Asia Minor, others from Greece, and settled in the immediate neighbourhood
of Rome. They were ultimately incorporated in the Roman state, but long before
this political union took place they exercised the most powerful influence on
the religion of the Romans. From the very first their skill in augury,
soothsaying, and all science, real or pretended, that the augurs or soothsayers
monopolised, made the Romans look up to them with respect. It is admitted on
all hands that the Romans derived their knowledge of augury, which occupied so
prominent a place in every public transaction in which they engaged, chiefly
from the Tuscans, that is, the people of Etruria, and at first none but natives
of that country were permitted to exercise the office of a Haruspex, which had
respect to all the rites essentially involved in sacrifice. Wars and disputes
arose between Rome and the Etruscans; but still the highest of the noble youths
of Rome were sent to Etruria to be instructed in the sacred science which
flourished there. The consequence was, that under the influence of men whose
minds were moulded by those who clung to the ancient idol-worship, the Romans
were brought back again to much of that idolatry which they had formerly
repudiated and cast off. Though Numa, therefore, in setting up his religious
system, so far deferred to the prevailing feeling of his day and forbade
image-worship, yet in consequence of the alliance subsisting between Rome and
Etruria in sacred things, matters were put in train for the ultimate subversion
of that prohibition. The college of Pontiffs, of which he laid the foundation,
in process of time came to be substantially an Etruscan college, and the
Sovereign Pontiff that presided over that college, and that controlled all the
public and private religious rites of the Roman people in all essential
respects, became in spirit and in practice an Etruscan Pontiff.
Still the Sovereign Pontiff of
Rome, even after the Etruscan idolatry was absorbed into the Roman system, was
only an offshoot from the grand original Babylonian system. He was a devoted
worshipper of the Babylonian god; but he was not the legitimate representative
of that God. The true legitimate Babylonian Pontiff had his seat beyond the
bounds of the Roman empire. That seat, after the death of Belshazzar, and the
expulsion of the Chaldean priesthood from Babylon by the Medo-Persian kings,
was at Pergamos, where afterwards was one of the seven churches of Asia. *
There, in consequence, for many centuries was "Satan's seat" (Rev 2:13).
There, under favour of the deified ** kings of Pergamos, was his favourite
abode, there was the worship of Aesculapius, under the form of the serpent,
celebrated with frantic orgies and excesses, that elsewhere were kept under
some measure of restraint.
* BARKER and
AINSWORTH'S Lares and Penates of Cilicia. Barker says, "The defeated
Chaldeans fled to Asia Minor, and fixed their central college at Pergamos."
Phrygia, that was so remarkable for the worship of Cybele and Atys, formed part
of the Kingdom of Pergamos. Mysia also was another, and the Mysians, in the Paschal Chronicle, are said to be descended from Nimrod. The words are,
"Nebrod, the huntsman and giant--from whence came the Mysians." Lydia, also,
from which Livy and Herodotus say the Etrurians came, formed part of the same
kingdom. For the fact that Mysia, Lydia, and Phrygia were constituent parts of
the kingdom of Pergamos, see SMITH's Classical Dictionary.
** The kings of
Pergamos, in whose dominions the Chaldean Magi found an asylum, were evidently
by them, and by the general voice of Paganism that sympathised with them, put
into the vacant place which Belshazzar and his predecessors had occupied. They
were hailed as the representatives of the old Babylonian god. This is evident
from the statements of Pausanias. First, he quotes the following words from the
oracle of a prophetess called Phaennis, in reference to the Gauls: "But
divinity will still more seriously afflict those that dwell near the sea.
However, in a short time after, Jupiter will send them a defender, the beloved
son of a Jove-nourished bull, who will bring destruction on all the Gauls."
Then on this he comments as follows: "Phaennis, in this oracle, means by the
son of a bull, Attalus, king of Pergamos, whom the oracle of Apollo called
Taurokeron," or bull-horned. This title given by the Delphian god, proves that
Attalus, in whose dominions the Magi had their seat, had been set up and
recognised in the very character of Bacchus, the Head of the Magi. Thus the
vacant seat of Belshazzar was filled, and the broken chain of the Chaldean
succession renewed.
At first, the Roman Pontiff
had no immediate connection with Pergamos and the hierarchy there; yet, in
course of time, the Pontificate of Rome and the Pontificate of Pergamos came to
be identified. Pergamos itself became part and parcel of the Roman empire, when
Attalus III, the last of its kings, at his death, left by will all his
dominions to the Roman people, BC 133. For some time after the kingdom of
Pergamos was merged in the Roman dominions, there was no one who could set
himself openly and advisedly to lay claim to all the dignity inherent in the
old title of the kings of Pergamos. The original powers even of the Roman
Pontiffs seem to have been by that time abridged, but when Julius Caesar, who
had previously been elected Pontifex Maximus, became also, as Emperor, the
supreme civil ruler of the Romans, then, as head of the Roman state, and head
of the Roman religion, all the powers and functions of the true legitimate
Babylonian Pontiff were supremely vested in him, and he found himself in a
position to assert these powers. Then he seems to have laid claim to the divine
dignity of Attalus, as well as the kingdom that Attalus had bequeathed to the
Romans, as centering in himself; for his well-known watchword, "Venus
Genetrix," which meant that Venus was the mother of the Julian race,
appears to have been intended to make him "The Son" of the great goddess, even
as the "Bull-horned" Attalus had been regarded. *
* The
deification of the emperors that continued in succession from the days of Divus
Julius, or the "Deified Julius," can be traced to no cause so likely as their
representing the "Bull-horned" Attalus both as Pontiff and Sovereign.
Then, on certain occasions, in
the exercise of his high pontifical office, he appeared of course in all the
pomp of the Babylonian costume, as Belshazzar himself might have done, in robes
of scarlet, with the crosier of Nimrod in his hand, wearing the mitre of Dagon
and bearing the keys of Janus and Cybele. *
* That the key was one of the symbols used in the Mysteries, the reader will find
on consulting TAYLOR'S Note on Orphic Hymn to Pluto, where that divinity
is spoken of as "keeper of the keys." Now the Pontifex, as "Hierophant," was
"arrayed in the habit and adorned with the symbols of the great Creator of the
world, of whom in these Mysteries he was supposed to be the substitute."
(MAURICE'S Antiquities) The Primeval or Creative god was mystically
represented as Androgyne, as combining in his own person both sexes (Ibid.),
being therefore both Janus and Cybele at the same time. In opening up the
Mysteries, therefore, of this mysterious divinity, it was natural that the
Pontifex should bear the key of both these divinities. Janus himself, however,
as well as Pluto, was often represented with more than one key.
Thus did matter continue, as
already stated, even under so-called Christian emperors; who, as a salve to
their consciences, appointed a heathen as their substitute in the performance
of the more directly idolatrous functions of the pontificate (that
substitute, however, acting in their name and by their authority), until the
reign of Gratian, who, as shown by Gibbon, was the first that refused to be
arrayed in the idolatrous pontifical attire, or to act as Pontifex. Now, from
all this it is evident that, when Paganism in the Roman empire was abolished,
when the office of Pontifex Maximus was suppressed, and all the dignitaries of
paganism were cast down from their seats of influence and of power, which they
had still been allowed in some measure to retain, that was not merely the
casting down of the Fiery Dragon of Rome, but the casting down of the Fiery
Dragon of Babylon. It was just the enacting over again, in a symbolical sense,
upon the true and sole legitimate successor of Nimrod, what had taken place
upon himself, when the greatness of his downfall gave rise to the exclamation,
"How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning"!
Zoroaster, the Head of the Fire-Worshippers
That Zoroaster was head of the
fire-worshippers, the following, among other evidence, may prove. Not to
mention that the name Zoroaster is almost a synonym for a fire-worshipper, the
testimony of Plutarch is of weight: "Plutarch acknowledges that Zoroaster among
the Chaldeans instituted the Magi, in imitation of whom the Persians
also had their (Magi). * The Arabian History also relates that Zaradussit, or
Zerdusht, did not for the first time institute, but (only) reform the religion
of the Persians and Magi, who had been divided into many sects."
* The great
antiquity of the institution of the Magi is proved from the statement of
Aristotle already referred to, as preserved in Theopompus, which makes them to
have been "more ancient than the Egyptians," whose antiquity is well known.
(Theopompi Fragmenta in MULLER).
The testimony of Agathias is
to the same effect. He gives it as his opinion that the worship of fire came
from the Chaldeans to the Persians. That the Magi among the Persians were the
guardians of "the sacred and eternal fire" may be assumed from Curtius, who
says that fire was carried before them "on silver altars"; from the statement
of Strabo (Geograph.), that "the Magi kept upon the altar a quantity of
ashes and an immortal fire," and of Herodotus, that "without them, no sacrifice
could be offered." The fire-worship was an essential part of the system of the
Persian Magi (WILSON, Parsee Religion). This fire-worship the Persian
Magi did not pretend to have invented; but their popular story carried the
origin of it up to the days of Hoshang, the father of Tahmurs, who founded
Babylon (WILSON)--i.e., the time of Nimrod. In confirmation of this, we have
seen that a fragment of Apollodorus makes Ninus the head of the
fire-worshipper, Layard, quoting this fragment, supposes Ninus to be different
from Zoroaster (Nineveh and its Remains); but it can be proved, that
though many others bore the name of Zoroaster, the lines of evidence all
converge, so as to demonstrate that Ninus and Nimrod and Zoroaster were one.
The legends of Zoroaster show that he was known not only as a Magus, but as a
Warrior (ARNOBIUS). Plato says that Eros Armenius (whom CLERICUS, De
Chaldaeis, states to have been the same as the fourth Zoroaster) died and
rose again after ten days, having been killed in battle; and that what he
pretended to have learned in Hades, he communicated to men in his new life
(PLATO, De Republica). We have seen the death of Nimrod, the original
Zoroaster, was not that of a warrior slain in battle; but yet this legend of
the warrior Zoroaster is entirely in favour of the supposition that the
original Zoroaster, the original Head of the Magi, was not a priest merely, but
a warrior-king. Everywhere are the Zoroastrians, or fire-worshippers, called
Guebres or Gabrs. Now, Genesis 10:8 proves that Nimrod was the first of
the "Gabrs."
As Zoroaster was head of the
fire-worshippers, so Tammuz was evidently the same. We have seen evidence
already that sufficiently proves the identity of Tammuz and Nimrod; but a few
words may still more decisively prove it, and cast further light on the
primitive fire-worship. 1. In the first place, Tammuz and Adonis are proved to
be the same divinity. Jerome, who lived in Palestine when the rites of Tammuz
were observed, up to the very time when he wrote, expressly identifies Tammuz
and Adonis, in his Commentary on Ezekiel, where the Jewish women are
represented as weeping for Tammuz; and the testimony of Jerome on this subject
is universally admitted. Then the mode in which the rites of Tammuz or Adonis
were celebrated in Syria was essentially the same as the rites of Osiris. The
statement of Lucian (De Dea Syria) strikingly shows this, and Bunsen
distinctly admits it. The identity of Osiris and Nimrod has been largely proved
in the body of this work. When, therefore, Tammuz or Adonis is identified with
Osiris, the identification of Tammuz with Nimrod follows of course. And then
this entirely agrees with the language of Bion, in his Lament for
Adonis, where he represents Venus as going in a frenzy of grief, like a
Bacchant, after the death of Adonis, through the woods and valleys, and
"calling upon her Assyrian husband." It equally agrees with the statement of
Maimonides, that when Tammuz was put to death, the grand scene of weeping for
that death was in the temple of Babylon. 2. Now, if Tammuz was Nimrod, the
examination of the meaning of the name confirms the connection of Nimrod with
the first fire-worship. After what has already been advanced, there needs no
argument to show that, as the Chaldeans were the first who introduced
the name and power of kings (SYNCELLUS), and as Nimrod was unquestionably the
first of these kings, and the first, consequently, that bore the title of
Moloch, or king, so it was in honour of him that the "children were made to
pass through the fire to Moloch." But the intention of that passing through the
fire was undoubtedly to purify. The name Tammuz has evidently reference to
this, for it signifies "to perfect," that is, "to purify" * "by fire"; and if
Nimrod was, as the Paschal Chronicle, and the general voice of
antiquity, represent him to have been, the originator of fire-worship, this
name very exactly expresses his character in that respect.
* From tam, "to perfect," and muz, "to burn." To be "pure in heart" in
Scripture is just the same as to be "perfect in heart." The well-known name
Deucalion, as connected with the flood, seems to be a correlative term of the
water-worshippers. Dukh-kaleh signifies "to purify by washing," from Dikh, "to
wash" (CLAVIS STOCKII), and Khaleh, "to complete," or "perfect." The noun from
the latter verb, found in 2 Chronicles 4:21, shows that the root means "to
purify," "perfect gold" being in the Septuagint justly rendered
"pure gold." There is a name sometimes applied to the king of the gods
that has some bearing on this subject. That name is "Akmon." What is the
meaning of it? It is evidently just the Chaldee form of the Hebrew Khmn, "the
burner," which becomes Akmon in the same way as the Hebrew Dem, "blood," in
Chaldee becomes "Adem." Hesychius says that Akmon is Kronos, sub voce "Akmon."
In Virgil (Aeneid) we find this name compounded so as to be an exact
synonym for Tammuz, Pyracmon being the name of one of the three famous Cyclops
whom the poet introduces. We have seen that the original Cyclops were Kronos
and his brethren, and deriving the name from "Pur," the Chaldee form of Bur,
"to purify," and "Akmon," it just signifies "The purifying burner."
It is evident, however, from
the Zoroastrian verse, elsewhere quoted, that fire itself was worshipped as
Tammuz, for it is called the "Father that perfected all things." In one
respect this represented fire as the Creative god; but in another, there can be
no doubt that it had reference to the "perfecting" of men by "purifying" them.
And especially it perfected those whom it consumed. This was the very idea
that, from time immemorial until very recently, led so many widows in India to
immolate themselves on the funeral piles of their husbands, the woman who thus
burned herself being counted blessed, because she became Suttee *--i.e.,
"Pure by burning."
* MOOR'S Pantheon, "Siva." The epithet for a woman that burns herself is spelled "Sati," but is pronounced "Suttee," as above.
And this also, no doubt,
reconciled the parents who actually sacrificed their children to Moloch, to the
cruel sacrifice, the belief being cherished that the fire that consumed them
also "perfected" them, and made them meet for eternal happiness. As both
the passing through the fire, and the burning in the fire, were
essential rites in the worship of Moloch or Nimrod, this is an argument that
Nimrod was Tammuz. As the priest and representative of the perfecting or
purifying fire, it was he that carried on the work of perfecting or purifying
by fire, and so he was called by its name.
When we turn to the legends of
India, we find evidence to the very same effect as that which we have seen with
regard to Zoroaster and Tammuz as head of the fire-worshippers. The fifth head
of Brahma, that was cut off for inflicting distress on the three worlds, by the
"effulgence of its dazzling beams," referred to in the text of this work,
identifies itself with Nimrod. The fact that that fifth head was represented as
having read the Vedas, or sacred books produced by the other four heads, shows,
I think, a succession. *
* The Indian
Vedas that now exist do not seem to be of very great antiquity as written
documents; but the legend goes much further back than anything that took place
in India. The antiquity of writing seems to be very great, but whether or not
there was any written religious document in Nimrod's day, a Veda there must
have been; for what is the meaning of the word "Veda"? It is evidently just the
same as the Anglo-Saxon Edda with the digamma prefixed, and both alike
evidently come from "Ed" a "Testimony," a "Religious Record," or "confession of
Faith." Such a "Record" or "Confession," either "oral" or "written," must have
existed from the beginning.
Now, coming down from Noah,
what would that succession be? We have evidence from Berosus, that, in the days
of Belus--that is, Nimrod--the custom of making representations like that of
two-headed Janus, had begun. Assume, then, that Noah, as having lived in two
worlds, has his two heads. Ham is the third, Cush the fourth, and Nimrod is, of
course, the fifth. And this fifth head was cut off for doing the very thing for
which Nimrod actually was cut off. I suspect that this Indian myth is the key
to open up the meaning of a statement of Plutarch, which, according to the
terms of it, as it stands, is visibly absurd. It is as follows: Plutarch (in
the fourth book of his Symposiaca) says that "the Egyptians were of the
opinion that darkness was prior to light, and that the latter [viz. light] was
produced from mice, in the fifth generation, at the time of the new
moon." In India, we find that "a new moon" was produced in a
different sense from the ordinary meaning of that term, and that the production
of that new moon was not only important in Indian mythology, but evidently
agreed in time with the period when the fifth head of Brahma scorched the world
with its insufferable splendour. The account of its production runs thus: that
the gods and mankind were entirely discontented with the moon which they had
got, "Because it gave no light," and besides the plants were poor and
the fruits of no use, and that therefore they churned the White sea [or, as it
is commonly expressed, "they churned the ocean"], when all things were
mingled--i.e., were thrown into confusion, and that then a new moon, with a new
regent, was appointed, which brought in an entirely new system of things
(Asiatic Researches). From MAURICE's Indian Antiquities, we learn
that at this very time of the churning of the ocean, the earth was set on fire,
and a great conflagration was the result. But the name of the moon in India is
Soma, or Som (for the final a is only a breathing, and the word is found
in the name of the famous temple of Somnaut, which name signifies "Lord
of the Moon"), and the moon in India is male. As this transaction is
symbolical, the question naturally arises, who could be meant by the moon, or
regent of the moon, who was cast off in the fifth generation of the world? The
name Som shows at once who he must have been. Som is just the name of Shem; for
Shem's name comes from Shom, "to appoint," and is legitimately represented
either by the name Som, or Sem, as it is in Greek; and it was precisely to get
rid of Shem (either after his father's death, or when the infirmities of old
age were coming upon him) as the great instructor of the world, that is, as the
great diffuser of spiritual light, that in the fifth generation the world was
thrown into confusion and the earth set on fire.
The propriety of Shem's being
compared to the moon will appear if we consider the way in which his
father Noah was evidently symbolised. The head of a family is divinely compared
to the sun, as in the dream of Joseph (Gen 37:9), and it may be easily
conceived how Noah would, by his posterity in general, be looked up to as
occupying the paramount place as the Sun of the world; and accordingly Bryant,
Davies, Faber, and others, have agreed in recognising Noah as so symbolised by
Paganism. When, however, his younger son--for Shem was younger than
Japhet--(Gen 10:21) was substituted for his father, to whom the world
had looked up in comparison of the "greater light," Shem would naturally,
especially by those who disliked him and rebelled against him, be compared to
"the lesser light," or the moon. *
* "As to the
kingdom, the Oriental Oneirocritics, jointly say, that the sun is the
symbol of the king, and the moon of the next to him in power." This sentence
extracted from DAUBUZ's Symbolical Dictionary, illustrated with
judicious notes by my learned friend, the Rev. A. Forbes, London, shows that
the conclusion to which I had come before seeing it, in regard to the
symbolical meaning of the moon, is entirely in harmony with Oriental
modes of thinking.
Now, the production of light
by mice at this period, comes in exactly to confirm this deduction. A
mouse in Chaldee is "Aakbar"; and Gheber, or Kheber, in Arabic, Turkish, and
some of the other eastern dialects, becomes "Akbar," as in the well-known
Moslem saying, "Allar Akbar," "God is Great." So that the whole statement of
Plutarch, when stripped of its nonsensical garb, just amounts to this, that
light was produced by the Guebres or fire-worshippers, when Nimrod was set up
in opposition to Shem, as the representative of Noah, and the great enlightener
of the world.
The Story of Phaethon
The identity of Phaethon and
Nimrod has much to support it besides the prima facie evidence arising from the
statement that Phaethon was an Ethiopian or Cushite, and the resemblance of his
fate, in being cast down from heaven while driving the chariot of the sun, as
"the child of the Sun," to the casting down of Molk-Gheber, whose very name, as
the god of fire, identifies him with Nimrod. 1. Phaethon is said by Apollodorus
to have been the son of Tithonus; but if the meaning of the name Tithonus be
examined, it will be evident that he was Tithonus himself. Tithonus was the
husband of Aurora (DYMOCK). In the physical sense, as we have already seen,
Aur-ora signifies "The awakener of the light"; to correspond with this Tithonus
signifies "The kindler of light," or "setter on fire." *
* From Tzet
or Tzit, "to kindle," or "set on fire," which in Chaldee becomes Tit, and Thon,
"to give."
Now "Phaethon, the son of
Tithonus," is in Chaldee "Phaethon Bar Tithon." But this also signifies
"Phaethon, the son that set on fire." Assuming, then, the identity of Phaethon
and Tithonus, this goes far to identify Phaethon with Nimrod; for Homer, as we
have seen (Odyssey), mentions the marriage of Aurora with Orion, the
mighty Hunter, whose identity with Nimrod is established. Then the name of the
celebrated son that sprang from the union between Aurora and Tithonus, shows
that Tithonus, in his original character, must have been indeed the same as
"the mighty hunter" of Scripture, for the name of that son was Memnon (MARTIAL
and OVID, Metam.), which signifies "The son of the spotted one," *
thereby identifying the father with Nimrod, whose emblem was the spotted
leopard's skin.
* From Mem
or Mom, "spotted," and Non, "a son."
As Ninus or Nimrod, was
worshipped as the son of his own wife, and that wife Aurora, the goddess
of the dawn, we see how exact is the reference to Phaethon, when Isaiah,
speaking of the King of Babylon, who was his representative, says,
"How art thou
fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning" (Isa
14:12).
The marriage of Orion with
Aurora; in other words, his setting up as "The kindler of light," or becoming
the "author of fire-worship," is said by Homer to have been the cause of
his death, he having in consequence perished under the wrath of the gods. 2.
That Phaethon was currently represented as the son of Aurora, the common story,
as related by Ovid, sufficiently proves. While Phaethon claimed to be the son
of Phoebus, or the sun, he was reproached with being only the son of
Merops--i.e., of the mortal husband of his mother Clymene (OVID, Metam.). The story implies that that mother gave herself out to be
Aurora, not in the physical sense of that term, but in its mystical sense; as
"The woman pregnant with light"; and, consequently, her son was held up as the
great "Light-bringer" who was to enlighten the world,--"Lucifer, the son of the
morning," who was the pretended enlightener of the souls of men. The
name Lucifer, in Isaiah, is the very word from which Eleleus, one of the names
of Bacchus, evidently comes. It comes from "Helel," which signifies "to
irradiate" or "to bring light," and is equivalent to the name Tithon. Now we
have evidence that Lucifer, the son of Aurora, or the morning, was worshipped
in the very same character as Nimrod, when he appeared in his new character as
a little child.
This Phaethon, or Lucifer, who
was cast down is further proved to be Janus; for Janus is called "Pater
Matutinus" (HORACE); and the meaning of this name will appear in one of its
aspects when the meaning of the name of the Dea Matuta is ascertained.
Dea Matuta signifies "The kindling or Light-bringing goddess," * and
accordingly, by Priscian, she is identified with Aurora.
* Matuta
comes from the same word as Tithonus--i.e., Tzet, Tzit, or Tzut, which in
Chaldee becomes Tet, Tit, or Tut, "to light" or "set on fire." From Tit, "to
set on fire," comes the Latin Titio, "a firebrand"; and from Tut, with the
formative M prefixed, comes Matuta--just as from Nasseh, "to forget," with the
same formative prefixed, comes Manasseh, "forgetting," the name of the eldest
son of Joseph (Gen 41:51). The root of this verb is commonly given as "Itzt";
but see BAKER'S Lexicon, where it is also given as "Tzt." It is
evidently from this root that the Sanscrit "Suttee" already referred to comes.
Matutinus is evidently just
the correlate of Matuta, goddess of the morning; Janus, therefore, as
Matutinus, is "Lucifer, son of the morning." But further, Matuta is identified
with Ino, after she had plunged into the sea, and had, along with her son
Melikerta, been changed into a sea-divinity. Consequently her son Melikerta,
"king of the walled city," is the same as Janus Matutinus, or Lucifer,
Phaethon, or Nimrod.
There is still another link by
which Melikerta, the sea-divinity, or Janus Matutinus, is identified with the
primitive god of the fire-worshippers. The most common name of Ino, or Matuta,
after she had passed through the waters, was Leukothoe (OVID, Metam.).
Now, Leukothoe or Leukothea has a double meaning, as it is derived either from
"Lukhoth," which signifies "to light," or "set on fire," or from Lukoth "to
glean." In the Maltese medal, the ear of corn, at the side of the goddess,
which is more commonly held in her hand, while really referring in its hidden
meaning to her being the Mother of Bar, "the son," to the uninitiated exhibits
her as Spicilega, or "The Gleaner,"--"the popular name," says Hyde, "for the
female with the ear of wheat represented in the constellation Virgo." In
Bryant, Cybele is represented with two or three ears of corn in her hand; for
as there were three peculiarly distinguished Bacchuses, there were
consequently as many "Bars," and she might therefore be represented with one,
two, or three ears in her hand. But to revert to the Maltese medal just
referred to, the flames coming out of the head of Lukothea, the
"Gleaner," show that, though she has passed through the waters, she is still
Lukhothea, "the Burner," or "Light-giver." And the rays around the mitre of the
god on the reverse entirely agree with the character of that god as Eleleus, or
Phaethon--in other words, as "The Shining Bar." Now, this "Shining Bar," as
Melikerta, "king of the walled city," occupies the very place of "Ala-Mahozim,"
whose representative the Pope is elsewhere proved to be. But he is equally the
sea-divinity, who in that capacity wears the mitre of Dagon. The fish-head
mitre which the Pope wears shows that, in this character also, as the "Beast
from the sea," he is the unquestionable representative of Melikerta.
The Roman Imperial Standard of the Dragon a Symbol of Fire-
worship
The passage of Ammianus
Marcellinus, that speaks of that standard, calls it "purpureum signum
draconis." On this may be raised the question, Has the epithet purpureum, as describing the colour of the dragon, any reference to
fire? The following extract from Salverte may cast some light upon it: "The
dragon figured among the military ensigns of the Assyrians. Cyrus caused it to
be adopted by the Persians and Medes. Under the Roman emperors, and under the
emperors of Byzantium, each cohort or centuria bore for an ensign a dragon."
There is no doubt that the dragon or serpent standard of the Assyrians and
Persians had reference to fire-worship, the worship of fire and the serpent
being mixed up together in both these countries. As the Romans, therefore,
borrowed these standards evidently from these sources, it is to be presumed
that they viewed them in the very same light as those from whom they borrowed
them, especially as that light was so exactly in harmony with their own system
of fire-worship. The epithet purpureus or "purple" does not indeed
naturally convey the idea of fire-colour to us. But it does
convey the idea of red; and red in one shade or another, among
idolatrous nations, has almost with one consent been used to represent fire. The Egyptians (BUNSEN), the Hindoos (MOOR'S Pantheon,
"Brahma"), the Assyrians (LAYARD'S Nineveh), all represented fire by red. The Persians evidently did the same, for when Quintus Curtius
describes the Magi as following "the sacred and eternal fire," he describes the
365 youths, who formed the train of these Magi, as clad in "scarlet garments,"
the colour of these garments, no doubt, having reference to the fire whose ministers they were. Puniceus is equivalent to purpureus,
for it was in Phenicia [six] that the purpura, or purple-fish, was originally
found. The colour derived from that purple-fish was scarlet, and it is
the very name of that Phoenician purple-fish, "arguna," that is used in Daniel
5:16 and 19, where it is said that he that should interpret the handwriting on
the wall should "be clothed in scarlet."
The Tyrians had the art of
making true purples, as well as scarlet; and there seems no doubt that purpureus is frequently used in the ordinary sense attached to our word
purple. But the original meaning of the epithet is scarlet; and as bright
scarlet colour is a natural colour to represent fire, so we have reason
to believe that that colour, when used for robes of state among the Tyrians,
had special reference to fire; for the Tyrian Hercules, who was regarded as the
inventor of purple (BRYANT), was regarded as "King of Fire," (NONNUS, Dionysiaca). Now, when we find that the purpura of Tyre produced
the scarlet colour which naturally represented fire, and that puniceus,
which is equivalent to purpureus, is evidently used for scarlet, there
is nothing that forbids us to understand purpureus in the same sense
here, but rather requires it. But even though it were admitted that the tinge
was deeper, and purpureus meant the true purple, as red, of which
it is a shade, is the established colour of fire, and as the serpent was the
universally acknowledged symbol of fire-worship, the probability is strong that
the use of a red dragon as the Imperial standard of Rome was designed as
an emblem of that system of fire-worship on which the safety of the empire was
believed so vitally to hinge.
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