The
Two Babylons
Chapter
II Objects of Worship
Section II
The Mother and Child, and
the Original of the Child
While this was the theory, the first perons in the
Godhead was practically overlooked. As the Great Invisible, taking no
immediate concern in human affairs, he was "to be worshipped through
silence alone," that is, in point of fact, he was not worshipped by the
multitude at all. The same thing is strikingly illustrated in India at
this day. Though Brahma, according to the sacred books, is the first
person of the Hindoo Triad, and the religiion of Hindostan is callec by
his name, yet he is never worshipped, and there is scarcely a single
Temple in all India now in existence of those that were formerly
erected to his honour. So also is it in those countries of Europe where
the Papal system is most completely developed. In Papal Italy, as
travellers universally admit (except where the Gospel has recently
entered), all appearance of worshipping the King Eternal and Invisible
is almost extinct, while the Mother and the Child are the grand objects
of worship. Exactly so, in this latter respect, also was it in ancient
Babylon. The Babylonians, in their
popular religion, supremely worshipped a Goddess Mother and a
Son, who was represented in pictures and in images as an infant or
child in his mother's arms. From Babylon, this worship of the Mother
and the Child spread to the ends of the earth. In Egypt, the Mother and
the Child were worshipped under the names of Isis and Osiris. * In
India, even to this day, as Isi and Iswara; ** in Asia, as Cybele and
Deoius; in Pagan Rome, as Fortuna and Jupiter-puer, or Jupiter, the
boy; in Greece, as Ceres, the Great Mother, with the babe at her
breast, or as Irene, the goddess of Peace, with the boy Plutus in her
arms; and even in Thibet, in China, and Japan, the Jesuit missionaries
were astronished to find the counterpart of Madonna *** and her child
as devoutly worshipped as in Papal Rome itself; Shing Moo, the Holy
Mother in China, being represented with a child in her arms, and a glory
around her, exactly as if a Roman Catholic artist had been employed to
set her up. ****
* Osiris, as the child called most frequently
Horus. BUNSEN.
** KENNEDY'S Hindoo Mythology.
Though Iswara is the husband of Isi, he is also represnted as an infant
at her breast.
*** The very name by which the Italians commonly
designate the Virgin, is just the translation of one of the titles of
the Babylonian goddess. As Baal or Belus was the name of the great male
divinity of Babylon, so the female divinity was called Beltis.
(HESYCHIUS, Lexicon) This name has been found in
Nineveh applied to the "Mother of the gods" (VAUX'S Nineveh
and Persepolis); and in a speech attributed to
Nebuchadnezzar, preserved in EUSEBII Proeparatio Evangelii,
both titles "Belus and Beltis" are conjoined as the titles of the great
Babylonian god and goddess. The Greek Belus, as representing the
highest title of the Babylonian god, was undoubtedly Baal, "The Lord."
Beltis, therefore, as the title of the female divinity, was equivalent
to "Baalti," which, in English, is "My Lady," in Latin, "Mea Domina,"
and, in Italina, is corrupted into the well known "Madonna." In
connection with this, it may be observed, that the name of Juno, the
classical "Queen of Heaven," which, in Greek, was Hera, also signified
"The Lady"; and that the peculiar title of Cybele or Rhea at Rome, was
Domina or "The Lady." (OVID, Fasti) Further, there
is strong reason to believe, that Athena, the well known name of
Minerva at Athens, had the very same meaning. The Hebrew Adon, "The
Lord," is, with the points, pronounced Athon. We have evidence that
this name was known to the
Asiatic Greeks, from whom idolatry, in a large measure, came into
European Greece, as a name of God under the form of "Athan."
Eustathius, in a note on the Periergesis of Dionysius, speaking of
local names in the district of Laodicea, says the "Athan is god." The
feminine of Athan, "The Lord," is Athan, "The Lady," which in the Attic
dialect, is Athena. No doubt, Minerva is commonly represented as a
virgin; but, for all that, we learn from Strabo that at Hierapytna in
Crete (the coins of which city, says Muller, Dorians
have the Athenian symbols of Minerva upon them), she was said to be the
mother of the Corybantes by Helius, or "The Sun." It is certain that
the Egyptian Minerva, who was the prototype of the
Athenian goddess, was a mother, and was styled "Goddess Mother," or
"Mother of the Gods."
**** CRABB'S Mythology.
Gutzlaff thought that Shing Moo must have been borrowed from a Popish
source; and there can be no doubt, that in the individual case to which
he refers, the Pagan and the Christian stories had been amalgamated.
But Sir. J. F. Davis shows that the Chinese of Canton find such an
analogy between their own Pagan goddess Kuanyin and the Popish Madonna,
that, in conversing with Europeans, they frequently call either of them
indifferently by the same title. DAVIS' China. The
first Jesuit missionaries to China also wrote home to Europe, that they
found mention in the Chinese sacred books--books unequivocally
Pagan--of a mother and child, very similar to their own Madonna and
child at home.
One of the names of the Chinese Holy Mother is Ma
Tsoopo; in regard to which, see note
below.
Note
Shing
Moo and Ma Tsoopo of China
The name of Shing Moo, applied by the Chinese to
their "Holy Mother," compared with another name of the same goddess in
another province of China, strongly favours the conclusion that Shing
Moo is just a synonym for one of the well known names of the
goddess-mother of Babylon. Gillespie (in his Land of Sinim)
states that the Chinese goddess-mother, or "Queen of Heaven," in the
province of Fuh-kien, is worshipped by seafaring people under the name
of Ma Tsoopo. Now, "Ama Tzupah" signifies the "Gazing Mother"; and
there is much reason to believe that Shing Moo signifies the same; for
Mu was one of the forms in which Mut or Maut, the name of the great
mother, appeared in Egypt (BUNSEN'S Vocabulary);
and Shngh, in Chaldee, signifies "to look" or "gaze." The Egyptian Mu
or Maut was symbolised either by a vulture, or an eye
surrounded by a vulture's wings (WILKINSON). The symbolic meaning of
the vulture may be learned from the Scriptural expression: "There is a
path which no fowl knoweth, and which the vulture's eye hath not seen"
(Job 28:7). The vulture was noted for its sharp sight, and hence, the eye
surrounded by the vulture's wings showed that, for some reason or
other, the great mother of the gods in Egypt had been known as "The
gazer." But the idea contained in the Egyptian symbol had evidently
been borrowed from Chaldea; for Rheia, one of the most noted names of
the Babylonian mother of the gods, is just the Chaldee form of the
Hebrew Rhaah, which signifies at once "a gazing woman" and a "vulture." The Hebrew Rhaah itself is
also, according to a dialectical variation, legitimately pronounced
Rheah; and hence the name of the great goddess-mother of Assyria was
sometimes Rhea, and sometimes Rheia. In Greece, the same idea was
evidently attached to Athena or Minerva, whom we have seen to have been
by some regarded as the Mother of the children of the sun. For one of
her distinguishing titles was Ophthalmitis (SMITH'S Classical
Dictionary, "Athena"), thereby pointing her out as the
goddess of "the eye." It was no doubt to indicate
the same thing that, as the Egyptian Maut wore a vulture on her head,
so the Athenian Minerva was represented as wearing a helmet with two
eyes, or eye-holes, in the front of the helmet.
(VAUX'S Antiquities)
Having thus traced the gazing mother over the
earth, is it asked, What can have given origin to such a name as
applied to the mother of the gods? A fragment of Sanchuniathon, in
regard to the Phoenician mythology, furnishes us with a satisfactory
reply. There it is said that Rheia conceived by Kronos, who was her own
brother, and yet was known as the father of the gods, and in
consequence brought forth a son who was called Muth, that is, as
Philo-Byblius correctly interprets the word, "Death." As Sanchuniathon
expressly distinguishes this "father of the gods" from "Hypsistos," The
Most High, * we naturally recall what Hesiod says in regard to his
Kronos, the father of the gods, who, for a certain wicked deed, was
called Titan, and cast down to hell. (Theogonia)
* In reading Sanchuniathon, it is necessary to bear
in mind what Philo-Byblius, his translator, states at the end of the Phenician
History--viz., that history and mythology were mingled
together in that work.
The Kronos to whom Hesiod refers is evidently at
bottom a different Kronos from the human father of the gods, or Nimrod,
whose history occupies so large a place in this work. He is plainly
none other than Satan himself; the name Titan, or Teitan, as it is
sometimes given, being, as we have elsewhere concluded, only the
Chaldee form of Sheitan, the common name of the grand Adversary among
the Arabs, in the very region where the Chaldean Mysteries were
originally concocted,--that Adversary who was ultimately the real
father of all the Pagan gods,--and who (to make the title of Kronos,
"the Horned One," appropriate to him also) was
symbolised by the Kerastes, or Horned serpent. All
"the brethren" of this father of the gods, who were implicated in his
rebellion against his own father, the "God of Heaven," were equally
called by the "reproachful" name "Titans"; but, inasmuch as he was the
ringleader in the rebellion, he was, of course,
Titan by way of eminence. In this rebellion of Titan, the goddess of
the earth was concerned, and the result was that (removing the figure
under which Hesiod has hid the fact) it became naturally impossible
that the God of Heaven should have children upon earth--a plain
allusion to the Fall.
Now, assuming that this is the "Father of the
gods," by whom Rhea, whose common title is that of the Mother of the
gods, and who is also identified with Ge, or the Earth-goddess, had the
child called Muth, or Death, who could this "Mother of the gods" be,
but just our Mother Eve? And the name Rhea, or "The Gazer," bestowed on
her, is wondrously significant. It was as "the gazer" that the mother
of mankind conceived by Satan, and brought forth that deadly birth,
under which the world has hitherto groaned. It was through her eyes
that the fatal connection was first formed between her and the grand
Adversary, under the form of a serpent, whose name, Nahash, or Nachash,
as it stands in the Hebrew of the Old Testament, also signifies "to
view attentively," or "to gaze" (Gen 3:6) "And when the woman
saw that the tree was good for food, and pleasant
to the eyes," &c., "she took of the fruit thereof,
and did eat; and gave also unto her husband with her, and he did eat."
Here, then, we have the pedigree of sin and death; "Lust, when it had
conceived, brought forth sin; and sin, when it was finished, brought
forth death" (James 1:15). Though Muth, or Death, was the son of Rhea,
this progeny of hers came to be regarded, not as Death in the abstract,
but as the
god of death; therefore, says Philo-Byblius, Muth was
interpreted not only as death, but as Pluto. (SANCHUN) In the Roman
mythology, Pluto was regarded as on a level, for honour, with Jupiter
(OVID, Fasti); and in Egypt, we have evidence that
Osiris, "the seed of the woman," was the "Lord of heaven," and king of
hell, or "Pluto" (WILKINSON; BUNSEN); and it can be shown by a large
induction of particulars (and the reader has somewhat of the evidence
presented in this volume), that he was none other than the Devil
himself, supposed to have become incarnate; who, though through the
first transgression, and his connection with the woman, he had brought
sin and death into the world, had, nevertheless, by means of them,
brought innumerable benefits to mankind. As the name Pluto has the very
same meaning as Saturn, "The hidden one," so, whatever other aspect
this name had, as applied to the father of the gods, it is to Satan,
the Hidden Lord of hell, ultimately that all came at last to be traced
back; for the different myths about Saturn, when carefully examined,
show that he was at once the Devil, the father of all sin and idolatry,
who hid himself under the disguise of the
serpent,--and Adam, who hid himself among the trees
of the garden,--and Noah, who lay hid for a whole
year in the ark,--and Nimrod, who was hid in the
secrecy of the Babylonian Mysteries. It was to glorify Nimrod that the
whole Chaldean system of iniquity was formed. He was known as Nin, "the
son," and his wife as Rhea, who was called Ammas, "The Mother." The
name Rhea, as applied to Semiramis, had another meaning from what it
had when applied to her, who was really the primeval goddess, the
"mother of gods and men." But yet, to make out the
full majesty of her character, it was necessary that she should be
identified with that primeval goddess; and, therefore, although the son
she bore in her arms was represented as he who was born to destroy
death, yet she was often represented with the very symbols of her who
brought death into the world. And so was it also in the different
countries where the Babylonian system spread.
The Two Babylons: Contents
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