The
Two Babylons
Chapter
III Festivals
Section III
The Nativity of St. John
The Feast of the Nativity of
St. John is set down in the Papal calendar for the 24th of June, or
Midsummer-day. The very same period was equally memorable in the
Babylonian calendar as that of one of its most celebrated festivals. It
was at Midsummer, or the summer solstice, that the month
called in Chaldea, Syria, and Phoenicia by the name of "Tammuz" began;
and on the first day--that is, on or about the 24th
of June--one of the grand original festivals of Tammuz was celebrated.
*
* STANLEY'S Saboean
Philosophy. In Egypt the month corresponding to Tammuz--viz.,
Epep--began June 25 (WILKINSON)
For different reasons, in
different countries, other periods had been devoted to commemorate the
death and reviving of the Babylonian god; but this,
as may be inferred from the name of the month,
appears to have been the real time when his festival was primitively
observed in the land where idolatry had its birth. And so strong was
the hold that this festival, with its peculiar rites, had taken of the
minds of men, that even when other days were devoted to the great
events connected with the Babylonian Messiah, as was the case in some
parts of our own land, this sacred season could not be allowed to pass
without the due observance of some, at least, of its peculiar rites.
When the Papacy sent its emissaries over Europe, towards the end of the
sixth century, to gather in the Pagans into its fold, this festival was
found in high favour in many countries. What was to be done with it?
Were they to wage war with it? No. This would have been contrary to the
famous advice of Pope Gregory I, that, by all means they should meet
the Pagans half-way, and so bring them into the Roman Church. The
Gregorian policy was carefully observed; and so Midsummer-day, that had
been hallowed by Paganism to the worship of Tammuz, was incorporated as
a sacred Christian festival in the Roman calendar.
But still a question was to be
determined, What was to be the name of this Pagan
festival, when it was baptised, and admitted into the ritual of Roman
Christianity? To call it by its old name of Bel or Tammuz, at the early
period when it seems to have been adopted, would have been too bold. To
call it by the name of Christ was difficult, inasmuch as there was
nothing special in His history at that period to commemorate. But the
subtlety of the agents of the Mystery of Iniquity was not to be
baffled. If the name of Christ could not be conveniently tacked to it,
what should hinder its being called by the name of His forerunner, John
the Baptist? John the Baptist was born six months before our Lord.
When, therefore, the Pagan festival of the winter solstice had once
been consecrated as the birthday of the Saviour, it followed, as a
matter of course, that if His forerunner was to have a festival at all,
his festival must be at this very season; for between the 24th of June
and the 25th of December--that is, between the summer and the winter
solstice--there are just six months. Now, for the purposes of the
Papacy, nothing could be more opportune than this. One of the many
sacred names by which Tammuz or Nimrod was called, when he reappeared
in the Mysteries, after being slain, was Oannes. *
* BEROSUS, BUNSEN'S Egypt.
To identify Nimrod with Oannes, mentioned by Berosus as appearing out
of the sea, it will be remembered that Nimrod has been proved to be
Bacchus. Then, for proof that Nimrod or Bacchus, on being overcome by
his enemies, was fabled to have taken refuge in the sea, see chapter 4,
section i. When, therefore, he was represented as reappearing, it was
natural that he should reappear in the very character of Oannes as a
Fish-god. Now, Jerome calls Dagon, the well known Fish-god Piscem
moerorissorrow,"
which goes far to identify that Fish-god with Bacchus, the "Lamented
one"; and the identification is complete when Hesychius tells us that
some called Bacchus Ichthys, or "The fish." (BRYANT), "the fish of
The name of John the Baptist,
on the other hand, in the sacred language adopted by the Roman Church,
was Joannes. To make the festival of the 24th of June, then, suit
Christians and Pagans alike, all that was needful was just to call it
the festival of Joannes; and thus the Christians would suppose that
they were honouring John the Baptist, while the Pagans were still
worshipping their old god Oannes, or Tammuz. Thus, the very period at
which the great summer festival of Tammuz was celebrated in ancient
Babylon, is at this very hour observed in the Papal Church as the Feast
of the Nativity of St. John. And the fete of St.
John begins exactly as the festal day began in Chaldea. It is well
known that, in the East, the day began in the evening.
So, though the 24th be set down as the nativity, yet it is on St.
John's EVE--that is, on the evening of the 23rd--that the festivities
and solemnities of that period begin.
Now, if we examine the
festivities themselves, we shall see how purely Pagan they are, and how
decisively they prove their real descent. The grand distinguishing
solemnities of St. John's Eve are the Midsummer fires. These are
lighted in France, in Switzerland, in Roman Catholic Ireland, and in
some of the Scottish isles of the West, where Popery still lingers.
They are kindled throughout all the grounds of the adherents of Rome,
and flaming brands are carried about their corn-fields. Thus does Bell,
in his Wayside Pictures, describe the St. John's
fires of Brittany, in France: "Every fete is marked
by distinct features peculiar to itself. That of St. John is perhaps,
on the whole, the most striking. Throughout the day the poor children
go about begging contributions for lighting the fires of Monsieur St.
Jean, and towards evening one fire is gradually followed by two, three,
four; then a thousand gleam out from the hill-tops, till the whole
country glows under the conflagration. Sometimes the priests light the
first fire in the market place; and sometimes it is lighted by an
angel, who is made to descend by a mechanical device from the top of
the church, with a flambeau in her hand, setting the pile in a blaze,
and flying back again. The young people dance with a bewildering
activity about the fires; for there is a superstition among them that,
if they dance round nine fires before midnight, they will be married in
the ensuing year. Seats are placed close to the flaming piles for the
dead, whose spirits are supposed to come there for the melancholy
pleasure of listening once more to their native songs, and
contemplating the lively measures of their youth. Fragments of the
torches on those occasions are preserved as spells against thunder and
nervous diseases; and the crown of flowers which surmounted the
principal fire is in such request as to produce tumultuous jealousy for
its possession." Thus is it in France. Turn now to Ireland. "On that
great festival of the Irish peasantry, St. John's Eve," says Charlotte
Elizabeth, describing a particular festival which she had witnessed,
"it is the custom, at sunset on that evening, to kindle immense fires
throughout the country, built, like our bonfires, to a great height,
the pile being composed of turf, bogwood, and such other combustible
substances as they can gather. The turf yields a steady, substantial
body of fire, the bogwood a most brilliant flame, and the effect of
these great beacons blazing on every hill, sending up volumes of smoke
from every point of the horizon, is very remarkable. Early in the
evening the peasants began to assemble, all habited in their best
array, glowing with health, every countenance full of that sparkling
animation and excess of enjoyment that characterise the enthusiastic
people of the land. I had never seen anything resembling it; and was
exceedingly delighted with their handsome, intelligent, merry faces;
the bold bearing of the men, and the playful but really modest
deportment of the maidens; the vivacity of the aged people, and the
wild glee of the children. The fire being kindled, a splendid blaze
shot up; and for a while they stood contemplating it with faces
strangely disfigured by the peculiar light first emitted when the
bogwood was thrown on it. After a short pause, the ground was cleared
in front of an old blind piper, the very beau ideal
of energy, drollery, and shrewdness, who, seated on a low chair, with a
well-plenished jug within his reach, screwed his pipes to the liveliest
tunes, and the endless jig began. But something was to follow that
puzzled me not a little. When the fire burned for some hours and got
low, an indispensable part of the ceremony commenced. Every one present
of the peasantry passed through it, and several children were thrown
across the sparkling embers; while a wooden frame of some eight feet
long, with a horse's head fixed to one end, and a large white sheet
thrown over it, concealing the wood and the man on whose head it was
carried, made its appearance. This was greeted with loud shouts as the
'white horse'; and having been safely carried, by the skill of its
bearer, several times through the fire with a bold leap, it pursued the
people, who ran screaming in every direction. I asked what the horse
was meant for, and was told it represented 'all cattle.' Here," adds
the authoress, "was the old Pagan worship of Baal, if not of Moloch
too, carried on openly and universally in the heart of a nominally
Christian country, and by millions professing the Christian name! I was
confounded, for I did not then know that Popery is only a crafty
adaptation of Pagan idolatries to its own scheme."
Such is the festival of St.
John's Eve, as celebrated at this day in France and in Popish Ireland.
Such is the way in which the votaries of Rome pretend to commemorate
the birth of him who came to prepare the way of the Lord, by turning
away His ancient people from all their refuges of lies, and shutting
them up to the necessity of embracing that kingdom of God that consists
not in any mere external thing, but in "righteousness, and peace, and
joy in the Holy Ghost." We have seen that the very sight of the rites
with which that festival is celebrated, led the authoress just quoted
at once to the conclusion that what she saw before her was truly a
relic of the Pagan worship of Baal. The history of the festival, and
the way in which it is observed, reflect mutual light upon each other.
Before Christianity entered the British Isles, the Pagan festival of
the 24th of June was celebrated among the Druids by blazing fires in
honour of their great divinity, who, as we have already seen, was Baal.
"These Midsummer fires and sacrifices," says Toland, in his Account
of the Druids, "were [intended] to obtain a blessing on the
fruits of the earth, now becoming ready for gathering; as those of the
first of May, that they might prosperously grow; and those of the last
of October were a thanksgiving for finishing the harvest." Again,
speaking of the Druidical fires at Midsummer, he thus proceeds: "To
return to our carn-fires, it was customary for the lord of the place,
or his son, or some other person of distinction, to take the entrails
of the sacrificed animals in his hands, and, walking barefoot over the
coals thrice after the flames had ceased, to carry them straight to the
Druid, who waited in a whole skin at the altar. If the nobleman escaped
harmless, it was reckoned a good omen, welcomed with loud acclamations;
but if he received any hurt, it was deemed unlucky both to the
community and himself." "Thus, I have seen," adds Toland, "the people
running and leaping through the St. John's fires in Ireland; and not
only proud of passing unsinged, but, as if it were some kind of lustration,
thinking themselves in an especial manner blest by the ceremony, of
whose original, nevertheless, they were wholly ignorant, in their
imperfect imitation of it." We have seen reason already to conclude
that Phoroneus, "the first of mortals that reigned"--i.e., Nimrod and
the Roman goddess Feronia--bore a relation to one another. In
connection with the firs of "St. John," that relation is still further
established by what has been handed down from antiquity in regard to
these two divinities; and, at the same time, the origin of these fires
is elucidated. Phoroneus is described in such a way as shows that he
was known as having been connected with the origin of fire-worship.
Thus does Pausanias refer to him: "Near this image [the image of Biton]
they [the Argives] enkindle a fire, for they do not admit that fire was
given by Prometheus, to men, but ascribe the invention of it to
Phoroneus." There must have been something tragic about the death of
this fire-inventing Phoroneus, who "first gathered mankind into
communities"; for, after describing the position of his sepulchre,
Pausanias adds: "Indeed, even at present they perform funeral obsequies
to Phoroneus"; language which shows that his death must have been
celebrated in some such way as that of Bacchus. Then the character of
the worship of Feronia, as coincident with fire-worship, is evident
from the rites practised by the priests at the city lying at the foot
of Mount Socracte, called by her name. "The priests," says Bryant,
referring both to Pliny and Strabo as his authorities, "with their feet
naked, walked over a large quantity of live coals and cinders." To this
same practice we find Aruns in Virgil referring, when addressing
Apollo, the sun-god, who had his shrine at Soracte, where Feronia was
worshipped, and who therefore must have been the same as Jupiter Anxur,
her contemplar divinity, who was regarded as a "youthful Jupiter," even
as Apollo was often called the "young Apollo":
"O
patron of Soracte's high abodes,
Phoebus, the ruling power among the gods,
Whom first we serve; whole woods of unctuous pine
Are felled for thee, and to thy glory shine.
By thee protected, with our naked soles,
Through flames unsinged we march and tread the kindled coals." *
* DRYDEN'S Virgil
Aeneid. "The young Apollo," when "born to introduce law and
order among the Greeks," was said to have made his appearance at Delphi
"exactly in the middle of summer." (MULLER'S Dorians)
Thus the St. John's fires,
over whose cinders old and young are made to pass, are traced up to
"the first of mortals that reigned."
It is remarkable, that a
festival attended with all the essential rites of the fire-worship of
Baal, is found among Pagan nations, in regions most remote from one
another, about the very period of the month of Tammuz, when the
Babylonian god was anciently celebrated. Among the Turks, the fast of
Ramazan, which, says Hurd, begins on the 12th of June, is attended by
an illumination of burning lamps. *
* HURD'S Rites and
Ceremonies. The time here given by Hurd would not in itself
be decisive as a proof of agreement with the period of the original
festival of Tammuz; for a friend who has lived for three years in
Constantinople informs me that, in consequence of the disagreement
between the Turkish and the solar year, the fast of Ramazan ranges in
succession through all the different months in the year. The fact of a
yearly illumination in connection with religious observances, however,
is undoubted.
In China where the Dragon-boat
festival is celebrated in such a way as vividly to recall to those who
have witnessed it, the weeping for Adonis, the solemnity begins at
Midsummer. In Peru, during the reign of the Incas, the feast of Raymi,
the most magnificent feast of the Peruvians, when the sacred fire every
year used to be kindled anew from the sun, by means of a concave mirror
of polished metal, took place at the very same period. Regularly as
Midsummer came round, there was first, in token of mourning, "for three
days, a general fast, and no fire was allowed to be lighted in their
dwellings," and then, on the fourth day, the mourning was turned into
joy, when the Inca, and his court, followed by the whole population of
Cuzco, assembled at early dawn in the great square to greet the rising
of the sun. "Eagerly," says Prescott, "they watched the coming of the
deity, and no sooner did his first yellow rays strike the turrets and
loftiest buildings of the capital, than a shout of gratulation broke
forth from the assembled multitude, accompanied by songs of triumph,
and the wild melody of barbaric instruments, that swelled louder and
louder as his bright orb, rising above the mountain range towards the
east, shone in full splendour on his votaries." Could this alternate
mourning and rejoicing, at the very time when the Babylonians mourned
and rejoiced over Tammuz, be accidental? As Tammuz was the Sun-divinity
incarnate, it is easy to see how such mourning and rejoicing should be
connected with the worship of the sun. In Egypt, the festival of the
burning lamps, in which many have already been constrained to see the
counterpart of the festival of St. John, was avowedly connected with
the mourning and rejoicing for Osiris. "At Sais," says Herodotus, "they
show the sepulchre of him whom I do not think it right to mention on
this occasion." This is the invariable way in which the historian
refers to Osiris, into whose mysteries he had been initiated, when
giving accounts of any of the rites of his worship. "It is in the
sacred enclosure behind the temple of Minerva, and close to the wall of
this temple, whose whole length it occupies. They also meet at Sais, to
offer sacrifice during a certain night, when every one lights, in the
open air, a number of lamps around his house. The lamps
consist of small cups filled with salt and oil, having a wick floating
in it which burns all night. This festival is called the festival of
burning lamps. The Egyptians who are unable to attend also observe the
sacrifice, and burn lamps at home, so that not only at Sais, but throughout
Egypt, the same illumination takes place. They assign a
sacred reason for the festival celebrated on this night, and for the
respect they have for it." Wilkinson, in quoting this passage of
Herodotus, expressly identifies this festival with the lamentation for
Osiris, and assures us that "it was considered of the greatest
consequence to do honour to the deity by the proper performance of this
rite."
Among the Yezidis, or
Devil-worshippers of Modern Chaldea, the same festival is celebrated at
this day, with rites probably almost the same, so far as circumstances
will allow, as thousands of years ago, when in the same regions the
worship of Tammuz was in all its glory. Thus graphically does Mr.
Layard describe a festival of this kind at which he himself had been
present: "As the twilight faded, the Fakirs, or lower orders of
priests, dressed in brown garments of coarse cloth, closely fitting to
their bodies, and wearing black turbans on their heads, issued from the
tomb, each bearing a light in one hand, and a pot of oil, with a bundle
of cotton wick in the other. They filled and trimmed lamps placed in
niches in the walls of the courtyard and scattered over the buildings
on the sides of the valley, and even on isolated rocks, and in the
hollow trunks of trees. Innumerable stars appeared to glitter on the
black sides of the mountain and in the dark recesses of the forest. As
the priests made their way through the crowd to perform their task, men
and women passed their right hands through the flame; and after rubbing
the right eyebrow with the part which had been purified by
the sacred element, they devoutly carried it to their lips.
Some who bore children in their arms anointed them in like manner,
whilst others held out their hands to be touched by those who, less
fortunate than themselves, could not reach the flame...As night
advanced, those who had assembled--they must now have amounted to
nearly five thousand persons--lighted torches, which they carried with
them as they wandered through the forest. The effect was magical: the
varied groups could be faintly distinguished through the darkness--men
hurrying to and fro--women with their children seated on the
house-tops--and crowds gathering round the pedlars, who exposed their
wares for sale in the courtyard. Thousands of lights were reflected in
the fountains and streams, glimmered amongst the foliage of the trees,
and danced in the distance. As I was gazing on this extraordinary
scene, the hum of human voices was suddenly hushed, and a strain,
solemn and melancholy, arose from the valley. It
resembled some majestic chant which years before I had listened to in
the cathedral of a distant land. Music so pathetic and so
sweet I never before heard in the East. The voices of men and
women were blended in harmony with the soft notes of many flutes. At
measured intervals the song was broken by the loud clash of cymbals and
tambourines; and those who were within the precincts of the tomb then
joined in the melody...The tambourines, which were struck
simultaneously, only interrupted at intervals the song of the priests.
As the time quickened they broke in more frequently. The chant
gradually gave way to a lively melody, which, increasing in measure,
was finally lost in a confusion of sounds. The tambourines were beaten
with extraordinary energy--the flutes poured forth a rapid flood of
notes--the voices were raised to the highest pitch--the men outside
joined in the cry--whilst the women made the rocks resound with the
shrilltahlehl.
"The musicians, giving way to
the excitement, threw their instruments into the air, and strained
their limbs into every contortion, until they fell exhausted to the
ground. I never heard a more frightful yell than that which rose in the
valley. It was midnight. I gazed with wonder upon the extraordinary
scene around me. Thus were probably celebrated ages ago the mysterious
rites of the Corybantes, when they met in some consecrated grove."
Layard does not state at what period of the year this festival
occurred; but his language leaves little doubt that he regarded it as a
festival of Bacchus; in other words, of the Babylonian Messiah, whose
tragic death, and subsequent restoration to life and glory, formed the
cornerstone of ancient Paganism. The festival was avowedly held in
honour at once of Sheikh Shems, or the Sun, and of the Sheik Adi, or
"Prince of Eternity," around whose tomb
nevertheless the solemnity took place, just as the lamp festival in
Egypt, in honour of the sun-god Osiris, was celebrated in the precincts
of the tomb of that god at Sais.
Now, the reader cannot fail to
have observed that in this Yezidi festival, men, women, and children
were "PURIFIED" by coming in contact with "the sacred element"
of fire. In the rites of Zoroaster, the great Chaldean god, fire
occupied precisely the same place. It was laid down as an essential
principle in his system, that "he who approached to fire would receive
a light from divinity," (TAYLOR'S Jamblichus) and
that "through divine fire all the stains produced by generation would
be purged away" (PROCLUS, Timaeo). Therefore it was
that "children were made to pass through the fire to Moloch" (Jer
32:35), to purge them from original sin, and through this purgation
many a helpless babe became a victim to the bloody divinity. Among the
Pagan Romans, this purifying by passing through the fire was equally
observed; "for," says Ovid, enforcing the practice, "Fire purifies both
the shepherd and the sheep." Among the Hindoos, from time immemorial,
fire has been worshipped for its purifying efficacy. Thus a worshipper
is represented by Colebrooke, according to the sacred books, as
addressing the fire: "Salutation to thee [O fire!], who dost seize
oblations, to thee who dost shine, to thee who dost scintillate, may
thy auspicious flame burn our foes; mayest thou, the PURIFIER, be
auspicious unto us." There are some who maintain a "perpetual fire,"
and perform daily devotions to it, and in "concluding the sacraments of
the gods," thus every day present their supplications to it: "Fire,
thou dost expiate a sin against the gods; may this oblation be
efficacious. Thou dost expiate a sin against man; thou dost expiate a
sin against the manes [departed spirits]; thou dost
expiate a sin against my own soul; thou dost expiate repeated sins;
thou dost expiate every sin which I have committed, whether wilfully or
unintentionally; may this oblation be efficacious." Among the Druids,
also, fire was celebrated as the purifier. Thus, in a Druidic song, we
read, "They celebrated the praise of the holy ones in the presence of
the purifying fire, which was made to ascend on
high" (DAVIES'S Druids, "Song to the Sun"). If,
indeed, a blessing was expected in Druidical times from lighting the
carn-fires, and making either young or old, either human beings or
cattle, pass through the fire, it was simply in consequence of the
purgation from sin that attached to human beings and all things
connected with them, that was believed to be derived from this passing
through the fire. It is evident that this very same belief about the "purifying"
efficacy of fire is held by the Roman Catholics of Ireland, when they
are so zealous to pass both themselves and their children through the
fires of St. John. * Toland testifies that it is as a "lustration"
that these fires are kindled; and all who have carefully examined the
subject must come to the same conclusion.
* "I have seen parents,"
said the late Lord J. Scott in a letter to me, "force
their children to go through the Baal-fires."
Now, if Tammuz was, as we have
seen,the same as Zoroaster, the god of the ancient "fire-worshippers,"
and if his festival in Babylon so exactly synchronised with the feast
of the Nativity of St. John, what wonder that that feast is still
celebrated by the blazing "Baal-fires," and that it presents so
faithful a copy of what was condemned by Jehovah of old in His ancient
people when they "made their children pass through the fire to Moloch"?
But who that knows anything of the Gospel would call such a festival as
this a Christian festival? The Popish priests, if they do not openly
teach, at least allow their deluded votaries to believe, as firmly s
ever ancient fire worshipper did, that material fire can purge away the
guilt and stain of sin. How that tends to rivet upon the minds of their
benighted vassals one of the most monstrous but profitable fables of
their system, will come to be afterwards considered.
The name Oannes could be known
only to the initiated as the name of the Pagan Messiah; and at first,
some measure of circumspection was necessary in introducing Paganism
into the Church. But, as time went on, as the Gospel became obscured,
and the darkness became more intense, the same caution was by no means
so necessary. Accordingly, we find that, in the dark ages, the Pagan
Messiah has not been brought into the Church in a mere clandestine
manner. Openly and avowedly under his well known classic names of
Bacchus and Dionysus, has he been canonised, and set up for the worship
of the "faithful." Yes, Rome, that professes to be pre-eminently the
Bride of Christ, the only Church in which salvation is to be found, has
had the unblushing effrontery to give the grand Pagan adversary of the
Son of God, UNDER HIS OWN PROPER NAME, a place in her calendar. The
reader has only to turn to the Roman calendar, and he will find that
this is a literal fact; he will find that October the 7th is set apart
to be observed in honour of "St. Bacchus the Martyr." Now, no doubt,
Bacchus was a "martyr"; he died a violent death; he
lost his life for religion; but the religion for which he died was the
religion of the fire-worshippers; for he was put to death, as we have
seen from Maimonides, for maintaining the worship of the host of
heaven. This patron of the heavenly host, and of fire worship (for the
two went always hand in hand together), has Rome canonised; for that
this "St. Bacchus the Martyr" was the identical Bacchus of the Pagans,
the god of drunkenness and debauchery, is evident from the time
of his festival; for October the 7th follows soon after the end of the
vintage. At the end of the vintage in autumn, the old Pagan Romans used
to celebrate what was called the "Rustic Festival" of Bacchus; and
about that very time does the Papal festival of "St Bacchus the Martyr"
occur.
As the Chalden god has been
admitted into the Roman calendar under the name of Bacchus, so also is
he canonised under his other name of Dionysus. The Pagans were in the
habit of worshipping the same god under different names; and,
accordingly, not content with the festival to Bacchus, under the name
by which he was most commonly known at Rome, the Romans, no doubt to
please the Greeks, celebrated a rustic festival to him, two days
afterwards, under the name of Dionysus Eleuthereus, the name by which
he was worshipped in Greece. That "rustic" festival was briefly called
by the name of Dionysia; or, expressing its object more fully, the name
became "Festum Dionysi Eleutherei rusticum"--i.e., the "rustic
festival of Dionysus Eleuthereus." (BEGG'S Handbook of Popery)
Now, the Papacy in its excess of zeal for saints and saint-worship, has
actually split Dionysus Eleuthereus into two, has made two several
saints out of the double name of one Pagan
divinity; and more than that, has made the innocent epithet "Rusticum,"
which, even among the heathen, had no pretension to divinity at all, a
third; and so it comes to pass that, under date of October the 9th, we
read this entry in the calendar: "The festival of St. Dionysius, * and
of his companions, St. Eleuther and St. Rustic."
* Though Dionysus was the
proper classic name of the god, yet in
Post-classical, or Low Latin, his name is found Dionysius, just as in
the case of the Romish saint.
Now this Dionysius, whom
Popery has so marvellously furnished with two companions, is the famed
St. Denys, the patron saint of Paris; and a comparison of the history
of the Popish saint and the Pagan god will cast no little light on the
subject. St. Denys, on being beheaded and cast into the Seine, so runs
the legend, after floating a space on its waters, to the amazement of
the spectators, took up his head in his hand, and so marched away with
it to the place of burial. In commemoration of so stupendous a miracle,
a hymn was duly chanted for many a century in the Cathedral of St.
Denys, at Paris, containing the following verse:
"The
corpse immediately arose;
The trunk bore away the dissevered head,
Guided on its way by a legion of angels."
(SALVERTE, Des Sciences Occultes)
At last, even Papists began to
be ashamed of such an absurdity being celebrated in the name of
religion; and in 1789, "the office of St. Denys" was abolished. Behold,
however, the march of events. The world has for some time past been
progressing back again to the dark ages. The Romish Breviary, which had
been given up in France, has, within the last six years, been reimposed
by Papal authority on the Gallican Church, with all its lying legends,
and this among the rest of them; the Cathedral of St. Denys is again
being rebuilt, and the old worship bids fair to be restored in all its
grossness. Now, how could it ever enter the minds of men to invent so
monstrous a fable? The origin of it is not far to seek. The Church of
Rome represented her canonised saints, who were said to have suffered
martyrdom by the sword, as headless images or statues with the severed
head borne in the hand. "I have seen," says Eusebe Salverte, "in a
church of Normandy, St. Clair; St. Mithra, at Arles, in Switzerland,
all the soldiers of the Theban legion represented with their heads in
their hands. St. Valerius is thus figured at Limoges, on the gates of
the cathedral, and other monuments. The grand seal of the canton of Zurich represents, in the same
attitude, St. Felix, St. Regula, and St. Exsuperantius. There
certainly is the origin of the pious fable which is told of these
martyrs, such as St. Denys and many others besides." This was the immediate
origin of the story of the dead saint rising up and marching away with
his head in his hand. But it turns out that this very mode of
representation was borrowed from Paganism, and borrowed in such a way
as identifies the Papal St. Denys of Paris with the Pagan Dionysus, not
only of Rome but of Babylon. Dionysus or Bacchus, in one of his
transformations, was represented as Capricorn, the "goat-horned fish";
and there is reason to believe that it was in this very form that he
had the name of Oannes. In this form in India, under the name "Souro,"
that is evidently "the seed," he is said to have done many marvellous
things. (For Oannes and Souro, see note below) Now, in the Persian
Sphere he was not only represented mystically as Capricorn, but also in
the human shape; and then exactly as St. Denys is represented by the
Papacy. The words of the ancient writer who describes this figure in
the Persian Sphere are these: "Capricorn, the third Decan. The
half of the figure without a head, because its head is in its hand."
Nimrod had his head cut off; and in commemoration of that fact, which
his worshippers so piteously bewailed, his image in the Sphere was so
represetned. That dissevered head, in some of the versions of his
story, was fabled to have done as marvellous things as any that were
done by the lifeless trunk of St. Denys. Bryant has proved, in this
story of Orpheus, that it is just a slighty-coloured variety of the
story of Osiris. *
* BRYANT. The very name
Orpheus is just a synonym for Bel, the name of the great Babylonian
god, which, while originally given to Cush, became hereditary in the
line of his deified descendants. Bel signifies "to mix," as well as "to
confound," and "Orv" in Hebrew, which in Chaldee becomes Orph,
signifies also "to mix." But "Orv," or "Orph," signifies besides "a
willow-tree"; and therefore, in exact accordance with the mystic
system, we find the symbol of Orpheus among the Greeks to have been a
willow-tree. Thus, Pausanias, after referring to a representation of
Actaeon, says, "If again you look to the lower parts of the picture,
you will see after Patroclus, Orpheus sitting on a hill, with a harp in
his left hand, and in his right hand the leaves of a
willow-tree"; and again, a little furthe on, he says: "He is
represented leaning on the trunk of this tree." The willow-leaves in
the right hand of Orpheus, and the willow-tree on which he leans,
sufficiently show the meaning of his name.
As Osiris was cut in pieces in
Egypt, so Orpheus was torn in pieces in Thrace. Now, when the mangled
limbs of the latter had been strewn about the field, his head, floating
on the Hebrus, gave proof of the miraculous character of him that owned
it. "Then," says Virgil:
"Then,
when his head from his fair shoulders torn,
Washed by the waters, was on Hebrus borne,
Even then his trembling voice invoked his bride,
With his last voice, 'Eurydice,' he creid;
'Eurydice,' the rockes and river banks replied."
There is diversity here, but
amidst that diversity there is an obvious unity. In both cases, thehead
dissevered from the lifeless body occupies the foreground of the
picture; in both cases, the miracle is in connection with a river. Now,
when the festivals of "St. Bacchus the Martyr," and of "St. Dionysius
and Eleuther," so remarkably agree with the time
when the festivals of the Pagan god of wine were celbrated, whether by
the name of Bacchus, or Dionysus, or Eleuthereus, and when the mode of
representing the modern Dionysius and the ancient Dionysus are
evidently the very same, while the legends of both so strikiingly
harmonise, who can doubt the real character of those Romish festivals?
They are not Christina. They are Pagan; they are unequivocally
Babylonian.
Note
Oannes and Souro
The reason for believing that
Oannes, that was said to have been the first of the fabulous creatures
that came up out of the sea and instructed the Babylonians, was
represented as the goat-horned fish, is as follows: First, the name
Oannes, as elsewhere shown, is just the Greek form of He-annesh, or
"The man," which is a synonym for the name of our first parent, Adam.
Now, Adam can be proved to be the original of Pan, who was also called
Inuus, which is just another pronunciation of Anosh without the
article, which, in our translation of Genesis 5:7, is made Enos. This
name, as universally admitted, is the generic name for man
after the Fall, as weak and diseased. The o in Enos
is what is called the vau, which sometimes is
pronounced o, sometimes u, and
sometimes v or w. A legitimate
pronunciation of Enos, therefore, is just Enus
or Enws, the same in sound as Inuus, the Ancient Roman name of Pan. The
name Pan itself signifies "He who turned aside." As the Hebrew word for
"uprightness" signifies "walking straight in the way," so every
deviation from the straight line of duty was Sin;
Hata, the word for sin, signifying generically "to go aside from the
straight line." Pan, it is admitted, was the Head of the Satyrs--that
is, "the first of the Hidden Ones," for Satyr and Satur, "the Hidden
One," are evidently just the same word; and Adam was the first of
mankind that hid himself. Pan is said to have loved
a nymph called Pitho, or, as it is given in another form, Pitys (SMITH,
"Pan"); and what is Pitho or Pitys but just the name of the beguiling
woman, who, having been beguiledbeguiler of her husband, and induced him
to take the step, in consequence of which he earned the name Pan, "The
man that turned aside." Pitho or Pitys evidently come from Peth or Pet,
"to beguile," from which verb also the famous serpent Python derived
its name. This conclusion in regard to the personal identity of Pan and
Pitho is greatly confirmed by the titles given to the wife of Faunus.
Faunus, says Smith, is "merely another name for Pan." * herself, acted the
part of a
* In Chaldee the same letter
that is pronounced P is also pronounced Ph, that is F, therefore Pan is
just Faun.
Now, the wife of Faunus was
called Oma, Fauna, and Fatua, which names plainly mean "The mother that
turned aside, being beguiled." This beguiled mother is also called
indifferently "the sister, wife, or daughter" of her husband; and how
this agrees with the relations of Eve to Adam, the reader does not need
to be told.
Now, a title of Pan was
Capricornus, or "The goat-horned" (DYMOCK, "Pan"), and the origin of
this title must be traced to what took place when our first parent
became the Head of the Satyrs--the "first of the Hidden ones." He fled
to hide himself; and Berkha, "a fugitive," signifies also "a he-goat."
Hence the origin of the epithet Capricornus, or "goat-horned," as
applied to Pan. But as Capricornus in the sphere is generally
represented as the "Goat-fish," if Capricornus represents Pan, or Adam,
or Oannes, that shows that it must be Adam, after, through virtue of
the metempsychosis, he had passed through the waters of the deluge: the
goat, as the symbol of Pan, representing Adam, the first
father of mankind, combined with the fish, the symbol of Noah, the second
father of the human race; of both whom Nimrod, as at once Kronos, "the
father of the gods," and Souro, "the seed," was a new incarnation.
Among the idols of Babylon, as represented in KITTO'S Illust.
Commentary, we find a representation of this very
Capricornus, or goat-horned fish; and Berosus tells us that the well
known representations of Pan, of which Capricornus is a modification,
were found in Babylon in the most ancient times. A great deal more of
evidence might be adduced on this subject; but I submit to the reader
if the above statement does not sufficiently account for the origin of
the remarkable figure in the Zodiac, "The goat-horned fish."
The Two Babylons: Contents
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