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PART
III - MITHRAISM: FREEMASONRY AND THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES CHAPTERS
OF MASONIC HISTORY BY
BRO. H. L. HAYWOOD EDITOR
THE BUILDER THE
BUILDER MAY 1923 THE
THEORY that modern Freemasonry is m some sense a direct descendant from the ancient
Mysteries has held a peculiar attraction for Masonic writers this long time, and the end
is not yet, for the world is rife with men who argue about the matter up and down endless
pages of print. It is a most difficult
subject to write about, so that the more one learns about it the less he is inclined to
ventilate any opinions of his own. The
subject covers so much ground and in such tangled jungles that almost any grand
generalization is pretty sure to be either wrong or useless. Even Gould, who is usually one of the soundest and
carefullest of generalizers, gets pretty badly mixed up on the subject. For
present purposes it has seemed to me wise to attention to one only of the Mysteries,
letting it stand as a type of the rest, and I have chosen for that purpose MITHRAISM, one
of the greatest and one of most interesting, as well as one possessing as many
parallelisms with Freemasonry as any of the others. I -
HOW MITHRA CAME TO BE A FIRST-CLASS GOD Way
back in the beginning of things, so we may learn from the Avesta, Mithra was the young god
of the sky lights that appeared just before sunrise and lingered after the sun had set. To him was attributed patronship of the virtues of
truth, life-giving, and youthful strength and joy. Such
qualities attracted many worshippers in whose eyes Mithra grew from more to more until
finally he became a great god in his own right and almost equal to the sun god himself. "Youth will be served," even a youthful
god; and Zoroastrianism, which began by giving Mithra a very subordinate place, came at
last to exalt him to the right hand of the awful Ormuzd, who had rolled up within himself
all the attributes of all gods whatsoever. When
the Persians conquered the Babylonians, who worshipped the stars in a most thoroughgoing
manner, Mithra got himself placed at the very center of star worshipping cults, and won
such strength for himself that when the Persian Empire went to pieces and everything fell
into the melting pot with it, Mithra was able to hold his own identity, and emerged from
the struggle at the head of a religion of his own. He was a young god full of vigour and
overflowing with spirits, capable of teaching his followers the arts of victory, and such
things appealed mightily to the bellicose Iranian tribesmen who never ceased to worship
him in one form or another until they became so soundly converted to Mohammedanism
centuries afterwards. Even then they did not
abandon him altogether but after the inevitable manner of converts rebuilt him into Allah
and into Mohammed, so that even today one will find pieces of Mithra scattered about here
and there in what the Mohammedans call their theology. After
the collapse of the Persian Empire, Phrygia, where so many religions were manufactured at
one time or another, took Mithra up and built a cult about him. They gave him his Phrygian cap which one always
sees on his statues, and they incorporated in his rites the use of the dreadful
"taurobolium," which was a baptism in the blood of a healthy young bull. In the course of time this gory ceremony became
the very center and climax of the Mithraic ritual, and made a profound impression on the
hordes of poor slaves and ignorant men who flocked into the mithrea, as the Mithraic
houses of worship were called. Mithra
was never able to make his way into Greece (the same thing could be said of Egypt, where
the competition among religions was very severe) but it happened that he borrowed
something from Greek art. Some unknown Greek
sculptor, one of the shining geniuses of his nation, made a statue of Mithra that served
ever afterwards as the orthodox likeness of the god, who was depicted as a youth of
overflowing vitality, his mantle thrown back, a Phrygian cap on his head, and slaying a
bull. For hundreds of years this statue was
to all devout Mithraists what the crucifix now is to Roman Catholics. This likeness did much to open Mithra's path
toward the west, for until this his images had been hideous in the distorted and repellant
manner so characteristic of Oriental religious sculpture.
The Oriental people, among whom Mithra was born, were always capable of
gloomy grandeur and of religious terror, but of beauty they had scarcely a touch; it
remained for the Greeks to recommend Mithra to men of good taste. After
the Macedonian conquests, so it is believed, the cult of Mithra became crystallized; it
got its orthodox theology, its church system, its philosophy, its dramas and rites, its
picture of the universe and of the grand cataclysmic end of all things in a terrific day
of judgment. Many things had been built into
it. There were exciting ceremonies for the multitudes; much mysticism for the devout; a
great machinery of salvation for the timid; a program of militant activity for men of
valour; and a lofty ethic for the superior classes. Mithraism
had a history, traditions, sacred books, and a vast momentum from the worship of millions
and millions among remote and scattered tribes. Thus
accoutered and equipped, the young god and his religion were prepared to enter the more
complex and sophisticated world known as the Roman Empire. II -
HOW MITHRA FOUND HIS WAY TO ROME When
Mithridates Eupator - he who hated the Romans with a virulency like that of Hannibal, and
who waged war on them three or four times - was utterly destroyed in 66 B.C. and his
kingdom of Pontus was given over to the dogs, the scattered fragments of his armies took
refuge among the outlaws and pirates of Cilicia and carried with them everywhere the rites
and doctrines of Mithraism. Afterwards the soldiers of the Republic of Tarsus, which these
outlaws organized, went pillaging and fighting all round the Mediterranean, and carried
the cult with them everywhere. It was in this
unpromising manner that Mithra made his entrance into the Roman world. The most ancient of all inscriptions is one made
by a freedman of the Flavians at about this time. In
the course of time Mithra won to his service a very different and much more efficient army
of missionaries. Syrian merchants went back
and forth across the Roman world like shuttles in a loom, and carried the new cult with
them wherever they went. Slaves and freedmen
became addicts and loyal supporters. Government
officials, especially those belonging to the lowlier ranks, set up altars at every
opportunity. But the greatest of all the
propagandists were the soldiers of the various Roman armies. Mithra, who was believed to love the sight of
glittering swords and flying banners, appealed irresistibly to soldiers, and they in turn
were as loyal to him as to any commander on the field.
The time came when almost every Roman camp possessed its mithreum. Mithra
began down next to the ground but the time came when he gathered behind him the great ones
of the earth. Antoninus Pius, father-in-law
of Marcus Aurelius, erected a Mithraic temple at Ostia, seaport of the city of Rome. With the exception of Marcus Aurelius and possibly
one or two others all the pagan emperors after Antaninus were devotees of the god,
especially Julian, who was more or less addle-pated and willing to take up with anything
to stave off the growing power of Christianity. The
early Church Fathers nicknamed Julian "The Apostate"; the slur was not
altogether just because the young man had never been a Christian under his skin. Why
did all these great fellows, along with the philosophers and literary men who obediently
followed suit, take up the worship of a foreign god, imported from amidst the much hated
Syrians, when there were so many other gods of home manufacture so close at hand? Why did
they take to a religion that had been made fashionable by slaves and cutthroats? The
answer is easy to discover. Mithra was
peculiarly fond of rulers and of the mighty of the earth.
His priests declared that the god himself stood at the right hand of
emperors both on and off the throne. It was
these priests who invented the good old doctrine of the divine right of kings. The more Mithra was worshipped by the masses, the
more complete was the imperial control of those masses, therefore it was good business
policy for the emperors to give Mithra all the assistance they could. There came a time when every Emperor was pictured
by the artists with a halo about his head; that halo had origin ally belonged to Mithra. It represented the outstanding splendour of the
young and vigorous sun. After the Roman
emperors passed away the popes and bishops of the Roman Catholic Church took up the
custom; they are still in the habit of showing their saints be-haloed. Mithraism
spread up and down the world with amazing rapidity. All
along the coast of northern Africa and even in the recesses of the Sahara; through the
Pillars of Hercules to England and up into Scotland; across the channel into Germany and
the north countries; and down into the great lands along the Danube, he everywhere made
his way. London was at one time a great
center of his worship. The greatest number of mithrea were built in Germany. Ernest Renan once said that if ever Christianity
had become s mitten by a fatal malady Mithraism might very easily: have become the
established and official religion of the whole Western World. Men might now be saying prayers to Mithra, and
have their children baptised in bull's blood. There
is not here space to describe in what manner the cult became modified, by its successful
spread across the Roman Empire. It was
modified, of course, and in many ways profoundly, and it in turn modified everything with
which it came into contact. Here
is a brief epitome of the evolution of this Mystery.
It began at a remote time among primitive Iranian tribesmen. It picked up a body of doctrine from the
Babylonian star worshippers, who created that strange thing known as astrology. It became a mystery, equipped with powerful rites,
in the Asia Minor countries. It received a
decent outward appearance at the hand of Greek artists and philosophers; and it finally
became a world religion among the Romans. Mithraism
reached its apogee in the second century; it went the way of all flesh in the fourth
century; and flickered out entirely in the fifth century, except that bits of its wreckage
were salvaged and used by a few new cults, such as those of the various forms of
Manicheeism. III
- THE MITHRAIC THEORY OF THINGS After
overthrowing its hated rival, the early Christian Church so completely destroyed
everything having to do with Mithraism that there have remained behind but few fragments
to bear witness to a once victorious religion. What
little is accurately known will be found all duly set down and correctly interpreted in
the works of the learned Dr. Franz Cumont, whose books on the subject so aroused the ire
of the present Roman Catholic Hierarchy that they placed them on the Index, and warned the
faithful away from his chapters of history. Today,
as in Mithra's time, superstitions and empty doctrines have a sorry time when confronted
with known facts. The
pious Mithraist believed that back of the stupendous scheme of things was a great and
unknowable deity, Ozmiuzd by name, and that Mithra was his son. A soul destined for its
prison house of flesh left the presence of Ormuzd, descended by the gates of Cancer,
passed through the spheres of the seven planets and in each of these picked up some
function or faculty for use on the earth. After its term here the soul was prepared by
sacraments and discipline for its re-ascent after death.
Upon its return journey it underwent a great ordeal of judgment before
Mithra. Leaving something behind it in each of the planetary spheres it finally passed
back through the gates of Capricorn to ecstatic union with the great Source of all. Also there was an eternal hell, and those who had
proved unfaithful to Mithra were sent there. Countless
deons, devils and other invisible monsters raged about everywhere over the earth tempting
souls, and presided over the tortures in the pit. Through it all the planets continued to
exercise good or evil influence over the human being, according as his fates might chance
to fall out on high, a thing imbedded in the cult from its old Babylonian days. The
life of a Mithraist was understood as a long battle in which, with Mithra's help, he did
war against the principles and powers of evil. In
the beginning of his life of faith he was purified by baptism, and through all his days
received strength through sacraments and sacred meals.
Sunday was set aside as a holy day, and the twenty-fifth of December began a
season of jubilant celebration. Mithraic
priests were organized in orders, and were deemed to have supernatural power to some
extent or other. It
was believed that Mithra had once come to earth in order to organize the faithful into the
army of Ormuzd. He did battle with the Spirit
of all Evil in a cave, the Evil taking the form of a bull.
Mithra overcame his adversary and then returned to his place on high as the
leader of the forces of righteousness, and the judge of all the dead. All Mithraic ceremonies centered about the bull
slaying episode. The
ancient Church Fathers saw so many points of resemblance between this cult and
Christianity that many of them accepted the theory that Mithraism was a counterfeit
religion devised by Satan to lead souls astray. Time
has proved them to be wrong in this because at bottom Mithraism was as different from
Christianity as night from day. IV -
IN WHAT WAY MITHRAISM WAS LIKE FREEMASONRY Masonic
writers have often professed to see many points of resemblance between Mithraism and
Freemasonry. Albert Pike once declared that
Freemasonry is the modern heir of the Ancient Mysteries.
It is a dictum with which I have never been able to agree. There are similarities between our Fraternity and
the old Mystery Cults, but most of them are of a superficial character, and have to do
with externals of rite or, organization, and not with inward content. When Sir Samuel Dill described Mithraism as
"a sacred Freemasonry" he used that name in a very loose sense. Nevertheless,
the resemblances are often startling. Men
only were admitted to membership in the cult. "Among
the hundreds of inscriptions that have come down to us, not one mentions either a
priestess, a woman initiate, or even a donatress." In this the mithrea differed from
the collegia, which latter, though they almost never admitted women as members, never
hesitated to accept help or money from them. Membership
in Mithraism was as democratic as it is with us, perhaps more so; slaves were freely
admitted and often held positions of trust, as also did the freedmen of whom there were
such multitudes in the latter centuries of the empire. Membership
was usually divided into seven grades, each of which had its own appropriate symbolical
ceremonies. Initiation was the crowning
experience of every worshipper. He was
attired symbolically, took vows, passed through many baptisms, and in the higher grades
ate sacred meals with his fellows. The great
event of the initiate's experiences was the taurobolium, already described. It was deemed very efficacious, and was supposed
to unite the worshipper with Mithra himself. A
dramatic representation of a dying and a rising again was at the head of all these
ceremonies. A tablet showing in bas relief
Mithra's killing of the bull stood at the end of every mithreum. This,
mithreum, as the meeting place, or lodge, was called, was usually cavern shaped, to
represent the cave in which the god had his struggle.
There were benches or shelves along the side, and on these side lines the
members sat. Each mithreum had its own
officers, its president, trustees, standing committees, treasurer, and so forth, and there
were higher degrees granting special privileges to the few.
Charity and Relief were universally practised and one Mithraist hailed
another as "brother." The Mithraic "lodge" was kept small, and new
lodges were developed as a result of "swarming off" when membership grew too
large. Manicheeism,
as I have already said, sprang fr the ashes of Mithraism, and St. Augustine, who did so
much to give shape to the Roman Catholic church and theology was for many years an ardent
Manichee, an through him many traces of the old Persian creed found their way into
Christianity. Out of Manicheeism, or out of
what was finally left of it, came Paulicianism, and out of Paulicianism came many strong
medieval cults - the Patari, the Waldenses, the Hugenots, and countless other such
developments. Through these various channels
echoes of the old Mithraism persisted over Europe, and it may very well be, as has often
been alleged, that there are faint traces of the ancient cult to be found here and there
in our own ceremonies or symbolisms. Such
theories are necessarily vague and hard to prove, and anyway the thing is not of
sufficient importance to argue about. If we
have three or four symbols that originated in the worship of Mithra, so much the better
for Mithra! After
all is said and done the Ancient Mysteries were among the finest things developed in the
Roman world. They stood for equality in a
savagely aristocratic and class-riddled society; they offered centers of refuge to the
poor and the despised among a people little given to charity and who didn't believe a man
should love his neighbour; and in a large historical way they left behind them methods of
human organization, ideals and principles and hopes which yet remain in the world for our
use and profit. It a man wishes to do so, he may say that what Freemasonry is among us,
the Ancient Mysteries were to the people of the Roman world, but it would be a difficult
thing for any man to establish the fact that Freemasonry has directly descended from those
great cults. [Note:
Kipling, who has never wearied of handling themes concerned with Freemasonry, often writes
of Mithraism. See in especial his Puck of
Pook's Hill, page 173 of the 1911 edition, for the stirring Song to Mithras.] WORKS
CONSULTED IN PREPARING THIS ARTICLE The
Secret Tradition in Freemasonry, Vol.
II, Waite. The
Book of Acts,
Expositor's Bible. Mystery
Religions and the New Testament,
Sheldon. Roman
Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius, Sir
Samuel Dill. The
Works of
Franz Cumont. Le
Culte de Mithra,
Gasquet. On
Isis and Osiris,
Plutarch. Life
of Pompey,
Plutarch. Annals,
Tacitus. Corpus
Inscriptionum Latinarum. Mythrasliturgie,
Dielitch. De
Corona,
Tertullion. History
of France,
Vol. V, Vol. VI, Vol. VII, Duruy. Neoplatonism,
Bigg. Roman
Society in the Last Century of the Western Empire, Sir Samuel Dill. Menippus,
Lucian. Thebaid,
Statius. See
bibliography in Hasting's Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics, Vol. VIII, p. 752. Ars
Quatuor Coronatorum, Vol. III, p. 109; Vol. IV, p. 32; Vol. XIII, p. 90. The History of
Freemasonry, Vol. I, Gould. Mackey's
Encyclopedia-(Revised
Edition): Allah,
46, Babylon, 89. Egyptian Mysteries, 232-233. Egyptian Priests, Initiations of the, 234. Gnostics, 300-301.
Legend, 433. Manichaeans, 462. Mithras,
Mysteries of, 485-487. Mohammed, 488.
Mysteries, Ancient, 497-500. Mystery, 500. Myth, 501. Myth,
Historical, 501. Mythical History, 501.
Mythology, 501. Myth, Philosophical, 501. Ormuzd, 539.
Persia, 558 Pike, Albert, 563. Roman Colleges of Artificers, 630-634. THE
BUILDER: Vol.
1, 1915. - Symbolism, The Hiramic Legend, and the Master's Word, p. 285; Symbolism in
Mythology, p. 296. Vol.
II, 1916. - Masonry and the Mysteries, p. 19; The Mysteries of Mithra, p. 94; The
Dionysiacs, p. 220; The Mithra Again, p. 254; The Ritual of Ancient Egypt, p. 285; The
Dionysiaes, p. 287. Vol.
III, 1917. - The Secret Key, p. 158; Mithraism, p. 252; Vol. IV, 1918. - The Ancient
Mysteries, p. 223. Vol.
V, 1919. - The Ancient Mysteries Again, p. 25; The Eleusinian Mysteries and Rites, pp.
143, 172; The Mystery of Masonry, p. 189; The Eleusinian Mysteries and Rites, pp. 218,
240. Vol.
VI, 1920. - A Bird's-Eye View of Masonic History, p. 236. Vol.
VII, 1921. - Whence Came Freemasonry, p. 90; Books on the Mysteries of Isis, Mithras and
Eleusis, p. 205. Vol.
VIII, 1922. - A Mediating Theory, p. 318; Christianity and the Mystery Religions, p. 322. |