Echoes from the Gnosis
by
G. R. S. MEAD
All textual references are to
G. R. S. Mead's Thrice-Greatest Hermes, 3 vols.
(London: Theosophical Publishing House, 1906).
The Hymns of Hermes
by G.R.S. Mead
THE SERVICE OF SONG
Clement of Alexandria tells us that the whole of the
religious philosophy-that is, the wisdom, discipline and
multifarious arts and sciences-of the Egyptian priesthood was
contained in the Books of Hermes, that is of Thoth. These Books,
he informs us further, were classified under forty-two heads and
divided into a number of groups according to the various septs
or divisions of the priests.
In describing a certain sacred ceremonial-a procession of
priests in their various orders-Clement tells us that it was
headed by a representative of the order of Singers, who were
distinguished by appropriate symbols of music, some of which
were apparently carried in the hands and others embroidered on
the robes.
These Singers had to make themselves masters of, that is,
learn by heart, two of the divisions of the Books of Hermes,
namely, those which contained collections of Hymns in Honour of
the Gods or God, and Encomia or Hymns in Praise of the Kings
(iii, 222).
Many specimens of similar hymns in praise of the Gods are
preserved to us in Egyptian inscriptions and papyri, and some of
them are most noble outpourings of the soul in praise of the
majesty and transcendency of the Supreme, in terms that may be
not unfavorably compared with similar praise giving in other
great scriptures. But, alas! the hymnbooks of Thoth, to which
Clement refers, are lost to us. He may, of course, have been
mistaken in so definitely designating them, just as he was
indubitably mistaken in thinking that they were collections of
hymns composed by a single individual, Hermes.
The grandiose conception of Thoth as the inspirer of all
sacred writings and the teacher of all religion and philosophy
was Egyptian and not Greek; and it was but a sorry equivalent
that the Greeks could find in their own pantheon when, in the
change of God-names, they were forced to 'translate' "Thoth" by
"Hermes."
Thoth, as the inspirer of all sacred writings
and the president of all priestly discipline, was, as Iamblichus
tells us, a name which was held by the Egyptians to be "common
to all priests"-that is to say, every priest as priest was a
Thoth, because he showed forth in his sacred office some
characteristic or other of the Great Priest or Master Hierophant
among the Gods whose earthy name was Thoth Tehuti.
Thoth was thus the Oversoul of all priests;
and when some of the Greeks came to know better what the inner
discipline of the true priestly mysteries connoted, they so felt
the inadequacy of plain Hermes as a suitable equivalent for the
Egyptian name which designated this great ideal, that they
qualified 'Egyptian Hermes' with the honorific epithet
'Thrice-greatest.'
It is of the Hymns of this Thrice-greatest Hermes that I
shall treat in the present small volume hymns that were inspired
by the still-living tradition of what was best in the wisdom of
ancient Egypt, as 'philosophized' through minds trained in Greek
thought, and set forth in the fair speech of golden-tongued
Hellas.
But here again, unfortunately, we have no collection of such
hymns preserved to us; and all we can do is to gather up the
fragments that remain, scattered through the pages of the
Trismegistic literature which have escaped the jealousy of an
exclusive bibliolatry.
The main Gospel of the Trismegistic Gnosis is
contained in a sacred sermon which bears in Greek the title
"Poemandres." This may have been originally the Greek
transliteration of an Egyptian name (ii, 50); but from the
treatise itself it is manifest that it was understood by the
Greek followers of this Gnosis to mean "The Shepherd of Men," or
"Man-shepherd." This Shepherd was no man, but Divine Humanity or
the Great Man or Mind, the inspirer of all spiritual
initiations.
This majestic Reality or Essence of Certitude was conceived
of as a limitless Presence, or Person, of Light and Life and
Goodness, which enwrapped the contemplative mind of the pious
worshipper of God or the Good, of the single-hearted lover of
the Beautiful, and of the unwearied striver for the knowledge of
the True.
And so, in His instruction to one who was striving to reach
the grade of a true self-conscious Hermes, Poemandres declares:
I, Mind, Myself am present with holy men and good, the
pure and merciful, men who live piously.
To such My Presence doth become an aid, and straightway
they gain Gnosis of all things, and win the Father's love by
their pure lives, and give Him thanks, invoking on Him
blessings, and chanting hymns, intent on Him with ardent
love (ii, 14).
And the same instruction is practically repeated in the
sermon called "The Key," where we read:
But on the pious soul the Mind doth mount and guide it to
the Gnosis' Light. And such a soul doth never tire in songs
of praise to God and pouring blessing on all men, and doing
good in word and deed to all, in imitation of its Sire (ii,
155).
The sole conditions for reaching this consummation, so
devoutly to be wished, are here laid down:
The good alone can know the Good; even as one of the
invocations to Hermes as the Good Mind, preserved in the Greek
Magic Papyri, phrases it:
Thee I invoke! Come unto me, O Good, Thou altogether
good, come to the good! (i, 86).
The pure alone can know the Pure; and by "Pure" I think
Hermes sometimes meant far more than is generally connoted by
the term. "Pure" is that which remains in itself, and is neither
too much nor too little; it is the equilibrium, the balanced
state, the mysterious something that reconciles all opposites,
and is their simultaneous source and ending-the Divine Justice.
The merciful alone can know the Merciful, the source of the
infinite variety of the Divine Love.
To such the Divine Presence becomes an aid; it is in the
field of this 'Good Land' alone, in the self cultivated soil of
the spiritual nature-the good and the pure and merciful
nature-of man, that the Divine Presence can sow the
self-conscious seeds of the heavenly Gnosis, so that from this
Virgin Womb of the Virtue may come to birth the true Man, the
child of Freedom, or Right Will, or Good Will.
To others, to those who are still in ignorance of spiritual
things, the Divine Presence is also an aid, but unknowingly; for
being manifested for them in its reversed mode, by means of the
constraints of Fate, the many consider it a hindrance, as indeed
it is-a hindrance to their falling into greater ignorance and
limitation. The soil must be cleared of tares and ploughed,
before it can be sown.
But when man of his own freewill reverses his
mode of life, and revolves with the motion of the heavenly
spheres instead of spinning against them, the conscious contact
with the Divine Presence which is thus effected, stirs the whole
nature to respond; sunlight pours into the true heart of the man
from all sides, and his heart answers; it wakes from the dead
and begins to speak true words. The Great God gives speech to
the heart in the Invisible, even as He does to the dead
Osirified; and that unspoken speech is a continual praise-giving
of right deeds. There is also a spoken speech, becoming
articulate in human words in hymns of praise and thanks to
God-the liturgy of a piety that answers to the Divine and is
thus responsible.
Indeed this is the basis of all liturgy and cult, even in
their crudest forms and reflections-in the dreams of men's
sleeping hearts. But the Trismegistic writings are dealing with
the self-conscious realization of true Gnostic Passion, where
feeling has to be consciously transmuted into knowledge.
The singing of hymns on earth is the reflection of a heavenly
mystery. Before the man can really sing in proper tune he must
have harmonized his lower nature and transformed it into cosmos
or fit order. Hitherto he has been singing out of tune,
chaotically-howling, shrieking, crying, cursing, rather than
singing articulately, and so offering 'reasonable oblations' to
God.
The articulation of the 'members' of his true
'body' or 'heart' has not yet been completed or perfected; they
are still, to use the language of the ancient Egyptian myth,
scattered abroad, as it were, by his Typhonic passions; the
limbs of his body of life are scattered in his body of death.
The Isis of his spiritual nature is still weeping and mourning,
gathering them together, awaiting the day of the New Dawn, when
the last member, the organ of Gnosis, shall complete the taxis,
or order, or band of his members, and the New Man shall arise
from the dead.
It is only when these 'limbs' of his are harmonized and
properly articulated that he has an instrument for cosmic music.
It matters not whether the old myth tells us of the fourteen
'limbs' of the dead Osiris, or the later instruction speaks of
the seven spheres of the creative Harmony that fashion forth the
'limbs' of every man, and views them as each energizing in two
modes, according as the individual will of man goes with them or
against them-it all refers to the same mystery. Man in
limitation is two-fold, even as are his physical limbs; man in
freedom as cosmicly configured is two in one in all things.
And therefore when this 'change of gnostic tendency' is
wrought, there is a marvellous transmutation of the whole
nature. He abandons his Typhonic passions, the energizings of
the nature that has battled with God, in order that what the
anonymous writer of that mystic masterpiece The Dream of Ravan,
so finely calls the 'Divine Catastrophe' may be precipitated,
and the Titan in him may be the more rapidly destroyed, or
rather transmuted into the God.
For though these passions now seem to us to be of the
'Devil,' and though we look upon them as born of powers that
fight against God, they are not really evil; they are the
experiences in our nature of the natural energies of the Divine
Harmony-that mysterious Engine of Fate, which is the seven-fold
means of manifestation, according to our Trismegistic tradition.
For the Divine Harmony is the creative instrument of the Divine
Energy, that perpetually produces forms in substance for
consciousness, and so gradually perfects a form that shall be
capable of imaging forth the Perfect Man.
The natural energies that have been hitherto working through
him unconsciously, in order that through form self-consciousness
may come to birth, are, however, regarded by the neophyte, in
the first stages of his gnostic birth, as inimical; they have
woven for him garments that have brought experience, but which
now seem rags that he would ain strip off, in order that he may
put on new robes of power and majesty, and so exchange the
sackcloth of the slave for the raiment of the King. Though the
new garments are from the same yarn and woven by the energies of
the same loom, the weaver is now laboring to change the texture
and design; he is now joyfully learning gnosticly to follow the
plan of the Great Weaver, and so cheerfully unravels the rags of
his past imperfections to reweave them into 'fine linen' fit for
King Osiris.
This gnostic change is in our treatise described by the Great
Mind teaching the little mind, as following on the stripping off
of the vices of the soul, which are said to arise from the
downward mode of the energies of the seven spheres of the
Harmony of Fate. The subsequent beatification is set forth in
the following graphic declaration:
And then, with all the energizing of the
Harmony stript from him, he cometh to that nature which
belongs unto the Eighth, and there with those that are
hymneth the Father.
They who are there welcome his coming
there with joy; and he, made like to them that sojourn
there, doth further hear the Powers who are above the nature
that belongs unto the Eighth, singing their songs of praise
to God in language of their own.
And then they, in a band, go to the
Father home; of their own selves they make surrender of
themselves to Powers, and thus becoming Powers they are in
God. This the good end for those who have gained Gnosis-to
be made one with God (ii, 16).
This is the change of gnostic tendency that
wrought in the nature of one who passes from the stage of
ordinary man, which Hermes characterizes as a "procession of
Fate," to that true manhood which leads finally to Godship.
The ancient Egyptians divided man into at
least nine forms of manifestation, or modes of existence, or
spheres of being, or by whatever phrase we choose to name these
categories of his natures.
The words "clothed in his proper Power"
refer, I believe, to one of these natures of man. Now the sekhem
is generally translated "power," but we have no description of
it whereby we may satisfactorily check the translation; and so I
would suggest that the khaibit, though generally translated
"shadow" (i, 89), is perhaps the mystery to which our text
refers, for "in the teaching of Egypt, around the radiant being
[perhaps the ren or name], which in its regenerate life could
assimilate itself to the glory of the Godhead, was formed the
khaibit, or luminous atmosphere, consisting of a series of
ethereal envelopes, at once shading and diffusing its flaming
lustre, as the earth's atmosphere shades and diffuses the solar
rays" (i, 76).
This was typified by the linen swathings of
the mummy, for "Thoth, the Divine Wisdom, wraps the spirit of
the justified a million times in a garment of fine linen," even
as Jesus in a certain sacred act girt himself with a 'linen
cloth' which Tertullian characterizes as the "proper garment of
Osiris" (i, 71). And Plutarch tells us that linen was worn by
the priests "on account of the colour which the flax in flower
sends forth, resembling the ethereal radiance that surrounds the
cosmos" (i, 265.).
The same mystery is shown forth in the marvellous passage
which describes the transfiguration of Jesus in the Gnostic
gospel known as the Pistis Sophia, which is of almost pure
Egyptian tradition. It is the mystic description of a wonderful
metamorphosis or transformation that is wrought in the inner
nature of the Master, who has ascended to clothe himself with
the Robe of Glory, and who returns to the consciousness of his
lower powers, or disciples, clad in his Robe of Power.
"They saw Jesus descending shining exceedingly; there was no
measure to the light which surrounded him, for he shone more
brightly than when he had ascended into the heavens, so that it
is impossible for any in this world to describe the light in
which he was. He shot forth rays shining exceedingly; his rays
were without measure, nor were his rays of light equal together,
but they were of every figure and type, some being more
admirable than the others in infinite manner. And they were all
pure light in every part at the same time.
"It was of three degrees, one surpassing the
other in infinite manner. The second, which was in the midst,
excelled the first which was below it, and the third, the most
admirable of all, surpassed the two below it. The first glory
was placed below all, like to the light which came upon Jesus
before he ascended into the heavens, and was very regular as to
its own light" (pp. 7, 8).
This triple glory, I believe, was the "body of light" of the
nature of the eighth, ninth and tenth spheres of glory in the
scale of the perfect ten. In our text the "clothed in his proper
Power" must, I think, be referred to the powers of the seven
spheres unified into one; the eighth, which was the vehicle of
the pure mind, according to Platonic tradition, based
originally, in all probability, on Egyptian tradition. This
'vehicle' was 'atomic' and not 'molecular,' to use the terms of
present-day science, simple and not compound, same and not other
"very regular as to its own light."
And so when this gnostic change is wrought in the man's inner
nature there is an accompanying change effected in the substance
of his very 'body,' and he begins to sing in harmony with the
spheres; "with those that are he hymneth the Father."
He now knows the language of nature, and
therewith sings praise continually in full consciousness of the
joy of life. He sings the song of joy, and so singing hears the
joyous songs of the Sons of God who form the first of the choirs
invisible. They sing back to him and give him welcome; and what
they sing the lover of such things may read in the same Pistis
Sophia (p. 17), in the Hymn of the Powers "Come unto Us"-when
they welcome the returning exile on the Great Day of that name.
But this is not all; for higher still and higher, beyond and
yet beyond, are other choirs of Powers of even greater
transcendency who sing. As yet, however, the newly born cannot
understand or bear their song, for they sing in a language of
their own, there being many tongues of angels and archangels, of
daimones and gods in their many grades.
But already the man has begun to realize the freedom of the
cosmos; he has begun to feel himself a true cosmopolitan or
world-citizen, and to thrill in harmony with the Powers. He
experiences an ineffable union that removes all fear, and longs
for the consummation of the final Sacred Marriage when he will
perform the great sacrifice, and of himself make joyful
surrender of all that he has been in separation, to become, by
union with Those alone who truly are, all that has ever been and
is and will be-and so one with God, the All and One.
It is thus evident that our Hymns of Hermes
are in direct contact with a tradition which regarded the
spiritual life as a perpetual service of song; and this is quite
in keeping with the belief of the Egyptians that man was created
for the sole purpose of worshipping the Gods and rendering them
pious service. The whole duty of man was thus conceived of as an
utterance of 'true words' or a continual singing of a song of
harmony of thought and word and deed, whereby man grew like unto
the Gods, and so at last becoming a God was with the Great God
in the "Boat of the millions of Years," or "Barque of the
Aeons," in other words, was safe for eternity.
And now we will turn to the four hymns preserved to us in
Greek from the hymn-book of this truly sacred liturgy.
The first is appended to the "Poemandres" treatise, and was
evidently intended to give some idea in human terms of the
nature of the Praise-giving of the Powers to which reference has
just been made. For, as we shall see later on, the less
instructed of the community fervently desired to have revealed
to them the words of this Song, thinking in their ignorance that
it was some hymn resembling those of earth, and not yet
understanding that it was the heavenly type of all
earth-praising, whether expressed by man or animal, by tree or
stone.
The first part of our hymn consists of nine
lines, divided by their subjects into three groups, every
sentence beginning with "Holy art Thou!" It is thus in the form
of a three-fold "Holy, Holy, Holy! "-and we may thus, for want
of a proper title, call it "A Triple Trisagion."
A TRIPLE TRISAGION
Holy art Thou, O God, the
Universals' Father.
Holy art Thou, O God, Whose Will
perfects itself by means of its own Powers.
Holy art Thou, O God, Who willest to
be known and art known by Thine own.
Holy art Thou, Who didst by Word
make to consist the things that are.
Holy art Thou, of Whom All-nature
hath been made an Image.
Holy art Thou, Whose Form Nature
hath never made.
Holy art Thou, more powerful than
all power.
Holy art Thou, transcending all
preeminence.
Holy art Thou, Thou better than all
praise.
Accept my reason's offerings pure,
from soul and heart for aye stretched up to Thee, O
Thou unutterable, unspeakable, Whose Name naught but
the Silence can express!
Give ear to me who pray that I may
ne'er of Gnosis fail -- Gnosis which is our common
being's nature -- and fill me with Thy Power, and
with this Grace of Thine, that I may give the Light
to those in ignorance of the Race, my Brethren and
Thy Sons!
For this cause I believe, and I bear
witness. I go to Life and Light. Blessed art Thou, O
Father. Thy Man would holy be as Thou art holy, e'en
as Thou gavest him Thy full authority to be.
"Holy art Thou, O God, the Universals'
Father." God is first praised as the Father of the Universals,
that is of the Greatnesses of all things, the Aeonic
Immensities, or Supreme Mysteries that are plural yet one-the
Subsistencies of the Divine Being in the state of pure Divinity.
"Holy art Thou, O God, Whose Will perfects itself by
means of its own Powers."
God is next praised as the Power or Potency
of all things; for Will is regarded by our Gnostics as the means
by which the Deity reveals Himself unto Himself by the Great Act
of perpetual Self-creation of Himself in Himself. "From Thee"
are all things when God is thought of as Divine Fatherhood; and
"Through Thee" are all things-when God is regarded as Divine
Motherhood. For this Will is the Divine Love which is the means
of Self-perfection, the source of all consummation and
satisfaction, of certitude and bliss. The Deity for ever
initiates Himself into His own Mysteries.
"Holy art Thou, O God, Who willeth to be known and art
known by Thine own."
The Will of God is Gnostic; He wills to be
known. The Divine Purpose is consummated in Self-knowledge. God
is knowable, but only by "His own," that is by the Divine
Sonship, as Basilides, the Christian Gnostic, calls it, or by
the Race of the Sons of God, as Philo and our Gnostics and
others of the same period phrase it.
The Sonship is a Race, and not an individual, because they of
the Sonship have ceased from separation and have made "surrender
of themselves to Powers, and thus becoming Powers they are in
God." They are one with another, no longer separated one from
another and using divided senses and organs; for they constitute
the Intelligible Word or Reason (Logos) which is also the
Intelligible World (Kosmos) or Order of all things.
The next three praise-givings celebrate the same trinity of
what, for lack of appropriate terms, we may call Being, Bliss
and Intelligence, but now in another mode-the mode of
manifestation or enformation in space and time and substance of
the Sensible Universe, or Cosmos of forms and species.
The three hypostases or hyparxes or
subsistences of this mode of the Divine self-manifestation are
suggested by the terms Word, All-nature and Form. Word is the
Vice-regent of Being, because it is this Word or Reason that
established the being of all things, the that in them which
causes them to be what they are, the essential reason of their
being; All-nature is the ground or substance of their being, the
all-receiver or Nurse, as Plato calls her, who nourishes them,
the Giver of Bliss, the Ever-becoming which is the Image of
Eternity; while Form is the impression of the Divine
Intelligence, the source of all transformation and
metamorphosis.
The final trisagion sings the praise of God's transcendency,
declaring the powerlessness of human speech adequately to sing
the praise of God.
Therefore is it said that the sole fit liturgy, or service of
God, is to be found in the offerings of reason alone, the reason
or logos which is the Divine principle in man, the image of the
Image, or Divine Man, the Logos. It is the continual raising of
the tension of the whole nature whereby the man is drawn ever
closer and closer to God, in the rapt silence of ecstatic
contemplation-when alone he goes to the Alone, as Plotinus says.
The Name of God can be expressed by Silence alone, for, as we
know from the remains of the Christianized Gnosis, this Silence,
or Sige, is the Spouse of God, and it is the Divine Spouse alone
who can give full expression to the Divine Son, the Name or
Logos of God.
The prayer is for Gnosis, for the realization
of the state of Sonship, or the self-consciousness of the common
being which the Son has with the Father. This is to be
consummated by the fulfillment of the man's whole nature, by the
completion of his insufficiency or imperfection (hysterema),
whereby he becomes the Fullness or Wholeness (Pleroma), the Aeon
or Eternity. This is to be achieved by the descent of the Great
Power upon him, by the Blessing of God's Goodwill, that Charis
or Grace or Love, which has been all along his Divine Mother,
but which now becomes his Divine Spouse or Complement or Syzygy.
The prayer is not for self but for others,
that so the man may become the means of illumination for those
still in darkness, who as yet do not know of the Glad Tidings of
the Divine Sonship, who are ignorant of the Race of Wisdom, but
who nevertheless are, as are all men, brethren of the Christ and
sons of God.
And so in this ecstasy of praise, the
traveller, as he sings upon the Path of the Divine, feels within
him the certitude that he is indeed on the Way of Return, his
face set forward to the True Goal; his going to Light and Life,
the eternal fatherhood and motherhood that are ever united in
the Good, the One Desirable, or Divine Father-Mother, two in one
and three in one.
Finally as God has been praised throughout in
His nature of holiness, that is as most worshipful, meet to be
adored, praiseworthy and the object of all wonder, so that which
has proceeded from Him, His Man, or the Divine in man, now longs
consciously to become of like nature with Him, according to the
Purpose and Commandment of the Father Who has destined him for
this very end, and bestowed on him power over all things.
It is indeed a fair psalm-this Hymn of
Hermes, that is, the praise-giving of some lover of this Gnosis
who had, as he expresses it, "reached the Plain of Truth" (i,
19), or come into conscious contact with the reality o€ his own
Divine nature, and so been made a Hermes indeed, capable of
interpreting the inner meaning of religion, and of leading souls
back from Death to Life-a true psychagogue. It matters little
who wrote it; Greek or Syrian, it may have borne this name or
that, it may have lived precisely from this year to that, or
from some other to some other year, all this is of little
consequence except for historians of the bodies of men. What
concerns us here more nearly is the outpouring of a soul; we
have here a man manifestly pouring forth from the fullness of
his heart the profoundest experiences of his inmost life. He is
telling us how it is possible for a man to learn to know God by
first learning to know himself, and so unfold the flower of his
spiritual nature and unwrap the swathings of the immemorial
heart of him, that has been mummified and laid in the tomb so
many ages of lives that have been living deaths.
And now we may pass to our next hymn. It is found in a
beautiful little treatise which bears as title the enunciation
of its subject-"Though Unmanifest God is most Manifest"-and is a
discourse of 'father' Hermes to 'son' Tat. The subject of this
sermon is that mysterious manifestation of the Divine Energy
which is now so well known by the Sanskrit term Maya, so
erroneously translated into English as "Illusion"-unless we
venture to take this illusion in its root-meaning of Sport and
Play; for in its highest sense Maya is the Sport of the Creative
Will, the World-Drama or God in activity.
The Greek equivalent of maya is phantasia,
which, for lack of a single term in English to represent it
rightly, I have translated by "thinking manifest." The Phantasy
of God is thus the Power (Shakti in Sanskrit) of perpetual
self-manifestation or self-imagining, and is the means whereby
all 'This' comes into existence from the unmanifest 'That'; or
as our treatise phrases it:
He is Himself, both things that are
and things that are not.
The things that are He hath made manifest, he
keepeth things that are not in Himself.
He is the God beyond all name-He the
unmanifest, he the most manifest;
He whom the mind alone can contemplate, He visible
unto the eyes as well.
He is the one of no body, the one of many bodies,
nay, rather, He of every body.
Naught is there which He is not, for
all are He, and He is all (ii, 104).
He is both things that are 'here' in our present
consciousness, and all that are not in our consciousness, or
rather memory-'there' in our eternal nature. He is both the
Manifest and Hidden hidden in the manifest and manifest in the
hidden, manifest in all we have been and hidden in all we shall
be.
From the things that are not He maketh things that are; and
so He may be said to create out of nothing-as far as we are
concerned; indeed He creates out of nothing but Himself.
He is both that which the mind alone can contemplate-that is
the Intelligible Universe, or that constituted in His Divine
Being which the divided senses cannot perceive-and also all that
which the senses, both physical and superphysical can
perceive-the whole Sensible Universe.
He is to be conceived simultaneously from a
monotheistic, polytheistic and pantheistic point of view, and
from many others-as many points of view indeed, as the mind of
man can conceive, not to speak of an infinitude that he cannot
ever imagine. He is corporeality and incorporeality in perpetual
union. He is in no body, for no body can contain Him, and yet is
He in every body and every body is in Him. "Naught is there
which He is not, for He is all."
It is indeed difficult to understand why so many in the West
so greatly dread the very thought of allowing pantheistic ideas
to enter into their conception of God. This fear is in reality
over-daring or rash presumption, for they have the hardihood to
dare to limit the Divine according to their own petty notions of
what they would like God to be, and so they bitterly resent the
disturbance of their self-complacency when it is pointed out
that He will not fit the miserably narrow cross on which they
would fain crucify Him.
What right have we, who in our ignorance are but puny
creatures of a day, to exclude God from anyone or anything? But
they will reply: It is not God who is excluded; it is we who
exclude ourselves from God.
Indeed; try as we may, we cannot do so. This is the
impossible, for we cannot exclude ourselves from ourselves. And
who are we apart from God? Did we create ourselves? And if we
did, then we are God, for self-creation is the prerogative of
the Divine alone.
But the pious soul will still object that God is good alone.
Agreed, if you will; but what is Good? Is Good our good only, or
the Good of all creatures? And if God is the Good of all
creatures; then equally so must He be the Evil of all creatures;
for the good of one creature is the evil of another, and the
evil of one the good of another-and so the Balance is kept even.
It is a limited view to say that God is good alone, and then to
define this as meaning some special form of good that we imagine
for ourselves, and not that which is really good for all; for it
is good that there should be such apparent evil in the universe
as pantheism, and that man's notions of apparent good should so
far fall short of the reality. The wise man, or rather the man
who is striving after Gnosis, is he who can see in the Good and
Evil as conceived by man good in every evil, and evil or
insufficiency in every good.
But if we say with Hermes that "All are He and He is all," we
do not assert that we know what this really means, we only
assert that we are in this declaration face to face with the
ultimate mystery of all things before which we can only bow the
head in reverent silence, for all words here fail.
And so the mystic who wrote these sentences
continues his meditation with a magnificent hymn, expressive of
the inability of the learner's mind rightly to sing God's
praises, which, for lack of a better title, we may call "A Hymn
to All-Father God."
A HYMN TO ALL-FATHER GOD
WHO, then, may sing Thee praise of Thee, or
praise to Thee?
WHITHER, again, am I to turn my eyes to sing Thy
praise; above, below, within, without? There is no
way, no place is there about Thee, nor any other
thing of things that are.
All are in Thee; all are from
Thee; O Thou Who givest all and takest naught, for
Thou hast all and naught is there Thou hast not.
And WHEN, O Father, shall l hymn Thee? For none
can seize Thy hour or time.
For WHAT, again, shall I sing
hymn? For things that Thou hast made, or things Thou
hast not? For things Thou hast made manifest, or
things Thou hast concealed?
How, further, shall I hymn Thee?
As being of myself? As having something of mine own?
As being other?
For that Thou art whatever I may
be; Thou art whatever I may do; Thou art whatever 1
may speak.
For Thou art all, and there is nothing else which
Thou art not.
Thou art all that which doth
exist, and Thou art what doth not exist,-Mind when
Thou thinkest, and Father when Thou makest, and God
when Thou dost energize, and Good and Maker of all
things (i, 105).
Who is capable of singing God's praises, when
it requires the whole universe of Being, and the countless
universes of all the beings that are, to sing the praises of God
in any truly adequate manner? Who, then, what man, has the
understanding wherewith to praise God fitly, when though in his
separated consciousness he knows he knows not who he is, he yet
begins to realize that the "who he really is" must inevitably be
God and no other? In what manner can the Divine sing praises of
itself as of some other than itself, when 'I' and 'Thou' must
essentially be one, and the utterance of praise as of some other
one seems to be a departure from the blessed state of that
Divine intuition.
Is God again to be limited by space and
spatial considerations? Is there a 'whither' in respect to God?
Certainly there cannot be any special place where the Divine may
be said to be, for He is in all places, and all places and
spaces are in Him. He cannot be said to be in the heart more
than in any other organ or limb of the body, for He is in all
things and all things are in Him. Equally so is there no special
direction in which the eyes of the mind can turn, for He is to
be seen in every direction of thought in which the mind can
proceed; and if we say there are evil turnings of the mind, evil
thoughts, he who has experienced this 'change of gnostic
tendency' will reply that the only evil he now knows is not to
be conscious that God is in all things, and that with the
dawning of this true self-consciousness the right side of every
thought presents itself with the wrong side in the joy of pure
thinking.
The idea of the next praise-giving is perhaps somewhat
difficult to follow, as it appears to be a contradiction in
terms. But in these sublime heights of human thought all is
seeming contradiction and paradox, because it is the state of
reconciliation of all opposites.
It might be said that if God is He who gives all things,
equally so must He be He who receives all things; but the
antithesis can be equally well declared by the thought of all
and nothing as by the idea of giving and receiving, for God
manifestly takes nothing, in that He has no need of anything,
seeing that He already has all things.
And if God cannot be limited by space,
equally so is it impossible that He can be conditioned by time.
Therefore the true Gnostic Te Deum cannot be sung at any one
time only, but must be sung eternally; the man must transform
himself into a perpetual song of praise in thought and word and
deed. Nor can the Deity be hymned for one thing, rather than for
another, for all things are equally from God, and he who would
make himself like unto God should have no preferences, but
should view all things with equal eye, and embrace them all with
equal love.
On account of what, again, as regards himself in distinction
from the world, shall the Gnostic praise God? Shall he hymn the
divine for the fact of his own self-existence, or because he is
other than, presumably, the many who are not in Gnosis? The
uselessness of all such distinctions becomes apparent in the
doubt that the very asking of such questions awakens, and the
devotee of Wisdom brushes them all aside in splendid outburst:
"For that Thou art whatever I may be; Thou art whatever I may
do; Thou art whatever I may speak." There is no separation in
the reality of things. Whatever the man is in this ecstatic
state, it is the Being of God in him; whatever the man does, it
is the Working of God in him; whatever the man speaks, it is the
Word of God in him.
Nay, more than this: to such a consciousness
God is in very truth all things both manifest and hidden. God is
Mind when we think of Him as thinking, devising and planning;
God is Father when we conceive Him as willing and creating and
bringing all things into existence; and God is Good when we
regard Him as energizing or in working or breathing in all
things to give them Light and Life. He is the Good or End of all
things, even as He is the Beginning or Maker of all.
Our next hymn is found in the marvellous
initiation ritual which now bears the title "The Secret Sermon
on the Mountain," with the sub-heading "Concerning Rebirth and
the Promise of Silence," but which might very well be called
"The Initiation of Tat."
This Rebirth or Regeneration was, and is, the
mystery of the Spiritual Birth or Birth from Above, the object
of the greater mysteries, even as in the lesser mysteries, the
subject of the instructions was concerning the Birth from Below,
the secret of genesis, or how a man comes into physical birth.
The one was the birth or genesis into matter, the other the
essential birth or palingenesis, the means of re-becoming a pure
spiritual being.
It is the mystic rite of the' laying on of
hands,' the rite of invocation by Hermes, the hierophant or
father on earth, whereby the Hands of Blessing of the Great
Initiator, the Good Mind, are laid upon the head of Tat, the
candidate, his son. These Hands of Blessing are no physical
hands, but Powers, Rays of the spiritual Sun, even as they are
symbolized in the well-known Egyptian frescoes of the Atem-cult.
Each Ray is a Gnostic Power, the light and virtue of which drive
out the darkness of the soul's vices and prepare the way for
transforming the fleshly body into the true ray-like or star
like body of God-the augoeides or astroeides, to
which we referred under its Egyptian equivalent at the beginning
of this little volume.
This mystic rite of Gnostic initiation brings
the God in man to birth; he is at first, however, but a baby
God, who as yet neither hears nor sees, but only feels. And so
when the rite is duly ended, Tat begs as a great privilege to be
told the marvellous Song of the Powers of which he has read in
his studies, and which his father, Hermes, is said to have heard
when he came to the Eighth Sphere or Stage in his ascent of the
Holy Mountain or Sacred Stairs.
I would, O father, hear the
praise-giving with hymn which thou dost say thou
heardest when thou wert at the Eight.
In answer to Tat's request Hermes replies
that it is quite true the Shepherd, the Divine Mind, at his own
still higher initiation into the first grade of masterhood,
foretold that he should hear this Heaven-Song; and he commends
Tat for hastening to "strike his tent" now that he has been made
pure. That is to say, the final rite of purification has now
been operated in Tat, the powers of the cathartic or purifying
virtues have descended upon him, so that he now has the power to
'strike his tent,' or free himself from the trammels of the body
of vice, and so rise from the tomb which has hitherto imprisoned
his 'daimonic soul,' as the Pythian Oracle says of Plotinus.
But, adds Hermes, it is not quite as Tat
supposes. There is no one Song of the Powers written in human
speech and kept secret; no manuscript, no oral tradition, of
some physically uttered hymn.
The Shepherd, Mind of all masterhood, hath
not passed on to me more than hath been writ down, for full well
did He know that I should of myself be able to learn all, and
see all things.
He left to me the making of fair things. Wherefore the Powers
within me, e'en as they are in all, break into song.
The Song can be sung in many modes and many
tongues, according to the inspiration of the illumined singer.
The man who is reborn becomes a psalmist and a poet, for now is
he tuned in harmony with the Great Harmony, and cannot do
otherwise than sing God's praises. He becomes a maker of hymns
and is no longer a repeater of the hymns of others.
But Tat persists; his soul is filled with
longing to hear some echo of the Great Song. "Father, I wish to
hear; I long to know these things!"
And so Hermes is at last persuaded, and
proceeds to give him a model of such praise-giving which he now
can use in substitution for the prayers he has previously
employed, and which were more suited to one in the state of
faith.
Hermes bids Tat calm himself and so await in
reverent silence the hearing of the potent theurgic outpouring
of the whole nature of the man in praise of God, which shall
open a path throughout all Nature straight to the Divine. This
is no ordinary hymn of praise but a theurgic operation or
gnostic act. Therefore, Hermes commands:
Be still, my son! Hear the
praise-giving that keeps the soul in tune, Hymn of
Rebirth -- a hymn I would not have thought fit so
readily to tell, had'st thou not reached the end of
all.
Not, of course, the end of all Gnosis, but
the end of the probationary path of purification and faith,
which is the beginning of the Gnosis. Such hymns were taught
only to those who had been made pure; not to those who were
slaves of the world or even to them who were still struggling
with their lower vices, but only to those who had got themselves
ready and "made the thought in them a stranger to the
world-illusion" (ii, 220).
"Wherefore," says Hermes, "this is not taught, but is kept
hid in silence."
It is a hymn that must be used ceremonially at sunrise and
sunset.
Thus then, my son, stand in a
place uncovered to the sky, facing the west, about
the sinking of the setting sun, and make thy
worship; so in like manner, too, when he doth rise,
with face unto the east.
And for those who cannot perfect the rite on all planes, let
them stand naked, with all the garments of false opinion
stripped from them, naked in the midst of High Heaven's clear
sphere, facing straight with the Spiritual Sun, or the Eye of
Mind that illuminates the Great Sphere of our spiritual nature
in stillness of the purified intelligence.
And so Hermes, before he sings what is called "The Secret
Hymnody," once more utters the solemn injunction:
"Now, son, be still!"
THE SECRET HYMNODY
Let every nature of the world receive the
utterance of my hymn!
Open, thou Earth! Let every bolt of the Abyss be
drawn for me! Stir not, ye Trees!
I am about to hymn creation's Lord, both All and
One.
Ye Heavens open, and ye Winds stay
still; and let God's Deathless Sphere receive my
word! For I will sing the praise of Him who founded
all; who fixed the Earth, and hung up Heaven, and
gave command that Ocean should afford sweet water to
the Earth, to both those parts that are inhabited,
and those that are not, for the support and use of
every man; who made the Fire to shine for gods and
men for every act.
Let us together all give praise to Him, sublime
above the Heavens, of every nature Lord! 'Tis He who
is the Eye of Mind; may He accept the praise of
these my Powers!
Ye Powers that are within me, hymn the One and
All, sing with my Will, Powers all that are within
me!
O blessed Gnosis, by thee illumined, hymning
through thee the Light that mind alone can see, I
joy in joy of Mind.
Sing with me praises, all ye Powers!
Sing praise, my Self-control; sing thou through
me, my Righteousness, the praises of the Righteous;
sing thou, my Sharing-all, the praises of the All;
through me sing, Truth, Truth's praises!
Sing thou, O Good, the Good! O Life and Light,
from us to you our praises flow!
Father, I give Thee thanks, to Thee Thou Energy
of all my Powers; I give Thee thanks, O God, Thou
Power of all my Energies.
Thy Reason sings through me Thy
praises. Take back through me the All into Thy
Reason-my reasonable oblation!
Thus cry the Powers in me. They sing Thy praise,
Thou All; they do Thy Will. From THEE, Thy Will; To
Thee, the All. Receive from all their reasonable
oblation. The All that is in us, O Life, preserve; O
Light, illumine it; O God, inspirit it!
It is Thy Mind that plays the
Shepherd to Thy Word, O Thou Creator, Bestower of
the Spirit upon all.
For Thou art God; Thy Man thus cries to Thee,
through Fire, through Air, through Earth, through
Water, and through Spirit, through Thy creatures.
'Tis from Thy Aeon I have found Praise-giving;
and in Thy Will, the object of my search, have I
found Rest (ii, 230-232).
We can see at once that this is no ordinary
hymn, no hymn conceived in the mode of the psalms to which we
have been used, but the gnostic outpouring of a man who has
begun to realize the nature of his own spiritual dignity and
proper place in the universe, based on the tradition of what is
best in Egyptian theurgy, or that Divine energizing which sends
forth words of command that all nature willingly obeys.
He is about to utter words 'that are true,'
words that from the true go unto the True, without let or
hindrance. Every nature will therefore receive such words and
hand them on. All elements will hasten to serve the man who is
serving God with the lawful liturgy of his whole nature.
The Earth in the midst, the Heaven above, the
Abyss beneath, will open all the gates of their secret ways to
let the true words of him who is' true of word' pass onwards to
the Deathless Sphere of the True God-that is, to the Aeon itself
wherein the True God dwells, not to some space of Heaven or of
Earth or of the Abyss, but to that which transcends them, and is
the source, preserver and end of all of them. Not only the trees
of the earth, but also the Trees of Paradise, the Divine Beings
that dwell in Aeonic Bliss, will rest in reverent silence as the
potent praise of proper reverence passes to the end of all
adorations.
The winds of earth will still themselves, and also the Winds
of Heaven, the Intelligent Breaths in the inmost chambers of
man's Greater Mind.
For the praise-giving is not poured forth to this or that
daimon or god, but unto the Lord of All; and they, the Obedient
Ones, whose life consists in praising God, cannot but rejoice
that the Disobedient One should at last of his own freewill join
in the unwearied liturgy of nature.
The hymn is in praise of the one and All, of
the One Lord of all creation, who is both the One who creates
and the All that is created. It is a hymn sung in harmony with
the liturgy, or service of praise, of the four great primal
natures, the Cosmic Elements of Earth and Air and Water and
Fire-Father Heaven and Mother Earth, Father Fire and Mother
Ocean. The man sings with them the glory of their common Lord,
the Eye of Mind-that is, the Mind, the True Spiritual Sun, whose
eyes are the countless suns in space. This True Sun is the True
Light, the Light that mind alone can see; the little mind of
man, now illumined by the Light of Gnosis, becomes of the nature
of the Great Mind, and so a prismatic trinity of Good and Light
and Life, through which the All-Brilliancy of the One and All
shines forth in a septenary of Powers or Virtues.
These Powers are, with one exception, given in our hymnody in
the exact classification in which they stand in the text of the
mystic rite, namely: Gnosis, Joy, Self-control, Continence,
Righteousness, Sharing-with-all, and Truth-which severally drive
out Not-knowing, Sorrow, Intemperance, Desire, Unrighteousness,
Avarice and Error. And with the coming of Truth the measure of
the Good is filled full, for unto Truth is joined Good and Life
and Light.
The nature of the persons of the latter trinity is still
further revealed and the transmutablility of these hypostases,
by praising God as the Energy of all Powers and the Power of all
Energies, that is, as Light and Life again, Light the masculine
energizer, and Life the feminine nourisher, the father
motherhood of God, the Good, the Logos or Reason of all things.
And so the gnostic psalmist at last resolves
his praise-giving into the offering of a reasonable
oblation-which, in final analysis, is the Song of the Logos; the
Reason, the Son of God, the Alone begotten, singing through the
whole nature of the man and refunding the cosmos which is
himself into the source of his Being. It is the consummation of
the Great Return; the Will of God is now the sole will of the
man.
"From Thee Thy Will; To Thee the All."
That is, from Thee proceeds Thy Will; Thou
art the Source of Thy Will, Thy Desire, Thy Love; and Thy Will
is Thy Spouse, through whom are all things, the whole universe,
Thy Alone-begotten, whose end also as well as beginning is
Thyself, for He is Thyself eternally.
For as another mystic hymn of the period phrases it (i, 146):
"From Thee is Father and Through Thee is Mother"-to which we may
add "and To Thee is Son."
And so the hymn-singer continues with his 'reasonable
oblation,' the offering of his true self, the logos within him,
of his angel "that perpetually beholds the Face of the
Father"-praying that his whole cosmos, the whole that there is
of him, may be preserved or saved by Life the Mother, illumined
or irradiated by Light the Father, and inspirited or inspired or
spiritualized by the Great Breath of God that eternally and
simultaneously outbreathes and inbreathes.
For the man is now no longer a single
'Letter' or a' Procession of Fate,' but a true 'Name,' a free
Man, a Word of God, a proper Cosmos, ordered in due and lawful
harmony by conversion of self-will into a willing union with
God's Will; and of that Word, or God, or Angel, the Shepherd, or
Feeder-He who gives the Divine nectar, or spiritual food, by
which that Word is nourished-is the Great Mind, or Light, or
Illuminator, the twin of the Great Soul, or Saving Life, the
Inspirer and Preserver, both of which are bestowed upon us by
God the Creator.
The man has now become a Man, a Word, a true Being of Reason,
whose energy is expressed in living ideas that can be impressed
upon the souls and minds of men, and lived out in a life of
example; from an imperfect man he has become a perfect Cosmos or
Order, or Harmony, and thus he can make his own purified natures
sing together with the great elements and the quintessence of
all of them, which is the Spirit or Breath of God, the Atman of
Indian theosophy.
For having attained unto this true mode of
breathing-breathing and thinking with the Great Life and Great
Mind of things-the man is no longer a man but a Man, an Aon, an
Eternity, and so rebecoming his own true Self he expresses his
natural joy in songs of praise, and finds rest in the Great
Peace, the Motherhood of God. He is born anew, a child Christ;
and, as he grows in stature, towards full manhood, so will she,
who has hitherto been his mother, refreshed with the eternal
youth of the Gods, change from mother into spouse. The remaining
hymn that has been preserved to us in the extant Trismegistic
literature is found at the end of "The Perfect Sermon," of
which, unfortunately, the Greek original has been lost. We are
dependent solely on an Old Latin version, which is frequently
unsatisfactory.
This sermon is by far the longest of our extant Trismegistic
logoi. The introduction informs us that Hermes and Asclepius and
Tat and Ammon are gathered together in the adytum or holy place.
There the three disciples reverently listen to their master, who
delivers a long instruction of the Gnosis, with the purpose of
perfecting them in the knowledge of spiritual things. The
discourse is, therefore, rightly called "The Perfect Sermon," or
"The Sermon of Initiation."
Asclepius, Tat and Ammon stand for three
types of disciples of the Gnosis, three natures of man.
Asclepius is the man of intellect, skilled in the knowledge of
the schools, of the arts and sciences of the day. Tat is
intuitional rather than intellectual; he is 'young' compared
with Asclepius; nevertheless it is he who succeeds Hermes as
teacher, when Hermes is taken to the Gods, for he has the
spiritual nature more strongly developed than Asclepius, so that
he can soar to greater heights of illumination. Ammon is the
practical man of affairs, the king, the doer, not the scientist
or the mystic.
It would, however, be a mistake to keep these
types too clearly distinguished in our mind; for mystically all
three are in each of us, and the true illumination of our
three-fold nature depends upon the brotherly love of the three
disciples-James, John and Peter-who must each complete each
other, and subordinate themselves to one another, and vie with
one another in love of their teacher, the purified mind, or
Hermes, through whom alone the instruction of the Great Mind,
the Shepherd, can as yet come to them.
And so we find the conditions of right
contemplation dramatically set forth in the last sentence of the
introduction of the sermon in the words:
When Ammon, too, had come within the holy
place, and when the sacred group of four was now complete with
piety and with God's goodly Prescence-to them, sunk in fit
silence reverently, their souls and minds pendent on Hermes'
lips, thus Love Divine began to speak (ii, 309).
This Love Divine is that same Presence, the
Highest Mind, or Shepherd of men, which illumines Hermes, or the
higher mind within us, directly; but these immediate living
words of power have to be passed on in human words to the three
natures of our lower mind, the Asclepius and Tat and Ammon in
us, who are the learners and hearers. After the instruction is
ended and they have come forth from the holy place, the
narrative tells us that they turned their faces towards the
setting sun, before uttering their hymn of praise.
That is to say mystically, the mind ceasing
from contemplation, in which the outward energies have been
caught up to the heights, or turned within, and stilled by the
higher in the intercourse of Love that has been blessed with the
Presence of the Divine, these energies, before betaking
themselves to their appointed separate tasks, all unite in a
hymn of praise, with their eyes still turned to the now
apparently departing glory of the setting spiritual Sun.
Hereupon the knower of forms in us, the
Asclepius who is wise in the sciences and arts, and ceremonies,
proposes to Tat, in whispered words, that they suggest to their
father Hermes, that they should say their prayer to God "with
added incense and with unguents." This is the suggestion of the
mind that still clings to outward forms, the ritualist. But
Hermes recalls them to the gnostic nature of their spiritual
cult.
Whom when Thine greatest heard, he grew
distressed and said:
"Nay, nay, Asclepius; speak more
propitious words! For this is like to profanation of
our sacred rites-when thou dost pray to God, to
offer incense and the rest.
"For naught is there of which He
stands in need, in that He is all things and all are
in Him. But let us worship, pouring forth our
thanks. For this is the best incense in God's sight
when thanks are given to Him by men" (ii, 388 ).
And so they begin their praise-giving, which
for lack of a better title we may call "A Hymn of Grace for
Gnosis."
A HYMN OF GRACE FOR GNOSIS
We give Thee grace, Thou highest and most
excellent! For by Thy Grace we have received the so
great Light of Thy own Gnosis. O holy Name, fit Name
to be adored, O Name unique, by which God only must
be blest through worship of our Sire, of Thee who
deignest to afford to all a Father's piety, and
care, and love, and whatsoever virtue is more sweet
than these, endowing us with sense, and reason, and
intelligence;-with sense that we may feel Thee; with
reason that we may track Thee out from appearances
of things; with means of recognition that we may joy
in knowing Thee.
Saved by Thy Power divine, let us rejoice that
Thou hast shown Thyself to us in all Thy Fullness.
Let us rejoice that Thou hast designed to consecrate
us, still entombed in bodies, to Eternity.
For this is the sole festival of praise worthy of
man-to know Thy Majesty.
We know Thee; yea, by the Single Sense of our
intelligence, we have perceived Thy Light supreme,-O
Thou True Life of life, O Fecund Womb that giveth
birth to every nature!
We have known Thee, O Thou
completely filled with the Conception from Thyself
of Universal Nature!
We have known Thee, O Thou Eternal Constancy!
Form the whole of this our prayer
in worship of Thy Good, this favour only of Thy
Goodness do we crave: that Thou wilt keep us
constant in our Love-of-knowing- Thee, and let us
ne'er be cut off from this kind of Life (ii, 389,
390).
We give Thee thanks, grace for Grace,
goodwill for Thy Goodwill. The Goodwill of God is, as we have
already learned, that "He willeth to be known," and the goodwill
of man is his "love of knowing God."
The Latin of the next sentence is very
obscure, but judging by other passages and by the context, the
unique effable Name of God is "Father." The worship of God as
Father is true religion, piety and love, since these are the
natural expressions of thanks to God, in that it is He who pours
out on us the treasures of His piety and care (religio in Latin)
and love, though indeed all of these words really fall short of
expressing this Divine of efficacia, or power of giving
utter satisfaction, of God; for He alone gives without stint, in
that He bestows His Fullness upon us.
He endows us with sense and reason and
intelligence, the three means of knowing Him: with sense to feel
God in all things; with reason to track out the manifestation of
the Divine in all phenomena; and with intelligence, or spiritual
intuition, which is the means of face to face recognition, when
objective and subjective, and when object and subject blend and
there is the complete joy and satisfaction of Self-knowledge.
The Power of God is the Will of God, the
Goodwill, whereby He willeth to be known, that is to say, the
Purpose of which is Gnosis; and this brings joy and rejoicing,
for it is the manifestation of God to man in all His Fullness,
that is to say, the manifestation of the Pleroma, the
Intelligible Cosmos, or God in the nature of His Alone-begotten
Son.
The 'holy four' sing with joy in that they have been made
holy, hallowed as priests of the Most High, while still in the
tomb of the body; and so their very bodies have been consecrated
as fit temples of the Son of God, the Aeon or Eternity.
Therefore the sole festival of praise worthy of man in his
divine nature, that is, in his true manhood or union with Great
Mind-is to know God's Majesty or Greatness, that is, again, the
Aon.
This Knowing, or Gnosis, is achieved by the Single Sense of
the intelligence; not by sense alone, nor by mind alone, but by
a means superior to both, in which the twain blend in Gnosis,
and so become self-knowledge, or the Light of God, or the
Overmind of all things, and of the Life of God, or the Over-Soul
of all things, which latter is graphically described as the
"Fecund Womb that giveth birth to every nature."
This is the Gnosis of the Divine as the Pler6ma, or Fullness,
which is replete with the Conception of universal nature from
God Himself.
Finally, God is praised for being known as the Eternal
Constancy, Stability, Duration, Unchangeableness, Sameness.
And so this beautiful gnostic thanksgiving or
grace ends with the one prayer of those in Gnosis, namely, that
He who is Eternal Constancy, or God in His energy of Aonic
Sameness, will ever keep them constant in the Pure and Single
Love, the Love of knowing God.
What noble hymns are these four, hymns worthy of all that is
best in man, and all that is worthiest in the true worshipper of
God! If only we had a psalter of such psalms, as doubtless once
existed in this excellent community of servants of God and
Gnostic liturgists! But alas! while the indifference of time has
preserved for us so much of the classical writers that we could
not unfrequently well spare, the jealousy of Providence has kept
from us the major part of the most beautiful monuments of man's
gnostic genius-perchance, however, because the world was not
ready to appreciate them.
There is, therefore, nothing to do but to follow again the
Way of the Hermeses of the past, and betake ourselves once more
to "the making of fair things," for what man has once achieved
he can again accomplish, and, if I am not mistaken in my augury,
the times are again becoming ripe for such true poesy.
We have no more Hymns of Hermes wherewith to
make glad the hearts of our readers-as we would fain hope they
have gladdened them-but we will add another hymn of so like a
nature that it might very well have been penned by a Hermes of
the Trismegistic faith.
It is "A Song of Praise to the Aeon," which
is said to have been inscribed on a "secret tablet," by some
unknown Brother of a forgotten Order, perhaps one of the
Communities of the Aeon-the Highest and Supercelestial One-which
Philo of Byblos, in the second half of the first century of our
era, tells us were in existence in Phoenicia in his day, and
doubtless were also existing in Egypt (i, 403). The text is
found in the Greek Magic Papyri.
A SONG OF PRAISE TO THE AEON
Hail unto Thee, O Thou All-Cosmos of ethereal
Spirit!
Hail unto Thee, O Spirit, who
doth extend from Heaven to Earth, and from the Earth
that's in the middle of the orb of Cosmos to the
ends of the Abyss!
Hail unto Thee, O Spirit, who
doth enter into me, who clingeth unto me or who doth
part Thyself from me according to the Will of God in
goodness of His heart!
Hail unto Thee, O Thou Beginning and Thou End of
Nature naught can move!
Hail unto Thou, Thou Liturgy unweariable of
Nature's Elements!
Hail unto Thee, O Thou
Illumination of the Solar Beam that shines to serve
the world! Hail unto Thee, Thou Disk of the night
shining
Moon, that shines unequally!
Hail, Ye Spirits all of the ethereal Statues of
the Gods!
Hail to You all, whom holy Brethren and holy
Sisters hail in giving of their praise!
O Spirit, Mighty One, most mighty circling and
incomprehensible Configuration of the Cosmos, hail!
-- celestial, aethereal interaethereal, water-like,
earth-like, fire-like, airlike, like unto light, to
darkness like, shining as do the Stars-moist, hot,
cold Spirit!
I praise Thee, God of gods, who ever doth restore
the Cosmos, and who doth store the Depth away upon
its Throne of Settlement no eye can see, who fixest
Heaven and Earth apart, and coverest the Heaven with
Thy golden everlasting wings, and makest firm the
Earth on everlasting Thrones!
O Thou who hangest up the (Ether
in the lofty Height, and scatterest the Air with
Thyself moving Blasts, who mak'st the Water eddy
round in circles!
O Thou who raisest up the fiery Whirlwind, and
makest thunder, lightning, rain, and shakings of the
earth, O God of (Eons! Mighty art Thou, Lord God, O
Master of the All! (i, 408, 409).
The Aeon is the Invisible Intelligible Cosmos, the All-Cosmos
of Aethereal Spirit or Quintessence, as distinguished from the
Sensible Cosmos of the four Great Elements, pure Fire and Air
and Water and Earth, and not our mixed elements.
The reader has only to compare the opening and closing
sentences of "The Secret Hymnody" with the first paragraph of
our hymn to see that we are in precisely the same circle of
ideas.
Heaven, Earth, and the Abyss, the three worlds, through which
the Spirit, like Vishnu in the Purina's, takes "three strides."
It is this Spirit, the Great Breath of Life, that is the
out-breath and in-breath of man's manifold existences. When the
Spirit breathes out he is born, from death into life, and also
from life into death; for the life of the body is the death of
the soul. And when the Spirit inbreathes he becomes dead, dead
to things of the body, but alive to the things of the soul.
And all this is "according to the Will of God
in goodness of His heart." For the Will of God is the Energy, or
Effective Working, of God, that which transcends all our human
ideas of Love-dictated by the goodness of His heart, which ever
wills the good of all beings, for the Heart of God is the Good
Itself, the Aeon.
The Aeon is neither Beginning nor End, but both; for all the
Spheres or Being which it energizes, end where they begin, and
begin where they end-they dance in eternal revolution, for their
"everlasting revelling-place" is in the Vortex of the Ceaseless
Liturgy, or Service, of the Elements. The Aeon is the Cause of
the Magna Vorago, the Mighty Whirlpool of the Universe, for it
is the Monad or Supreme Atom of all atoms and all combinations
of atoms.
The Aeon is the Illumination or Source of Light for all the
Lights of Heaven, the Sun and Moon and all the rest of the "Aethereal
Statues of the Gods" the countless suns in space.
The Aeon is Spirit, of Light and Life consisting, and so
Father-Mother of all Spirits, whose true Bodies are the fiery
spheres, the sidereal bodies ray-like, star-like.
Therefore, the Brethren and Sisters of this community of
gnostic servants of God rightly praise all the Gods, for these
Gods are the true community of saints or holy ones in Heaven,
even as the Brethren and Sisters are endeavoring to become
saints on earth, holy as they are holy.
The Aeon is the Great Paradigm or One
Exemplar of all things, the Eternal Configuration of the Cosmos
and all cosmoi, in a septenary of three quintessential and four
essential elements, which are completed by the all-color, Light,
and no-color, Darkness, into a decad of which Spirit is the
beginning and the end, existing in three modes-reminding us of
the Trigunam, or three-fold nature of Prakriti or Nature in
Indian theosophy -- moist, hot, cold; black, red, white; Tamas,
Rajas and Sattva.
The Great Work of the God of Gods is perpetually to restore
the Cosmos, to refresh, to renew it, in its threefold nature of
Height and Midst and Depth-the endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm,
as it were, of the cosmic germ-cell-over which the Spirit broods
with its golden everlasting wings, as the Great Bird who
perpetually hatches forth the Egg of the Universe.
And from this brooding there ever comes forth into being the
perpetual cosmo-genesis of all things; and, seeing that all
beings come forth from the Aeon, each and all, in their cosmic
nature, are Aeons as well, so that the Aeon is also God of Aeons.
He is the God of millions of years, of millions of months,
and millions of days-whether those time periods be of the earth
or of the universe-and so God of all existences, even as He is
God of the Eternity of all things.
And here we must bring our little hymn-book to a close, in
the hope that some may be found to sing in response to the Hymns
of Heathen Hermes even in this twentieth-century of Christian
grace; for perhaps, after all, Hermes and Christ are not in
reality such strangers to each other as traditional theological
prejudice would have us believe.