Produced by Charles Keller
PAGAN & CHRISTIAN CREEDS: THEIR ORIGIN AND MEANING
By Edward Carpenter
"The different religions being lame attempts to represent under various guises this one root-fact of the central universal life, men have at all times clung to the religious creeds and rituals and ceremonials as symbolising in some rude way the redemption and fulfilment of their own most intimate natures--and this whether consciously understanding the interpretations, or whether (as most often) only doing so in an unconscious or quite subconscious way."
The Drama of Love and Death, p. 96.
CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTORY II. SOLAR MYTHS AND CHRISTIAN FESTIVALS III. THE SYMBOLISM OF THE ZODIAC IV. TOTEM-SACRAMENTS AND EUCHARISTS V. FOOD AND VEGETATION MAGIC VI. MAGICIANS, KINGS AND GODS VII. RITES OF EXPIATION AND REDEMPTION VIII. PAGAN INITIATIONS AND THE SECOND BIRTH IX. MYTH OF THE GOLDEN AGE X. THE SAVIOUR-GOD AND THE VIRGIN-MOTHER XI. RITUAL DANCING XII. THE SEX-TABOO XIII. THE GENESIS OF CHRISTIANITY XV. THE MEANING OF IT ALL XV. THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES XVI. THE EXODUS OF CHRISTIANITY XVII. CONCLUSION
APPENDIX ON THE TEACHINGS OF THE UPANISHADS: I. REST II. THE NATURE OF THE SELF
PAGAN AND CHRISTIAN CREEDS: THEIR ORIGIN AND MEANING
I. INTRODUCTORY
The subject of Religious Origins is a fascinating one, as the great multitude of books upon it, published in late years, tends to show. Indeed the great difficulty to-day in dealing with the subject, lies in the very mass of the material to hand--and that not only on account of the labor involved in sorting the material, but because the abundance itself of facts opens up temptation to a student in this department of Anthropology (as happens also in other branches of general Science) to rush in too hastily with what seems a plausible theory. The more facts, statistics, and so forth, there are available in any investigation, the easier it is to pick out a considerable number which will fit a given theory. The other facts being neglected or ignored, the views put forward enjoy for a time a great vogue. Then inevitably, and at a later time, new or neglected facts alter the outlook, and a new perspective is established.
There is also in these matters of Science (though many scientific men would doubtless deny this) a great deal of "Fashion". Such has been notoriously the case in Political Economy, Medicine, Geology, and even in such definite studies
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Pagan and Christian creeds: their origin and meani
- 2: Nork in Germany Biblische Mythologie
- 3: And conclude that in general the Phallic cults came first
- 4: Taboos surrounded these things too
- 5: With its orderly phases of evolution
- 6: Are really quite directly derived from
- 7: 2 1 See Plutarch on Isis and Osiris
- 8: The story of Attis is very similar
- 9: Of the birth of Mithra in the Cave of Zoroastrianism
- 10: Why were so many of these gods Mithra
- 11: They are not so bright as Sirius
- 12: 1 Here Virgo the constellation is represented
- 13: Gr b and gr g of Virgo are almost exactly on the Ecliptic
- 14: From constellation to constellation
- 15: The triumph of the Sungod was therefore
- 16: Mithraism was a greatly older religion than Christianity
- 17: In a certain well known Mithra sculpture or group
- 18: Sacrificed himself or his representative
- 19: The rites and ceremonials of Mithra and Cybele
- 20: 5 the cleansing of the stables of Augeas
- 21: 20 the Serpent and the Scorpion
- 22: This in imitation of the treatment of Dionysus by the Titans
- 23: Why he should make of the said totem a divinity
- 24: 3 As to the tendency to divinize these totems
- 25: An immense variety of totem names
- 26: Which closely resembles a totemic communion feast
- 27: And disguised as an actual emu
- 28: There also a similar ritual of sacrifice occurs
- 29: To return to the rites of Dionysus
- 30: Was considered to personate the god Dionysus
- 31: In pursuit of Totems and the Eucharist
- 32: All this is of the nature of Magic
- 33: Fir cones and snakes and unnamable objects made of paste
- 34: Hudson 2 declares that the Puma
- 35: From being a vague subconscious feeling
- 36: Abode of the soul of the universe
- 37: Was hardly a conscious perception
- 38: On that occasion an effigy of the corn god
- 39: Occupies almost half the stage of pre Olympic ritual
- 40: Like the blameless king in the Odyssey
- 41: With regard to the renovation of the tribe
- 42: And so superposing their images on one another
- 43: Bound and scourged and crucified
- 44: Minos and the Minotaur in Crete
- 45: Non differentiated so to speak
- 46: Let me say that Anthropomorphism
- 47: Animistic or anthropomorphic or transcendental
- 48: And certainly it was opaque and brutish
- 49: Its far back ancestor and totem symbol
- 50: Si llevaban y echaban muchos lagrimas
- 51: Frazer has especially made his own
- 52: Augustine with his own devilish creed
- 53: They made their reparation BEFORE
- 54: Per annos singulos arbor pinea caeditur
- 55: And to have symbolized itself in some most ancient rituals
- 56: Perhaps there IS a very slow amelioration
- 57: Let us take the doctrine of Re birth or Regeneration
- 58: The novice is born again as THE SACRED ANIMAL
- 59: The legend being that Dhuramoolan
- 60: And falling upon the Thessalians by night
- 61: The strange transformations of Worms and Insects
- 62: As in the mysteries of Dionysus
- 63: Lord Kingsborough published them in England in 1830
- 64: Sacrificed the victim to the Totem spirit of the tribe
- 65: Carrying its rites and customs with it
- 66: Commonly called the Messianic Eclogue
- 67: It is called the Theory of intra uterine Blessedness
- 68: Knowledge and self consciousness were born
- 69: Not unlikely that the German root Suhn
- 70: Kolben who travelled among them in 1275 or so
- 71: In contrast to the succeeding period of everlasting warfare
- 72: And 2 that such rituals may have
- 73: And so forth do not have Eucharists
- 74: As representative of the tribe
- 75: Was conceived of as that creature's saviour
- 76: With an altar to Cybele in the midst
- 77: If the 'saviour' was plainly a personification of the tribe
- 78: It is explained that Quetzalcoatl sacrificed himself
- 79: I believe in God the Father Almighty
- 80: These rituals and legends were
- 81: Even in mature and civilized man
- 82: About some doctrines in which Qing was not initiated
- 83: Eucharistic and orgiastic communions and celebrations
- 84: The inherited instincts and racially accumulated wisdom
- 85: He instances the medicine man's excellent management
- 86: The only diet in the Soma sacrifice
- 87: For the rendering of sexual services
- 88: As to the lingam as representing the male organ
- 89: Sex itself became the great Sin
- 90: Of communal and public value over sex acts
- 91: Will my claims to salvation be allowed
- 92: The sex taboo in Christianity was apparently
- 93: A very stringent taboo on the Sabbath arose
- 94: No Blacksnake might marry a Blacksnake woman
- 95: Yet each has had its own special characteristics
- 96: Des divinites syriennes et de Mithra
- 97: Religions Orientales dans le Paganisme Romain Paris
- 98: See also Cumont's Mysteres de Mithra
- 99: Mithraism had been flourishing for 600 years
- 100: And when at the Council of Nicaea 325 A
- 101: The American author of The Pre christian Jesus 1906
- 102: The LEGENDARY theory seems a little TOO far fetched
- 103: And finally the Crucifixion at sunrise
- 104: But he called himself thenceforth The Bab
- 105: Legends of miracles performed by the mature Bab
- 106: And especially precepts of love and forgiveness
- 107: Encompassed by the defilements of earth
- 108: The stage of Self consciousness
- 109: Tylor in his Primitive Culture vol
- 110: An inevitable period of strife
- 111: Perhaps in the beginning of the Neolithic Age
- 112: Must have been equally slow and hesitating
- 113: In ceremonial ACTIONS in a more or less elaborate ritual
- 114: We see the three phases of tribal psychology the first
- 115: And from centuries before our era
- 116: Cosmic Consciousness first published at Philadelphia
- 117: As in the Eleusinian representations
- 118: The doctrine of Salvation indeed gr swthria was
- 119: Transfiguration gr metamorfwsis
- 120: XII that the lingam and the yoni are
- 121: Says that the Samothracian Mysteries
- 122: Mead's Thrice greatest Hermes 1 vol
- 123: And the consciousness of the Whole
- 124: Love ascends from the lingam to yogam
- 125: He adopts terms like gr sarkikos
- 126: Protestantism and Commercialism
- 127: Christianity is undoubtedly a branch
- 128: The Social affiliation or the Nature affiliation
- 129: It would be seen that some taboos
- 130: Rehabilitating the ancient symbols and rituals
- 131: The five camphors in each candlestick were lighted
- 132: It seems to be a survival of some very ancient ritual
- 133: Unreasoning and idiotic taboos still linger
- 134: The growth of intuitional and psychical perception
- 135: Of loneliness is never forgotten
- 136: In its fifth by the access of enmities
- 137: An industrial system which is no real industrial order
- 138: And will in the future disentangle itself
- 139: A serious and an urgent problem
- 140: Who are or were chained permanently to their wheelbarrows
- 141: Self chaining duties and indulgences
- 142: And then imagine some one comes with a phial
- 143: Let the ugly sediment of tiresome thoughts and anxieties
- 144: When it is our part to remain externally INACTIVE
- 145: But may even succeed in effacing
- 146: But no distinctive self consciousness
- 147: Emotions and mentality directly associated with it
- 148: What is the ESSENCE of the tree
- 149: The author speaks of him whose soul is purified
- 150: Not in any quality or qualities
- 151: The Self is free from qualities
- 152: But experience and direct perception are possible
- 153: And condemned to further isolation in a prison cell
- 154: Describe and show the boundaries of myself
