I have been reading Templeof the Cosmos by Jeremy Naydler and he hits some
rather important points which some neo-pagans might not like much.
The book looks at what the Ancient Egyptian worldview would
have actually been and how this could have led to many of religious ideas. What Naydler accidently does is put a spanner
in the works of would be neo-pagans who wished to create a modern form of
Egyptian worship with their worldview.
If Temple of the
Cosmos is to be believed to get a real Egyptian religion you would have to
short circuit many of the modes of thinking of modern life. Naydler believes that the world that the Ancient
Egyptians had was one where their myth, time and material universe were
intertwined. All actions around you were
your interaction with the divine myth.
For example when the Ancient Egyptians built a statue to the
gods they were not worshiping an idol that they had made. Their mind-set was such that the statue
really was the God or Goddess. When
they looked up at the sky they saw the eye of Horus looking down on them.
Nature mimicked the myth of transmutation and initiation.
This is great stuff.
Sometimes the book gets a bit lost in academic verbiage and its point
gets missed because Naydler has fallen into saying something that actually
sounds more complex than it actually is.
Practically we see that there are
huge problems for people who want to adopt a way of life or magic which mimics the
Ancient Egyptian mind-set. It cannot
just be that you like cats and wear tons of Egyptian-style jewellery. You have to be able to apply Egyptian myth to
every aspect of your life and not just that which is fluffy. It is one thing to look into the night’s sky
and see Nut stretched over you, it is quite another to see your boss as Set.
Naydler also makes it clear that much of the real
spirituality behind the Ancient Egyptian mind-set was down to the actual
movements of nature. The colours of
Osiris, for example, become more meaningful when you know the colours of the
Nile when it floods.
Where is your Pharaoh now?
The Ancient Egyptians regarded their Kings as important
parts of their religion. How can you
equate your modern politicians with an incarnate God? It would be difficult to fit David Cameron or
Silvio Berlusconi into any scenario where
they would be worthwhile let alone divine.
The problem that
modern people have is that they have become disconnected from all forms of myth
or any gods. In the West, we can blame
science for this, but we can also see that the Ancient Greeks had a role in
rationalising away much of this mind-set.
The Ancient Greeks at the time of Homer certainly still had it. The odyssey is packed full of myth woven into
“fact”.
There are some important points to note for magicians too. In magic there are a lot of references to the
Secret Tradition. What if this tradition
was never really secret at all, but a mind-set which was forgotten.
Reading through this book you can see that magical
technology reflects some of these ideas.
The idea that a priest was not just wearing the mask of a God, but
really was that God, is something that many Golden Dawn magicians need to
understand. It might be that we can only
duplicate the Ancient Egyptian mind-set within our ritual space, but it is
there that we should be doing it.
We should be striving to make sure that whatever we are doing
in our ritual space is real, we should not just believe it to be true, but know
that myth has overcome any form of “reality” as we know it. This is closer to the Ancient Egyptian way
and could be one of the forgotten secrets.
Anyway I recommend this book for those who, like me, like to
root their magic in Ancient Traditions. But it is also useful for those who
want to understand the core of magical methods. Those who think that they have past lives with their cats in Ancient Egypt and put their religion as Ancient Egyptian on the census form might be a little disappointed.
Great post, Nick. You hit the mail on the head when you write that in Lodge we need to "know that myth has overcome any form of reality as we know it". :) I hope folk understand this, and that 12 hours later in the city, the reality has returned, but has now been changed and informed by the knowledge of the myth.
ReplyDeleteOne of the key issues I think is the tendency, spurred on by Hollywood showing all cultures and even dinosaurs mirroring the modern western family-social setup, for people to believe ancient folk thought like us. As you say, they did not, no way. However, if we think they did then we can fool ourselves that our modern magical ways are actually ancient, and thus better. We can ascribe to some sort of lineage. This is magical laziness at its worse.
The ancients, and even western medieval folk were vastly different to us in many ways. As I've mentioned elsewhere, I found CS Lewis' 'the Discarded Image' very useful in understanding medieval thought. I will be getting a copy of Naydler's work too :) thanks.
When we consider the evidence, such as Ancient Egyptians systematically for hundreds of years bred puppies to sacrifice for Anubis (8 million of the cute, little buggers) we see modern concepts are very different. That Anubis is not a modern Neo-Pagan's Anubis, nor a magician's 'Opener of the Way'. Yet folk do not want to get this, at all. So thanks again for this this post :)