B —The second letter in almost all
the alphabets, also the second in the Hebrew. Its symbol is a house, the
form of Beth, the letter itself indicating a dwelling, a shed or a
shelter. “As a compound of a root, it is constantly used for the purpose of
showing that it had to do with stone; when stones at Beth-el are set up, for
instance. The Hebrew value as a numeral is two. Joined with its predecessor, it
forms the word Ab, the root of ‘father’, Master, one in authority, and it has
the Kabalistical distinction of being the first letter in the Sacred Volume of
the Law. The divine name connected with this letter is "Bakhour." (R. M.
[Cyclop.]
Baal (Chald. Heb.). Baal or
Adon (Adonai) was a phallic god. “Who shall ascend unto the hill (the high
place) of the Lord; who shall stand in the place of his Kadushu (q.v.) ?
” (Psalms XX1V. 3.) The “circle dance” performed by King David round the
ark, was the dance prescribed by the Amazons in the Mysteries, the dance of the
daughters of Shiloh (Judges xxi., et seq.) and the same as the
leaping of the prophets of Baal (I. Kings xviii). He was named
Baal-Tzephon, or god of the crypt (Exodus) and Seth, or the
pillar (phallus), because he was the same as Ammon (or
Baal-Hammon) of Egypt, called “the hidden god”. Typhon, called Set, who was a
great god in Egypt
during the early dynasties, is an aspect of Baal and Ammon as also of
Siva, Jehovah and other gods. Baal is the all devouring Sun, in one sense, the
fiery Moloch.
Babil Mound (Chald. Heb.). The site
of the Temple of
Bel at Babylon.
Bacchus (Gr.). Exoterically and superficially
the god of wine and the vintage, and of licentiousness and joy; but the esoteric
meaning of this personification is more abstruse and philosophical. He is the
Osiris of Egypt, and his life and significance belong to the same group as the
other solar deities, all “sin-bearing,” killed and resurrected; e.g., as
Dionysos or Atys of Phrygia (Adonis, or the Syrian Tammuz), as Ausonius, Baldur
(q.v.), &c., &c. All these were put to death, mourned for, and restored
to life. The rejoicings for Atys took place at the Hilaria on the “pagan”
Easter, March 15. Ausonius, a form of Bacchus, was slain “at the vernal
equinox, March 21st, and rose in three days”. Tammuz, the double of Adonis and
Atys, was mourned by the women at the “grove” of his name “over Bethlehem, where the infant
Jesus cried”, says St. Jerome. Bacchus is murdered and his
mother collects the fragments of his lacerated body as Isis does those of Osiris, and so
on. Dionysos Iacchus, torn to shreds
by the Titans, Osiris, Krishna, all descended into
Hades and returned again. Astronomically, they all represent the Sun ;
psychically they are all emblems of the ever-resurrecting “ Soul” (the Ego in
its re-incarnation) ; spiritually, all the innocent scape-goats, atoning for the
sins of mortals, their own earthly envelopes, and in truth, the poeticized image
of DIVINE MAN, the form of clay informed by its God.
Bacon, Roger. A Franciscan monk, famous as
an adept in Alchemy and Magic Arts. Lived in the thirteenth century in
England. He
believed in the philosopher’s stone in the way all the adepts of Occultism
believe in it; and also in philosophical astrology. He is accused of having made
a head of bronze which having an acoustic apparatus hidden in it, seemed to
utter oracles which were words spoken by Bacon himself in another room. He was a
wonderful physicist and chemist, and credited with having invented gunpowder,
though he said he had the secret from “Asian (Chinese) wise men."
Baddha (Sk.). Bound, conditioned; as is
every mortal who has not made himself free through Nirvâna.
Bagavadam (Sk.). A Tamil Scripture on
Astronomy and other matters.
Bagh-bog (Slavon.). “God”; a
Slavonian name for the Greek Bacchus, whose name became the prototype of the
name God or Bagh and bog or bogh; the Russian for
God.
Bahak-Zivo (Gn.). The “father of the
Genii” in the Codex Nazarœus. The Nazarenes were an early semi-Christian
sect.
Bal (Heb.). Commonly
translated “Lord”, but also Bel, the Chaldean god, and Baal, an
"idol".
Bala (Sk.), or
Panchabalâni. The “five powers” to be acquired in Yoga practice; full trust
or faith; energy ; memory; meditation ; wisdom.
Baldur (Scand.). The “Giver of all Good”. The
bright God who is “the best and all mankind are loud in his praise; so fair and
dazzling is he in form and features, that rays of light seem to issue from him
(Edda). Such was the birth-song chanted to Baldur who resurrects as Wali,
the spring Sun. Baldur is called the “well-beloved”, the “Holy one”, “who alone
is without sin”. He is the “God of Goodness”, who
“shall be born again, when
a new and purer world will have arisen from the ashes of the old, sin-laden
world (Asgard)”. He is killed by the crafty Loki, because Frigga, the mother of
the gods, “while entreating all creatures and all lifeless things to swear that
they will not injure the well-beloved”, forgets to mention “the weak mistletoe
bough”, just as the mother of Achilles forgot her son’s heel. A dart is made of
it by Loki and he places it in the hands of blind Hödur who kills with it the sunny-hearted
god of light. The Christmas misletoe is probably a reminiscence of the mistletoe
that killed the Northern God of Goodness.
Bal-ilu (Chal.). One of the many
titles of the Sun.
Bamboo Books. Most ancient and certainly
pre-historic works in Chinese containing the antediluvian records of the
Annals of China. They were found in the tomb of King Seang of Wai, who
died 295 B.C., and claim to go back many centuries.
Bandha (Sk.). Bondage; life on this earth;
from the same root as Baddha.
Baphomet (Gr.). The androgyne goat
of Mendes. (See Secret Doctrine, I. 253). According to the
Western, and especially the French Kabalists, the Templars were accused of
worshipping Baphomet, and Jacques de Molay, the Grand Master of the Templars,
with all his brother-Masons, suffered death in consequence. But esoterically,
and philologically, the word never meant “goat”, nor even anything so objective
as an idol. The term means according to Von Hammer, “baptism” or initiation
into Wisdom, from the Greek words bafh and mhtiz and from the relation of
Baphometus to Pan. Von Hammer must be right. It was a Hermetico Kabalistic
symbol, but the whole story as invented by the Clergy was false.
(See “Pan
”.)
Baptism (Gr.). The rite of
purification performed during the ceremony of initiation in the sacred tanks of
India, and also the
later identical rite established by John “the Baptist” and practised by his
disciples and followers, who were not Christians. This rite was hoary with age
when it was adopted by the Chrestians of the earliest centuries. Baptism
belonged to the earliest Chaldeo-Akkadian theurgy; was religiously practised in
the nocturnal ceremonies in the Pyramids where we see to this day the font in
the shape of the sarcophagus; was known to take place during the Eleusinian
mysteries in the sacred temple lakes, and is practised even now by the
descendants of the ancient Sabians. The Mendæans (the El Mogtasila
of the Arabs) are, notwithstanding their deceptive name of “St. John
Christians”, less Christians than are the Orthodox Mussulman Arabs around them.
They are pure Sabians; and this is very naturally explained when one remembers
that the great Semitic scholar Renan has shown in his Vie de Jésus
that the Aramean verb seba, the origin of the name Sabian, is a
synonym of the Greek baptizw. The modern Sabians, the
Mendæans whose vigils and religious rites, face to face with the silent stars,
have been described by several travellers, have still preserved the theurgic,
baptismal rites of their distant and nigh-for gotten forefathers, the
Chaldean Initiates. Their religion is one of multiplied baptisms, of seven
purifications in the name of the seven planetary rulers, the “seven Angels of the
Presence” of the Roman Catholic Church. The Protestant Baptists are but the pale
imitators of the El Mogtasila or Nazareans who practise their
Gnostic rites in the deserts of Asia Minor. (See
“Boodhasp”.)
Bardesanes or Bardaisan. A Syrian
Gnostic, erroneously regarded as a Christian theologian, born at Edessa (Edessene
Chronicle) in 155 of our era (Assemani Bibl.. Orient. i. 389). He was
a great astrologer following the Eastern Occult System. According to Porphyry
(who calls him the Babylonian, probably on account of his Chaldeeism or
astrology), “Bardesanes . . . . held intercourse with the Indians that had been
sent to the Cæsar with Damadamis at their head” (De Abst. iv. 17), and
had his information from the Indian gymnosophists. The fact is that most of his
teachings, however much they may have been altered by his numerous Gnostic
followers, can be traced to Indian philosophy, and still more to the Occult
teachings of the Secret System. Thus in his Hymns he speaks of the creative
Deity as “Father-Mother”, and elsewhere of “Astral Destiny” (Karma) of “Minds of
Fire” (the Agni-Devas) &c. He connected the Soul (the personal Manas)
with the Seven Stars, deriving its origin from the Higher Beings (the
divine Ego); and therefore “admitted spiritual resurrection but denied the
resurrection of the body”, as charged with by the Church Fathers. Ephraim shows
him preaching the signs of the Zodiac, the importance of the birth-hours and
“proclaiming the seven”. Calling the Sun the “Father of Life” and the Moon the
“Mother of Life”, he shows the latter “laying aside her garment of light
(principles) for the renewal of the Earth”. Photius cannot understand how, while
accepting “the Soul free from the power of genesis (destiny of birth)” and
possessing free will, he still placed the body under the rule of birth
(genesis). For “they (the Bardesanists) say, that wealth and poverty and
sickness and health and death and all things not within our control are works of
destiny” (Bibl. Cod. 223, p.221—f). This is Karma, most evidently,
which does not preclude at all free-will. Hippolytus makes him a representative
of the Eastern School. Speaking of Baptism, Bardesanes is made to say (loc.
cit. pp. 985-ff “It is not however the Bath alone which makes us free, but
the Knowledge of who we are, what we are become, where we were before, whither
we are hastening, whence we are redeemed; what is generation (birth), what is
re-generation (re.birth)”. This points plainly to the doctrine of
re-incarnation. His conversation (Dialogue) with Awida and Barjamina on
Destiny and Free Will shows it. “What is called Destiny, is an order of outflow
given to the Rulers (Gods) and the Elements, according to which order the
Intelligences (Spirit-Egos) are changed by their descent into the Soul, and the
Soul by its descent into the body”. (See Treatise, found in its Syriac original, and published
with English translation in 1855 by Dr. Cureton, Spicileg. Syriac. in
British Museum.)
Bardesanian (System). The “Codex of
the Nazarenes”, a system worked out by one Bardesanes. It is called by some a
Kabala within the Kabala; a religion or sect the esotericism of which is given
out in names and allegories entirely sui-generis. A very old Gnostic
system. This codex has been translated into Latin. Whether it is right to call
the Sabeanism of the Mendaїtes (miscalled St. John’s Christians),
contained in
the Nazarene Codex, “the Bardesanian system”, as some do, is doubtful; for the
doctrines of the Codex and the names of the Good and Evil Powers therein, are
older than Bardaisan. Yet the names are identical in the two systems.
Baresma (Zend). A plant used by Mobeds
(Parsi priests) in the fire- temples, wherein consecrated bundles of it
are kept.
Barhishad (Sk.). A class of the “lunar” Pitris
or “Ancestors”, Fathers, who are believed in popular superstition to have kept
up in their past incarnations the household sacred flame and made
fire-offerings. Esoterically the Pitris who evolved their shadows or
chhayas to make there-with the first man. (See Secret Doctrine,
Vol. II.)
Basileus (Gr.). The Archon or
Chief who had the outer super-vision during the Eleusinian Mysteries. While the
latter was an initiated layman, and magistrate at Athens, the Basileus of the
inner Temple was of the staff of the great
Hierophant, and as such was one of the chief Mystæ and belonged to the
inner mysteries.
Basilidean (System). Named after
Basilides; the Founder of one of the most philosophical gnostic sects. Clement
the Alexandrian speaks of Basilides, the Gnostic, as “a philosopher devoted to
the contemplation of divine things”. While he claimed that he had all his
doctrines from the Apostle Matthew and from Peter through Glaucus, Irenaeus
reviled him, Tertullian stormed at him, and the Church Fathers had not
sufficient words of obloquy against the “heretic”. And yet on the authority of
St. Jerome himself, who describes with indignation what he had found in the
only genuine Hebrew copy of the Gospel of Matthew (See Isis Unv.,
ii., 181) which he got from the Nazarenes, the statement of Basilides becomes
more than credible, and if accepted would solve a great and perplexing problem.
His 24 vols. of Interpretation of the Gospels, were, as Eusebius
tells us, burnt. Useless to say that these gospels were not our present
Gospels. Thus, truth was ever crushed.
Bassantin, James. A Scotch astrologer. He
lived in the 16th century and is said to have predicted to Sir Robert Melville,
in 1562, the death and all the events connected therewith of Mary, the
unfortunate Queen of Scots.
Bath (Heb.).
Daughter.
Bath Kol (Heb.). Daughter of the
Voice: the Divine afflatus, or inspiration, by which the prophets of
Israel were
inspired as by a voice from Heaven and the Mercy-Seat. In Latin Filia
Vocis. An analogous ideal is found in Hindu exoteric theology named Vâch,
the voice, the female essence, an aspect of Aditi, the mother of the gods and
primæval Light; a mystery. [ w.w.w.]
Batoo (Eg.). The first man in
Egyptian folk-lore. Noum, the heavenly artist, creates a beautiful
girl—the original of the Grecian Pandora—and sends her to Batoo, after which the
happiness of the first man is destroyed.
Batria (Eg.). According to
tradition, the wife of the Pharaoh and the teacher of Moses.
Beel-Zebub (Heb.). The disfigured
Baal of the Temples. and more correctly
Beel-Zebul. Beel-Zebub means -literally “god of flies” ; the derisory epithet
used by the Jews, and the incorrect and confused rendering of the “god of the
sacred scarabæi”, the divinities watching the mummies, and symbols of
transformation, regeneration and immortality. Beel-Zeboul means properly the “
God of the Dwelling:’ and is spoken of in this sense in Matthew x. 25. As
Apollo, originally not a Greek but a Phenician god, was the healing god, Paiàn,
or physician, as well as the god of oracles, he became gradually transformed as
such into the “Lord of Dwelling”, a household deity, and thus was called
Beel-Zeboul. He was also, in a sense, a psychopompic god, taking care of the
souls as did Anubis. Beelzebub was always the oracle god, and was only confused
and identified with Apollo latter on.
Bel (Chald.). The oldest and
mightiest god of Babylonia, one of the earliest trinities,—Anu (q.v.) ;
Bel,
“Lord of the World”, father of the gods, Creator, and “Lord of the City
of Nipur’; and Hea, maker of fate, Lord of the Deep, God of Wisdom and esoteric
Knowledge, and “Lord of the city of Eridu”. The wife of Bel, or his female
aspect (Sakti), was Belat, or Beltis, “the mother of the great gods”, and
the “Lady of the city of Nipur”. The original Bel was also called Enu, Elu and
Kaptu (see Chaldean account of Genesis, by G. Smith). His eldest son was
the Moon God Sin (whose names were also Ur, Agu and Itu), who was the presiding
deity of the city of Ur, called in his honour by one of his names. Now
Ur was the place of nativity of
Abram (see “Astrology”). In the early Babylonian religion the Moon was, like
Soma in India, a male, and the Sun a
female deity. And this led almost every nation to great fratricidal wars between
the lunar and the solar worshippers—e.g., the contests between the Lunar and the
Solar
Dynasties, the Chandra and Suryavansa in ancient Aryavarta. Thus we
find the same on a smaller scale between
the Semitic tribes. Abram and his father Terah are shown migrating from
Ur and carrying
their lunar god (or its scion) with them ; for Jehovah Elohim or El—another form
of Elu—has ever been connected with the moon. It is the Jewish lunar chronology
which has led the European “civilized” nations into the greatest blunders and
mistakes. Merodach, the son of Hea, became the later Bel and was worshipped at
Babylon. His other title, Belas, has a number of symbolical meanings.
Bela-Shemesh (Chald. Heb.). “The Lord
of the Sun”, the name of the Moon during that period when the Jews became in
turn solar and lunar worshippers, and when the Moon was a male, and the Sun a
female deity. This period embraced the time between the allegorical expulsion of
Adam and Eve from Eden down to the no less
allegorical Noachian flood. (See Secret Doctrine, I. 397.)
Bembo, Tablet of; or Mensa
Isiaca. A brazen tablet inlaid with designs in Mosaic (now in the Museum at
Turin) which once
belonged to the famous Cardinal Bembo. Its origin and date are unknown. It is
covered with Egyptian figures and hieroglyphics, and is supposed to have been an
ornament in an ancient Temple of Isis. The learned Jesuit Kircher
wrote a description of it, and Montfaucon has a chapter devoted to it.
[
w.w.w.]
The only English work on the
Isiac Tablet is by Dr. W. Wynn Westcott, who gives a photogravure in addition to
its history, description, and occult significance.
Ben (Heb.). A son; a common
prefix in proper names to denote the son of so-and-so, e.g., Ben Solomon, Ben
Ishmael, etc.
Be-ness. A term coined by Theosophists
to render more accurately the essential meaning of the untranslatable word Sat.
The latter word does not mean “Being” for it presupposes a sentient feeling or
some consciousness of existence. But, as the term Sat is applied solely to the
absolute Principle, the universal, unknown, and ever unknowable Presence, which
philosophical Pantheism postulates in Kosmos, calling it the basic root of
Kosmos. and Kosmos itself— “Being” was no fit word to express it. Indeed, the
latter is not even, as translated by some Orientalists, “the incomprehensible
Entity”; for it is no more an Entity than a non-Entity, but both. It is, as
said, absolute Be-ness, not Being, the one secondless, undivided,
and indivisible All—the root of all Nature visible and invisible, objective and
subjective, to be sensed by the highest spiritual intuition, but’ never to be
fully comprehended.
Ben Shamesh (Heb.). The children or
the “Sons of the Sun”. The term belongs to the period when
the Jews were divided into sun and moon worshippers—Elites and Belites. (See
“Bela- Shemesh”.)
Benoo (Eg.). A word applied to
two symbols, both taken to mean “Phœnix”. One was the Shen-shen
(the
heron), and the other a nondescript bird, called the Rech (the red one),
and both were sacred to Osiris. It was the latter that was the regular Phœnix of
the great Mysteries, the typical symbol of self-creation and resurrection
through death—a type of the Solar Osiris and of the divine Ego in man. Yet both
the Heron and the Rech were symbols of cycles; the former, of the Solar year of
365 days; the latter of the tropical year or a period covering almost 26,000
years. In both cases the cycles were the types of the return of light from
darkness, the yearly and great cyclic return of the sun-god to his birth-place,
or—his Resurrection. The Rech-Benoo is described by Macrobius as living 660
years and then dying; while others stretched its life as long as 1,460 years.
Pliny, the Naturalist, describes the Rech as a large bird with gold and purple
wings, and a long blue tail. As every reader is aware, the Phœnix on feeling its end
approaching, according to tradition, builds for itself a funeral pile on the top
of the sacrificial altar, and then proceeds to consume himself thereon as a
burnt-offering. Then a worm appears in the ashes, which grows and developes
rapidly into a new Phœnix, resurrected from the ashes of its
predecessor.
Berasit (Heb.). The first word of
the book of Genesis. The English established version translates this as “In the
beginning,” but this rendering is disputed by many scholars. Tertullian approved
of “In power”; Grotius “When first”; but the authors of the Targum of
Jerusalern, who ought to have known Hebrew if anyone did, translated it “In
Wisdom”. Godfrey Higgins, in his Anacalypsis, insists on Berasit being the sign
of the ablative case, meaning “in” and ras, rasit, an ancient word for
Chokmah, “wisdom”. [ w. w.w.]
Berasit or Berasheth is a mystic
word among the Kabbalists of Asia Minor.
Bergelmir (Scand.). The one giant
who escaped in a boat the general slaughter of his brothers, the giant Ymir’s
children, drowned in the blood of their raging Father. He is the Scandinavian
Noah, as he, too, becomes the father of giants after the Deluge. The lays of the
Norsemen show the grandsons of the divine Bun—Odin, Wili, and We— conquering and
killing the terrible giant Ymir, and creating the world out of his
body.
Berosus (Chald.). A priest of the Temple of Belus who wrote for
Alexander the Great the history of the Cosmogony, as taught in the Temples, from the astronomical
and chronological records preserved in that temple. The fragments we have in the
soi-disant translations of Eusebius are certainly as untrustworthy as the
biographer of the Emperor Constantine—of whom he made a saint (!!)—could make
them. The only guide to this Cosmogony may now be found in the fragments of the
Assyrian tablets, evidently copied almost bodily from the earlier Babylonian
records; which, say what the Orientalists may, are undeniably the originals of
the Mosaic Genesis, of the Flood, the tower of Babel, of baby Moses set afloat
on the waters, and of other events. For, if the fragments from the Cosmogony of
Berosus, so carefully re-edited and probably mutilated and added to by Eusebius,
are no great proof of the antiquity of these records in Babylonia—seeing that
this priest of Belus lived three hundred years after the Jews were carried
captive to Babylon, and they may have been borrowed by the Assyrians from
them—later discoveries have made such a consoling hypothesis impossible. It is
now fully ascertained by Oriental scholars that not only “Assyria borrowed its civilization and
written characters from Babylonia,” but the Assyrians
copied their literature from Babylonian sources. Moreover, in his first Hibbert
lecture, Professor Sayce shows the culture both of Babylonia itself and of the
city of Eridu to have been of foreign importation; and, according to this
scholar, the city of Eridu stood already “6,000 years ago on the shores of the
Persian gulf,” i.e., about the very time when Genesis shows the Elohim creating
the world, sun, and stars out of nothing.
Bes (Eg.). A phallic god, the
god of concupiscence and pleasure. He is represented standing on a lotus ready
to devour his own progeny (Abydos). A rather modern deity
of foreign origin.
Bestla (Scand.). The daughter of
the “Frost giants”, the sons of Ymir; married to Bun, and the mother of Odin and
his brothers (Edda).
Beth (Heb.). House,
dwelling.
Beth Elohim (Heb.). A Kabbalistic
treatise treating of the angels, souls of men, and demons. The name means “House
of the Gods".
Betyles (Phœn.). Magical stones.
The ancient writers call them the “animated stones” ; oracular stones, believed
in and used both by Gentiles and Christians. (See S.D. II. p.
342).
Bhadra Vihara (Sk.). Lit., “the Monastery of the
Sages or Bodhisattvas”. A certain Vihara or Matham in
Kanyâkubdja.
Bhadrakalpa (Sk.). Lit., “The Kalpa of the
Sages”. Our present period is a Bhadra Kalpa, and the exoteric teaching makes it
last 236 million years. It is “so called because 1,000 Buddhas or sages appear
in the course of it”. (Sanshrit Chinese Dict.) “Four Buddhas have already
appeared” it adds; but as out of the 236 millions, over 151 million years have already
elapsed, it does seem a rather uneven distribution of Buddhas. This is the way
exoteric or popular religions confuse everything. Esoteric philosophy teaches us
that every Root- race has its chief Buddha or Reformer, who appears also in the
seven sub-races as a Bodhisattva (q.v.). Gautama Sakyamuni was the
fourth, and also the fifth Buddha: the fifth, because we are the fifth
root-race; the fourth, as the chief Buddha in this fourth Round. The
Bhadra Kalpa, or the “period of stability”, is the name of our present Round,
esoterically—its duration applying, of course, only to our globe (D), the
“1,000” Buddhas being thus in reality limited to but forty-nine in
all.
Bhadrasena (Sk.). A Buddhist king of
Magadha.
Bhagats (Sk.). Also called Sokha and
Sivnath by the Hindus; one who exorcises evil spirits.
Bhagavad-gita (Sk.). Lit., “the Lord’s Song”. A
portion of the Mahabharata, the great epic poem of India. It contains a dialogue
wherein Krishna—the “Charioteer”—and Arjuna, his Chela, have a discussion upon
the highest spiritual philosophy. The work is pre-eminently occult or
esoteric.
Bhagavat (Sk.). A title of the Buddha and of
Krishna. “The Lord”
literally.
Bhao (Sk.). A ceremony of divination
among the Kolarian tribes of Central India.
Bhârata Varsha (Sk.). The land of Bharata, an ancient name
of India.
Bhargavas (Sk.). An ancient race in India;
from the name of Bhrigu, the Rishi.
Bhâshya (Sk) A
commentary.
Bhâskara (Sk). One of the titles
of Surya, the Sun; meaning “life- giver” and “light-maker”.
Bhava (Sk.). Being, or state of being; the
world, a birth, and also a name of Siva.
Bhikshu (Sk.). In Pâli Bihkhu. The name given to the first
followers of Sâkyamuni Buddha. Lit., “mendicant scholar”. The Sanskrit
Chinese Dictionary explains the term correctly by dividing Bhikshus into two
classes of Sramanas (Buddhist monks and priests), viz., “esoteric
mendicants who control their nature by the (religious) law, and exoteric
mendicants who control their nature by diet;” and it adds, less
correctly: “every true Bhikshu is supposed to work miracles”.
Bhons (Tib.). The followers of
the old religion of the Aborigines of Tibet; of pre-buddhistic temples and
ritualism; the same as Dugpas, “red caps”, though the latter
appellation usually applies only to sorcerers.
Bhrantidarsanatah (Sk.). Lit., “false
comprehension or apprehension”; something conceived of on false appearances as a
mayavic, illusionary form.
Bhrigu (Sk.). One of the great Vedic
Rishis. He is called “Son” by Manu, who confides to him his Institutes.
He is one of the Seven Prajâpatis or progenitors of mankind, which is
equivalent to identifying him with one of the creative gods, placed by the
Purânas in Krita Yug, or the first age, that of purity. Dr. Wynn Westcott
reminds us of the fact that the late and very erudite Dr. Kenealy (who spelt the
name Brighoo), made of this Muni (Saint) the fourth, out of his twelve,
“divine messengers” to the World, adding that he appeared in Tibet, A.N. 4800
and that his religion spread to Britain, where his followers raised the
megalithic temple of Stonehenge. This, of course, is a hypothesis, based merely
on Dr. Kenealy’s personal speculations.
Bhûmi (Sk.). The earth, called also
Prithivî.
Bhur-Bhuva (Sk). A mystic
incantation, as Om, Bhur, Bhuva,
Swar, meaning
“Om, earth, sky, heaven, This is the exoteric explanation.
Bhuranyu (Sk.). “The rapid” or the swift.
Used of a missile— an equivalent also of the Greek Phoroneus.
Bhur-loka (Sk). One of the 14, lokas or
worlds in Hindu Pantheism; our Earth.
Bhutadi (Sk.). Elementary substances, the
origin and the germinal essence of the elements.
Bhutan. A country of heretical
Buddhists and Lamaists beyond Sikkhim, where rules the Dharma Raja, a nominal
vassal of the Dalaї Lama.
Bhûhta-vidyâ (Sk.). The art of exorcising, of
treating and curing demoniac possession. Literally, “Demon” or
“Ghost-knowledge”.
Bhûta-sarga (Sk.). Elemental or incipient
Creation, i.e., when matter was several degrees less material than it is
now.
Bhûtesa (Sk.) Or Bhûteswara; lit.,
“Lord of beings or of existent lives”. A name applied to Vishnu, to Brahmâ and
Krishna.
Bhûts (Sk.). Bhûta.: Ghosts,
phantoms. To call them “demons”, as do the Orientalists, is incorrect. For, if
on the one hand, a Bhûta is “a malignant spirit which haunts cemeteries, lurks
in trees, animates dead bodies, and deludes and devours human beings”, in
popular fancy, in India in Tibet and China, by Bhûtas are also meant “heretics”
who besmear their bodies with ashes, or Shaiva ascetics (Siva being held in
India for the King of Bhûtas).
Bhuya-loka (Sk.). One of the 14
worlds.
Bhuvana (Sk). A name of Rudra or
Siva, one of the Indian Trimurti (Trinity).
Bifröst (Scand.). A bridge built
by the gods to protect Asgard. On it “the third Sword-god, known as Heimdal or
Riger”, stands night and day girded with his sword, for he is the watchman
selected to protect Asgard, the abode of gods. Heimdal is the Scandinavian
Cherubim with the flaming sword, “which turned every way to keep the way of the
tree of life”.
Bihar Gyalpo (Tib.). A king deified by
the Dugpas. A patron over all their religious buildings.
Binah (Heb.). Understanding.
The third of the 10 Sephiroth, the third of the Supernal Triad; a female
potency, corresponding to the letter hé of the Tetragrammaton IHVH. Binah
is called AIMA,
the Supernal Mother, and “the great Sea”. [ w.w.w.]
Birs Nimrud (Chald.). Believed by the
Orientalists to be the site of the Tower of Babel. The great pile of Birs Nimrud
is near Babylon. Sir H. Rawlinson and several
Assyriologists examined the excavated ruins and found that the tower consisted
of seven stages of brick-work, each stage of a different colour, which shows
that the temple was devoted to the seven planets. Even with its three higher
stages or floors in ruins, it still rises now 154 feet above the level of the
plain. (”See Borsippa”.)
Black Dwarfs. The name of the Elves of
Darkness, who creep about in the dark caverns of the earth and fabricate weapons
and utensils for their divine fathers, the Æsir or Ases. Called also “Black
Elves”.
Black Fire (Zohar.) A Kabbalistic
term for Absolute Light and Wisdom; “black” because it is incomprehensible to
our finite intellects.
Black Magic (Occult.). Sorcery;
necromancy, or the raising of the dead, and other selfish abuses of abnormal
powers. This abuse may be unintentional; yet it is still “black magic”
whenever anything is produced phenomenally simply for one’s own
gratification.
B’ne Alhim or Beni Elohim (Heb.). “Sons of God ”,
literally or more correctly “Sons of the gods”, as Elohim is the plural of
Eloah. A group of angelic powers referable by analogy to the Sephira Hôd.
[w. w. w.]
Boat of the Sun. This sacred solar boat was
called Sekti, and it was steered by the dead. With the Egyptians the
highest exaltation of the Sun was in Aries and the depression in
Libya. (See “Pharaoh”, the “Son of
the Sun”.) A blue light—which is the “Sun’s Son”—is seen streaming from the
bark. The ancient Egyptians taught that the real colour of the Sun
was blue, and Macrobius also states that his colour is of a pure blue before he
reaches the horizon and after he disappears below. It is curious to note in this
relation the fact that it is only since 1881 that physicists and astronomers
discovered that “our Sun is really blue”. Professor Langley devoted many years
to ascertaining the fact. Helped in this by the magnificent scientific apparatus
of physical science, he has succeeded finally in proving that the apparent
yellow-orange colour of the Sun is due only to the effect of absorption exerted
by its atmosphere of vapours, chiefly metallic; but that in sober truth and
reality, it is not “a white Sun but a blue one”, i.e., something which the
Egyptian priests had discovered without any known scientific instruments, many
thousands of years ago!
Boaz (Heb.). The
great-grandfather of David. The word is from B, meaning “in”, and oz
“strength”, a symbolic name of one of the pillars at the porch of King Solomon’s
temple. [w. w. w.]
Bodha-Bodhi (Sk.). Wisdom-knowledge.
Bodhi or Sambodhi
(Sk.). Receptive intelligence, in
contradistinction to Buddhi, which is the potentiality of
intelligence.
Bodhi Druma (Sk.). The Bo or Bodhi tree; the
tree of “knowledge the Pippala or ficus religiosa in botany. It is
the tree under which Sâkymuni meditated for seven years and then reached
Buddhaship. It was originally 400 feet high, it is claimed; but when
Hiouen-Tsang saw it, about the year 640 of our era, it was only 50 feet high.
Its cuttings have been carried all over the Buddhist world and are planted in
front of almost every Vihâra or temple of fame in China, Siam, Ceylon, and
Tibet.
Bodhidharma (Sk.). Wisdom-religion; or the
wisdom contained in Dharma (ethics). Also the name of a great Arhat
Kshatriya (one of the warrior-caste), the son of a king. It was
Panyatara, his guru, who “gave him the name Bodhidharma to mark his
understanding (bodhi) of the Law (dharma) of Buddha”. (Chin. San.
Diet.). Bodhidharma, who flourished in the sixth century, travelled to
China, whereto he brought a precious relic, namely, the almsbowl of the Lord
Buddha.
Bodhisattva (Sk). Lit., “he, whose
essence (sattva) has become intelligence (bodhi)”; those who need
but one more incarnation to become perfect Buddhas, i.e., to be entitled to
Nirvâna. This, as applied to Manushi (terrestrial) Buddhas. In the
metaphysical sense, Bodhisattva is a title given to the sons of the
celestial Dhyâni Buddhas.
Bodhyanga (Sk.). Lit., the seven branches of
knowledge or understanding. One of the 37 categories of the Bodhi
pakchika dharma, comprehending seven degrees of intelligence
(esoterically, seven states of consciousness), and these are
(1) Smriti “memory”; (2) Dharma pravitchaya, “correct understanding” or
discrimination of the Law ; (3) Virya, “energy” ; (4) Priti,
“spiritual joy” ; (5 )Prasrabdhi, “tranquillity” or quietude; (6)
Samâdhi, “ecstatic contemplation”; and (7) Upeksha “absolute
indifference”.
Boehme (Jacob). A great mystic
philosopher, one of the most prominent Theosophists of the mediæval ages. He was
born about 1575 at Old Seidenburg, some two miles from Görlitz (Silesia), and died in 1624, at
nearly fifty years of age. In his boyhood he was a common shepherd, and, after
learning to read and write in a village school, became an apprentice to a poor
shoemaker at Görlitz. He was a natural clairvoyant of most wonderful powers.
With no education or acquaintance with science he wrote works which are now
proved to be full of scientific truths; but then, as he says himself, what he
wrote upon, he “saw it as in a great Deep in the Eternal”. He had “a thorough
view of the universe, as in a chaos”, which yet “opened itself in him, from time
to time, as in a young plant”. He was a thorough born Mystic, and evidently of a
constitution which is most rare one of those fine natures whose material
envelope impedes in no way the direct, even if only occasional, intercommunion
between the intellectual and the spiritual Ego. It is this Ego which Jacob
Boehme, like so many other untrained mystics, mistook for God; “Man must
acknowledge,” he writes, “that his knowledge is not his own, but from God, who
manifests the Ideas of Wisdom to the Soul of Man, in what measure he pleases.”
Had this great Theosophist mastered Eastern Occultism he might have expressed it
otherwise. He would have known then that the “god” who spoke through his poor
uncultured and untrained brain, was his own divine Ego, the omniscient Deity
within himself, and that what that Deity gave out was not in “what measure
pleased,” but in the measure of the capacities of the mortal and temporary
dwelling IT informed.
Bonati, Guido. A Franciscan monk, born
at Florence in the
XIIIth century and died in 1306. He became an astrologer and alchemist, but
failed as a Rosicrucian adept. He returned after this to his
monastery.
Bona-Oma, or Bona Dea. A Roman
goddess, the patroness of female Initiates and Occultists. Called also Fauna
after her father Faunus. She was worshipped as a prophetic and chaste divinity,
and her cult was confined solely to women, men not being allowed to even
pronounce her name. She revealed her oracles only to women, and the ceremonies
of her Sanctuary (a grotto in the Aventine) were conducted by the
Vestals, every 1st of May. Her aversion to men was so great that no male person
was permitted to approach the house of the consuls where her festival was sometimes held,
and even the portraits and the busts of men were carried out for the time from
the building. Clodius, who once profaned such a sacred festival by entering the
house of Caesar where it was held, in a female disguise, brought grief upon
himself. Flowers and foliage decorated her temple and women made libations from
a vessel (mellarium) full of milk. It is not true that the mellarium contained
wine, as asserted by some writers, who being men thus tried to revenge
themselves.
Bono, Peter. A Lombardian; a great
adept in the Hermetic Science, who travelled to Persia to study Alchemy. Returning
from his voyage he settled in Istria in 1330, and became famous as a
Rosicrucian. A Calabrian monk named Lacinius is credited with having published
in 1702 a condensed version of Bono’s works on the transmutation of metals.
There is, however, more of Lacinius than of Bono in the work. Bono was a genuine
adept and an Initiate ; and such do not leave their secrets behind them in
MSS.
Boodhasp (Chald.) .An alleged
Chaldean; but in esoteric teaching a Buddhist (a Bodhisattva), from the East,
who was the founder of the esoteric school of Neo-Sabeism, and whose secret rite
of baptism passed bodily into the Christian rite of the same name. For almost
three centuries before our era, Buddhist monks overran the whole country of
Syria, made their
way into the Mesopotamian valley and visited even Ireland. The name Ferho
and Faho of the Codex Nazaraeus is but a corruption of Fho, Fo and
Pho, the name which the Chinese, Tibetans and even Nepaulese often give to
Buddha.
Book of the Dead. An ancient Egyptian ritualistic
and occult work attributed to Thot-Hermes. Found in the coffins of ancient
mummies,
Book of the Keys. An ancient Kabbalistic
work.
Borj (Pers.). The Mundane Mountain, a volcano or
fire-mountain; the same as the Indian Meru.
Borri, Joseph Francis. A great
Hermetic philosopher, born at Milan in the 17th century. He
was an adept, an alchemist and a devoted occultist. He knew too much and was,
therefore, condemned to death for heresy, in January, 1661, after the death of
Pope Innocent X. He escaped and lived many years after, when finally he was
recognised by a monk in a Turkish village, denounced, claimed by the Papal
Nuncio, taken back to Rome and imprisoned, August 10th,
1675. But facts show that he escaped from his prison in a way no one could
account for.
Borsippa (Chald.). The
planet-tower, wherein Bel was worshipped in the days when astrolaters
were the greatest astronomers. It was dedicated to Nebo, god of Wisdom. (See
“Birs Nimrud ”.)
Both-al (Irish). The Both-al of
the Irish is the descendant and copy of the Greek Batylos and the
Beth-el of
Canaan, the “house
of God” (q.v.).
Bragadini, Marco Antonio. A Venetian
Rosicrucian of great achievements, an Occultist and Kabbalist who was
decapitated in 1595 in Bavaria, for making
gold.
Bragi (Scand.). The god of New
Life, of the re-incarnation of nature and man. He is called “the divine singer”
without spot or blemish. He is represented as gliding in the ship of the Dwarfs
of Death during the death of nature (pralaya), lying asleep on the deck with his
golden stringed harp near him and dreaming the dream of life. When the vessel
crosses the threshold of Nain, the Dwarf of Death, Bragi awakes and sweeping the
strings of his harp, sings a song that echoes over all the worlds, a song
describing the rapture of existence, and awakens dumb, sleeping nature out of
her long death-like sleep.
Brahma (Sk.). The student must distinguish
between Brahma the neuter, and Brahmâ, the male creator of the Indian Pantheon.
The former, Brahma or Brahman, is the impersonal, supreme and uncognizable
Principle of the Universe from the essence of which all emanates, and into which
all returns, which is incorporeal, immaterial, unborn, eternal, beginningless
and endless. It is all-pervading, animating the highest god as well as the
smallest mineral atom. Brahmâ on the other hand, the male and the alleged
Creator, exists periodically in his manifestation only, and then again goes into
pralaya, i.e., disappears and is annihilated.
Brahmâ’s Day. A period of 2,160,000,000 years
during which Brahmâ having emerged out of his golden egg
(Hiranyagarbha), creates and fashions the material world (being simply
the fertilizing and creative force in Nature). After this period, the worlds
being destroyed in turn, by fire and water, he vanishes with objective nature,
and then comes Brahmâ's Night.
Brahmâ’s Night. A period of equal duration,
during which Brahmâ. is said to be asleep. Upon awakening he recommences the
process, and this goes on for an AGE of Brahmâ composed of alternate “Days”, and
“Nights”, and lasting 100 years (of 2,160,000,000 years each). It requires
fifteen figures to express the duration of such an age; after the expiration of
which the Mahapralaya or the Great Dissolution sets in, and lasts in its
turn for the same space of fifteen figures.
Brahmâ Prajâpati (Sk.). “Brahmâ the Progenitor”,
literally the “Lord of Creatures”. In this aspect Brahmâ is the synthesis of the
Prajâpati or creative Forces.
Brahmâ Vâch (Sk.) Male and female
Brahmâ. Vâch is also some-times called the female logos; for Vâch means
Speech, literally. (See Manu Book I., and Vishnu
Purâna.)
Brahma Vidyâ (Sk.) The knowledge, the
esoteric science, about the two Brahmas and their true nature.
Brahmâ Virâj. (Sk.) The same: Brahmâ separating
his body into two halves, male and female, creates in them Vâch and Virâj. In
plainer terms and esotericlly Brahmâ the Universe, differentiating,
produced thereby material nature, Virâj, and spiritual intelligent Nature,
Vâch—which is the Logos of Deity or the manifested expression of the
eternal divine Ideation.
Brahmâcharî (Sk.) A Brahman ascetic;
one vowed to celibacy, a monk, virtually, or a religious student.
Brahmajnâni (Sk.) One possessed of complete
Knowledge; an Illuminatus in esoteric parlance.
Brâhman (Sk.) The highest of the
four castes in India, one supposed or rather
fancying himself, as high among men, as Brahman, the ABSOLUTE of the Vedantins,
is high among, or above the gods.
Brâhmana period (Sk.) One of the four
periods into which Vedic literature has been divided by Orientalists.
Brâhmanas (Sk.) Hindu Sacred Books. Works
composed by, and for Brahmans. Commentaries on those portions of the Vedas which
were intended for the ritualistic use and guidance of the “twice-born (Dwija) or
Brahmans.
Brahmanaspati (Sk.). The planet Jupiter; a deity
in the Rig -Veda, known in the exoteric works as Brihaspati, whose wife
Târâ was carried away by Soma (the Moon). This led to a war between the gods and
the Asuras.
Brahmâpuri (Sk.) Lit., “the City of
Brahmâ.
Brahmâputrâs (Sk.) The Sons of
Brahmâ.
Brahmarandhra (Sk.) A spot on the crown
of the head connected by Sushumna, a cord in the spinal column, with the
heart. A mystic term having its significance only in mysticism.
Brahmârshîs (Sk.). The Brahminical
Rishis.
Bread and Wine. Baptism and the Eucharist have
their direct origin in pagan Egypt. There the “waters of purification” were used
(the Mithraic font for baptism being borrowed by the Persians from the
Egyptians) and so were bread and wine. “Wine in the Dionysiak cult, as in the
Christian religion, represents that blood which in different senses is the life
of the world” (Brown, in the Dionysiak Myth). Justin Martyr says, “In
imitation of which the devil did the like in the Mysteries of Mithras, for you
either know or may know that they also take bread and a cup of water in
the sacrifices of those that are initiated and pronounce certain words over
it”. (See “Holy Water”.)
Briareus (Gr.) A famous giant in
the Theogony of Hesiod. The son of Cœlus and Terra, a monster with 50 heads and
100 arms. He is conspicuous in the wars and battles between the gods.
Briatic World or Briah (Heb.)
This world is the second of the Four worlds of the Kabbalists and referred to
the highest created “Archangels”, or to Pure Spirits. [ w.w.w.]
Bride. The tenth Sephira, Malkuth, is
called by the Kabbalists the Bride of Microprosopus; she is the final Hé of the
Tetragrammaton ; in a similar manner the Christian Church is called the Bride of
Christ.
[ w.w.w.]
Brihadâranyaka (Sk.) The name of a
Upanishad. One of the sacred and secret books of the Brahmins; an
Aranyaka is a treatise appended to the Vedas, and considered a subject of
special study by those who have retired to the jungle (forest) for purposes of
religious meditation.
Brihaspati (Sk.) The name of a
Deity, also of a Rishi. It is like wise the name of the planet Jupiter.
He is the personified Guru and priest of the gods in India ; also the symbol of
exoteric ritualism as opposed to esoteric mysticism. Hence the opponent of King
Soma—the moon, but also the sacred juice drunk at initiation—the parent of
Budha, Secret Wisdom.
Briseus (Gr.) A name given to the
god Bacchus from his nurse, Briso. He had also a temple at Brisa, a promontory
of the isle of Lesbos.
Brothers of the
Shadow. A name
given by the Occultists to Sorcerers, and especially to the Tibetan
Dugpas, of whom there are many in the Bhon sect of the Red Caps
(Dugpa). The word is applied to all practitioners of black or left
hand magic.
Bubasté (Eg.) A city in
Egypt which was
sacred to the cats, and where was their principal shrine. Many hundreds of
thousands of cats were embalmed and buried in the grottoes of Beni-Hassan-el
Amar. The cat being a symbol of the moon was sacred to Isis, her goddess. It
sees in the dark and its eyes have a phosphorescent lustre which frightens the
night-birds of evil omen. The cat was also sacred to Bast, and thence called
“the (destroyer of the Sun’s (Osiris’) enemies”.
Buddha (Sk.). Lit., “The Enlightened”. The
highest degree of knowledge. To become a Buddha one has to break through the
bondage of sense and personality; to acquire a complete perception of the REAL
SELF and learn not to separate it from all otherselves; to learn by experience the utter
unreality of all phenomena of the visible Kosmos foremost of all; to reach a
complete detachment from all that is evanescent and finite, and live while yet
on Earth in the immortal and the everlasting alone, in a supreme state of
holiness.
Buddha Siddhârta (Sk.) The name given to
Gautama, the Prince of Kapilavastu, at his birth. It is an abbreviation of
sarvârtthasiddha and means, the “realization of all desires”.
Gautama, which means, on earth (gâu) the most victorious (tama)
“was the sacerdotal name of the Sâkya family, the kingly patronymic of the
dynasty to which the father of Gautama, the King Suddhodhana of Kapilavastu,
belonged. Kapilavastu was an ancient city, the birth-place of the Great Reformer
and was destroyed during his life time. In the title Sâkyamuni, the last
component, muni, is rendered as meaning one mighty in charity, isolation
and silence”, and the former Sâkya is the family name. Every Orientalist or
Pundit knows by heart the story of Gautama, the Buddha, the most perfect of
mortal men that the world has ever seen, but none of them seem to suspect the
esoteric meaning underlying his prenatal biography, i.e., the significance
of the popular story. The Lalitavistûra tells the tale, but abstains from
hinting at the truth. The 5,000 jâtakas, or the events of former births
(re-incarnations) are taken literally instead of esoterically. Gautama, the
Buddha, would not have been a mortal man, had he not passed through hundreds and
thousands of births previous to his last. Yet the detailed account of these, and
the statement that during them he worked his way up through every stage of
transmigration from the lowest animate and inanimate atom and insect, up to the
highest—or man, contains simply the well-known occult aphorism : “a stone
becomes a plant, a plant an animal, and an animal a man”. Every human being who
has ever existed, has passed through the same evolution. But the hidden
symbolism in the sequence of these re-births (jâtaka) contains a perfect
history of the evolution on this earth, pre and post human, and is
a scientific exposition of natural facts.
One truth not veiled but bare and open
is found in their nomenclature, viz., that as soon as Gautama had reached
the human form he began exhibiting in every personality the utmost
unselfishness, self-sacrifice and charity. Buddha Gautama, the fourth of the
Sapta (Seven) Buddhas and Sapta Tathâgatas was born according to Chinese
Chronology in 1024 B.C; but according to the Singhalese chronicles, on the 8th
day of the second (or fourth) moon in the year 621 before our era. He fled from
his father’s palace to become an ascetic on the night of the 8th day of the
second moon, 597 BC., and having passed six years in ascetic meditation at
Gaya, and perceiving that physical
self-torture was useless to bring enlightenment, be decided upon striking out a
new path, until he reached the state of Bodhi. He became a full Buddha
on the night of the 8th day of the twelfth moon, in the year 592, and finally
entered Nirvâna in the year 543 according to Southern Buddhism. The
Orientalists, however, have decided upon several other dates. All the rest is
allegorical. He attained the state of Bodhisattva on earth when in the
personality called Prabhâpala. Tushita stands for a place on this globe, not for
a paradise in the invisible regions. The selection of the Sâkya family and his
mother Mâyâ, as “the purest on earth,” is in accordance with the model of the
nativity of every Saviour, God or deified Reformer. The tale about his entering
his mother’s bosom in the shape of a white elephant is an allusion to his innate
wisdom, the elephant of that colour being a symbol of every Bodhisattva.
The
statements that at Gautama’s birth, the newly born babe walked seven
steps in four directions, that an Udumbara flower bloomed in all its
rare beauty and that the Nâga kings forthwith proceeded ‘‘to baptise him
”, are all so many allegories in the phraseology of the Initiates and
well-understood by every Eastern Occultist. The whole events of his noble life
are given in occult numbers, and every so-called miraculous event—so
deplored by Orientalists as confusing the narrative and making it impossible to
extricate truth from fiction—is simply the allegorical veiling of the truth, it
is as comprehensible to an Occultist learned in symbolism, as it is difficult to
understand for a European scholar ignorant of Occultism. Every detail of the
narrative after his death and before cremation is a chapter of
facts written in a language which must be studied before it is
understood, otherwise its dead letter will lead one into absurd contradictions.
For instance, having reminded his disciples of the immortality of Dharmakâya
Buddha is said to have passed into Samâdhi, and lost himself in Nirvâna—from
which none can return., and yet, notwithstanding this, the Buddha is shown
bursting open the lid of the coffin, and stepping out of it ; saluting with
folded hands his mother Mâyâ who had suddenly appeared in the air, though she
had died seven (days after his birth, &c., &c. As Buddha. was a
Chakravartti (he who turns the wheel of the Law), his body at its
cremation could not be consumed by common fire. What happens Suddenly a
jet of flame burst out of the Swastica on his
breast, and reduced his body to ashes. Space prevents giving more
instances. As to his being one of the true and undeniable Saviours of the World,
suffice it to say that the most rabid orthodox missionary, unless he is
hopelessly insane, or has not the least regard even for historical truth, cannot
find one smallest accusation against the life and personal character of Gautama,
the “Buddha”. Without any claim to divinity, allowing his followers to fall into
atheism, rather than into the degrading superstition of deva or idol-worship,
his walk in life is from the beginning to the end, holy and divine.
During the years of his
mission it is blameless and pure as that of a god—or as the latter should be. He
is a perfect example of a divine, godly man. He reached Buddhaship—i.e.,
complete enlightenment—entirely by his own merit and owing to his own individual
exertions, no god being supposed to have any personal merit in the exercise of
goodness and holiness. Esoteric teachings claim that he renounced Nirvâna and
gave up the Dharmakâya vesture to remain a “Buddha of compassion” within the
reach of the miseries of this world. And the religious philosophy he left to it
has produced for over 2,000 years generations of good and unselfish men. His is
the only absolutely bloodless religion among all the existing
religions tolerant and liberal, teaching universal compassion and charity, love
and self-sacrifice, poverty and contentment with one’s lot, whatever it may he.
No persecutions, and enforcement of faith by fire and sword, have ever disgraced
it. No thunder-and-lightning-vomiting god has interfered with its chaste
commandments; and if the simple, humane and philosophical code of daily life
left to us by the greatest Man-Reformer ever known, should ever come to he
adopted by mankind at large, then indeed an era of bliss and peace would dawn on
Humanity.
Buddhachhâyâ (Sk.). Lit., “the shadow of Buddha”.
It is said to become visible at certain great events, and during some imposing
ceremonies performed at Temples in commemoration of glorious
acts of Buddhas life. Hiouen-tseng, the Chinese traveller, names a certain cave
where it occasionally appears on the wall, but adds that only he whose mind is
perfectly pure”, can see it.
Buddhaphala (Sk) Lit., “the fruit of
Buddha”, the fruition of Arahattvaphalla, or Arhatship.
Buddhi (Sk.). Universal Soul or Mind.
Mahâbuddhi is a name of Mahat (see “Alaya”); also the spiritual Soul in
man (the sixth principle), the vehicle of Atmâ exoterically the
seventh.
Buddhism. Buddhism is now split into two
distinct Churches : the Southern and the Northern Church. The former is said to be the
purer form, as having preserved more religiously the original teachings of the
Lord Buddha. It is the religion of Ceylon, Siam, Burmah and other places, while
Northern Buddhism is confined to Tibet, China and Nepaul. Such a distinction,
however, is incorrect. If the Southern Church is nearer, in that it has not
departed, except perhaps in some trifling dogmas due to the many councils held
after the death of the Master, from the public or exoteric
teachings of Sâkyamuni—the Northern Church is the outcome of Siddhârta
Buddha’s esoteric teachings which he confined to his elect Bhikshus and Arhats.
In fact, Buddhism in the present age, cannot he justly judged either by one or the other of its exoteric
popular forms. Real Buddhism can be appreciated only by blending the philosophy
of the Southern Church and the metaphysics of the Northern Schools. If one seems
too iconoclastic and stero:, and the other too metaphysical and transcendental,
even to being overgrown with the weeds of Indian exotericism—many of the gods of
its Pantheon having been transplanted under new names to Tibetan soil—it is
entirely due to the popular expression of Buddhism in both Churches.
Correspondentially they stand in their relation to each other as Protestantism
to Roman Catholicism. Both err by an excess of zeal and erroneous
interpretations, though neither the Southern nor the Northern Buddhist clergy
have ever departed from truth consciously, still less have they acted under the
dictates of priestocracy, ambition, or with an eye to personal gain and
power, as the two Christian Churches have.
Buddhochinga (Sk) The name of a great
Indian Arhat who went to China in the 4th century to propagate Buddhism and
converted masses of people by means of miracles and most wonderful magic
feats.
Budha (Sk. “The Wise and
Intelligent”, the Son of Soma, the Moon, and of Rokini or Taraka, wife of
Brihaspati carried away by King Soma, thus leading to the great war between the
Asuras, who sided with the Moon, and the Gods who took the defence of Brihaspati
(Jupiter) who, was their Purohita (family priest). This war is known as
the Tarakamaya. It is the original of the war in Olympus between the Gods and the
Titans and also of the war (in Revelation between Michael (Indra) and the
Dragon (personifying the Asuras).
Bull-Worship (See “Apis” ). The worship of
the Bull and the Ram was addressed to one and the same power, that of generative
creation, under two aspects— the celestial or cosmic, and the terrestrial or
human. The ram-headed gods all belong to the latter aspect, the bull—to the
former. Osiris to whom the Bull was sacred, was never regarded as a phallic
deity ; neither was Siva with his Bull Nandi, in spite of the lingham. As
Nandi is of a pure milk-white colour, so was Apis. Both were the emblems of the
generative, or of evolutionary power in the Universal Kosmos. Those who regard
the solar gods and the bulls as of a phallic character, or connect the Sun with
it, are mistaken, it is only the lunar gods and the rams, and lambs, which are
priapic, and it little becomes a religion which, however unconsciously, has
still adopted for its worship a god pre-eminently lunar, and accentuated
its choice by the selection of the lamb, whose sire is the ram, a glyph as
pre-eminently phallic, for its most sacred symbol—to vilify the older religions
for using the same symbolism. The worship of the bull, Apis, Hapi Ankh, or the
living Osiris, ceased over 3,000 years ago the worship of the ram and lamb
continues to this day. Mariette Bey discovered the Serapeum, the Necropolis of the Apis-bulls,
near Memphis, an
imposing subterranean crypt 2,000 feet long and twenty feet wide, containing the
mummies of thirty sacred bulls. If 1,000 years hence, a Roman Catholic Cathedral
with the Easter lamb in it, were discovered under the ashes of Vesuvius or Etna,
would future generations be justified in inferring therefrom that Christians
were “lamb” and “dove” worshippers ? Yet the two symbols would give them as much
right in the one case as in the other. Moreover, not all of the sacred “Bulls”
were phallic, i.e., males; there were hermaphrodite and sexless “bulls”. The
black bull Mnevis, the son of Ptah, was sacred to the God Ra at
Heliopolis; the Pacis of Hermonthis—to Amoun Horus, &c., &c., and Apis
himself was a hermaphodite and not a male animal, which shows his cosmic
character. As well call the Taurus of the Zodiac and all Nature
phallic.
Bumapa (Tib.). A school of men,
usually a college of mystic students.
Bunda-hish. An old Eastern work in which
among other things anthropology is treated in an allegorical fashion.
Burham-i-Kati. A Hermetic Eastern
work.
Burî (Scand) “The producer”,
the Son of Bestla, in Norse legends.
Buru Bonga. The “Spirit of the Hills”. This
Dryadic deity is worshipped by the Kolarian tribes of Central India with great
ceremonies and magical display. There are mysteries connected with it, but the
people are very jealous and will admit no stranger to their rites.
Busardier. A Hermetic philosopher born in
Bohemia who is
credited with having made a genuine powder of projection. He left the bulk of
his red powder to a friend named Richthausen, an adept and alchemist of
Vienna. Some years after Busardier’s death, in 1637, Richthausen introduced
himself to the Emperor Ferdinand III, who is known to have been ardently devoted
to alchemy, and together they are said to have converted three pounds of mercury
into the finest gold with one single grain of Busardier’s powder. In 1658 the
Elector of Mayence also was permitted to test the powder, and the gold produced
with it was declared by the Master of the Mint to be such, that he had never
seen finer. Such are the claims vouchsafed by the city records and
chronicles.
Butler. An English name assumed by an
adept, a disciple of some Eastern Sages, of whom many fanciful stories are
current. It is said for instance, that Butler was captured during his travels in
1629, and sold into captivity. He became the slave of an Arabian philosopher, a
great alchemist, and finally escaped, robbing his Master of a large quantity of
red powder. According to more trustworthy records, only the last portion of this
story is true. Adepts who can be robbed without knowing it would be unworthy of
the name. Butler or rather the person who assumed this name, robbed his
“Master” (whose free disciple he was) of the secret of transmutation, and
abused of his knowledge—i.e., sought to turn it to his personal profit, but was
speedily punished for it. After performing many wonderful cures by means of his
“stone (i.e., the occult knowledge of an initiated adept), and producing
extraordinary phenomena, to some of which Val Helmont, the famous Occultist and
Rosicrucian, was witness, not for the benefit of men but his own vain glory,
Butler was imprisoned in the Castle of Viloord, in Flanders, and passed almost
the whole of his life in confinement. He lost his powers and died miserable and
unknown. Such is the fate of every Occultist who abuses his power or desecrates
the sacred science.
Bythos (Gr.). A Gnostic term meaning
“Depth” or the “great Deep”, Chaos. It is equivalent to space, before anything
had formed itself in it from the primordial atoms that exist eternally in its
spatial depths, according to the teachings of Occultism.