Historical Spiritual Traditions
Related to ORMUS Alchemy
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The Alchemical Tradition
Ancient alchemical traditions once thrived in the Middle East, Egypt,
India, China, and Europe. These traditions held that certain precious
metals (including copper, silver & gold) could be transformed into
a fine white powder (elixir = powder in Arabic) that had miraculous
spiritual and healing properties when ingested.
Although the historical texts that
specifically describe alchemical practices date back only about 2000 years,
virtually all alchemical traditions held that their knowledge was very
ancient, and had been passed down as an oral tradition among initiates since the
very foundations of human civilization. There are tantalizing allusions to these
lost traditions in spiritual texts of many ancient cultures. A brief
overview is presented below.
The Biblical Tradition
In John's Book of Revelations:
REV 2:17 He that hath an ear, let him hear what the
Spirit saith unto the churches; To him that overcometh will I give to eat of
the hidden Manna, and will give him a white stone, and in the stone a new name
written, which no man knoweth saving he that receiveth it.
Those who have consumed the white powder of gold typically
report the experience of a spiritual sound deep in their awareness. This
spiritual sound cannot be heard by the ordinary ear. It can only be heard by the
spiritual ear. Is this spiritual sound the new name, “which no man knoweth
saving he that receiveth it.”?
For forty years, the Israelites consumed the white Manna in order to
spiritually prepare themselves for entry into Canaan, the Promised Land
(a higher state of consciousness?).
Exodus 16:15 “And when the children of Israel saw it,
they said one to another, It is Manna: for they knew not what it was. And
Moses said unto them, This is the Bread which the LORD hath given you to eat.”
Exodus 16:31 “And the house of Israel called the name
thereof Manna: and it was like coriander seed, white; and the taste of it was
like wafers made with honey.”
Exodus 16:33 And Moses said unto Aaron, Take a pot, and
put an omer full of Manna therein, and lay it up before the LORD, to be kept
for your generations.
Exodus 16:34 As the LORD commanded Moses, so Aaron laid
it up before the Testimony, to be kept.
Exodus 16:35 And the children of Israel did eat Manna
forty years, until they came to a land inhabited; they did eat Manna, until
they came unto the borders of the land of Canaan. (Until they approached
Cosmic Consciousness, for the last step into it cannot be made by the
personality)
If the Manna represents an allusion to the alchemical white
powder (elixir), then the Biblical legend of the golden calf may be an allusion
to an ancient alchemical process. According to the Book of Exodus, Moses took
the golden calf, burnt it in the fire, ground it to a powder, and cast it into
water for the Israelites to drink as an expiation for their sin.
Exodus 32:20 And he took the (golden) calf which they had made, and
burnt it with fire, and ground it to powder, and strewed it upon the water,
and made the children of Israel drink of it.
We know from Biblical records that Moses was the adopted son
of a royal Egyptian family. Is it possible that the Divine Bread or Manna had
its roots in ancient Egyptian alchemy?
The Egyptian Tradition
The ancient Egyptian texts state that when the Pharaohs
spiritually prepared themselves to enter the abode of the Immortals (the
Egyptian ‘Promised Land’) they were fed divine ‘Bread’. The sacred white
substance called “Bread” was prepared in the ‘House of Life’ by the
Egyptian high priests, and was considered ‘food of the gods’.
In the Egyptian texts, there is a deep connection between the divine ‘Bread’
and the all-seeing ‘Eye of Horus’ also known as the Udjat (“Whole One”).
For example, the Pyramid texts specifically state “Thy Bread-cakes shall
come from the Eye-of-Horus.” Another text states: “I am Thoth who brings
you the bright Eye-of-Horus in its name of White Bread.”
The Udjat
All-Seeing Eye of Horus
In general, the Udjat represented the divine healing power of
the gods. It represented wholeness, health, and spiritual vision. Its function
is clearly depicted in the ancient myth of Osiris, where Horus is said to have
used the mysterious power of the Udjat to resurrect his father Osiris. After his
resurrection, Osiris ascended through the sky to attain Eternal Life among the
gods.
The idea that the Eye of Horus was related to a divine
substance that could be ingested is also indicated in the ancient Coffin texts,
which state: “If Nu be hungry, Nekhbet will be hungry; if Nu be thirsty,
Nekhbet will be thirsty," (Spell 863). This litany ends by mentioning the
Eye of Horus as the cure. “Your thirst and hunger are satisfied with the
consumption of the Eye of Horus” (Spell 936). Later in the same text it is
stated: "I live on Bread of white emmer washed down with Ale of red
barley... I testify concerning the Eye of Horus to him." (Spell 1013).
The spiritual power of the White Bread is clearly indicated
in the Egyptian texts. The Book of the Dead states: "Let there be given to
him Bread and Ale which have been issued in the Presence of Osiris, and he will
be for ever like the Followers of Horus." The Followers of Horus were
considered semi-divine sage-priests. Again, the texts state: “I eat Bread. I
drink Ale.…That which is an abomination unto my Ka shall not enter my body. I
will live upon that whereon live the gods and the Spirit-souls. I shall live,
and I shall be master of their (Bread) cakes.” “Now the subsistence of
Osiris Ani, whose word is truth, is among the Bread and the Ale which are made
for your mouths … Behold, I shall be with Osiris, and my perfection shall be
his perfection among the Great Gods.”
It should be noted that the sacred or divine Bread used by
the Egyptians was not shaped like an ordinary loaf of bread. It was shaped into
a conical or pyramidal cake, resembling the cap-stone of the pyramids. There was
thus a deep connection in the Egyptian mind between the Pyramids or “Houses of
Eternity” and the White Bread. This is made explicit by the use of the
hieroglyphic symbol of the White Bread to indicate the gift of Life, a gift that
is also indicated by the Ankh.
“Given Life”
The Ankh and the pyramidal loaf of Bread are synonymous symbols, indicating
the gift of Life.
The symbol of the White Bread was also used in the hieroglyph
that meant “Peace, Contentment, Offering”. It was represented by a cup that
contained the sacred Bread placed on a reed mat. This constituted the hieroglyph
“Hotep”, which can be found as an inscription over every tomb in ancient
Egypt.
Hotep
“Peace, Contentment, Offering”
Many pharaohs and noble persons in ancient Egypt included the
word “Hotep” in their name. For example, the famous Egyptian high-priest,
who was the patron of Egyptian medicine and the first architect and builder of
an Egyptian Pyramid was named Imhotep.
Imhotep
The First Pyramid Builder
The symbolic connection between the sacred Bread and the
Pyramid is made explicit by the pyramidal shape of the Bread-cakes and the
cap-stone of the Pyramids, called the Benben.
The Benben was the proverbial “Philosopher’s Stone” of
ancient Egypt. It symbolized the primordial mound that rose above the waters of
the Abyss in the very beginning. It was also revered as the “seed of the gods”,
the “ashes of the Phoenix (benu bird)”, and the embodiment of Ra-Atum, the
Sun-God.
The Egyptian word for gold is “Neb”,
which is just the inverse of “Ben”. Is it possible that the sacred cap-stone
(Ben) and the sacred White Bread were produced from an inverted form of gold
(Neb) that appeared as a fine white powder?
The Vedic Tradition
The ancient Vedic tradition in India also sang the praises of
a mysterious sacred substance called Soma, the nectar of immortality. It was
prepared and consumed by the Vedic priests in order to attain health, longevity,
spiritual illumination, and entry into the abode of the immortal gods.
Rig Veda 8:48 “I have tasted, as one who knows its
secret, the honeyed (Soma) drink that inspires and grants freedom, the drink
that all, both Gods and mortals, seek to obtain, calling it nectar. We have
drunk the Soma, we have become immortal; we have gone to the light; we have
found the gods… These glorious (Soma) drops are my health and salvation:
they strengthen my joints as thongs do a cart. May these droplets guard my
foot lest it stumble and chase from my body all manner of ills. Far-famed
Soma, stretch out our life-spans so that we may live… Make me shine brightly
like fire produced by friction. Illumine us…Enter within us for our
well-being. With hearts inspired may we relish the Juice like treasure
inherited from our Fathers! Lengthen our days, King Soma, as the sun causes
the shining days to grow longer… It is you, O Soma, who guard our bodies; in
each of our limbs you have made your abode. Our weariness and pains are now
far removed; the forces of darkness have fled in fear. Soma has surged within
us mightily. We have reached our goal! Life is prolonged! The drop that we
have drunk has entered our hearts, an immortal inside mortals.”
In this tradition, Soma is also closely related to gold.
Although modern scholars have traditionally assumed that the Soma was an
hallucinogen produced from plants, some scholars have now begun to suggest
that the concept of Soma involves a metallurgical or alchemical allegory. In the
ancient Rig Veda, Soma is said to have been fetched from heaven by a divine
Eagle who extracted it from a bronze (or metal) fortress. (Rig Veda 8.100) The
Eagle who fetched the Soma from Heaven may very well be a Vedic reference to the
divine Phoenix. The fact that the Soma was kept in a metal fortress provides a
clue that the Soma had its true source in the metals.
However, the Vedic texts generally state that Soma has
mountains (girau) and stones (adrau) for his body. Soma is also described as
dwelling in the mountains (giristha) or growing on the mountains (parvata_vrdh:
RV. 9,46). Terrestrial mountains are the abode of Soma (RV. 9,2). The texts
state that the Soma was plucked from the rock (adri) by the mountain dwellers
and then bought by the priests (kavis) who prepared the Soma. The Sanskrit term
kavi not only means priest-poet, but also smith, metallurgist, or alchemist.
Although the Soma is said to grow on or in the rocks in the
form of shoots or stalks (amshu), this term can easily be interpreted as the
veins or stalk-like protrusions that are often found associated with certain
ores, such as quartzite gold. The texts state that the Soma was specifically
plucked from two rocks (adrau) which are either reddish brown (aruna) or yellow
(hari) in color, colors that are typical of gold bearing ores. For example,
quartzite deposits often contain native yellow gold veins and protrusions, which
gives them a yellow or golden color, while gold-platinum ores often appear as
reddish-brown mineral veins. Because these veins appeared to be growing on or in
the mountain rocks, they were compared to the stalks of a plant to be plucked
from the rocks.
Once the ores were collected by mountain dwellers and
bought by the priest-metallurgists, the ores would be crushed and washed free of
impurities. The crushing or pressing of the Soma is abundantly described in the
Rig Veda. It involved the use of grinding stones, which were said to make a loud
noise. The use of grinding stones instead of a mortar and pestle was a common
practice in ancient metallurgy.
It appears that several stages of grinding, washing, cooking
and filtering were involved. A woolen fleece (avi) was used as the filter. The
use of woolen filters was also very common in ancient metallurgy, and were often
used as a means of collecting gold particles from running streams. The grease or
oil on the fleece would capture the tiny flecks of gold, but would not capture
particles of sand or grit, which would be wetted by the water and washed away.
Some have speculated that the Greek myth of Jason and Argonauts who sought the
Golden Fleece had its origin in this ancient practice. The use of a woolen
filter during the washing of the crushed ores would thus allow the
priest-metallurgists to collect the gold particles.
After crushing, washing, and filtering the Soma would be
cooked in water. As the juice began to mature, it was said to become clothed in
robes of milk. In other words, it assumed a white appearance, resembling milk or
the moon. Due to its white color it was often referred to as the Milk of Heaven
or the Milk of the Gods, and was compared to Divine Semen, indicating its
creative spiritual potency.
It is interesting to note that when the monatomic elements
are placed in water they form a permanent suspension that looks exactly like
pure white milk.
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