PAPER 95
- THE MELCHIZEDEK TEACHINGS IN THE LEVANT
As India gave rise to many
of the religions and philosophies of eastern Asia, so the
Levant was the homeland of the faiths of the Occidental
world. The Salem missionaries spread out all over
southwestern Asia, through Palestine, Mesopotamia, Egypt,
Iran, and Arabia, everywhere proclaiming the good news of
the gospel of Machiventa Melchizedek. In some of these lands
their teachings bore fruit; in others they met with varying
success. Sometimes their failures were due to lack of
wisdom, sometimes to circumstances beyond their control.
1. THE SALEM
RELIGION IN MESOPOTAMIA
By 2000 B.C. the religions
of Mesopotamia had just about lost the teachings of the
Sethites and were largely under the influence of the
primitive beliefs of two groups of invaders, the Bedouin
Semites who had filtered in from the western desert and the
barbarian horsemen who had come down from the north.
But the custom of the
early Adamite peoples in honoring the seventh day of the
week never completely disappeared in Mesopotamia. Only,
during the Melchizedek era, the seventh day was regarded as
the worst of bad luck. It was taboo-ridden; it was unlawful
to go on a journey, cook food, or make a fire on the evil
seventh day. The Jews carried back to Palestine many of the
Mesopotamian taboos which they had found resting on the
Babylonian observance of the seventh day, the Shabattum.
Although the Salem
teachers did much to refine and uplift the religions of
Mesopotamia, they did not succeed in bringing the various
peoples to the permanent recognition of one God. Such
teaching gained the ascendency for more than one hundred and
fifty years and then gradually gave way to the older belief
in a multiplicity of deities.
The Salem teachers greatly
reduced the number of the gods of Mesopotamia, at one time
bringing the chief deities down to seven: Bel, Shamash,
Nabu, Anu, Ea, Marduk, and Sin. At the height of the new
teaching they exalted three of these gods to supremacy over
all others, the Babylonian triad: Bel, Ea, and Anu, the gods
of earth, sea, and sky. Still other triads grew up in
different localities, all reminiscent of the trinity
teachings of the Andites and the Sumerians and based on the
belief of the Salemites in Melchizedek's insignia of the
three circles.
Never did the Salem
teachers fully overcome the popularity of Ishtar, the mother
of gods and the spirit of sex fertility. They did much to
refine the worship of this goddess, but the Babylonians and
their neighbors had never completely outgrown their
disguised forms of sex worship. It had become a universal
practice throughout Mesopotamia for all women to submit, at
least once in early life, to
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the embrace of strangers;
this was thought to be a devotion required by Ishtar, and it
was believed that fertility was largely dependent on this
sex sacrifice.
The early progress of the
Melchizedek teaching was highly gratifying until Nabodad,
the leader of the school at Kish, decided to make a
concerted attack upon the prevalent practices of temple
harlotry. But the Salem missionaries failed in their effort
to bring about this social reform, and in the wreck of this
failure all their more important spiritual and philosophic
teachings went down in defeat.
This defeat of the Salem
gospel was immediately followed by a great increase in the
cult of Ishtar, a ritual which had already invaded Palestine
as Ashtoreth, Egypt as Isis, Greece as Aphrodite, and the
northern tribes as Astarte. And it was in connection with
this revival of the worship of Ishtar that the Babylonian
priests turned anew to stargazing; astrology experienced its
last great Mesopotamian revival, fortunetelling became the
vogue, and for centuries the priesthood increasingly
deteriorated.
Melchizedek had warned his
followers to teach about the one God, the Father and Maker
of all, and to preach only the gospel of divine favor
through faith alone. But it has often been the error of the
teachers of new truth to attempt too much, to attempt to
supplant slow evolution by sudden revolution. The
Melchizedek missionaries in Mesopotamia raised a moral
standard too high for the people; they attempted too much,
and their noble cause went down in defeat. They had been
commissioned to preach a definite gospel, to proclaim the
truth of the reality of the Universal Father, but they
became entangled in the apparently worthy cause of reforming
the mores, and thus was their great mission sidetracked and
virtually lost in frustration and oblivion.
In one generation the
Salem headquarters at Kish came to an end, and the
propaganda of the belief in one God virtually ceased
throughout Mesopotamia. But remnants of the Salem schools
persisted. Small bands scattered here and there continued
their belief in the one Creator and fought against the
idolatry and immorality of the Mesopotamian priests.
It was the Salem
missionaries of the period following the rejection of their
teaching who wrote many of the Old Testament Psalms,
inscribing them on stone, where later-day Hebrew priests
found them during the captivity and subsequently
incorporated them among the collection of hymns ascribed to
Jewish authorship. These beautiful psalms from Babylon were
not written in the temples of Bel-Marduk; they were the work
of the descendants of the earlier Salem missionaries, and
they are a striking contrast to the magical conglomerations
of the Babylonian priests. The Book of Job is a fairly good
reflection of the teachings of the Salem school at Kish and
throughout Mesopotamia.
Much of the Mesopotamian
religious culture found its way into Hebrew literature and
liturgy by way of Egypt through the work of Amenemope and
Ikhnaton. The Egyptians remarkably preserved the teachings
of social obligation derived from the earlier Andite
Mesopotamians and so largely lost by the later Babylonians
who occupied the Euphrates valley.
2. EARLY EGYPTIAN
RELIGION
The original Melchizedek
teachings really took their deepest root in Egypt, from
where they subsequently spread to Europe. The evolutionary
religion of
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the Nile valley was
periodically augmented by the arrival of superior strains of
Nodite, Adamite, and later Andite peoples of the Euphrates
valley. From time to time, many of the Egyptian civil
administrators were Sumerians. As India in these days
harbored the highest mixture of the world races, so Egypt
fostered the most thoroughly blended type of religious
philosophy to be found on Urantia, and from the Nile valley
it spread to many parts of the world. The Jews received much
of their idea of the creation of the world from the
Babylonians, but they derived the concept of divine
Providence from the Egyptians.
It was political and
moral, rather than philosophic or religious, tendencies that
rendered Egypt more favorable to the Salem teaching than
Mesopotamia. Each tribal leader in Egypt, after fighting his
way to the throne, sought to perpetuate his dynasty by
proclaiming his tribal god the original deity and creator of
all other gods. In this way the Egyptians gradually got used
to the idea of a supergod, a steppingstone to the later
doctrine of a universal creator Deity. The idea of
monotheism wavered back and forth in Egypt for many
centuries, the belief in one God always gaining ground but
never quite dominating the evolving concepts of polytheism.
For ages the Egyptian
peoples had been given to the worship of nature gods; more
particularly did each of the two-score separate tribes have
a special group god, one worshiping the bull, another the
lion, a third the ram, and so on. Still earlier they had
been totem tribes, very much like the Amerinds.
In time the Egyptians
observed that dead bodies placed in brickless graves were
preserved--embalmed--by the action of the soda-impregnated
sand, while those buried in brick vaults decayed. These
observations led to those experiments which resulted in the
later practice of embalming the dead. The Egyptians believed
that preservation of the body facilitated one's passage
through the future life. That the individual might properly
be identified in the distant future after the decay of the
body, they placed a burial statue in the tomb along with the
corpse, carving a likeness on the coffin. The making of
these burial statues led to great improvement in Egyptian
art.
For centuries the
Egyptians placed their faith in tombs as the safeguard of
the body and of consequent pleasurable survival after death.
The later evolution of magical practices, while burdensome
to life from the cradle to the grave, most effectually
delivered them from the religion of the tombs. The priests
would inscribe the coffins with charm texts which were
believed to be protection against a "man's having his heart
taken away from him in the nether world." Presently a
diverse assortment of these magical texts was collected and
preserved as The Book of the Dead. But in the Nile valley
magical ritual early became involved with the realms of
conscience and character to a degree not often attained by
the rituals of those days. And subsequently these ethical
and moral ideals, rather than elaborate tombs, were depended
upon for salvation.
The superstitions of these
times are well illustrated by the general belief in the
efficacy of spittle as a healing agent, an idea which had
its origin in Egypt and spread therefrom to Arabia and
Mesopotamia. In the legendary battle of Horus with Set the
young god lost his eye, but after Set was vanquished, this
eye was restored by the wise god Thoth, who spat upon the
wound and healed it.
The Egyptians long
believed that the stars twinkling in the night sky
represented the survival of the souls of the worthy dead;
other survivors they thought were absorbed into the sun.
During a certain period, solar veneration became a
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species of ancestor worship.
The sloping entrance passage of the great pyramid pointed
directly toward the Pole Star so that the soul of the king,
when emerging from the tomb, could go straight to the
stationary and established constellations of the fixed
stars, the supposed abode of the kings.
When the oblique rays of
the sun were observed penetrating earthward through an
aperture in the clouds, it was believed that they betokened
the letting down of a celestial stairway whereon the king
and other righteous souls might ascend. "King Pepi has put
down his radiance as a stairway under his feet whereon to
ascend to his mother."
When Melchizedek appeared
in the flesh, the Egyptians had a religion far above that of
the surrounding peoples. They believed that a disembodied
soul, if properly armed with magic formulas, could evade the
intervening evil spirits and make its way to the judgment
hall of Osiris, where, if innocent of "murder, robbery,
falsehood, adultery, theft, and selfishness," it would be
admitted to the realms of bliss. If this soul were weighed
in the balances and found wanting, it would be consigned to
hell, to the Devouress. And this was, relatively, an
advanced concept of a future life in comparison with the
beliefs of many surrounding peoples.
The concept of judgment in
the hereafter for the sins of one's life in the flesh on
earth was carried over into Hebrew theology from Egypt. The
word judgment appears only once in the entire Book of Hebrew
Psalms, and that particular psalm was written by an
Egyptian.
3. EVOLUTION OF
MORAL CONCEPTS
Although the culture and
religion of Egypt were chiefly derived from Andite
Mesopotamia and largely transmitted to subsequent
civilizations through the Hebrews and Greeks, much, very
much, of the social and ethical idealism of the Egyptians
arose in the valley of the Nile as a purely evolutionary
development. Notwithstanding the importation of much truth
and culture of Andite origin, there evolved in Egypt more of
moral culture as a purely human development than appeared by
similar natural techniques in any other circumscribed area
prior to the bestowal of Michael.
Moral evolution is not
wholly dependent on revelation. High moral concepts can be
derived from man's own experience. Man can even evolve
spiritual values and derive cosmic insight from his personal
experiential living because a divine spirit indwells him.
Such natural evolutions of conscience and character were
also augmented by the periodic arrival of teachers of truth,
in ancient times from the second Eden, later on from
Melchizedek's headquarters at Salem.
Thousands of years before
the Salem gospel penetrated to Egypt, its moral leaders
taught justice, fairness, and the avoidance of avarice.
Three thousand years before the Hebrew scriptures were
written, the motto of the Egyptians was: "Established is the
man whose standard is righteousness; who walks according to
its way." They taught gentleness, moderation, and
discretion. The message of one of the great teachers of this
epoch was: "Do right and deal justly with all." The Egyptian
triad of this age was Truth-Justice-Righteousness. Of all
the purely human religions of Urantia none ever surpassed
the social ideals and the moral grandeur of this onetime
humanism of the Nile valley.
In the soil of these
evolving ethical ideas and moral ideals the surviving
doctrines of the Salem religion flourished. The concepts of
good and evil found
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ready response in the hearts
of a people who believed that "Life is given to the peaceful
and death to the guilty." "The peaceful is he who does what
is loved; the guilty is he who does what is hated." For
centuries the inhabitants of the Nile valley had lived by
these emerging ethical and social standards before they ever
entertained the later concepts of right and wrong--good and
bad.
Egypt was intellectual and
moral but not overly spiritual. In six thousand years only
four great prophets arose among the Egyptians. Amenemope
they followed for a season; Okhban they murdered; Ikhnaton
they accepted but halfheartedly for one short generation;
Moses they rejected. Again was it political rather than
religious circumstances that made it easy for Abraham and,
later on, for Joseph to exert great influence throughout
Egypt in behalf of the Salem teachings of one God. But when
the Salem missionaries first entered Egypt, they encountered
this highly ethical culture of evolution blended with the
modified moral standards of Mesopotamian immigrants. These
early Nile valley teachers were the first to proclaim
conscience as the mandate of God, the voice of Deity.
4. THE TEACHINGS
OF AMENEMOPE
In due time there grew up
in Egypt a teacher called by many the "son of man" and by
others Amenemope. This seer exalted conscience to its
highest pinnacle of arbitrament between right and wrong,
taught punishment for sin, and proclaimed salvation through
calling upon the solar deity.
Amenemope taught that
riches and fortune were the gift of God, and this concept
thoroughly colored the later appearing Hebrew philosophy.
This noble teacher believed that God-consciousness was the
determining factor in all conduct; that every moment should
be lived in the realization of the presence of, and
responsibility to, God. The teachings of this sage were
subsequently translated into Hebrew and became the sacred
book of that people long before the Old Testament was
reduced to writing. The chief preachment of this good man
had to do with instructing his son in uprightness and
honesty in governmental positions of trust, and these noble
sentiments of long ago would do honor to any modern
statesman.
This wise man of the Nile
taught that "riches take themselves wings and fly
away"--that all things earthly are evanescent. His great
prayer was to be "saved from fear." He exhorted all to turn
away from "the words of men" to "the acts of God." In
substance he taught: Man proposes but God disposes. His
teachings, translated into Hebrew, determined the philosophy
of the Old Testament Book of Proverbs. Translated into
Greek, they gave color to all subsequent Hellenic religious
philosophy. The later Alexandrian philosopher, Philo,
possessed a copy of the Book of Wisdom.
Amenemope functioned to
conserve the ethics of evolution and the morals of
revelation and in his writings passed them on both to the
Hebrews and to the Greeks. He was not the greatest of the
religious teachers of this age, but he was the most
influential in that he colored the subsequent thought of two
vital links in the growth of Occidental civilization--the
Hebrews, among whom evolved the acme of Occidental religious
faith, and the Greeks, who developed pure philosophic
thought to its greatest European heights.
In the Book of Hebrew
Proverbs, chapters fifteen, seventeen, twenty, and chapter
twenty-two, verse seventeen, to chapter twenty-four, verse
twenty-two,
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are taken almost verbatim
from Amenemope's Book of Wisdom. The first psalm of the
Hebrew Book of Psalms was written by Amenemope and is the
heart of the teachings of Ikhnaton.
5. THE REMARKABLE
IKHNATON
The teachings of Amenemope
were slowly losing their hold on the Egyptian mind when,
through the influence of an Egyptian Salemite physician, a
woman of the royal family espoused the Melchizedek
teachings. This woman prevailed upon her son, Ikhnaton,
Pharaoh of Egypt, to accept these doctrines of One God.
Since the disappearance of
Melchizedek in the flesh, no human being up to that time had
possessed such an amazingly clear concept of the revealed
religion of Salem as Ikhnaton. In some respects this young
Egyptian king is one of the most remarkable persons in human
history. During this time of increasing spiritual depression
in Mesopotamia, he kept alive the doctrine of El Elyon, the
One God, in Egypt, thus maintaining the philosophic
monotheistic channel which was vital to the religious
background of the then future bestowal of Michael. And it
was in recognition of this exploit, among other reasons,
that the child Jesus was taken to Egypt, where some of the
spiritual successors of Ikhnaton saw him and to some extent
understood certain phases of his divine mission to Urantia.
Moses, the greatest
character between Melchizedek and Jesus, was the joint gift
to the world of the Hebrew race and the Egyptian royal
family; and had Ikhnaton possessed the versatility and
ability of Moses, had he manifested a political genius to
match his surprising religious leadership, then would Egypt
have become the great monotheistic nation of that age; and
if this had happened, it is barely possible that Jesus might
have lived the greater portion of his mortal life in Egypt.
Never in all history did
any king so methodically proceed to swing a whole nation
from polytheism to monotheism as did this extraordinary
Ikhnaton. With the most amazing determination this young
ruler broke with the past, changed his name, abandoned his
capital, built an entirely new city, and created a new art
and literature for a whole people. But he went too fast; he
built too much, more than could stand when he had gone.
Again, he failed to provide for the material stability and
prosperity of his people, all of which reacted unfavorably
against his religious teachings when the subsequent floods
of adversity and oppression swept over the Egyptians.
Had this man of amazingly
clear vision and extraordinary singleness of purpose had the
political sagacity of Moses, he would have changed the whole
history of the evolution of religion and the revelation of
truth in the Occidental world. During his lifetime he was
able to curb the activities of the priests, whom he
generally discredited, but they maintained their cults in
secret and sprang into action as soon as the young king
passed from power; and they were not slow to connect all of
Egypt's subsequent troubles with the establishment of
monotheism during his reign.
Very wisely Ikhnaton
sought to establish monotheism under the guise of the
sun-god. This decision to approach the worship of the
Universal Father by absorbing all gods into the worship of
the sun was due to the counsel of the Salemite physician.
Ikhnaton took the generalized doctrines of the then existent
Aton faith regarding the fatherhood and motherhood of Deity
and created a
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religion which recognized an
intimate worshipful relation between man and God.
Ikhnaton was wise enough
to maintain the outward worship of Aton, the sun-god, while
he led his associates in the disguised worship of the One
God, creator of Aton and supreme Father of all. This young
teacher-king was a prolific writer, being author of the
exposition entitled "The One God," a book of thirty-one
chapters, which the priests, when returned to power, utterly
destroyed. Ikhnaton also wrote one hundred and thirty-seven
hymns, twelve of which are now preserved in the Old
Testament Book of Psalms, credited to Hebrew authorship.
The supreme word of
Ikhnaton's religion in daily life was "righteousness," and
he rapidly expanded the concept of right doing to embrace
international as well as national ethics. This was a
generation of amazing personal piety and was characterized
by a genuine aspiration among the more intelligent men and
women to find God and to know him. In those days social
position or wealth gave no Egyptian any advantage in the
eyes of the law. The family life of Egypt did much to
preserve and augment moral culture and was the inspiration
of the later superb family life of the Jews in Palestine.
The fatal weakness of
Ikhnaton's gospel was its greatest truth, the teaching that
Aton was not only the creator of Egypt but also of the
"whole world, man and beasts, and all the foreign lands,
even Syria and Kush, besides this land of Egypt. He sets all
in their place and provides all with their needs." These
concepts of Deity were high and exalted, but they were not
nationalistic. Such sentiments of internationality in
religion failed to augment the morale of the Egyptian army
on the battlefield, while they provided effective weapons
for the priests to use against the young king and his new
religion. He had a Deity concept far above that of the later
Hebrews, but it was too advanced to serve the purposes of a
nation builder.
Though the monotheistic
ideal suffered with the passing of Ikhnaton, the idea of one
God persisted in the minds of many groups. The son-in-law of
Ikhnaton went along with the priests, back to the worship of
the old gods, changing his name to Tutankhamen. The capital
returned to Thebes, and the priests waxed fat upon the land,
eventually gaining possession of one seventh of all Egypt;
and presently one of this same order of priests made bold to
seize the crown.
But the priests could not
fully overcome the monotheistic wave. Increasingly they were
compelled to combine and hyphenate their gods; more and more
the family of gods contracted. Ikhnaton had associated the
flaming disc of the heavens with the creator God, and this
idea continued to flame up in the hearts of men, even of the
priests, long after the young reformer had passed on. Never
did the concept of monotheism die out of the hearts of men
in Egypt and in the world. It persisted even to the arrival
of the Creator Son of that same divine Father, the one God
whom Ikhnaton had so zealously proclaimed for the worship of
all Egypt.
The weakness of Ikhnaton's
doctrine lay in the fact that he proposed such an advanced
religion that only the educated Egyptians could fully
comprehend his teachings. The rank and file of the
agricultural laborers never really grasped his gospel and
were, therefore, ready to return with the priests to the
old-time worship of Isis and her consort Osiris, who was
supposed to have been miraculously resurrected from a cruel
death at the hands of Set, the god of darkness and evil.
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The teaching of immortality
for all men was too advanced for the Egyptians. Only kings
and the rich were promised a resurrection; therefore did
they so carefully embalm and preserve their bodies in tombs
against the day of judgment. But the democracy of salvation
and resurrection as taught by Ikhnaton eventually prevailed,
even to the extent that the Egyptians later believed in the
survival of dumb animals.
Although the effort of
this Egyptian ruler to impose the worship of one God upon
his people appeared to fail, it should be recorded that the
repercussions of his work persisted for centuries both in
Palestine and Greece, and that Egypt thus became the agent
for transmitting the combined evolutionary culture of the
Nile and the revelatory religion of the Euphrates to all of
the subsequent peoples of the Occident.
The glory of this great
era of moral development and spiritual growth in the Nile
valley was rapidly passing at about the time the national
life of the Hebrews was beginning, and consequent upon their
sojourn in Egypt these Bedouins carried away much of these
teachings and perpetuated many of Ikhnaton's doctrines in
their racial religion.
6. THE SALEM
DOCTRINES IN IRAN
From Palestine some of the
Melchizedek missionaries passed on through Mesopotamia and
to the great Iranian plateau. For more than five hundred
years the Salem teachers made headway in Iran, and the whole
nation was swinging to the Melchizedek religion when a
change of rulers precipitated a bitter persecution which
practically ended the monotheistic teachings of the Salem
cult. The doctrine of the Abrahamic covenant was virtually
extinct in Persia when, in that great century of moral
renaissance, the sixth before Christ, Zoroaster appeared to
revive the smouldering embers of the Salem gospel.
This founder of a new
religion was a virile and adventurous youth, who, on his
first pilgrimage to Ur in Mesopotamia, had learned of the
traditions of the Caligastia and the Lucifer
rebellion--along with many other traditions--all of which
had made a strong appeal to his religious nature.
Accordingly, as the result of a dream while in Ur, he
settled upon a program of returning to his northern home to
undertake the remodeling of the religion of his people. He
had imbibed the Hebraic idea of a God of justice, the Mosaic
concept of divinity. The idea of a supreme God was clear in
his mind, and he set down all other gods as devils,
consigned them to the ranks of the demons of which he had
heard in Mesopotamia. He had learned of the story of the
Seven Master Spirits as the tradition lingered in Ur, and,
accordingly, he created a galaxy of seven supreme gods with
Ahura-Mazda at its head. These subordinate gods he
associated with the idealization of Right Law, Good Thought,
Noble Government, Holy Character, Health, and Immortality.
And this new religion was
one of action--work--not prayers and rituals. Its God was a
being of supreme wisdom and the patron of civilization; it
was a militant religious philosophy which dared to battle
with evil, inaction, and backwardness.
Zoroaster did not teach
the worship of fire but sought to utilize the flame as a
symbol of the pure and wise Spirit of universal and supreme
dominance. (All too true, his later followers did both
reverence and worship this symbolic fire.)
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Finally, upon the conversion
of an Iranian prince, this new religion was spread by the
sword. And Zoroaster heroically died in battle for that
which he believed was the "truth of the Lord of light."
Zoroastrianism is the only
Urantian creed that perpetuates the Dalamatian and Edenic
teachings about the Seven Master Spirits. While failing to
evolve the Trinity concept, it did in a certain way approach
that of God the Sevenfold. Original Zoroastrianism was not a
pure dualism; though the early teachings did picture evil as
a time co-ordinate of goodness, it was definitely
eternity-submerged in the ultimate reality of the good. Only
in later times did the belief gain credence that good and
evil contended on equal terms.
The Jewish traditions of
heaven and hell and the doctrine of devils as recorded in
the Hebrew scriptures, while founded on the lingering
traditions of Lucifer and Caligastia, were principally
derived from the Zoroastrians during the times when the Jews
were under the political and cultural dominance of the
Persians. Zoroaster, like the Egyptians, taught the "day of
judgment," but he connected this event with the end of the
world.
Even the religion which
succeeded Zoroastrianism in Persia was markedly influenced
by it. When the Iranian priests sought to overthrow the
teachings of Zoroaster, they resurrected the ancient worship
of Mithra. And Mithraism spread throughout the Levant and
Mediterranean regions, being for some time a contemporary of
both Judaism and Christianity. The teachings of Zoroaster
thus came successively to impress three great religions:
Judaism and Christianity and, through them, Mohammedanism.
But it is a far cry from
the exalted teachings and noble psalms of Zoroaster to the
modern perversions of his gospel by the Parsees with their
great fear of the dead, coupled with the entertainment of
beliefs in sophistries which Zoroaster never stooped to
countenance.
This great man was one of
that unique group that sprang up in the sixth century before
Christ to keep the light of Salem from being fully and
finally extinguished as it so dimly burned to show man in
his darkened world the path of light leading to everlasting
life.
7. THE SALEM
TEACHINGS IN ARABIA
The Melchizedek teachings
of the one God became established in the Arabian desert at a
comparatively recent date. As in Greece, so in Arabia the
Salem missionaries failed because of their misunderstanding
of Machiventa's instructions regarding overorganization. But
they were not thus hindered by their interpretation of his
admonition against all efforts to extend the gospel through
military force or civil compulsion.
Not even in China or Rome
did the Melchizedek teachings fail more completely than in
this desert region so very near Salem itself. Long after the
majority of the peoples of the Orient and Occident had
become respectively Buddhist and Christian, the desert of
Arabia continued as it had for thousands of years. Each
tribe worshiped its olden fetish, and many individual
families had their own household gods. Long the struggle
continued between Babylonian Ishtar, Hebrew Yahweh, Iranian
Ahura, and Christian Father of the Lord Jesus Christ. Never
was one concept able fully to displace the others.
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Here and there throughout
Arabia were families and clans that held on to the hazy idea
of the one God. Such groups treasured the traditions of
Melchizedek, Abraham, Moses, and Zoroaster. There were
numerous centers that might have responded to the Jesusonian
gospel, but the Christian missionaries of the desert lands
were an austere and unyielding group in contrast with the
compromisers and innovators who functioned as missionaries
in the Mediterranean countries. Had the followers of Jesus
taken more seriously his injunction to "go into all the
world and preach the gospel," and had they been more
gracious in that preaching, less stringent in collateral
social requirements of their own devising, then many lands
would gladly have received the simple gospel of the
carpenter's son, Arabia among them.
Despite the fact that the
great Levantine monotheisms failed to take root in Arabia,
this desert land was capable of producing a faith which,
though less demanding in its social requirements, was
nonetheless monotheistic.
There was only one factor
of a tribal, racial, or national nature about the primitive
and unorganized beliefs of the desert, and that was the
peculiar and general respect which almost all Arabian tribes
were willing to pay to a certain black stone fetish in a
certain temple at Mecca. This point of common contact and
reverence subsequently led to the establishment of the
Islamic religion. What Yahweh, the volcano spirit, was to
the Jewish Semites, the Kaaba stone became to their Arabic
cousins.
The strength of Islam has
been its clear-cut and well-defined presentation of Allah as
the one and only Deity; its weakness, the association of
military force with its promulgation, together with its
degradation of woman. But it has steadfastly held to its
presentation of the One Universal Deity of all, "who knows
the invisible and the visible. He is the merciful and the
compassionate." "Truly God is plenteous in goodness to all
men." "And when I am sick, it is he who heals me." "For
whenever as many as three speak together, God is present as
a fourth," for is he not "the first and the last, also the
seen and the hidden"?
[Presented by a
Melchizedek of Nebadon.] |