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by Michael A Aquino


  manacled. We see our lives, and indeed the entire known

  universe, as a terrible struggle against entropy, ending

  ultimately in the death, decomposition, and obliteration

  of each separate person or thing.

  It is further this perception, and the fear of it, which

  has lent Hebraic monotheism a vampiric persistence far

  past the 17th-18th Century “Enlightenment” which,

  intellectually at least, exposed it as a sham. For the

  Christian and Muslim versions, if not the Jewish, promise

  continuation of the same life after physical death, albeit

  with dire punishment specifically for not believing in and

  obeying them now.

  The Egyptians, however, envisioned neither

  themselves nor the world about them to be entrapped in

  such a fearsome forced-march. They saw the Sun, Moon,

  and firmament behaving in recurring cycles, as also the

  rise and fall of the Nile, the regular seasons, plant life. If

  6 Fairservis, Walter A. Jr., The Ancient Kingdoms of the Nile. New

  York: New American Library/Mentor #MY-843, 1962, Chapters #1-2.

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  humans and other animals were born, lived for a time,

  and died, it stood to reason that they too participated in

  an eternal cycling of a more subtle color. Egyptian

  records would accordingly document specific

  personalities and events, but without any particular

  attention to related change or innovation. Harmony with

  the cycles of things, not defiance of them, was the

  Egyptian ideal - which explains why the essential

  character of Egyptian society remained little changed,

  except to meet external intrusion, for thirty dynasties

  extending over 3,000 years. 7

  Former Director of Cairo’s French Oriental

  Archæological Institute Serge Sauneron comments:

  To understand the attitude of the Egyptians, it is

  necessary to emphasize the striking contrast between

  their view of the world and ours. We live in a universe

  which we know is in perpetual movement; each new

  problem demands a new solution. But for the Egyptians

  this notion of time which modifies the current

  knowledge of the world, of an alteration of factors

  which forces a change in methods, had no place. In the

  beginning the divinity created a stable world, fixed,

  definitive; this world functions as a motor well oiled

  and well fed. If there are “misfires” - if the motor fades,

  if one of the parts making it up is worn out or broken -

  it is replaced and everything starts off again better than

  before. But this motor would always remain the same;

  its mechanism, its appearance, its output would always

  be identical.

  If some problem intrigues the mind, therefore - if

  some serious event arises to disturb the customary

  order of things - it could not really be new; it was

  foreseen with the world. Its solution or remedy exists in

  all eternity, revealed in a kind of universal “manner of

  7 The XXX Dynasty is generally considered to be the last native

  Egyptian one. Subsequently there was a Persian one (XXXI) and a

  Ptolemaic Greek one (XXXII), ending with the death of Cleopatra VII

  and Roman rule in 30 BCE.

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  use” that the gods defined in creating the universe

  itself. What is necessary, therefore, is to find in the

  ancient writings the formula that foresaw such-and-

  such a case. Before a given event - a physical

  phenomenon, a catastrophe striking the whole country

  - the scholar would not seek to discover the actual

  causes in order to find an appropriate remedy. Rather

  he would examine with scholarly ardor the volumes of

  old writings to find out if the event had already

  occurred in some moment of the past, and what

  solution had then been applied to it. 8

  In accordance with their cyclical perception of reality,

  therefore, the Egyptians’ achievements tended to be in

  “timeless” areas such as astronomy, mathematics,

  medicine, and architecture. These, along with Egyptian

  religion and art, are often oversimplified in many modern

  treatments, due in part to the absence of verifiable data in

  later history until the deciphering of hieroglyphics by

  Champollion in 1822. Because of the destruction and

  despoliation of ancient Egyptian records and works of art

  by religious fanatics of later eras, it is estimated that

  modern archæologists have at their disposal less than

  10% of that country’s cultural creations from which to

  reconstruct its values. 9

  Egypt was divided into 42 nomes (provinces), each

  dominated by the priesthood of one or more neteru. A

  particular priesthood might also influence more than one

  nome. The monarchy was closely controlled by the

  various orders of priesthood, with the pharaoh acting as

  an Earthly deputy of and interpreter for the neteru.

  Governmental, judicial, and political systems were

  responsible for their ethics to the neteru, not to the

  8 Sauneron, Serge, Les pretres de l’ancienne Egypte. New York:

  Grove Press, 1980, pages #118-119.

  9 Cf. Fagan, Brian M., The Rape of the Nile. New York: Charles

  Scribner’s Sons, 1975.

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  people. Justice was meted out by viziers (internal roving

  ambassadors of the pharaoh) and nome governors

  according to the neter of justice, Maat, on an individual-

  case basis. There was no concept of individual rights

  against the government, because government was viewed

  as a system imposed from without by the neteru.

  Similarly each Egyptian, whether high- or lowborn,

  participated in this system. Crime and corruption were of

  course possible, but inadvisable because of the conviction

  that viciousness, callousness, or cruelty would be

  punished severely after Earthly death. 10 [It is of note that

  such posthumous judgment focused upon individual

  virtue/vice rather than, as in later Christian/Islamic

  doctrine, upon mere orthodoxy and obedience to

  religious institutions.]

  Old Kingdom Egypt was largely insulated from foreign

  invasion or conflict, hence Egypt spent its early years as a

  peaceful culture with no standing military. Egypt is

  credited with invention of the alphabet, as well as the use

  of currency as a medium of exchange. It is noteworthy for

  having produced the first national (as opposed to city-

  state) political system, as well as the most enduring one

  in recorded history (more than 3,000 years). There was

  no caste, racial, or sexual discrimination; foreigners were

  considered “less than human (=Egyptian)”, but could

  remedy this misfortune simply by moving to Egypt and

  adopting Egyptian culture.

  Egypt was ultimately destroyed by foreign conquerors

  (Persia, Macedonia, Rome) and by her inability to adapt

  to the continuing competition of foreign cultures. Her

  New Empire of the Setian (XIX-XX) Dynasties was a

  protectionist backlash rather tha
n an effort to “civilize” or

  10 Wilson, John A., “Egypt” in Frankfort, Henri (Ed.), Before

  Philosophy. Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1946.

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  create a permanent empire [after the fashion of Persia,

  Macedonia, or Rome].

  C. The Neteru

  The Egyptians perceived the Universe as actively

  controlled by conscious, natural principles ( neteru) of

  which Sir E.A. Wallis Budge remarks:

  The word neter has been translated “godlike”,

  “holy”, “divine”, “sacred”, “power”, “strength”, “force”,

  “strong”, “fortify”, “mighty”, “protect”; but it is quite

  impossible to be certain that any word which we may

  use represents the meaning of neter, because no one

  knows exactly what idea the ancient Egyptians attached

  to the word. The truth is that the exact meaning of

  neter was lost at a very early period of Egyptian history,

  and even the Coptic does not help us to recover it. 11

  To the Egyptians, all of “nature” (derived from neter)

  was alive and the direct consequence of the wills of the

  neteru. Nature was intelligible not just through

  inanimate, automatic, general regularities which could be

  discovered via the “scientific method”; but also through

  connections and associations between things and

  events perceived in the human mind. There was no

  distinction between “reality” and “appearance”; anything

  capable of exerting an effect upon the mind thereby

  existed. Hence a dream could be considered just as “real”

  and thus significant as a daytime experience. No more

  eloquently has this been summarized than by She-Who-

  Must-Be-Obeyed in H. Rider Haggard’s She and Allan:

  11 Budge, E. A. Wallis, The Book of the Dead. New Hyde Park:

  University Books, 1960, page #99.

  - 43 -

  [Allan Quatermain] “I have heard of Isis of the

  Egyptians, Lady of the Moon, Mother of Mysteries,

  spouse of Osiris whose child was Horus the Avenger.”

  [Ayesha] “Aye, and I think will hear more of her

  before you have done, Allan, for now something comes

  back to me concerning you and her and another. I am

  not the only one who has broken the oaths of Isis and

  received her curse, Allan, as you may find out in the

  days to come. But what of these heavenly queens?”

  “Only this, Ayesha: I have been taught that they

  were but phantasms fabled by men with many another

  false divinity, and could have sworn that this was true.

  And yet you talk of them as real and living, which

  perplexes me.”

  “Being dull of understanding doubtless it perplexes

  you, Allan. Yet if you had imagination, you might

  understand that these goddesses are great principles

  of nature: Isis of throned Wisdom and strait virtue,

  and Aphrodite of Love as it is known to men and

  women who, being human, have it laid upon them that

  they must hand on the torch of life in their little hour.

  Also you would know that such principles can seem to

  take shape and form and at certain ages of he world

  appear to their servants visible in majesty, though

  perchance today others with changed names wield their

  sceptres and work their will. Now you are answered on

  this matter.”

  The Egyptian concept of “magic”, correspondingly,

  was neither unusual or exceptional. It merely represented

  the setting in motion of appropriate neteru forces to

  accomplish a desired end: which could be through

  physical action, symbolic ritual, art, or speech ( heka). A

  magical operation thus initially required perception ( sia)

  of a necessity, followed by utterance of the heka ( hw) to

  address it.

  Egyptian art, literature, and science looked for beauty

  and symmetry (felt to be indications of divine perfection),

  rather than for cause-and-effect relationships. Hence

  Egyptian thought is sometimes called “geometric” as

  - 44 -

  opposed to the “algebraic” thought of Hellenic and later

  logicians.

  Since impressions and appearances substantiated

  reality, the Egyptian emphasis on portraits and statues of

  the neteru was not merely decorative, metaphorical, or

  symbolic. Rather an image was a medium whereby the

  neter in question could make an actual appearance in the

  material world. 12

  Similarly part of something could substitute for the

  whole as long as the mind completed the connection.

  Mental imagery created by viewing the portrait of a dead

  relative, for example, brought that relative to true life.

  Persons unfamiliar with the ancient Egyptian culture

  often assume that the Egyptian religion, like those of later

  Mediterranean civilizations, consisted of a single,

  integrated pantheon of anthropomorphic gods and

  goddesses. It is rather the case that the earliest Egyptian

  neteru were provincial, being patrons of individual cities

  and districts (nomes). Nor, despite their famous human/

  beast composite appearances, were they mere

  “ s u p e r n a t u r a l p e r s o n s ” i n t h e l a t e r G r e e k ,

  Mesopotamian, or Roman mold. While popular stories

  were woven about them - presumably for popular

  consumption - the hieroglyphic treatment of the Egyptian

  neteru suggests that they actually represented various

  aspects of existence - the “Forms” or “First Principles”

  discussed by Pythagoras and Plato in a more abstract

  manner. 13

  12 Cf. Schaefer, Heinrich, Principles of Egyptian Art. Oxford:

  Clarendon Press, 1974. Contrast Egyptian statuary with Greek,

  Roman, or later European. The “living presence” in the former will be

  dramatically evident.

  13 Cf. Winspear, Alban D., The Genesis of Plato’s Thought. New York:

  S.A. Russell, 1940. Also Cf. Aquino, M.A., “The Sphinx and the

  Chimæra” (Appendix #1).

  - 45 -

  Intriguingly the neteru may have had a physical

  presence as well. The 30-Dynasty dating system most

  archæologists use for ancient Egypt comes from

  Manetho, an Egyptian priest at Sebennytos in the Nile

  Delta ca. 280 BCE. Manetho’s dynastic list extends

  backward before Menes and the I Dynasty date of 3100

  BCE: 350 years Thinites; 1,790 years other Memphite

  kings; 1,817 years other kings; 1,255 years “Heroes”; and

  before that 13,900 years in which the neteru reigned

  physically on Earth.

  Obviously this chronology would conflict with the

  “accepted” prehistory of Egypt as summarized at the

  beginning of this appendix. Conventional Egyptologists

  are comfortable only with a “civilization began suddenly

  in 3100 BCE” scenario, hence Manetho is relied upon

  very strongly after that date, but swept under the rug

  prior to it. 14

  Commerce, protective alliances, cultural contact, and

  finally the unification of the entire nation ca. 3100 BCE

  resulted in the gradual incorp
oration of local neteru into

  regional groups, and then into a loosely-knit national

  pantheon. Local and regional cult centers continued to

  hold their respective patrons in especial regard, however,

  and so the character and role of a specific neter might

  vary remarkably from place to place. Individual dynasties

  also tended to be oriented to particular cult centers, and

  so the neteru in question would be elevated - at least for a

  time - to the status of national patrons. 15

  The information concerning these cults which is

  available to modern Egyptologists is both sparse and

  14 Hoffman, Michael A., Egypt Before the Pharaohs. New York:

  Alfred A. Knopf, 1979. Fix, Wm. R., Pyramid Odyssey. New York:

  Mayflower Books, 1978.

  15 Ions, Veronica, Egyptian Mythology. New York: Hamlyn

  Publishing Group, 1968, pages #11-13.

  - 46 -

  confusing. Since a given neter could be portrayed in a

  number of different ways, identifying the “core neter” is

  difficult. The images and inscriptions concerning a neter

  were often altered or appropriated by cultists of rival

  neteru. In Christian and Islamic times all “old gods” were

  considered blasphemous, and monuments to them were

  regularly defaced and destroyed. By the end of the fifth

  century CE, knowledge of hieroglyphics had died out, not

  to reappear until the nineteenth century; meanwhile

  many “useless” records perished through neglect.

  For two reasons the cult of Osiris ( Asar) and Isis

  ( Asa) has been emphasized in modern literature: First, it

  was the last cult to dominate the entire Egyptian nation.

  Thus it was in a position to do a “final editing” of non-

  Osirian manuscripts and monuments. Secondly it was

  described in detail by Plutarch, permitting its study long

  after the hieroglyphic records of the other cults had

  become unreadable. 16

  D. Set

  No records of the ancient Priesthood of Set survived

  first the Osirian-dynastic persecution and later the more

  general vandalism of the Christian/Islamic eras. We

  know of it only by its reflection, both in the character of

  Set as he was portrayed symbolically and mythologically

  and in the nature of Egyptian priesthoods in general.

  Three significant facts are known about the Priesthood of

 

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