CHAPTER
IV.
ABRAHAM IN EGYPT.—CONFIRMATORY STATEMENTS OR
JOSEPHUS, NICOLAUS OF DAMASCUS, AND OTHERS.—ABRAHAM'S INFLUENCE ON THE
RELIGIONS OF EGYPT, PERSIA AND HINDOOSTAN.—TRACES OF GOSPEL TEACHING IN THE
MYTHOLOGIES OF EGYPT, PERSIA, CHALDEA, GREECE AND ROME.—FIRST DEPARTURES FROM
THE TRUE FAITH.—THE EGYPTIAN WORSHIP OF ADAM AND THE PATRIARCHS.—THE BOOK OF
THE DEAD.
THE
Book of Abraham states that God commanded the patriarch to show unto the
Egyptians the things that He had revealed unto him. Josephus, in narrating this
portion of Abraham's history—being only partially acquainted with the facts of
the case from the authorities at his disposal—tell us that Abraham went down
into Egypt to avoid the famine in Canaan, and to "become an auditor of
their priests, and to know what they said concerning the gods; designing either
to follow them if they had better notions than he, or to convert them into a
better way if his own notions proved the truest."[1]
After his arrival in Egypt, and the circumstances arising out of the attempt of
Pharaoh to add Sarah to the number of his wives, the outcome of which placed the
monarch under obligations to the patriarch, Josephus states that "Pharaoh
gave Abraham leave to enter into conversation with the most learned among the
Egyptians, from which conversation his virtue and his reputation became more
conspicuous than they had been before. For whereas the Egyptians were formerly
addicted to different customs, and despised one another's sacred and accustomed
rites, and were very angry one with another on that account, Abraham conferred
with each of them, and, confuting the reasonings they made use of, every one for
his own practices, he demonstrated that such reasonings were vain and void of
truth; whereupon he was admired by them in those conferences as a very wise man,
and one of great sagacity, when he discoursed upon any subject he undertook; and
this not only in understanding it, but in persuading other men also to assent to
him."[2]
In another place the Jewish historian states, "He (Abraham) was a person of
great sagacity, both for understanding all things, and persuading his hearers,
and not mistaken in his opinions; for which reason he began to have higher
notions of virtue than others had, and he determined to renew and to change the
opinion all men happened then to have concerning God."[3]
So
far as Josephus' testimony, confirmatory of this portion of the Book of Abraham,
is concerned, we deem the above abundant. In later chapters we shall show the
great political and religious changes that Abraham's visits to Egypt produced.
From
Egypt we will turn to Persia, and from the writings of various modern authors
adduce testimony to prove that Abraham's power as a religious teacher was felt,
known and recognized in the faith and creed of that nation.
In
the sacred book of the ancient Persians and modern Parsees— the Zend Avista—"it
is declared that the religion taught in it was received from Abraham; and
according to Hyde, who supports his statements by quotations and references,
this was believed by leading Arabian writers not only of Persian Magianism but
of Indian Brahmanism." The same writer remarks: "The claims of
Magianism to have been influenced by the revelations made to Abraham are far
from being discountenanced by the laws of historical probability. For the war
waged so successfully by Abraham in behalf of his kinsman, Lot, against the five
kings, among
whom was the king of Elam [i.e., Persia], is of itself a sufficient proof
that the Father of the Faithful, Abraham, the Hebrew from Ur of the Chaldees,
must have been as well known to the eastern kingdoms as Moses was in after
times."[4]
It
is generally admitted that in the days of Abraham the forefathers of the
Persians and Brahmins were one people, inhabiting one region of country.
It is supposed that the ancestors of the latter race moved to India from
1500 to 1300 years B. C. That
these two races are of common descent is urged from the close relationship
existing between the Sanskrit, the language of the Brahmins, and the Zend or
Persian; it is also said that the "remarkable identity between
the Brahminical and Persian mythologies indicates, unerringly, the
original union of the two." It may also be noticed that Hitzig, in his
"Geschichte dcs Volkes Israel," reasons from the identity of certain
practices observed by Abraham and the patriarchs of Israel on the one hand, and
by Brahminical Hindoos on the other, that a community of some kind once existed
between these people.
The
two nations being thus admitted, by authors of research, to have been one people
in Abraham's time, it is supposable that the Brahmin as well as the Persian
branch of the family would exhibit some traces of Abraham's ministry. On this
point it has been written "Abraham's influence extended to Bactria, and the
most complete proof at once of its spread, and the spread with it of the name
and renown of Abraham, is contained in the language and name of the Brahminical
Hindoos."[5]
"The
name Brahma signifies he who multiplies; the name Abraham likewise means the
father of a multitude. (Arabic, Rahama, a multitude. Genesis xxii, 5.) The wife
of Brahma was named Savitree. The wife of Abraham was named Sarai or
Sarah." [6]
Mr.
Goodsir, remarking on this last extract, writes: "These coincidences appear
to us to be well deserving of attention, though we are not aware that they have
ever before been noticed. We leave them and the whole question of the identity
of Brahma and Abraham to the judgment of our readers, merely observing, in
conclusion, that having found Adam and Noah and Ham to have been the father-gods
of Egyptian mythology, and Japhet the father-god of that of Greece, there is
abundant analogy as well as probability in our inference that the father-god of
the Indian superstition was Abraham."
Admitting
the truth of the following extract from the writings of Nicolaus of Damascus,
referred to by Josephus, it is very easy to understand when and how Abraham
obtained his great influence in Persia; and we know of no conflicting testimony
to render the statements unworthy of our consideration. He writes, in the fourth
book of his history: "Abram reigned in Damascus, being a foreigner, who
came with an army out of the land above Babylon, called the land of the Chaldees;
but after a long time he got him up and removed from that country also, with his
people, and went into the land then called the land of Canaan, but now the land
of Judea. * * * Now the name of Abram is even still famous in the country of
Damascus, and there is shewed a village named from him, the habitation of
Abraham."
We
now come to the consideration of the traces, ofttimes scarcely discernable,
found in the pagan religions of the ancient nations of the eastern continent, of
a time when the worship of the true God was taught and understood in their
midst, for we fully believe that having made of one blood all the nations of the
earth, "God guided and ruled over pagan nations in a manner the same in
kind, though much modified in degree, as in the case of the chosen people; and
for the same great final end." Let it not be supposed, in the following
pages, that we desire to extenuate the sinfulness, or to palliate the foulness
of idolatrous, cruel, unclean and licentious paganism in any of its branches.
Our desire is to exalt the goodness of God, as well as to show that under all
the vileness, the indecency, the lust and cruelty of many of the forms of
ancient paganism, could be found a sub-stratum of pure revealed truth,
testifying to us that at some period the fathers of these peoples held
intercourse with the servants of the true God, but had fallen away from the
principles of righteousness aforetime taught them, and after their own peculiar
ways and to suit their own peculiar notions and desires, had heaped to
themselves gods and demons, creeds and rites, ceremonies and mysteries, oracles
and auguries, differing in different nations according to the force of
circumstances and the direction given to them by master minds.
As
a proof of the truth of our position, we have but to refer to the fact that it
has been demonstrated that the further we go back through the centuries to the
primeval days succeeding the dispersion of mankind at the Tower of Babel, the
more frequent and more noticeable are the traces of pure religious truth found
intermingled with the follies and vagueries of man-made religions. As an example
of this, it is recounted by Levy, the Roman historian, that certain sacred books
having been found at the burying place of Numa, the great religious legislator
of early Rome, they were burned because they were not suited to the times in
which they were discovered, when Rome had added scores of gods to its Pantheon,
though they were considered suited to the early era in which they were written,
when Numa forbade images and their worship as well as the offering of human
sacrifices.
It
is not difficult for those who believe in the Bible as it is written, to
understand that immediately after the flood there was but one form of faith upon
the earth, and that the true one. Noah
was a preacher of righteousness both before and after the deluge, and because of
their obedience to God's laws, he and his family were saved from the universal
destruction that came upon the wicked. But their descendants, in an early day, began to depart
from the purity of the truths that had saved "the fathers," and a
knowledge of the forms of iniquity that existed amongst the antediluvians was in
some manner conveyed to them, and incorporated in their debased new systems of
worship. Noah, Melchize-dek
and others battled with but partial success against these growing infamies, and
Abraham was especially called of the Lord to usher in a new dispensation.
We have seen, in part, how he fulfilled this call; we shall now refer to
some Gospel ideas that for many centuries afterwards were found incorporated
amongst the filth and rubbish of paganism, some in Egypt, some in Persia, some
in Chaldea, some in Greece, Rome and other nations.
From this almost universal admixture of the true and the false it is
evident that there was some primeval source from which the ancient gentile
nations drew that which was good and true in their religions.
In
our researches into the mythology of these peoples we find, amongst others, the
following Gospel ideas:
The
belief in the existence of one great father God.
The
prophecy and expectation of the coming of a Son of God in the flesh.
A
reverence for Adam as the great prince of his race, in some nations, extended to
his worship as the father of the terrestrial gods.
The
belief in a resurrection, and in future rewards and punishments.
The
necessity of faith in the gods, and under certain very remarkable circumstances,
to be hereafter noticed, of repentance and baptism.
The
administration of washings and anointings.
Traditions,
more or less perfect, of the great war in heaven when Lucifer and his angels
were cast down upon the earth.
The
belief in good and bad angels, ministers of the will of heaven.
A
belief in the eternity of matter, and
The
almost universal practice of sacrifice.
To
give strength to the above assertions we shall now appeal to a number of
well-known authors.
The
Rev. Mr. Goodsir, in his work on Ethnic Inspiration, writes: "The
principles of mythology enable us to discern the true order in which the various
erroneous and morbid developments of human belief arose. It proves both that
monotheism—the knowledge of the true God, preceded the various forms of
polytheism, and especially the worship of the heavenly bodies; and that the
worship of dead men preceded other forms of false or idolatrous worship; and the
same facts which show that the worship of dead men was the first step in false
religion, prove at the same time the original grafting of this on the belief of
a heavenly Creator and Father. Were there no other than the single case of
Egypt, as explained from its language, hieroglyphics and monuments, by Mr.
Os-born, it would place the matter beyond all doubt, so clear and well-supported
is that case. Adam and Eve, Noah and Tamer, Ham, Mizraim[7]
and Phut were all deified there, while the supreme God was incontrovertibly
known; and the sun was only a symbol and the supposed abode of Adam. There is
reason to believe that the state of things in Chaldea and Babylon was
substantially the same as this."
To
this we may append the remark that the Egyptians appear to have recognized the
partial truth that there be "that are called gods, whether in heaven or on
earth, as there be gods many and lords many," but were ignorant of the
corollary, "but to us there is but one God the Father." (1
Corinthians, viii, v. 5, 6.)
It
must be evident from the light thown on the early history of the world, more
especially of Egypt, by the Book of Abraham, that under the almost universally
existing form of patriarchal government that "the fathers" were not
only High Priests unto God by right of their "fatherhood," but also
the kings of the earth by that same right,[8]
and it was 0ne of the easiest things in the world for the descendants of these
men, who ruled by right divine, to not only reverence them as ministers of
heaven's will in all things, temporal and spiritual, but also to deify and
afterwards worship them. Indeed in the case of most of these holy patriarchs it
was but a very small step in advance of their true position in relation to the
sons of men; for "He called them Gods unto whom the word of God came, and
the scriptures cannot be broken." (John, x, 35.)
We
next appeal to Mr. Osborn, author of "The Religions of the World." In
writing of the Egyptian mythology, he states: "This most ancient mythology,
as described by authors who lived before the Christian era, and as set forth on
the walls of the temples in which its ritual or worship was performed, was
taught to the initiated and concealed from the vulgar, that God created all
things at the first by the primary emanation from himself, his firstborn, who
was the author and giver of all knowledge in heaven and on earth, being at the
same time the wisdom and the word of God. The birth of this all-powerful being,
his manifestation as an infant, his nurture and education through all the
succeeding periods of childhood and of boyhood, constituted the grand mystery of
the entire system." So convinced were the priests of this people of the
coming of a Son
of God, that they had chambers prepared in their temples for his nativity.
Another
quotation from Mr. Osborn will, we trust, make the matter yet clearer to our
readers. He says: "The founders of the nation knew not only of Ham and
Mizriam, but of various men and women contemporary with, them, even of our first
parents, Adam and Eve, as well as of our second progenitors, Noah and his wife
Tamer. Adam has thus been handed down to us as Athom, the guide or governor of
the sun; Eve as Hathor, who presided over the moon; Noah as Nuh, who
presided over the Nile; while Ham, Mizraim, Phut, Neveth, or Neith, the wife of
Ham, and others, occupied singular and sometimes multiform positions and offices
in the Egyptian Pantheon."[9]
We
will now leave modern writers, and draw attention to that wonderful papyrus, the
Ancient Egyptian Ritual or Book of the Dead, and from its hieroglyphics show the
relation in which Adam stood in their mythology, reminding our readers that the
abode of the great father of humanity was supposed by them to be the sun, and
that the chief seat of his worship was at Heliopolis, the city of the sun, the
On of the Scriptures, Aseniath, a daughter of one of whose priests was married
to Joseph, the son of Jacob.
Our
extracts are necessarily brief, and simply intended to prove the trustworthiness
of the quotations already made.
In
the fifteenth chapter it is written :
"The
praise of Athom[10] when he sets from the
land of life, saith the Osir,[11]
"
Glory be to Athom, setting from the gate of life,
"When
his colors glow in the western gate of the horizon,
"Hail
to thee setting from the land of life,
"Thou
father of the Gods."
Again,
(chapter xvii,) Adam is represented as saying:
"I
am the great God, creating myself;
"I
am the great Phoenix which is in On;
"I
am the creator of beings and existences."
In
another place it proclaims:
"Glory
be to thee, O Sun; glory be to thee, O Athom,
"When
thou goest down, perfect, crowned and glorious."
Adam
is also called "the old man whose palace is at On," the "God
alone in the firmament," "Father Athom," "Righteous
Athom," and much more. Probably were we better versed in the mysteries of
its hieroglyphics and idioms, the translation of this wonderful testimony to the
belief of the ancients in the immortality of the soul, which this ritual is,
would be yet plainer and more instructive. As it is, much of its imagery is very
difficult for modern minds to grasp.
From
the Egyptians we will turn to the Persians, the people next most likely to show
traces in their religion of the influence left by the preaching of the Gospel in
patriarchal days. Mr. Hyde, in his "Religion of the Ancient Persians,"
points out how that Magianism, as set forth in its sacred books, taught that the
human race sprang from a single pair; that it bore testimony to the occurrence
of the flood; that it mentions Noah and his sons; that as far as Abraham is
concerned, it declares him to have been its own author; and that it makes
mention also of Moses. Moreover, it contains predictions respecting the
appearance on earth of a Savior, who would ultimately overthrow the kingdom of
darkness and make supreme and universal the kingdom of light and of God. It also
taught the existence of good and of bad angels, also a resurrection of the dead.
The
religions of ancient Greece and Rome were, to a very great extent, originally
drawn from those of Egypt, Persia and Phoenicia. Many traces of Gospel
principles can be found in them, hidden concealed under the mass of filth and
abomination that in later ages disgraced the religions of the kingdoms of brass
and iron. Still, in all these nations it is admitted that "so far from
atheism and godless irreligion being the rule, belief in the Divine, however
mistaken, and worship of the Divine, however superstitious, everywhere
prevailed." With regard to special Gospel ideas prevailing in all these
nations, it has been remarked that "baptism was as completely a portion of
the primeval ceremonial worship as was the tenet of immortality and resurrection
a portion of the primeval creed." It is also noticeable that all the Greek
schools of philosophy taught the doctrine of the eternity of matter, and not
only had these races a knowledge of things that occurred in antediluvian days,
but in their different, absurd ways they recounted the history of the war in
heaven when Lucifer was cast out. Those curious on this point can read their
accounts of the war between the Titians and Heaven, and of the giants against
Jupiter.
Late discoveries at Nineveh have demonstrated that the
Chaldeans had also a very distinct tradition of this pre-Adamite war, as many
particulars relating thereto have been found transcribed on the earthen tiles
exhumed from the mounds where that once mighty city is supposed to have stood.
These tablets having been translated by Mr. Geo. Smith, of the British Museum,
prove to be an account of the war in heaven before the creation of this earth,
of the fall of man, of the flood, the building of the tower of Babel, etc. The
similarity between the statements on these cuneiform records and the Bible
account of the same events is very remarkable and interesting, while at the same
time they prove how wide spread in ancient times was the knowledge of God’s
dealings with humanity.
[1]
Josephus,
Antiquities, Book 1, chap. viii.
[2]
Ibid, Book 1,
chap. viii.
[3]
Ibid, Book 1, chap. vii.
[4]
Ethnic Inspiration, by Mr. Goodsir, pages 73 and 80.
[5]
Ibid.
[6] Osborn's "Religions of the World."
[7] Mizriam is identified with Osiris, chief lord of the land of the departed.
[8] Max Muller says "king" originally meant "father."
[9] "Religions of the World."
[10] The Egyptian form of the name Adam.
[11] The deceased.