Mithra Mystery
http://www.iranian.com/History/Sept97/Mitra/
When the Aryan tribes swept down from the Russian steppes they
brought their gods with them. Some time between 2000 and 1500 B.C.E.,
these tribes entered India and Iran, bringing with them one particular
deity. These people, the Mitanni, gave us the first written reference
to Mitra in a treaty between themselves and the Hittites. Signed
about 1375 B.C.E., the treaty calls on divine witnesses to pledge
its terms. The Hittites called on the sun go. The Mitanni called
on Mitra.
Mitra had been worshipped by the Iranians for centuries when Zarathustra
(we call him Zoroaster, the Greek version of his name) founded the
first revealed religion. Zarathustra announced the primacy of Ahura
Mazda, the Wise Lord, who was served by the Amentas Spenta, or bounteous
immortals. Among these was Mithra, whom Ahura Mazda declared to
be "as worthy of worship as myself." Thus Zarathustrian
reform did not replace Mithra in the Iranian Pantheon. It merely
changed his role.
Mithra may also have been worshipped by the Mani. Some branches
of Manicheism identified Mithra as the ruler of the second or third
emanation (an occultist would say "ray," "aeon,"
or "sepheroth"). But whether there were actual rites of
worship dedicated to him or whether he simply functioned as an anthropomorphic
principle is impossible to say.
In the Roman Empire, this same deity was called Mithras, and was
the central figure of a mystery religion that for almost five hundred
years vied with Christianity for dominance. Roman Mithrasism differed
so markedly, however, from other traditions that some scholars have
claimed Mithras to be a unique deity, distinct from Mitra or Mithra.
Although this book deals primarily with Mithrasism in its Roman
form, it will demonstrate that there is good reason to connect the
Roman Mithras with his other forms in other traditions.
In the beginning was a word
The names Mitra, Mithra and Mithras all derive from the Indo-European
root "Mihr," which translates both as "friend"
and as "contract." While both translations are correct,
however, neither gives a full account of the word. "Mihr"
itself derives from "mei," an Indo-European root meaning
"exchange." But Aryan society did not use the word "exchange"
to describe a transaction.
Ancient societies were hierarchical. Neither the concept of an
exchange between equals after which a relationship ended (our meaning
of contract), nor the concept of an open-ended exchange between
equals (our meaning of friendship) were contained in the original
meaning of the word "Mihr" or "Mei." (For our
concept of friendship, the Rg Veda uses the word "sakhi.")
The friendship or contract offered by Mihr, or Mitra as he became
known, was an exchange between unequal partners with Mitra as a
just lord. Like any feudal relationship, this "friendship"
imposed certain obligations on both sides. Mitra oversaw the affairs
of his worshippers. He established justice for them. In return,
his worshippers had to be upright in their dealings with others.
Mitra was thus "lord of the contract" (a title frequently
applied to him)...
The Iranian Mithra and Zarathustra
As the Aryan tribes swept south, they split into two major branches,
the Indian in the east and the Iranis in the west. Both Worshipped
the god of the contract in similar ways. Like the Indians, the Iranis
sacrificed cattle to Mithra. They invoked him to preserve the sanctity
of the contract. They associated him with fire. And like both Indian
and Roman worshippers, the Iranis concluded contracts before fires
so that they might be made in the presence of Mithra. Like Mitra,
Mithra saw all things. The Avestan Yast (hymn) dedicated to him
describes him as having a thousand ears, ten thousand eyes, and
as never sleeping. And like Mitra, Mithra has a partner, Apam Nepat,
whose name means Grandson of Waters. (Note that the same elemental
connection of fire and water is maintained as in the Indian tradition.)
Mithra was a moral god, upholding the sanctity of the contract
even when the contract was made with one who was sure to break it.
His primary responsibility was to the rightness of the action. In
this he stood above the various national gods of the time, who had
little function other than to look after the welfare of the state
and its wealthiest members. In fact, Mithra was the first such moral
deity and stands above the notions of many worshippers of many gods
today...
The Iranis had a deep reverence for Mithra, as is proved by their
reception of the prophet, Zarathustra. Zarathustra is the most important
person in the recorded history of religion, bar none. The first
man to promulgate a divinely revealed religion. He influenced the
religions of Judaism, Christianity, Mithrasism, Islam, Northern
(Mahayana) Buddhism, Manicheism, and the pagan Norse myths. Over
half the world has accepted a significant portion of his precepts
under the guise of one or another of these faiths.
At the age of about forty, Zarathustra, a priest in the traditional
Irani rites, received a revelation. In it, the many gods of the
Iranis were supplanted by a new deity who was the supreme deity
of the Good. This deity became known as Ahura Mazda, or the "Wise
Lord." Opposed to Ahura Mazda was Aingra Mainyu or Ahriman,
the "Angry Spirit," the chief deity of evil. Both deities
had underlings and partners. The chief allies of Ahura Mazda were
the "Amentas Spenta." Created by the "Wise Lord,"
these "Bounteous" or "Holy Immortals" included
Mithra.
There was a hymn to Mithra in the Zarathustrian holy work, the
Avesta. It is a beautiful hymn or Yast, and Ilya Gershevitch is
right to lament that it is not more widely known. In it, Ahura Mazda
addresses the prophet Zarathustra, saying that when he created Mithra,
he made him as worthy of worship as himself. This accolade is given
to no other Amenta Spenta or Yazata. Historians have argued that
this distinction indicates only that the cult of Mithra was so important
that Zarathustra had to give its god special concessions to convert
its members. Some have even argued the popularity from the concessions.
But there is another theological reason for the special attention
given to Mithra by Zarathustra...
Mithra is a much more fully developed image than the rather ethereal
Mitra. Unlike the Indian god, we actually have a relief of the Iranian
deity. Reconstruction shows Mithra shaking hands with King Antiochus.
It is Mithra's attire, however, that is important to the current
study. Mithra wears the Phrygian cap, Persian trousers, and a cape.
His hat is star speckled (from textual evidence his chariot is similarly
decorated). Rays of light emerge from Mithra's head much like a
halo. His choke collar is a serpent. This image, or one very like
it, will appear again in Rome. |