Hermeticism
From: http://www.teleport.com/~aforrest/HFWeb/HFHermeticism.html#HistoricalBackground
Corpus Hermeticum
Corpus Hermeticum II
Corpus Hermeticum III
Corpus Hermeticum IV
Introduction
Hermeticism is an ancient spiritual, philosophical, and magical
tradition. It is a path of spiritual growth. Hermeticism takes its
name from the God Herms Trismegistos (Greek, "Thrice-Greatest
Hermes"), a Grco-Egyptian form of the great Egyptian God of
Wisdom and Magic, Thth. What the Hermetic Fellowship defines as
Hermeticism has also been called the Western Esoteric Tradition,
and embraces the Perennial Philosophy or the Ageless Wisdom. Generally,
the following can be said to be characteristic of the positive form
of Hermeticism advocated by the Hermetic Fellowship.
Hermeticism:
-
Considers humanity
to be on a spiritual journey to return to a state of unity with
the Divine; this is the Great Work of humankind.
-
Holds that if we would
attain to the Divine, we must aspire to the Divine; spiritual
growth cannot be achieved without human effort
-
Is eclectic and draws
material from sources spanning the entire Western Esoteric Tradition
-
Is polytheistic, yet
ultimately monotheisitic (i.e., posits a multiplicity of Manifestations
of the Divine Which emanate from an ultimate Divine Unity)
-
Holds that the Divine
is both immanent and transcendent
-
Holds that the Universe
is Divine and basically good
-
Teaches that when we
seek the Divine, we may best begin with the Mysteries of Nature
-
Encourages spiritual
curiosity
-
Understands that human
beings can access the Subtle Realms through technique and aspiration;
to this end, it embraces theurgy, meditation, ritual, and other
spiritual and magical practices
-
Urges those who seek
the Divine to also seek balance in embracing all things
-
Is a poetic rather
than an ascetic worldview
The Historical Background of Hermeticism
Hermes & Thoth
Hermeticism takes its name from the God Hermes Trismegistos or
Thrice-Greatest Hermes. Trismegistos, in turn, was so-called because
of His identification with the great Egyptian God of Wisdom and
Magic, Thoth. Thth is a Greek attempt to phonetically render Tehuti,
the late antique form of the very ancient Egyptian name Djehuti.
In an effort to express Tehuti's majesty, when writing His name
Egyptian scribes would often append the epithet Ao, Ao, Ao (literally
"Great, Great, Great," meaning "Greatest").
Greeks and Greek-speaking Egyptians translated the Egyptian epithet
as Trismegistos, also using it for 'their' Thoth --- Hermes.
Just as Thoth was considered the all-wise font of sacred knowledge
and author of all sacred books in Egypt, so in the Grco-Roman world,
and later, in Renaissance Europe, Hermes Trismegistos was considered
to be an unimpeachable authority on things sacred and author of
the influential body of literature known as the Hermetica.
Hermetic Syncretism
Hermetism (the original Hermetic source from which the broader
tradition of Hermeticism derives) was one of the many products of
the meeting of the ancient Hellenic and Egyptian cultures in the
centuries surrounding the beginning of the Common Era. Hermetism,
described most simply, combined Egyptian and Greek theology, philosophy,
and spiritual practice. But of course, it was not that simple.
Perhaps the principle reason the origin of Hermetism is complex
is that it found its most fertile home in the great syncretic Grco-Egyptian
metropolis of Alexandria, when that city was the cultural capital
of the Mediterranean under the Pax Romana. Religious and philosophical
wisdom flowed from many cultures into the city, the great spiritual
Krater or Mixing Bowl which gave birth to the new synthesis of religion,
philosophy, and practice which was Hermetism. Nominally Egyptian,
and attributed to the Egyptian God Thoth in the guise of an enlightened
ancient master, the Hermetic elixir was composed of ingredients
from all the great Traditions active in Alexandria. To the millennia-rich
stock of Egyptian religion, philosophy, and magic were added many
elements from Greek Paganism (itself influenced throughout its development
by Egypt, Anatolia, Phoenicia, and Syria), particularly the Mysteries
and the philosophical schools of Platonism, Neo-Platonism, Stoicism,
and Neo-Pythagorism; Alexandrian Judaism, with its Angelology, Magic,
and deep reverence for the sacred Book; the many forms of Christianity
(Gnostic and otherwise); Persian Zoroastrianism, with its deep concern
with good and evil; as well as the new developments springing up
alongside Hermetism and cross-fertilizing with it, such as Alchemy
and Iamblichan Theurgy.
Modern Hermeticism maintains this spiritual eclecticism, exploring
and assimilating what is compatible and valuable from the Traditions
with which it comes into contact, and sharing its own insights with
other Traditions.
Hermetic Philosophies
There was almost certainly not a single late antique Hermetic School;
the conspicuous philosophical diversity in the surviving Hermetic
treatises seems to preclude this. Instead the writings of the early
Hermetists display the same independent spirit we recognize among
members of the alternative spirituality community today. Probably
they studied together in small groups, often with a single teacher
and a group of students, on the model of the Hellenic philosophical
schools. Some Hermetists, inspired by the Divine, inevitably added
their own new insights and revelations to the Hermetic teachings.
As do modern Hermeticists, the ancient Hermetists considered their
Tradition a living, evolving Path, changing to reflect the results
of their search for Divine Truth --- not merely as an abstract philosophical
concept, but as a very real, very personal part of their spiritual
lives.
Hermeticism Banished --- and Returned
When Christianity was adopted as the official state religion of
the Roman Empire, Hermetism was suppressed along with the whole
vast range of non-Christian religions, cults, sects, and schools
that had flourished in the Empire, as well as the many forms of
Christianity now perceived as competitors with the wealthy and powerful
Church of Rome.
Yet, against all odds, some few of the Hermetic books dealing with
philosophy, mysticism, and particularly those dealing with Alchemy,
were preserved through the long Middle Ages by scholars and collectors
in Greek Byzantium.
The group of texts now known as the Corpus Hermeticum finally returned
to the Latin West during the Italian Renaissance when the Florentine
philosopher prince Cosimo de Medici obtained a set of manuscripts
from one of his agents in the Greek East and commissioned the scholar,
priest, magician, and philosopher Marsilio Ficino to translate the
Corpus into Latin.
Yet these were, after all, Pagan texts. How was it that these Pagan
scriptures could be even passably acceptable in the very Christian
world of Renascimento Italy? The solution was in the form of a fortuitous
mistake. Two centuries before the advent of European textual criticism,
Ficino and the other Renaissance philosophers, magicians, and artists
who studied the Hermetic texts accepted the largely legendary pseudo-historical
milieu claimed for themselves by the Hermetica (much as Biblical
scholars for centuries uncritically accepted late pseudepigraphic
texts as ancient history) and believed that the Hermetic texts were
far more ancient than they actually were. Ficino therefore believed
that Hermetic philosophy was an ancient forerunner of Christianity
rather than its contemporary. So when the Hermetic texts showed
influence from Jewish or Christian myth, this was understood not
as the syncretism of a late age, but as the prophetic prefiguring
of an earlier one. As such, the Hermetica could be viewed as predicting
the supposed triumph of Christianity and their obvious Paganism
forgiven, just as the Hebrew "Old Testament" could justifiably,
in spite of its Judaism, be studied by Christians for its Messianic
prophecies, all of course applied to Jesus by the Church.
Because of this mistaken assumption of prophetic antiquity, conjoined
with the self-proclaimed Orphic Ficino's simultaneous re-interpretation
of Magic in a much brighter and less controversial form than that
of the Medival period (which itself contained many clandestinely
preserved elements of Hermetism), the new figure of the Hermetic
Renaissance Magus entered the cultural consciousness of the era.
Ficino's 'Natural Magic' moved out of the shadows of the grimoires
and once more into the light of general philosophical and theological
consideration. A student at Ficino's Florentine Platonic Academy,
the brilliant and daring enfant terrible Count Giovanni Pico della
Mirandola, added the crucial catalytic element of the Jewish Qabalah
to the new Pagan-Christian Hermetic amalgam, and transformed Hermetism
forever. It is here that Hermeticism was born of ancient Hermetism,
once more entering into a syncretic union, this time with Christianity,
Renaissance Neo-Classicism and Humanism, Natural Magic, and Qabalah.
The resulting vigorous Hermetic influence spreading out from the
court of the Medicis and the Academy of Ficino clearly served as
one of the most potent inspirations for the spiritual, artistic,
and scientific renewal of the Renaissance.
Hermeticism as Western Esoteric Tradition
In addition to the religious and philosophical traditions already
mentioned, Hermeticism has of course included the beauty of Rosicrucianism
since the 17th century, and has illuminated the symbolic ritual
of Freemasonry since the 18th. It was the motivating force behind
the foundation of the most influential esoteric schools of the fin
de siecle --- Theosophy, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn,
and the Martinism of Papus --- and the great Occult Revival to which
they gave birth, and has strongly influenced the 20th-century Pagan
Renaissance.
The profoundly influential work of psychologist C.G. Jung may also
reasonably be considered a Hermetic legacy with its Alchemical symbolism,
god-like archetypes, and concern with the subtle realms of the psyche.
Letters survive in which a correspondent reported to Jung that she
had come across the concepts of Animus and Anima in the 18th-century
British novel Tristram Shandy, and asked Jung if he had been inspired
by the book. He replied that he had been unaware of the occurrence
of the ideas in the book and could only assume that Sterne, the
author, had been privy to the teachings of the esoteric --- probably
Rosicrucian --- circles of his day, clearly indicating Jung's acknowledgement
of his own indebtedness to the Hermetic Tradition.
Today, as we draw near the dawn of a new millennium, many groups
--- such as the Hermetic Fellowship --- are the inheritors of the
still vibrant Hermetic Current.
The Corpus Hermeticum and other Hermetica
Topics Addressed by the Hermetica
Hermeticism has always valued not only oral teaching, but spiritual
knowledge passed on by teachers through the medium of books. The
original Hermetic books, those attributed to Hermes Trismegistos,
are called the Hermetika (usually Latinized as Hermetica). They
address a wide range of topics, including discussions of the cosmic
principles, the nature and orders of Being and beings, the human
yearning to know the Divine, mysticism, magic, astrology, alchemy,
and medicine. Scholars generally place the individual texts of the
Hermetica, somewhat arbitrarily, in one of two camps: the 'philosophical'
and religious Hermetica, or the 'technical' --- that is, magical
or theurgic --- Hermetica.
Dating of the Hermetica
The main philosophical Hermetic texts which have come down to us
are contained in the Corpus Hermeticum, a collection of approximately
17 treatises originally composed in Egypt and written in the Greek
language. The exact date for the composition of the texts is unknown,
but most scholars place at least the main texts of the Corpus in
the second or third centuries CE. Technical Hermetica range more
broadly, and are tentatively dated to a period spanning the first
century BCE to the fourth century CE. It is quite possible, however,
that at least some of the texts were based on significantly earlier
models. Inscriptions prove that Hermes Trismegistos was already
a name for Thoth at Saqqara as early as the second century BCE.
Other Hermetica
In addition to the texts contained in the Corpus there are many
other writings ascribed to Hermes Trismegistos, and as such, are
by definition, Hermetica. Among these are the famous Asclepius (originally
entitled The Perfect Discourse), which is both philosophical and
magical, and texts such as The Ogdoad Reveals the Ennead, which
is a philosophical and mystical Hermetic text not in the original
Byzantine anthology translated by Ficino, but added to the Hermetic
collection after being discovered in the Gnostic library at Nag
Hammadi. There are also a significant number of the Grco-Egyptian
Magical Papyri said to be the work of Hermes Trismegistos. It may
even be, given Thoth's position as Great Divine Magician, that the
first Hermetica were not the philosophical texts such as those in
the Corpus Hermeticum and the Nag Hammadi find, but were technical,
that is, magical texts. The structure of the Hermetic texts, whether
philosophical or technical, are often in the form of dialogues between
a teacher and one or more students.
The Hermetica as Sacred Texts
The Hermetica form one of the bases for the philosophy, beliefs,
and values of modern Hermeticism, along with many other texts of
the Western Tradition. While the Hermetica are considered sacred
texts in that they provide important information on matters of a
sacred nature and can be extremely profound and valuable guides
on the spiritual path, neither they nor any other text are considered
infallible or without contradiction.
The Beliefs of Hermeticism
The Perennial Philosophy
The Hermeticism of the Hermetic Fellowship is also called the Western
Esoteric Tradition, and embraces that essential outpouring of the
Light known as the Philosophis Perennis, the Prisca Theologia, the
Wisdom Tradition, and the Ageless Wisdom. Esoteric legend holds
that this is a body of spiritual teachings that have been passed
down through the millennia from generation to generation, teacher
to student. The Tradition is said to have been the inner impetus
for the blossoming of arts and sciences in many ages and the common
inspiration of that which is truest in the world's religions.
As we've seen even in the extremely brief history above, in the
case of Hermeticism, the legend is at least partly true. While Hermeticism
came into its own in the first millennium CE, it drew on yet more
ancient Egyptian, Greek, and other traditions as its sources. In
turn, it passed that knowledge on to most of the major Western esoteric
movements of the past two thousand years. Furthermore, Hermeticism
truly has inspired both artists and scientists throughout that period,
from Botticelli to Dee to Newton to Cezanne.
Characteristics of Hermeticism
The Hermetic Tradition is not a single dogmatic school of thought
or one particular spiritual system. Rather, it is a living body
of knowledge and practice that springs from a common root while
bearing a variety of blossoms. As in the original Hermetic schools,
a stimulating diversity of views and experiences may be found in
contemporary Hermeticism, although there are some broad characterizations
that can be made.
The following particularly apply to the Hermeticism of the Hermetic
Fellowship. Each of these characteristics has legitimate historical
precedent and would be shared by many, but certainly not all, Hermetic
groups operating today.
Eclecticism
Just as Alexandrian Hermeticism drew on a wide variety of religious
and philosophical traditions, so modern Hermeticism explores a broad
range of spiritual paths within the Hermetic, or Western Esoteric,
Tradition. For the Hermetic Fellowship, these paths include ---
but are not limited to --- the Ancient Mystery Religions, Qabalah,
Alchemy, Rosicrucianism, Gnosticism and other types of esoteric
Christianity, Theurgy, Wicca and Neo-Paganism, and the Grail Quest.
As a guiding metaphor, the Hermetic Fellowship has adopted the
Pharos, the Lighthouse of Alexandria which shone its Light upon
all the many different spiritual, magical, and religious paths which
came together in that city, cross-fertilizing each other and producing
an illuminating spiritual flowering. Accepting this multiplicity
means that Hermetics must be able to entertain the paradoxical idea
of multiple realities. Spiritual paradox is considered a Mystery
to be understood, not necessarily a contradiction to be ruled out.
Although by definition we limit ourselves to exploring the Western
Traditions, we honor all spiritual Paths, in so far as each contains
a ray of that Divine Light which we seek.
Spiritual Curiosity
Hermetics are Seekers --- Seekers of Divine Truth, Seekers of Wisdom,
Seekers of Understanding, Seekers of Gnosis. Hermetic spiritual
curiosity encourages openness and tolerance of the ways and spiritual
paths of others. This curiosity may be partially satisfied through
books. As a literate and literary tradition, Hermeticism holds that
as seekers we can benefit through the recorded experiences and insights
of others --- as well as through the mediation of a living teacher
and/or a group of fellow seekers.
But it is not enough to simply read about the spiritual. We will
gain little without genuine, personal experience. Therefore, while
we highly recommend personal study and teaching, we also stress
the irreplacable value of participation in the spiritual through
ritual, meditation, and other spiritual practices. The religious
devotion of one's choice will prove extremely valuable in one's
growth as well.
Polytheism & Ultimate Monotheism
Since it has its roots in the ancient Pagan traditions, we see
Hermeticism as a generally polytheistic approach to spirituality.
The Divine makes Itself known by many names and wears many faces.
Many Goddesses and Gods --- particularly those honored by the cultures
that gathered at Alexandria under the Light of the Pharos --- are
important to Hermeticism. Yet underlying and uniting this polytheism,
we posit an ultimate Divine Unity, an ultimate monotheism.
This concept extends to the Hermetic understanding of the Universe.
The Universe is multiform and diverse, yet ultimately united in
the One. Thus we can seek and discover the hidden connections leading
to the revelation of the Unity behind the apparent diversity of
the world. Hermetic Qabalah is one model for this: while each of
the Sephiroth is an expression of the diversity of the Divine, all
emanate from and are united in Kether, which Unity Itself is ultimately
an Emanation from the Unmanifest En Soph.
As Above, So Below
Hermetics consider the Divine to be both immanent and transcendent.
The Divine is within all things in the manifested Universe (notably
including ourselves), and beyond them as well. Because of the interconnection
between 'above' and 'below,' what happens on a spiritual level has
consequences in the material. Conversely, what happens in the material
can have consequences in the spiritual.
Creating equilibrium between all these things --- matter and spirit,
body and soul, within and without, night and day, in fact, all polarities
--- is pivotal to the spiritual Work of the Hermetic. Balance is
the key to growth.
All is Divine
Since the Divine is in all things, all is Divine. Through contemplation
and understanding of the Universe, including ourselves, through
prayer, aspiration, and gnosis (or sacred 'knowing'), human beings
can become more 'god-like' and eventually come to reunite with the
Divine. Many Hermetics do not believe this goal can be achieved
during a single lifetime, and some hold that this ideal is not fully
attainable while in the physical body. Attitudes toward reincarnation
vary.
In the ancient Hermetica, you will find two different attitudes
toward the Universe, which may be distinguished (as by Frances Yates)
as optimistic and pessimistic. The optimistic attitude posits a
Divine and basically good Universe --- although it recognizes the
many trials we and all things undergo. The pessimistic attitude
sees matter as a distraction from spirit and because of this, qualitatively
evil. The Hermeticism of the modern Fellowship is decidedly of the
optimistic school.
Nature Reveals the Divine
To the modern Hermetic, Nature is the Divine teacher, the Revealer
of the Mysteries. A Rosicrucian motto puts it this way, "Art
is the Priestess of Nature." Thus, in order to accomplish his
or her spiritual Art, the Hermetic must also serve Nature as a Priest
or Priestess. The physical world is the manifestation or vessel
of Divine Power and Love, and we are uniquely entrusted with caring
for that vessel.
There is an esoteric tradition that when Adam (i.e.,Humanity) fell,
in one sense Nature fell with him. By redeeming Adam through our
own spiritual growth and development, we also redeem Nature. The
converse is also true: by redeeming Nature, we redeem ourselves.
This idea provides one basis for Hermetic environmentalism.
In return for our honor and our care, Nature reveals Her Divine
Self as an infinitely profound symbol for the spiritual journey.
In the rhythms of the Earth and the cycles of the Sun, the Moon,
and the Planets, the awesome structure of the Universe, the complementary
miracles of birth and death, the Hermetic finds the Divine unveiled
--- and celebrates.
The Will to the Light
Human beings have a unique place in the Divine pattern because
of our Will. We have the ability to aspire to the Divine, and this
we must do in order to attain to the Divine. A seeker must want
to find. A philosopher must desire to know. And furthermore, she
or he must use the power of Will to accomplish this. Hermeticism
takes an optimistic view of the individual human being as well.
Encouraged by Divine Love and through the use of the considerable
human power of desire and Will, everyone has the ability to achieve
union with her or his Higher Self, and eventually to reunite with
the Divine.
Access to the Subtle Realms
Human beings have the ability to access the non-physical realms
--- the psychic, the mental, the spiritual. Furthermore, this is
a natural, innate ability that can be more fully developed through
a variety of spiritual techniques. One way to access the non-physical
is through the practice of Theurgy, or working with the Divine through
ritual. Ritual can be a particularly powerful practice in the Quest,
as it can combine a variety of individual psychospiritual techniques
into a powerful whole to put us in touch with the non-physical realms.
As stated above, working in Theurgic harmony with the Divine, and
through the law of As Above, So Below, works in the non-physical
affect the physical --- and vice versa.
The Great Work
The idea that humankind has fallen away from a previous state in
which we were more blessed and more unified with the Divine is common
to many religions and philosophies. Versions of the concept are
to be found in the Egyptian, Greek, Gnostic, and Hebrew mythologies
that are components of the Hermetic Current. Hermetics do not see
the fall from unity as evil or as a punishment. Instead, it was
necessary for spiritual growth. Just as a young person must leave
home and truly experience life in order to grow and mature, so humanity
as a whole had to 'fall' into experience. But our journey is not
complete until we eventually return home and unite with the Divine
once more for healing and regeneration.
The work that each Hermetic is called to undertake, though it is
sometimes called the Tiqqun,, the Restoration, is not simply regaining
our blessed, pre-fall state of Unity; it is the attainment of something
new, for we -- and all of reality -- have been metamorphosized by
our entry into the great cocoon of incarnation. When we return to
Eden, it will not be simply the Garden we once left, but in the
midst of the Garden will stand the Holy City, the highest attainment
of the human spirit in creative Union with the Divine. This return
to a new and transformed Unity with the Divine is the ultimate goal
of the Hermetic work. This process is called both the Great Work
and the Royal Art. It is the finding of the Stone of the Philosophers,
True Wisdom, Perfect Happiness, the Summun Bonum.
This journey home may be understood as a process of renewing our
links with the Divine through a system whose keys are the patterns
of Nature. Each link is represented by an initiation. Different
schools follow different natural patterns. For example, some might
use a series of initiations based on the steps of an Alchemical
operation; another might base their initiations on the development
of the psyche and spirit; yet another on the cycles of the Moon.
Furthermore, instead of a spiritual journey that rejects all things
material in order to re-attain the spiritual, the goal of the Hermetic
is to embrace and balance all things. Hermeticism may be described
as a poetic rather than an ascetic mode of Attainment. Hermes Trismegistos,
quoting the Divine Mind, tells us:
Make yourself grow to immeasurable immensity, outleap all body,
outstrip all time, become eternity, and you will understand God.
Having conceived that nothing is impossible to you, consider yourself
immortal and able to understand everything, all art, all learning,
the temper of every living thing. Go higher than every height and
lower than every depth. Collect in yourself the sensations of all
that has been made, of fire and water, dry and wet; be everything
at once, on land, in the sea, in heaven; be not yet born, be in
the womb, be young, old, dead, beyond death. And when you have understood
all these things at once --- times, places, things, qualities, quantities
--- then you can understand God.
|