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Passages similar to: Secret Teachings of All Ages — Isis, the Virgin of the World
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
Isis, the Virgin of the World (51)
No complete records are available which give the secret doctrine of the Egyptians concerning the relationship existing between the spirit, or consciousness, and the body which it inhabited. It is reasonably certain, however, that Pythagoras, who had been initiated in the Egyptian temples, when he promulgated the doctrine of metempsychosis, restated, in part at least, the teachings of the Egyptian initiates. The popular supposition that the Egyptians mummified their dead in order to preserve the form for a physical resurrection is untenable in the light of modern knowledge regarding their philosophy of death. In the fourth book of On Abstinence from Animal Food, Porphyry describes an Egyptian custom of purifying the dead by removing the contents of the abdominal cavity, which they placed in a separate chest. He then reproduces the following oration which had been translated out of the Egyptian tongue by Euphantus: "O sovereign Sun, and all ye Gods who impart life to men, receive me, and deliver me to the eternal Gods as a cohabitant. For I have always piously worshipped those divinities which were pointed out to me by my parents as long as I lived in this age, and have likewise always honored those who procreated my body. And, with respect to other men, I have never slain any one, nor defrauded any one of what he deposited with me, nor have I committed any other atrocious deed. If, therefore, during my life I have acted erroneously, by eating or drinking things which it is unlawful to cat or drink, I have not erred through myself, but through these" (pointing to the chest which contained the viscera). The removal of the organs identified as the seat of the appetites was considered equivalent to the purification of the body from their evil influences.
Ancient Egyptian
Chapter CLIV The Chapter Of Not Letting The Body Decay In The Netherworld (13)
This Chapter is not frequently met with in the papyri; it was written on the wrappings and the bandages of the dead; for instance, on the funeral...
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Neoplatonic
PYTHAGORIC ETHICAL SENTENCES FROM STOBÆUS, Which are omitted in the Opuscula Mythologica, &c. of Gale. (37)
The two following extracts are from Clemens Alexandrinus in Stromat. lib. 3. p. 413. The ancient theologists and priests testify that the soul is...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter XLVI (3)
The Egyptians, like many other ancient nations, held the doctrine of the preexistence of souls. They held it not like philosophers or poets, but as...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter LI (4)
The Chapters numbered 51 and 52 are not found in the most ancient papyri, but the substance of them and their formulas are met with on the ancient...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter IV: The Greeks Drew Many of Their Philosophical Tenets From the Egyptian and Indian Gymnosophists. (1)
We shall find another testimony in confirmation, in the fact that the best of the philosophers, having appropriated their most excellent dogmas from...
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Ancient Egyptian
Nut And The Deceased King, Utterances 1-11 (11)
8 To say by Nut: I unite thy beauty with this body (and with) this ba, for life, endurance, joy, health 8 of Horus, divine apparition, king of Upper...
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter XVI (1)
Farther still, therefore, we must not disdain to add what follows; that we frequently perform something to the Gods who are the inspective guardians...
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Greek
Physiology and Human Nature (73a)
Timaeus: and the mortal kind, while still incomplete, come straightway to a complete end,—foreseeing this, the Gods set the “abdomen,” as it is...
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Neoplatonic
Magical and Philosophical Precepts (178)
The Oracles of the Gods declare, that through purifying ceremonies, not the Soul only, but bodies themselves become Worth) of receiving much...
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Neoplatonic
VIII, Chapter I (1)
Leaving, therefore, these particulars, you wish in the next place that I would unfold to you “ What the Egyptians conceive the first cause to be;...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter III (17)
It is also worth mentioning the remark of Philolaus. This Pythagorean speaks as follows: "The ancient theologians and seers testify that the soul is...
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Alchemical
The Thirty-Second Dictum (32)
Bonellus saith: According to thee, O Pythagoras, all things die and live by the will of God, because that nature from which the humidity is removed,...
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Neoplatonic
VIII, Chapter IV (2)
The Egyptians, likewise, do not say that all things are physical. For they separate the life of the soul and the intellectual life from nature, not...
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Neoplatonic
VIII, Chapter V (1)
This deific and anagogic path Hermes, indeed, narrated, but Bitys, the prophet of King Ammon, explained it, having found it in the adyta of Saïs in...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter III: Plagiarism By the Greeks of the Miracles Related in the Sacred Books of the Hebrews. (9)
The prophetess Diotima, by the Athenians offering sacrifice previous to the pestilence, effected a delay of the plague for ten years. The sacrifices, ...
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Channeled Material
Session 60 (60.29)
Ra: Much as we would like to speak to you of this distortion of our designs in constructing the pyramid, we can say very little for the intent was quite mixed…
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Christian Mysticism
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
The Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, Caput VII (12)
When the Hierarch has finished these things, he places the body in an honourable chamber, with other holy bodies of the same rank. For if, in soul...
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Neoplatonic
CHAP. III. (1)
Pythagoras, therefore, having been benefited by Thales in other respects, and especially having learned from him to be sparing of his time; for the...
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Neoplatonic
I, Chapter II (1)
We shall, therefore, deliver to you the peculiar dogmas of the Assyrians; and also clearly develop to you our own opinions; collecting some things...
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Neoplatonic
CHAP. XVII. (2)
And these things, indeed, O Hipparchus, you learnt with diligent assiduity, but you have not preserved them; having tasted, O excellent man, of Sicili...
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