Prologue:
The Nine Gods
In the beginning were the Nine gods of ancient
Egypt, the Great Ennead, in whom all beauty, magic and power were
personified. But although many, they were only ever truly One -
each an aspect of the great creator god, Atum. The Pyramid Texts,
hieroglyphic inscriptions found on the inside walls of seven
pyramids of the Fifth and Sixth Dynasties, implore them both as
Nine and as One:
O you, Great Ennead which is at On [Heliopolis]
(namely) Atum, Shu, Tefnut, Geb, Nut, Osiris, Isis, Set, and
Nepthys; O you children of Atum extend his goodwill to his child
...1
The mysteries of the Great Ennead were
celebrated by generations of initiate priests at Heliopolis. Their
worship was a central part of the lives of thousands of ordinary
men and women, to whom their discrete identities made them as
accessible as the saints are to modem Catholics, while their
mysterious Oneness kept in place the divine veil of
ineffability.
The Nine - in one form or another - reigned for
many centuries, until the Egyptian world changed forever with the
influx of conquering races including the Greeks and, later, the
Romans. The change seemed complete with the coming of the new
religion of the sacrificial man-god, Yeshua (Jesus). But even then
it was believed that the Nine merely withdrew to a heavenly realm —
or, as many would have it today, to another dimension. The Ennead
had departed, perhaps one day to return in glory.
However, the Nine are no longer a mere curiosity
of some long past religion, nor are the works of their priests as
ephemeral as sand blowing across the face of time. Their sacred
city of Heliopolis hid many jealously guarded secrets, incredible
knowledge that is only now being rediscovered. From the wisdom of
antiquity, these high initiates built the pyramids, feats of
construction that are still unparalleled and whose mysteries
continue to challenge and enthral. The Nine taught their priests
well — and their strange and secret knowledge is coming back to
haunt us.
Buried beneath a suburb of Cairo - the most
populous city in Africa, with 16 million inhabitants and their mad
cacophony of traffic - the wonders of ancient Heliopolis are now
marked only by a single obelisk. Once it was one of the unofficial
wonders of the ancient world, glorying in its name - derived from
the Greek for ‘city of the sun god’ because it was the centre of
worship of Ra, whose daily journey blazed across the heavens. Its
Egyptian name of Ounu, which appears in the Old Testament as On,
may mean ‘the pillared city’, although no one knows for certain.
Sometimes it was known as the ‘House of Ra’, while the Arabs called
it Ain-Shams, meaning ‘Sun eye’ or ‘Sun spring’.2
It is unknown how long the centre at Heliopolis
had been established before its first mention in the records, but
it was certainly already the supreme religious centre of Egypt
‘when records begin’ - at least the beginning of the Old Kingdom
(c. 2700 BCE).3 Although several other rival cult
centres later rose in power and political influence, Heliopolis
always retained its status and due reverence was paid to its
antiquity throughout the history of Egypt.
Heliopolis was the principal religious centre of
the Pyramid Age, and its theology - the first organised system of
religion and cosmology known in Egypt - inspired and motivated the
building of the great monuments at Giza. To people of that time and
place, theology represented the sum total of all knowledge. All
that existed was God: everything was a manifestation of Him/Her,
and everything was imbued with the divine spark. Therefore the
study of anything was in itself a glorious religious act. To learn
was to worship and at the same time to progress along one’s own
path to godhood. Heliopolis is indelibly linked with Giza, which
lies some 12 miles to its south-west. Indeed, the three pyramids
are arranged so they point to Heliopolis.4
As ‘the chosen seats of the gods’ and ‘the
birthplace of the gods’, Heliopolis was the most sacred site of
Egypt. It contained temples to the creator god Atum, to Ra - the
sun god himself — and to Horus, as well as to Isis, Thoth and the
Nile god Hapi. One of the city’s most renowned buildings was the
hwt-psdt, the Mansion of the Great Ennead. Another structure
was the House of the ,Phoenix, which may have contained the sacred
ben-ben stone, Egypt’s most holy ‘relic’, which was possibly
meteoritic in origin.
The priesthood of Heliopolis was famed for its
learning and wisdom. Two of its greatest achievements were in the
fields of medicine and astronomy — its high priests held the title
‘Greatest of Seers’, generally understood to mean ‘Chief
Astronomer’.5 Its priests were still regarded as the
wisest and most learned in Egypt at the time of Herodotus (fifth
century BCE) and even remembered in Strabo’s day, as late as the
first century CE. The priesthood was even famed among the Greeks,
and it is said that, among others, Pythagoras, Plato, Eudoxus and
Thales went to Heliopolis to study. And although we know few of the
names of the great Egyptians who were its graduates, we do know
that Imhotep, the genius who designed the first pyramid - the Step
Pyramid of Djoser at Saqqara - and was venerated as a god for his
medical knowledge, was a High Priest there.6
Significantly, the priesthood probably included
women. An inscription of the Fourth Dynasty, roughly contemporary
with the Giza pyramids, refers to a woman in the Temple of Thoth
holding the title ‘Mistress of the House of Books’.7
It is possible to piece together the main
elements of the Heliopolitan religious beliefs from the Pyramid
Texts. The earliest text, in the pyramid of Unas, dates from around
2350 BCE, some 200 years after the Great Pyramid of Khufu at Giza
is believed to have been built. In fact most Egyptologists agree
that the Pyramid Texts are much older than the earliest surviving
inscriptions, and that they - and the religious and cosmological
ideas — existed at the beginning of the First Dynasty, the
‘official’ birth of Egyptian civilisation, around 3100 BCE.8 The Pyramid Texts are the oldest
surviving religious writings in the world.9
Customarily divided into short ‘chapters’ called
‘utterances’ by Egyptologists, these ancient texts form
descriptions of the funeral rites and afterlife journey of the king
(strictly speaking, ‘pharaoh’ is a much later term). There is every
reason to believe that the Pyramid Texts are not, in fact, merely
funeral texts, nor is the wisdom embedded in them relevant solely
to the kings of a long-dead civilisation.
The central theme of the texts is the afterlife,
or astral, journey in which the king, identified with Osiris,
ascends to the heavens where he is transformed into a star. He also
encounters various gods and other entities, and is finally accepted
into their ranks. He is then reincarnated as his own successor, in
the form of Osiris’s son, Horus, thus ensuring the literal divinity
of the royal line and maintaining the continuity of Egyptian
culture.
The Pyramid Texts are undoubtedly the product of
the Heliopolitan priesthood,10 and represent the only surviving
unadulterated expression of their religion, and probably the only
writings of the religion ever inscribed outside of Heliopolis
itself at that time. The same ideas underpin later funeral
inscriptions, such as the Coffin Texts (written inside sarcophagi
of the Middle Kingdom, 2055-1650 BCE) and the so-called Book of
the Dead, though these were also influenced by other, rival
religious systems. The Pyramid Texts hold the key to reconstructing
the beliefs of ancient Heliopolis.
A further problem arises as the Pyramid Texts
were intended for a specific purpose, not as a general dissertation
on theology. One analogy is with a Christian funeral service today.
Obviously it would feature references to Christian beliefs, such as
Jesus dying on the cross to save us, which Christians understand,
while anyone unfamiliar with the religion would feel completely
lost. The Pyramid Texts, in much the same way, are not the
equivalent of a Heliopolitan Bible, but more like a prayer
book.
A study of the underlying beliefs of the Pyramid
Texts reveals an extraordinarily sophisticated yet economical
theology and cosmology that can be read on many levels. Several
complex concepts are expressed simultaneously in its imagery. There
are many academic reconstructions of Heliopolitan thought, but the
one we believe to make most sense of the data is that of the
American professor of religious history, Karl W. Luckert, as
described in his seminal book Egyptian Light and Hebrew Fire
(1991). According to this, the system is one of deceptive
simplicity, hiding a rich and awesome complexity. We came to
realise that Heliopolitan beliefs concerning the nature of the
universe, consciousness, life and what happens after death are both
mystical and practical, yet also incorporate knowledge that rivals
that of the most cutting-edge modem science.
It has long been recognised that the Pyramid
Texts contain astronomical material. Recent books have argued that
these ideas are neither primitive nor superstitious — as many
academics still believe - but reveal a detailed and sophisticated
understanding of the movement of heavenly bodies. They even take
into account the phenomenon known as the precession of the
equinoxes, a heavenly cycle of nearly 26,000 years that was deemed
to have been discovered as late as the second century BCE by the
Greeks (who even then got it wrong).11 This civilisation existed at least
five millennia ago. On such a timeline our own superstitious Dark
Ages, when the world was believed to be flat, seem like
yesterday.
The most fundamental revelation of the Pyramid
Texts is that, despite our preconceptions, the Heliopolitan
religion was essentially monotheistic. Its many gods, often
animal-headed, were understood to represent the manifold aspects of
the one creator god, Atum.
The Heliopolitan religion incorporated the
concept of a mystical union with the ‘higher’ god forms, and even
with the source of all creation, Atum himself. This union was the
true objective of the process described in the Pyramid Texts, the
destination of the soul’s ultimate journey. According to the
standard view, this was relevant only to the king in his afterlife
state, but we believe it was not a journey reserved only for
royalty — nor even for the dead. The Pyramid Texts in fact describe
a secret technique for enabling a man or woman to encounter God and
- dead or merely out of the body - to discover some of his
knowledge for themselves.
Atum stood at the apex of the Great Ennead, or
the nine primary gods of Egypt. However, exemplifying the concept
of ‘one god, many god forms’, the nine themselves were considered
as One, the other eight representing different aspects of
Atum.12 This is a similar idea to that of the
Christian Trinity. As Professor Luckert says: ‘The entire
theological system can be visualised as a flow of creative
vitality, emanating outward from the godhead, thinning out as it
flows further from its source.’13
Before Atum’s act of creation, the universe was a
formless, watery void, called Nun. Out of this void emerged a
phallic-shaped hill, the sacred Hill of Atum. Although a metaphor,
it was also believed that this landmark was a physical place, the
real site of the beginning of all things. Atum’s temple in
Heliopolis was probably built on this hill, although some
Egyptologists have recently argued it was actually the rising
ground of the Giza plateau. Others suggest that the pyramids
themselves were intended to represent the Primeval Mound.14
The writings of Victorian — and even more recent
— Egyptologists have been notably coy or tight-lipped about the
story of Atum’s act of creation. In fact, he ejaculated the
universe as a result of masturbating himself to an explosive
orgasm. Though this inevitably invites jokes about the ‘Big Bang’,
it is actually rather an accurate image. Atum’s life-giving burst
of energy seeded the void of Nun, pushing back its boundaries to
give way to the expansion of material creation. In the original
story, Atum was considered to be androgynous: his phallus
represented the male principle, while his hand represented the
female principle. This defines one of the fundamental tenets of the
Heliopolitan system and all Egyptian thinking, namely that of the
eternal and quintessential balance of male and female, the yin-yang
polarity without which, they believed, chaos would rule.
From Atum’s arching semen the universe proceeded
to unfold, gradually becoming manifest in the physical, material
world that we inhabit, but only after passing through several other
stages. From the creative act, two beings, Shu and Tefnut, emerged
in the dividing of the first principle. Shu is male, representing
the creative power, and Tefnut is female, representing a principle
of order that limits, controls and shapes Shu’s power. Tefnut is
also represented as the goddess Ma’at, ruler of eternal
justice.15 Together, Shu and Tefnut are sometimes
jointly called the Ruti, represented in physical form as two lions
(or rather, a lion and a lioness).
From the union of Shu and Tefnut were born Geb
(the earth god) and Nut (the sky goddess), representing the
elements of the visible cosmos, more manifest forms of their
‘parents’. Geb and Nut, in turn, gave birth to two pairs of
brother-sister twins: the famous quartet of Isis and Osiris and
Nepthys and her brother-consort, Set. They express the principle of
duality in two ways: male and female, and
positive-negative/light-dark. Nepthys is the ‘dark sister’ of the
beneficent Isis, while Set is the destructive, obstructive force
opposing Osiris’s civilising and creative character. These four
deities were considered to be closer to us and the material world,
than their forebears, although still inhabiting the world of spirit
beings ‘behind the veil’. Luckert says that they ‘exist low enough
to participate more intimately in the human experience of life and
death’ and that they operate ‘on a smaller and more visible scale
than their parent(s)’.16
Collectively, these nine gods make up the Great
Ennead, but they remain only expressions of Atum, reaching through
the levels of creation from the first emergence from the void to
the world of matter we inhabit. In a sense, Osiris is Geb and Shu
and Atum, just as Isis is Nut and Tefnut/Ma’at and Atum. Even Set
was perceived as more complex than a simple embodied, archetypal
evil, such as the Devil of Christianity.
The system continues. The Great Ennead itself
leads on to another series of gods, the Lesser Ennead. The link -
or ‘go-between’ — is Horus, the magical child of Isis and Osiris.
He is regarded as the god of the material world, his role here
echoing that of Atum in the universe. The foremost of the Lesser
Ennead, who are believed to exert a direct influence over
humankind, are the wisdom god Thoth — scribe to the Great Ennead -
and Anubis, the jackal-headed god who guards the gateway between
the worlds of the living and the dead.
This level is the province of many other deities,
each dealing with a specific aspect of human life. It is probable
that it incorporated local gods and goddesses worshipped in Egypt
before the Heliopolitan religion was established. Luckert calls
this the ‘Turnaround Realm’, the meeting point of the world of
matter and the ‘other dimensions’ of the gods, where the reverse
process can be experienced by an individual — either at death, or
by mystical experiences in life — as an ‘inner journey’, back to
union with the creator. This is the process that is the main theme
of the Pyramid Texts, which - far from being ‘primitive’ — exceeds
newer religions in both authority and sublimity, besides being
strikingly similar to the traditions of shamanism.
Further significance can be derived from this
elegant system. In an association of imagery, the emergence of
Atum’s Primeval Mound from Nun was equated with the rising of the
sun, the source of all life in the material world. This is why Atum
is associated with Ra, the sun god, sometimes referred to as
Ra-Atum. This is also why Horus, as lord of this world, is also
associated with, and sometimes personified as, the sun. The daily
‘birth’ of the sun is a ‘microcosm’ of the original creative
explosion that gave birth to the universe, so it can be associated
with both Atum and Horus. Like so much of the Pyramid Texts, the
imagery works on several levels at once.
An objective reading of the Pyramid Texts
involves much more than poetic symbolism. For example, its system
of creation is a remarkable parallel to modern physicists’
conception of the creation and evolution of the Universe. It
literally describes the ‘Big Bang’, in which all matter explodes
from a point of singularity and then expands and unfolds, becoming
more complex as fundamental forces come into being and interact,
finally reaching the level of elemental matter. (Significantly, the
leading American Egyptologist Mark Lehner, in his 1997 book The
Complete Pyramids, uses the term ‘singularity’ when referring
to Atum’s place in the myth.17) The system also includes the concept
of a multidimensional universe, represented by the different levels
of creation as embodied in the god forms. In the Pyramid Texts, the
higher gods, such as Shu and Tefnut, still exist, but remain
essentially unreachable by humankind without going through the
intermediaries of the lower gods.
Yet another level of imagery lies within the
creation story. While discussing the sophistication of the ideas in
the Pyramid Texts with our friend, the Belgian writer-researcher
Philip Coppens, he pointed out that certain very new discoveries of
modern science are an implicit part of the story. As we have seen,
Atum emerged from a formless void, imaged in the form of the
primordial watery chaos called Nun. This is often regarded as being
based on the way land emerges from the Nile flood as the annual
inundation recedes, but this is not really the concept expressed in
the Heliopolitan image. As Egyptologist R.T. Rundle Clark says:
It was not like a sea, for that has a surface,
whereas the original waters extended above as well as below ... The
present cosmos is a vast cavity, rather like an air-bubble, amid
the limitless expanse.18
This is an elegantly clever way of expressing
the complex concept of a sea that represents, on the one hand, the
void - nothing - yet at the same time stands for unlimited
potential - infinity. There may be another reason for choosing this
image, though. Scientists have only recently announced the
discovery that water can be found in interstellar space in far
greater quantities than has ever been expected. Atum represents not
just the ‘Big Bang’ of creation, but also the sun: and scientists
are only now realising that the enormous clouds of water throughout
the universe play a vital role in the creation of stars such as our
sun. In fact, they are now beginning to believe that stars are
actually created from such clouds of water ...19 It has also been pointed out that, on
a terrestrial level, the myth expresses the idea that life
originated in the seas.20 All this suggests the possession of
exceptionally sophisticated knowledge by the Heliopolitans.
Significantly, on 12 September 1998, the leading
British scientific magazine New Scientist published the
ground-breaking research of a NASA team led by Lou Allamandola into
the origins — and requirements — of life in the universe.
Previously scientists had found it impossible to assemble the right
‘ingredients’ out of which to create even the most basic form of
life, but this team had succeeded in creating some of the complex
molecules necessary by recreating in the laboratory conditions
similar to those found inside clouds of gas in interstellar space.
They discovered that creating those complex molecules in those
circumstances is extremely easy - in fact, virtually inevitable -
whereas trying to do so in strictly terrestrial circumstances is
impossible. The most striking example is that of molecules called
lipids which make up the walls of individual cells, without which
the cell, the basic building block of living things, could not
exist. Now that scientists know that this can be done so easily in
these conditions, the implications are enormous. It looks
increasingly as if life originated in deep space and was then
‘seeded’ on to planets, probably by comets, and that, even in its
most primitive form, it is probably found everywhere throughout the
universe. As Lou Allamandola says, ‘I begin to really believe that
life is a cosmic imperative.’
This, however, is only part of the story, as
Philip Coppens pointed out to us. It may be that Allamandola’s team
are by no means the first to comprehend the requirements for the
creation of life. He cites the ancient Egyptian myth of Atum’s
explosive orgasm that created the universe: his ejaculation can be
seen to symbolise, with astonishing accuracy, the idea that all the
basic ingredients for life existed from the very first and that the
universe, as it continues to expand, carries them within it. The
imagery of the Atum myth also encompasses perfectly the concept of
‘seeding’ the universe with life. Did the Heliopolitan priests
really know how life originates and spreads throughout the
universe?20
21
This, then, was the ‘primitive’ religion of
ancient Egypt, which was governed by the Great Ennead, the Nine who
represented all life and all wisdom. The ancient Egyptian
civilisation, so often underestimated even by our most learned
scholars, continues to fascinate with mysteries that call to us
from antiquity. But we were to discover that something new is
afoot, a sudden, unexplained interest in the lost secrets of the
Egyptians and a flurry of mysterious activity among their most
venerable ruins. Something intriguing is going on at Giza,
something that is intimately connected with the preparation for the
Millennium and the start of the twenty-first century. People and
organisations are searching for the lost knowledge of the
worshippers of the Nine for their own purposes. They are about to
undertake a momentous, perhaps even a catastrophic venture: to
hijack the mysteries for their own ends, even daring to attempt the
unthinkable — to exploit the ancient gods themselves.