Gnostic Origins
Of Alfred Rosenberg's Thought

JAMES B. WHISKER
It has been said that the Christian opponent of
Judaism has but two alternatives: to de-judaize Christ or to deny Him. Houston
Stewart Chamberlain, following many theologians of middle Europe in the 19th
Century, attempted to prove that Jesus was an Aryan living in an isolated area
of Gallilee, and separated racially from the rest of the peoples of the region.
The author of Foundations of the 19th Century attempted to show that an isolated
group of Nordics had been cut off from the mainstream of the nation, and that
Christ was descended from such people. Field Marshal Ludendorf and others merely
denied the relevance of Jesus, and were anti-Christian as well as anti-Hebrew.
These two traditions accepted in common the idea that the Bible, Old and New
Testaments alike, was literal history.

A third possibility underlies Rosenberg's thought.
The origins are rooted in pre-Christian ideas and practices commonly known in
the West as gnosticism. Like many other generic terms, gnosticism is used by
many to cover a wide variety of philosophical-theological ideas.- Because of the
success of the Western church, including its more recent Protestant forms, the
systems which were vanquished in the long struggle for religious supremacy in
Christendom are thought of in a totally negative context. Such names as
Marcionite, Gnostic, Manichaean, and Bogomilite, are perjoratives. Most of what
was known about them was either secretly guarded or was learned from reading the
refutations of opponents or the accounts of one or another Inquisition,
including the interrogations (most often of unlearned members under torture) of
those who were accused of heresy.
In the 20th Century there have been two major
developments which have changed what we know about the various
"heresies." One is the discovery of major documents and treatises
either by leading gnostics or by their closest disciples and followers. The
other development is the interest shown by leaders of the Third Reich in these
movements, and the subsequent study of the ideology in terms of such thought.
Among the major works to appear reinterpreting the National Socialist movement
in such terms are Pauwels and Bergiers' The Morning of the Magician (in
French, and translated into many languages), Ravenscroft's The Spear of
Destiny and The Cup of Destiny and Angebert's The Occult and the
Third Reich.
Most of the authors who have rediscovered the
gnostics and their influence on the Third Reich have assumed that the leaders
kept the bases of knowledge secret, usually in the SS shrines and rituals, and
that this special knowledge was never intended for mass distribution. Only the
few specially selected SS types could be entrusted with the age-old secrets.
Even in the pre-Third Reich State, Rosenberg had distributed his essay on the
origins of Nazi ideology (actually written before the NSDAP was formed). His Myth
of the 20th Century discussed one particularly gnostic sect, the Cathars
(Holy or Purified Ones), in great detail, but stopped short of offering a
simplified version of the Cathar religion-philosophy as the new religion (or
reinstated religion) of Germany.
It is my contention here that Alfred Rosenberg's
Myth of the 20th Century is quintessentially a gnostic work which attempted to
set the stage for subsequent works which would have taken Germany back in time
to a stage in which a simplified, anti-Jewish religion was the common practice
in the West among the common peoples. It was designed not as a final statement
on the New Nordic Religion, but was to serve as a trial balloon, a precursor of
what was to come. In the early 1920s Rosenberg was not prepared to offer a final
statement of this philosophy. The research necessary to the full creation had
not yet been completed. It was a promise of things to come. It was a quest which
may, in his terms, be likened unto King Arthur's setting the Knights of the
Round Table on the quest for the Holy Grail.
The Grail Legend
Every German schoolboy knew the great folk tale of
the Grail by heart. Wolfram von Eschenbach's Parzival was one of the
greatest works of literature in the German (or any other) language. On the
surface it is a familiar tale of a pure knight's search for perfect love and
redemption. It had been popularized in the late 19th Century by the composer
Richard Wagner, in operatic form. Few pieces of heroic literature had more
impact on the nation-conscious Germans than Parzival.
Wagner's opera opens with the aged Knight, Gurnemanz,
recalling the legend of the Grail. Titurel had been fighting the pagans without
success when, suddenly, he was visited by a band of angels. They gave unto his
keeping the Holy Grail, which Christ drank from at the Last Supper; and the
Spear of Longinius, the lance used by the Roman centurion to pierce the side of
Jesus as he lay in agony upon the cross. Titurel had built a great stronghold at
Monsalvat to house these treasures, and had gathered around him those knights
who were pure in heart wherewith to guard these great talismans of heavenly
power. These knights rode forth to fight injustice and tyranny throughout the
world.
Klingsor was an applicant, but he could not vanquish
lust and passion from his heart, and so was rejected for membership. He then
built a great garden of evil in which, through enticements of the flesh provided
by a variety of beautiful women, he lured the pure ones from their stronghold,
and enslaved them in his evil service. Amfortas was sent forth by Titurel to
carry the sacred lance into the evil place and end its temptations. Khngsor sent
the lovely Kundry to tempt Amfortas. She seduced him and delivered the sacred
spear to Klingsor. The evil sorcerer wounded Amfortas with it, and although
Amfortas escaped, his wound would not heal. Amfortas believed that he was
condemned for his sin of the flesh.
tin Innocent Fool, Parsifal, appears on the scene,
seeking his identity and destiny. After a brief scene in which the Holy Grail is
unveiled, he goes to Klingsor's castle. Kundry is sent to seduce him, but,
suddenly, Parsifal has a vision and is transfixed. He is told that should he
fall to Kundry's seduction there can be no healing of Amfortas' wound and no
salvation for him or the Grail Knights. He rejects Kundry and leaves. Klingsor
attempts to kill him with the spear, but it hovers over the youth's head. The
sensual paradise collapses and Klingsor vanishes.
After many years Parsifal returns from his
wanderings throughout the world. He finds that Kundry has taken the robes of a
penitent and that Gurnemanz has become a hermit. It is Good Friday. He is told
that Titurel has died and that Amfortas still lies wounded and unable to
consecrate Holy Communion. Parsifal goes to Monsalvat, touches Amfortas' wound
with the sacred spear and revives the knight. The spear and the Grail are
replaced in the sanctuary.
The Grail legend is interpreted in two ways.
Generally, it is viewed as a story of Christian love and the redemption of
mankind. The second is the mythical interpretation. The Grail is said to contain
a coded message known only to a few, and understood by a tiny number. It is this
interpretation which is accepted by Ravenscroft in The Cup of Destiny (1981)
and Angebert in The Occult and the Third Reich (1974).
Lucifer was a Prince of Heaven before his sin
prompted God to cast him to Hell. On the descent to the Underworld his crown
fell to earth, and from it a huge emerald. This was used by men of antiquity to
fashion a drinking cup to be used in occult rituals. Here we find the most
ancient relic accepted by both Christians and gnostics. The cup was ringed with
the usual special signs, symbols, runes and the like, all depicting the ascent
of man through various stages to a final state of blessedness. The Grail had
become the sacred vessel of Initiate Knowledge. It contained on its exterior the
great trove of primordial knowledge and tradition which linked the past to the
future. That primordial knowledge can bring man back into the natural and only
true condition for him, the primordial state of consciousness.
Within Germany many regarded the Grail as the lost,
secret book of the Aryan race. It had been entrusted to them since eons past,
and was lost and recovered on occasion. What precisely it contained was unknown,
and since it was written in symbols, the interpretation given these runes may
have differed from age to age. It was the one great treasure of all Aryans, at
all times. From age to age it had been the uniting factor, the one artifact that
provided a rationale for the existence of the race.
The recent movie Excalibur has given a
similar highly secularized interpretation of the Grail myth. The Grail is
presented as being a sort of intermediary between ruler and ruled, a magic
transmitter that guarantees that the king and the land are one, and that each
will serve the other in a wholly natural relationship. Yet it is the spiritual
dimension of the Grail that allows for this mythical union.
The Grail predated Christianity. This is an absolute
whose acceptance is necessary for understanding the importance of it as an
artifact to the NSDAP and its leaders, notably the SS. In Alfred Rosenberg's Myth
of the 20th Century the Grail may be viewed as the cause of German objection
to some aspects of Christianity, notably to Roman Catholicism. It may be viewed
as having provided direction to the German people, or at least a significant
portion of it, when the people were confronted by orthodox Western church
teachings which were alien to them.
While the authors of the recent studies, notably
Angebert and Ravenscroft, and to a lesser degree Pauwels and Bergier, have noted
the importance of the Cathars of the lith through the 14th centuries, they have
not gone far enough in their research. It is true, as we shall see below, that
the "Pure Ones" did preserve, for a time, the Grail and other related
artifacts, but they were relative latecomers, both doctrinally and in terms of
interest in and preservation of the Grail.
The Marcionite Heresy
We must return to the 2nd century A.D., to Marcion
of Sinope in Pontus, to see the development of the whole body of literature
surrounding the Grail. The greater portion of what stood in contradistinction to
both Western Catholicism and the later Orthodox schism from that Church, can be
seen at least germinally in Marcion. He, like many, had struggled with the great
problem of evil. The Church had not as of that time decided its own explanation
of evil in the world. The question was far from settled when Marcion was
writing.
The Marcionites believed that evil was a truly real
force, not merely the privation of some good. One may, for simplification,
regard that evil power as the Devil, Satan, or the Lord of the Flies. He is a
power to be reckoned with. The world was the source of sin and corruption, and
was to be avoided. It had been created just as the Old Testament had said, but
not by God. There was a lesser being, or beings, much like the classic Greek
"world artificers." Sometimes known as a Demiurge, that creator had a
spark of divinity, for he was a son of God, an emanation from the Most High. Man
naturally longs for his true home, but that is unknown to him. He is trapped in
a world of corruption and ruination: in matter, the material world, which is not
God's creation.
To Marcion, the Old Testament was lie because it was
the story of a false god, a deceiver: Jehovah. It and most, if not all, of its
various characters were a deceit, and must be rejected. The Jews he considered
to be the people of Jehovah, that is, a race dedicated to the false god. He
agreed with the Jews on one point: their messiah had not yet come. Jesus Christ
was not their redeemer; he had come to liberate men from the false religion of
Jehovah. In his anti-cosmic dualism, Marcion put the unknown God in opposition
to the inferior creator-god, Jehovah. The salvation of mankind meant, in a word,
liberation from Jehovah.
The contrast between the two worlds and their
respective gods is very great. Jehovah is presented by Marcion as a
warrior-avenger, interested in perpetuating a world of retribution. The gentle
Jesus is the agent of the unknown (alien) God, and he is merciful and filled
with love. One cannot know the unknown (alien) God directly, and though he may
have been suspected by men, he was not revealed to exist until Jesus came into
the world. Jehovah was at home in the material world because it was his mirror
image, made in his (not the alien-God's) image and likeness. The true God could
not exist in this world, for he is pure spirit and is in direct opposition to
the conflict and disorder which is inherent in matter.
The Marcionites rejected any and all things which
tied one to the material world, or which seemed to tie one there, or which
seemed to suggest physical redemption or conversion of material things. Thus
they rejected baptism, except as a manifestation of their disdain for the
material world. Holy Communion was a great contradiction, for it had as its
primary content the transfixion of material things into the realm of the spirit
and of the unknown God. All earthly pleasures were to be avoided as distractions
which tie one to the temporal world. Sexual contact was another more serious tie
to the visible world. Procreation of children meant that more sparks of the
spirit were to be entrapped in the world of tears and deceit.
Because he is pure goodness and mercy, the unknown
God adopted mankind, or at least that portion which was his own and to whom he
could come, and who would accept and love him. God gave us grace quite freely to
aid in our salvation, not because we as lowly beings could not merit it, but
because he loved us although he did not know us. This is the doctrine of
"pure grace," a quintessential part of Marcionite theology. That, in a
sense, is the whole of the religion. God so loved the world that, although
unknown to him, he chose to bring men to live with him so that he and men could
come to know one another in a world far removed from the corruption of the
present one.
Morality was not regarded as conformity to some law
of Nature; nature was physical, and thus corrupt. God was not in the world.
Natural laws were the embodiment of the demiurge, Satan, not the Unknown God.
One ought to avoid contact with nature in all its visible forms, for it leads
one away from the true God.
While it is faith, not knowledge, that leads us
toward God, we must have access to and know the special knowledge that much of
what passes as religion is false. We must know, in Marcion's schema, that the
Unknown God is God, and that the creator of the world is only an eon, an evil
emanation from God. Christ the Son of God came to bring us to know that which we
cannot know directly, in and of ourselves. That we are trapped in matter without
hope of redemption unless we know the correct faith is a matter of special, or
gnostic, revelation. That God invites us strangers into his home without any
knowledge of us, or we of him, is a canon of faith which can be known only
through this special knowledge.
Marcion dropped elements of the New Testament that
he did not like. What remained were expurgated portions of the Gospels (notably
Luke), some of Paul's letters, and bits of the Acts of the Apostles. It is
noteworthy that the Western church had not, as of this time, codified the New
Testament. Marcion was more restrictive than most of the priests of the time in
his choice of acceptable materials for the services. He rejected the Old
Testament entirely, although one deviation of the time, possibly not Marcionite,
devolved into snake worship, based on the Old Testament tale of the snake
tempting Eve. Presumably, the snake was a good symbol for it was set in
contradistinction to the ones Marcion had made evil characters. The snake was
believed to be bringing certain knowledge of Satan, the creator of Adam and Eve.
In censoring the New Testament, Marcion excised
those references made to an early childhood of Christ. Since Jesus was the
messenger of the Most High, the Unknown God, he could not have been immersed in
matter. Without having to materialize, Jesus had appeared to men to have a body
and then only at Capernaum. He came to save those who would reject Judaism and
Jehovah. What his precious blood purchased, in a metaphorical sense, was the
freedom from the false god, Jehovah. He offered a baptism which would reject the
world and all its material evils. One was to be "married" only to
Christ so that child-bearing was avoided and man could escape the material
world. While the material world would continue to exist, Christ had come to
destroy, as an idea, the world of Jehovah.
The Manichaean Heresy
Few religious deviations in the Western church had
greater impact or longer-lasting effect than Manichaeanism. Founded by Mani in
Mesopotania about 242 A.D., it was a major rival to orthodox Christianity. Mani
was martyred by the Western Church in 276 A.D. Among the early adherents was the
great apologist for the Catholic Church, St. Augustine, who practiced its tenets
from about 373 to 382. His City of God has strong Manichaean tendencies
in its absolute dichotomy between good and evil, and between the city of man
(visible world) and the City of God (realm of the spirit).
Mani reflected the gnostic background of the area
and the times. The origin of evil lay in the nature of matter itself. Its
multiplicity is radically opposed to the spirituality of God. Matter is an evil
which can never be redeemed; it is eternally evil. The soul is divine, or like
unto the divine, for it is immaterial and simple. Man's body is but a prison in
which the soul is entrapped. Redemption is found only in death.
The Demiurge, or lesser creator, created the visible
world out of particles which belonged to the powers of darkness. These powers
are opposed to God and the whole realm of the spirit. They are forever entrapped
in the world of matter. They entice man to use his sexual powers to continually
procreate so that bits of the spirit are trapped in the bodies of men. Otherwise
the bodies would be lifeless, hollow shells, and there would be no one for the
powers of darkness to control.
The dichotomy is called anti-cosmic dualism. It
underlies all of the major works of gnosticism, but especially Manichaeanism.
Sin is concomitant with life itself in the material world. Only the spark of life,
the human spirit, is fit for godly action or thoughts, and for redemption.
Necessarily this dualism concluded that whatever is merely finite (hence limited
in time) is evil; whatever is eternal is good, and the spirit of man is a spark
of the eternal fire of God.
Manichaeanism had a rigid ethic. Mankind was
forbidden to kill animals or otherwise to shed blood. Sex was condemned for
reasons noted above. One was to reject Satan, the world, all material things,
and all happiness based on the enjoyment of material goods. The elect or
perfects travelled begging for food. They ignored secular laws which were in any
way antithetical to their religion, and openly sought martyrdom for their
beliefs. A significant portion of the community was devoted to prayer and
fasting, and was dependent on the lodging and hospitality of the common
believers.
Strictly speaking, the Manichaeans were not
Christians. They did accept Christ as having been a divine being, or, at least,
a being who was guided by the Holy Spirit. But so too did they accept all of the
major religious leaders: Buddha, Lao-tzu and others. They did reject the idea of
incarnation that is the cornerstone of Christianity. Jesus only appeared to be a
man. He was not hung on one cross; he was, at all times, omnipresent. Some of
the critics of Manichaeanism accused the cult of pantheism. It is true that the
Manichaeans had no special use for many of the Christian beliefs. They rejected
Holy Communion on the ground that it was worthless because of the omnipresence
of Jesus. They rejected the relics, such as the cross, partly because the
artifacts were material and partly because they had no more relevance than any
other physical item, since God was everywhere.
The term Manichaeanism has come to represent any and
all varieties of dualism in which matter and spirit are necessarily and
essentially opposed. The movement died out probably for two reasons. It was too
anti-social in its rejection of sex and its exclusiveness. It went too far in
rejecting war, violence and bloodshed in an age that was far too tempted to war
in both conquest and defense. But the term and many of the ideas lingered on,
the vital spark carried by others.
Agapius (c. 450 A.D.)
attempted a fusion of Manichaeanism and true Christianity. He continued the
belief in an Evil One, a self-subsistent force that is both eternal and opposed
to God. He urged rejection of the whole of the Old Testament on the grounds that
it was filled with lies and deceit. He, too, condemned earthly pleasures, sex
included. Yet he believed in the doctrine of the Trinity, the Incarnation,
baptism for the remission of sins, the Crucifixion, Resurrection and Final
judgment, and the resurrection of the material and glorified body. His fusion,
while intriguing, had only its role as a link in the time chain to commend it.
The Paulicans are quite another matter, for they served as a link between
Manichaeanism and the Gathers, from about 668 A.D. when the cult was organized,
until after 1200. In 869, Peter of Sicily wrote a blistering attack on the
Paulicans in his Historia Manichaeorum.
The origins of Paulicanism are obscure. The
teachings are traced by some authorities to Paul and John of Samosota. The name
may have been derived from that Paul, or it may refer to the sect's devotion to
ten letters of St. Paul (Saul). Others have traced it to an attempt to belittle
the movement as the "petty disciples of Paul."
Publicly, the Paulicans rejected Manichaeanism, but
privately they adopted the gnostic dualism and many other of its teachings. They
rejected the Old Testament as a work of deception. They stated that it had been
written by a race of thieves and deceivers, and was inspired by the worship of
the false god, a demiurge, Jehovah. They hated the Jews on a second ground, as
Christ judgers and condemners. They stopped short of condemning them as Christ
killers because they viewed the Crucifixion as an illusion. They viewed Peter as
a typical Jew who, under pressure and in danger, had betrayed Christ and denied
him.
They attacked the traditional church on several
grounds. They viewed clerical garb as the costume of Satan. They despised the
emphasis placed on Christ's Passion and Crucifixion as these were either
illusions or deliberate lies. Christ had no physical body made of the corrupt
matter of this world. His "body" was an illusion offered to men as a
convenient point of reference. Communion was an offering of material things,
water or wine and bread, and thus could not be holy. The true Eucharist, they
taught, was in Christ's words and thoughts.
On the surface they appeared to be orthodox
Christians, for they made a distinction between things done on the surface
without meaning and those done privately with special meaning. The Bible, even
the hated Old Testament, was accepted for esoteric use, while the initiates used
esoteric rites in private. They believed that faith was the great guiding factor
in attaining salvation (hence their love for Paul). But they also believed that
there were certain hidden meanings and revealed words that the initiates must
know in order to escape the material world. These they held in secret, in their
clandestine services.
In one area they did differ from Manichaeanism. They
were willing to fight and die. Much of their success came in opposing the armies
of the Byzantine and, later, the Bulgarian empires. They spread the word with
the sword as well as with the Bible. Perhaps their impact on history is greater
because of their fighting prowess than because of their ideas. While they did
not usually force conversion, the mere sight of their powerful armies in the
field must have had a significant impact on the local population. Their power
peaked under Tychicus, c. 801-835 A.D., although remnants remained active until
at least 1200.
Paulican and Manichaean ideas were fused in an
otherwise quite original movement which appeared in Bulgaria about 950 A.D. Our
only true point of reference is a notation that they were first studied while
Tsar Peter reigned in Bulgaria. Peter died in 969. The
Bogomili were a group of initiates possessed of
secret writings and ideas, whose name indicates "God have mercy" or
"Mercy of God" or "Beloved of God."
Their highly original position in theology begins
with the gnostic dualism of matter as evil and spirit as good. In the story of
the Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11-32) they found an allegory. Christ is the good son
who remained with the father and the devil is the son who goes off to do evil.
The devil (Satanel as the Bogomili called him) was the son of God and the
brother of Christ. One later tale which tells us of the Bogomili is as follows.
The devil made the body of Adam. He tried to animate it with a spark of the
eternal (soul) which he had stolen from God, but the soul would not remain in
place. The soul continually exited through the anus. Eventually the devil was
able to dam it up and the soul was sufficient to animate the body. The devil
made the body from water and earth.
In a second version of the story the water flowed
out of Adam's toe and formed a stream, which appeared to Adam as a snake. The
snake tried to warn Adam of the deceit of Satanel, and was thus cursed by him.
Eventually, God and his prodigal son reached an accord: each would rule a part
of man. God was to govern what had been stolen from him, the spirit of man; the
devil would govern the body.
To prevent the end of mankind, and thus end
Satanel's control over man through his body, the devil must continue the human
race. He could accomplish that only by continually entrapping the spirit in
matter. He thus uses sex as the primary instrument of control. Without sex and
procreation there would be no future subjects for Satanel's control. Thus,
marriage was to be rejected by the true believer.
The esoteric portion of the Bogomile cult taught
that messages were hidden in the gospels, acts of the apostles, and letters of
Paul. One had to have a certain key to unlock the secrets. For reasons that are
not clear, but perhaps out of fear of the Jews, the messages were presented in
riddles, allegories and metaphors. The correct interpretation of the materials
was vital to salvation.
The Bogomili rejected the cross-it was a symbol of
evil. On it the Jews had really or symbolically crucified Christ. Even if one
attempts to reconcile the dualism which precludes Christ from having a body with
the hatred of the Jews as "Christ killers" one is left with the idea
in Bogomilism that they condemned Christ and his teaching. The Cross may be
symbolically interpreted as representing that condemnation and rejection.
The Bogomili made no distinction between priests and
laity. It was a democratically-run organization with no hierarchy until about
1200. They were more contemplative than the Paulicans, less given to action, and
apparently non-violent. Had they been more active militarily their
organizational structure may have been greater. They did not attempt to create a
temporal regime.
The usual rejection of the sacraments marked
Bogomilism. Marriage leads to continued creation of material bodies. Communion
is an attempt to do the impossible: sanctify matter which is evil and cannot be
blessed. Relies are rejected, and formal churches for the same reason.
The Phundagiagitae may
be regarded as a form or application of Bogomilism and, to a degree, Paulicanism.
It was probably founded by John Tzurillas in Bulgaria about 1050, and spread
through Bulgaria and Byzantium. It was more willing than the Bogomili to pay lip
service to those things of organized Orthodox Christianity. Its adherents were
hard to discover during the many persecutions of non-Orthodox Christians in both
Bulgaria and Byzantium.
The Phundagiagitae were accused of being devil
worshipers, and of having a developed satanology. The accusation comes from a
misreading of their interest in Satanel as a son of God and as the creator of
this world. God created six heavens, and Satanel the remaining one. Satanel had
tricked the other devils into rebelling against God; realizing that they had
been tricked, these other fallen angels set about to create a race of helpers
for mankind. This they did by fathering a race of giants by the daughters of
men.
Moses had led the Jews astray, the Phundagiagitae
argued, by worshiping only Satanel, and in offering men the law which was
written by Satanel, not by God. Other men rebelled, urged on by the giants who
had been instructed by their fathers. In retaliation, Satanel caused the
Universal Deluge which killed all but Noah who had remained loyal to him. In
this cult, very few of the Old Testament figures were worthy of other than
eternal damnation.
Satanel had stolen the spark from God which became
the spirit of man. This was represented metaphorically as the light of the sun
set against the eternal darkness of Satanel's realm. The spirit of man cried out
for redemption so God sent his son Jesus Christ to the rescue. After having
saved men, or that portion to whom he came and who received him, Jesus returned
to heaven. On the ascent he bound Satanel, and removed from him his godliness,
after which the devil became Satan, the "el" having been appropriately
dropped. (The "el" indicated "of God.") The teaching of
Jesus was designed exclusively to liberate men from Satanel and his servants on
earth, the Jews, followers of Moses and Noah.
The Pure Ones
In the Myth of the 20th Century
Alfred
Rosenberg spends much time discussing the Cathars, also known as the Albigensians or Pure Ones. He clearly preferred their brand of Christianity
to the Roman Catholic version. They were the carriers of the Manichaean
tradition, as influenced by the Bogomili, Paulicans and others, into Central
Europe, in the years prior to the Reformation. Had the Cathars been more
militarily active and adept it is they, not Luther and Calvin, who might have
won a place in history as the reformers of Christianity and the successful
rebels against the Church. As it was, they were successfully contained by the
Catholic Church and allied princes.
We find the Cathars emerging by about 1025 A.D., in
Germany, Italy and France, also spreading to England and Flanders. Originally
they were simply "the new Manichaeans," and were so labeled by those
whom the Church sent to weed out the recurrent heresy. There are many legends
about the founders of the Cathar heresy, but no single figure or small,
identifiable group can be credited. Gerbert of Aurillac, Archbishop of Reims,
for example, in 991 made a declaration of principles which were decidedly
gnostic and Manichaean, but he cannot be said to have led or encouraged the
spread of Cathar religion. In 1028 William V, Duke of Aquitaine, summoned a
council of bishops to deal with the heresy, and there it was held that it had
spread northward from Italy. Ademar of Chabannes believed that a woman and
another peasant had carried the doctrine into France, perhaps from Italy. Modern
scholarship suggests that a portion of it, at least, came from Bulgaria,
Armenia, and/or the Byzantine Empire, with another portion coming out of the
Moslem Empire, where there was an unusual tolerance for strange Gnostic sects.
Their doctrines are learned by and large from Roman
Catholic sources, mostly records kept of the inquisition of prisoners. No book
similar to the (ancient Armenian?) Key to Truth had to date been
discovered, translated and disseminated to explain the Cathar side of the
controversy over their doctrines. Most modern scholarship begins with a stern
warning that the records of the Inquisition, even if accurate, were gleaned from
those under torture, and thus those questioned were prone to say what the
torturer wished to hear. Also, the records were obtained from unlearned peasants
whose ideas of theology contradict one another, and none may be accurate in
their recountings of the theology. Last, we must note that the Cathar heresy
existed clearly for more than two centuries and it had no central authority
similar to the papacy to set doctrine universally.
The Cathars were clearly dualists in the classical
Manichaean sense. The earliest references to them state that there was a new
outbreak of the Church's old nemesis, Manichaeanism. Intermittently thereafter
the Cathars were called Manichaean. Authorities have not decided, based on the
available testimony, whether the Cathar dualism was of traditionally opposed
eternal gods, or whether it was of the monarchical type. There may have been
shades of each heresy existing simultaneously. The monarchical dualism suggests
that the power of evil is a being in all ways inferior to God, and that evil
force will disappear when the material world ends. Traditional dualism, based in
some part on the teachings of the Persian sage Zarathustra (Zoroaster) suggests that there are two equally
eternal and powerful beings, one good and one evil.
The Cathars accepted the usual limited scriptural
writings, and excluded the bulk of the Old Testament. Several books, to which
the New Testament referred often, were retained, notably the Psalms. Jehovah of
the Jews was dismissed as being either an incarnation or form of Satan, or as
being merely a world artificer and not God. They gave esoteric interpretations
to Scripture, including proscription of eating meat. The portions of the New
Testament which did not suit their purposes were removed, usually with the
justification that these had been added by the Jews to confuse or confound the
faithful.
There was a significant distinction made between the
Perfects and the laity within Catharism. The laity were those who were learning
the true Christianity. They could marry, or continue to live in wedlock, if they
wished. The initiates who had taken the final vows of the cult could not have
sexual intercourse or live in a family environment. The training period often
lasted several years or even a decade or more. Many Cathars held off taking the
vows until they were near death, so that they were not obliged to follow the
much stricter moral code required of the Perfects.
The great sacrament of the Cathar religion was the
Consolementum. It was held in the home of a Perfect or a sympathizer. It began
with a communal confession of sins and failures called the Servitium. All those
present, Perfects or followers, participated. A senior Perfect held aloft a copy
of the excised Scripture. The transcriptions of what the ceremony consisted of
have come down to us, and as reported contain nothing that is shocking to, or
antithetical to, orthodox Christianity. The closest it came to heresy was the
stress laid on the sins one could commit of a material type, notably the sins of
the flesh.
The candidate's initiation into the final rite of
the Perfects was reasonably simple. It was flavored with writings from the
accepted Church fathers and the excised Scripture, but mostly consisted of the
rejection of things which were offensive to the Cathars. One pledged not to eat
meat, engage in worldly vanities, lie, cheat, swear, and the like. The Roman
Catholic Church alleged that it was at this point that the rejection of all
things Catholic took place. The cathechumen was reminded that here, before God,
he swore eternal allegiance to his religion. Doubtless, he was required to
renounce the Sacraments, since these were tied to the material world, and
several canons of faith.
The Cathars drank no wine, and they objected to Holy
Communion on the ground that nothing material could be made holy or purified in
the sight of God. This, as we have seen before, is standard in anti-cosmic and Gnostic dualism. Confession was an open affair, and not made to the priesthood.
The cross was most objectionable, on the traditional ground that it was the
symbol of the passion, even though they generally believed that Christ had no
body and only appeared to suffer. The fact that the Jews had sought to crucify
and condemn Jesus was sufficient reason to hate the cross, even if Christ was
not actually crucified.
Some Cathars appeared to be Adoptionists. Here, they believed that a man like any of us-but a
non-Jew-had been born, out of the flesh of Mary, fathered probably by Joseph,
but not born of a virgin, and not born of one eternally exempted from sin
(Immaculate Conception). At the time of the baptism by John, when God spoke the
words "This is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased," Jesus was
transfixed or possessed by God. The "adoption" remained through the
crucifixion, and possibly God removed himself from the man either at the Garden
of Gethsemane or on the cross ("My God! My God! Why hast thou forsaken
me?"). Most among those accepting Adoptionism believed that the man, not
the man-God, was crucified.
Probably the mainstream Cathars believed that God
had not, and could not, become flesh, because flesh is material and thus
corrupt. He only appeared to men to have a body, as a convenience to men to see
him. That point of view had a secondary benefit: it precluded having to be
concerned with whether Christ was a Jew. That was a problem of some considerable
concern for a group which had fully rejected Judaism and the writings, prophets,
thoughts, and laws of the Old Testament.
Traditional teachings on Heaven, Hell and Purgatory
were unacceptable to the Cathars. Earth, as the material world of the Devil and
of corruption, was the Hell. Only those who renounced the flesh and Satan could
be assumed into Heaven. The Consolamentum was the purgation of the evil and
corruption from man. Thus, there was no need for a second place in which this
cleansing could occur. Likewise, there was no need to pray for the dead. Some of
the dead had made it to the Heaven above the corruption of the material world,
and thus needed no help. Others continued to have their spirits entrapped in the
world.
None of the works consulted on Catharism have taken
up the question of reincarnation, but it seems to be a logical consequence of
the religion. If a soul was not able to escape matter, would it not be forced to
return to try again? Or was it that a soul which failed to rise from the
material world in that single attempt of the lifetime spent here was eternally
trapped in matter in some way? The sources we have are silent on this important
point.
One might also ask if it was necessary for the
Cathars to believe that all men had this spark of the Eternal God. This is not
taken up in the extant sources either. One legend suggested that Satan invaded
the celestial abode sufficiently well enough to capture one-third of the spirits
and these he entrapped in earthly bodies. However, the legend does not state
clearly that this number was sufficient to account for all mankind. This,
precisely, is the major problem in the Cathar teachings: they spoke in myths,
parables and legends, and not infrequently contradicted themselves.
Except in a highly symbolic sense, Mary had no role
in the Cathar teachings. Some held that she was, as a virgin, a symbol for the
Church in its most abstract form. One sidelight held that Mary was a vehicle
through which an eon passed on its way to earth; and a variance allowed Christ
to have passed through her, but through her ear, not through the usual birth
route.
The Inquisition accused the Cathars of being
pantheists. In a spiritual sense, something of God may be said to be present in
anythings. Conversely, nothing material could house God, as in the Cathar
rejection of Holy Communion, because God was the antithesis of materialist
diversity and multiplicity. The Cathars generally responded to questions about
God's presence in Church or in Communion by saying that God was no more present
there than anywhere else. Some Cathars evidently believed that God, being
all-powerful, could enter matter, or take on the appearance of matter, at will,
to deceive the Devil and rescue the Men of Light from their material prison.
Thus, at any given time, God may be present in any apparently material thing, or
appear to all, Satan included, as a material thing.
The list of figures inverted in their moral standing
is both long and intriguing. Jehovah, as we have seen, was as the Jewish God
both evil and a false god, a form of Satan (or Satan incarnate). Abraham and
Moses were said to have been inspired by the Devil. John the Baptist was evil
because he baptised in water (i.e., a material thing) instead of baptising in
the spirit. The various characters who destroyed, or who had a hand in ,
destroying, others-as in the robbery of the Caananites to obtain the "land of milk and honey"-were
condemned.
Rosenberg and Gnosticism
The Cathars served as a highly convenient take-off
point for Alfred Rosenberg's attack on both the Catholic Church and on Judaism.
It is impossible to show his intellectual development, to say whether his
disdain for these two powerful institutions flowed from a general dislike of
them, or from his analysis of their doctrine or their history. However, there
are many references throughout the Myth of the 20th Century to both
groups as the corrupters of Christianity and of God's true message, and to these
organizations as the persecutors of the Cathars.
One may assume that Rosenberg's constant favorable
reference to the Cathars suggests that he believed they possessed the key to
true Christianity. Rosenberg insisted throughout his writings and speeches that
he was a Christian. He criticized the Roman Church on the usual grounds that one
finds throughout post-Reformation Europe. But there was much more to it than
that. The Reformation had not gone far enough. Luther and Calvin, and others,
had started in the right direction, but had faltered.
One might compare the Protestants to the
Waldenses who were the
contemporaries of the Cathars. The Waldenses were in no way dogmatic and they
spent very little time with questions of esoteric doctrine. They merely wanted
to purify the Church, simplify the services, and end the corruption among the
clergy. In short, they wanted to reform the Church to conform more to the
"simple" Church they believed to have existed during the Acts of the
Apostles. These, basically, were the aims and the results of Protestantism. In
"simplifying" they wanted to reduce the number and complexity of the
sacraments and the stronghold of central authority over matters of faith,
morals, and bureaucracy. The doctrinal disputes were minimal, and for the most
part no more comprehensible that the difference between Catholic
Transubstantiation and Lutheran Consubstantiation. The doctrinal differences
were of very little concern to most of the body of the faithful.
Thus, Luther paid great heed to the literal
interpretation of the whole of the Bible, and rejected tendencies (latent
Catharism?) to excise the Old Testament. The matter of a vernacular Bible was
more important than any process of "purifying" the content. The
Calvinists paid even greater attention to the Old Testament than did the
Catholic Church. The Puritan form even attempted to re-institute the Rule of
judges and the Old Testament theocracy when they came to power in New England,
and many of the True Levellers ("Diggers") attempted to do the same in England.
Luther had the greatest reverence for the literal
word of Paul. The Cathars and other gnostics had made great use of Paul, but in
a way so highly symbolic that a fair statement of the situation might be that
they merely used Paul as a take-off point for their esoteric ideas. It is with
Paul, especially a literal interpretation of Paul, that Rosenberg had his
greatest problem with Christianity. Rosenberg saw in Paul a conclusive
hypocrisy, in that Paul denied the Law, yet paid great attention to the
development of the same Law. He had rejected the Mosaic Code under that name as
too binding, but had attempted to codify a Law for Christians which, Rosenberg
said, was merely the Mosaic Code under a new name.
To Rosenberg, Paul was the grand conspirator. Seeing
that the new religion of Christ could not be defeated, that it threatened
Judaism, the Jews sent Paul to transform it. Because the New Testament blamed
the Jews for the death of Christ ("His blood be upon us") it would
or at least could take on an anti-Jewish character. So the Jews decided,
according to Rosenberg, to send one of their own, in effect sacrificing him, to
redirect Christianity. It was this simple: Christ had come unto his own, and his
own received him not. The Jews were thus outcast. But by redirecting
Christianity, Paul made it seem that the Jews were not outcasts.
Had it not been for Paul, Rosenberg argued,
Christianity would have been as the "heretics" like the Bogomili,
Manichaeans, Paulicans, or Cathars. It would have rejected the Old Testament,
removed the Jews and their Jehovah, and founded an anti-Jewish religion.
We are unusually hard-pressed to discover precisely
how much of the Gnostic anti-cosmic dualistic theology Rosenberg had mastered.
We do not know precisely what books he read or discovered. Neither do we know
precisely what the "Occult Bureau" of the SS had found.
After the fall of the last Cathar stronghold, in
October 1244 A.D. at Montsegur, a few of the group made it through the Roman
Catholic lines and carried off the treasures. Among these was reputed to be a
Holy Grail, and on it the initiate knowledge the Cathar gnosticism required for
salvation. This is the great theme of both Ravenscroft's books, and of
Angebert's The Occult and the Third Reich. Otto
Rahn's Crusade Against the Grail, published
during the pre-war years, suggests that the location of the greatest of the
Cathar treasures was known. Possibly, too, the SS had located long lost books of Cathar theology, or books
showing the esoteric Cathar interpretation of the New Testament books they
accepted. Also, the SS may have located the Cathar commentaries on books long
used by Manichaean sects, including apocryphal books like The Books of Enoch,
the Book of Adam and Eve, The Gospel of Thomas, or The Childhood of Jesus.
Ravenscroft believed that the spear of Longinius had
long before been located, in Vienna, at the treasure-house of the hereditary
Austrian kings. The spear, as he calls it in his book title: The Spear of
Destiny, was to Ravenscroft a talisman of power in and of itself. He
suggested, but did not clearly state, that it may be much more.
We may be puzzled, as an aside, by the movie
Raiders
of the Lost Ark. In a sense, it suggests that a small group knew that the
National Socialists were hunting for certain symbols, such as the Holy Grail and
the Spear of Longinius. In another sense, why was the Ark of the Covenant chosen
in that movie? Nothing I have read about Rosenberg or the Gnostics suggests that
the Ark was remotely of interest.
Other than the miscellaneous writings we have
suggested here, and the Grail, of what did the Cathar treasure consist? More to
the point in this section of the essay, of what did Rosenberg believe it would
consist? And what of that lot did Rosenberg study and consider? Presumably,
Ravenscroft and Angebert, in researching their books, spent much time in
considering answers to these questions. Both agree that Hitler and the National
Socialists possessed the Spear. Neither author is evidently willing to commit to
the Nazis' possession any other specific object or writing. One might even ask
if, indeed, the Cathars had a treasure, and, if they did, if any of it has
survived.
I strongly suspect that somewhere there exists, or
did exist at the end of the war, a substantial amount of very important research
on the whole of the Cathar movement and the presumed great treasure taken from
Montsegur. It would have been gathered for the express purpose of being made
into the basis of the Nordic Christianity that preoccupied both Rosenberg and
Hitler.
Angebert's The Occult and the Third Reich
suggests
that a substantial portion of what the SS gathered on religion was put into use
by the SS under Heinrich Himmler and that a special stronghold had been provided
Himmler for the express purpose of indoctrinating his select SS leaders in the
new cult. Pauwels and Bergier, whose work is most noteworthy for its wild
statements given with absolutely no documentation, say in the Morning of the
Magician that a whole black ritual devoted to Satan worship was offered
selected SS officers. The Black Order was to be devoted to black magic,
demonology and all sorts of evil things. Ravenscroft believed that Hitler was a
black magician and a master of many of the occult sciences.
One might point out that similar charges had been
brought against the Cathars. They had offered a whole new interpretation of
Christianity and had suffered burning at the stake and other painful martyrdoms.
Until the documents which still may exist are released, we can only say that it
is within the context of Rosenberg's published works that he studied what was
available on the Cathars, and perhaps other medieval Manichaeans (in a very
broad definition of Manichaeanism), and that the ideas as he understood them
were to be the basis for a reconstituted Christianity.
It is noteworthy that the Roman Catholic Church
acted swiftly, and for the first time in many centuries attacked a specific
work, Rosenberg's Myth of the 20th Century, in an encyclical entitled Mit
Brennender Sorge. The issuance of an encyclical in the vernacular (German here)
was itself more than slightly irregular and noteworthy. The Roman Catholic
Church has also taken the position of exonerating the Jews for especial guilt in
the death of Christ, placing the blame more universally on all men. That action
has taken place since the Myth of the 20th Century was written and, to
some considerable degree, the encyclical may be viewed as a reaction to
Rosenberg and the National Socialist position.
Surely, nothing fitted in better with the prevailing
thinking of the Third Reich than the Manichaean position on the Jews and the Old
Testament. That it was quite possible to be anti-Jewish and a good Christian at
the same time was a cornerstone of the Nordic approach to Christian doctrine. It
was also important that the medieval Manichaeans could allow that there was a
race of cosmic men who were corrupt and materialistic and ruled by a false,
materialistic god that stood in opposition to a race of pure men, steeped in
rejection of the material world and deeply immersed in the realm of the spark of
the Creator. The statement of the medieval Manichaeans on the race and the
anti-race sounds like a passage plucked from the Nazi Primer.
Bibliographic Essay
Probably the best single-volume introduction to the
various "heresies" is Steven Runciman, The Medieval Manichee (Cambridge,
1955). It gives a simplified overview and a reasonable statement of the times.
E. Broeckx's Le Catharisme (Hoogstraten, 1916) is an excellent source on
this particular religion. Hans Jonas, The Gnostic Religion (Beacon, 1963)
is an excellent coverage of all the major Manichaean religions and gnosticism
generally. Dmitri Obolensky, The Bogomils (Cambridge, 1948) is
authoritative on its subject. F.C. Conybeare discovered and translated an
intriguing book based in Manichaean doctrine, The Key of Truth (Oxford,
1898). The book is as yet undated, but is clearly quite ancient. Modern authors
disagree with Conybeare's introduction. F. Cumont's Recherches sur le
manicheisme (Paris, 1908) is another excellent source on the subject. J.
Guiraud has written an excellent Histoire de Finquisition au moyen age (Paris,
1935-38). A. Borst's Die Katharer is one of the few works in German
published since the war (Stuttgart, 1953). Recent and quite good is H. Soderberg,
La Religion des Cathars (Uppsala, 1949). An old standard is C. Schmidt's Histoire
des Cathars et Albigeois (Paris, 1849). On Rosenberg, I used the only
English language edition, published in 1982 by Noontide Press, of The Myth of
the 20th Century, while checking the original German text. A summary of
Rosenberg's other works can be found in my The Social, Political and
Religious Thought of Alfred Rosenberg (University Press of America, 1982).
The other books noted are: Trevor
Ravenscroft, The
Cup of Destiny (York Beach, Maine: Weiser, 1982) and The Spear of Destiny (New York: Putnam, 1973); Jean-Michel
Angebert, The Occult and the Third
Reich (New York: MacMillan, 1974); and Louis Pauwels and Jacques Bergier, Morning
of the Magician (Paris: Gallimard, 1960).
On the Parsifal legend, one good edition is Jessie
L. Weston, editor, Parzival: A Knightly Legend by Wolfram von Eschenbach,
2 volumes (London: Nutt, 1894). One might also see Helen M. Mustard and Charles
E. Passage, Parzival: A Romance of the Middle Ages (New York: Vintage,
1961).
There has been a new wave of interest in the Cathars
shown in France. Among the more interesting, but not necessarily always
scientific, studies are: Pierre Durban, Actualité du catharisme (Toulouse:
Bible d'or, 1968); Simone Hannedouche, Manicheisme et catharisme (Cahiers
d'études cathares, 1967); Serge Hutin, Les gnostiques (Paris: P.U.F.,
1958) and Les sociétés sécretes (Paris: P.U.F., 1952); Rene Nelli, Le
phenomene cathare (Toulouse: Privat, 1964), Le musée du catharisme (Toulouse:
Privet, 1966) and Ecritures cathares (Paris: Planate, 1968); Fernand Niel, Albigois et cathares
(Paris: P.U.F., 1965) and Montsegur, la montagne
inspirée (Grenoble: Allier, 1967); S. Petrement, Le dualisme chez Platon:
les gnostiques et les manichées (Paris: P.U.F., 1947); HenriCharles Peuch, Le
manicheisme (Paris: S.A.E.P., 1949) and La quete du Graal (Paris:
Stock, 1934); Edouard Schure, Les grands inities (Paris: L.A.P., 1960);
Gerard de Sede, Le tresor cathare (Paris: Julliard, 1966); and Christine
Thouzelfier, Catharisme et valdeisme en Languedoc à la fin du XIIe et au
debut XII1e siècle (Paris: P.U.F., 1967).
Otto Rahn's story of the initial search for the
Grail is told in his La Croisade contre la Graal (Paris: Stock, 1934).
Source: Reprinted from
The Journal of
Historical Review, vol. 4, no. 3, pp. 335-355
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