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The Idea of the Holy Ghost...

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The Idea of the Holy Ghost

 

To try to comprehend the Holy Ghost let us first classify its various names and

characteristics drawn from the gospels and epistles of the Christian bible. It

shows that scarcely any two references to it agree in assigning it the same

character or attributes.

 

John 14:26, the Holy Ghost is a person or personal God.

 

Luke 3:22, the Holy Ghost assumes the form of a dove.

 

Matt. 13:16, the Holy Ghost is a spirit.

 

John 1:32, the Holy Ghost is an inanimate, senseless object.

 

John 5:7, the Holy Ghost is a God—the third member of the Trinity.

 

Acts 2:1; the Holy Ghost is a mighty, rushing wind.

 

Acts 10:38, the Holy Ghost, from its mode of application, is an ointment.

 

John 20:22, the Holy Ghost is the breath, by its being breathed into the mouth

of the recipient after the ancient oriental custom.

 

Acts 2:3, the Holy Ghost sat upon each of them, probably in the form of a bird,

as at Jesus' baptism.

 

Acts 2:1, the Holy Ghost appears as cloven tongues of fire.

 

Luke 2:26, the Holy Ghost is the author of a revelation or inspiration.

 

Acts 8:17, the Holy Ghost is a magnetic aura imparted by the laying on of hands.

 

Mark 1:8, the Holy Ghost is a medium or element for baptism.

 

Acts 28:25, the Holy Ghost appears with vocal organs, and speaks.

 

Heb. 6:4, the Holy Ghost is dealt out or imparted by measure.

 

Luke 3:22, the Holy Ghost appears with a tangible body.

 

Luke 1:5, and many other texts, people are filled with the Holy Ghost.

 

Matt. 11:15, the Holy Ghost falls upon the people as a ponderable substance.

 

Luke 4:1, the Holy Ghost is a God within a God, Jesus being full of the Holy

Ghost.

 

Acts 21:11, the Holy Ghost is a being of the masculine or feminine gender — Thus

saith the Holy Ghost.

 

John 1:32, the Holy Ghost is of the neuter gender, it (the Holy Ghost) abode

upon him.

 

Matt. 1:18, the Holy Ghost, this third member of the Trinity aids the first

member (the Father) in the creation of the second member of the trinity of

bachelor Gods—the Word, or Saviour, or Son of God.

 

 

 

The Holy Ghost surpasses the fabulous changes of the classical gods snd genii.

Indeed many of these fabulous conceptions were drawn from mythological sources.

 

The Christian's Holy Ghost descended as a dove and alighted on Christ's head at

his baptism (Luke 3:22). The Holy Ghost in the shape of a bird – a dove or a

pigeon – is a very ancient pagan tradition. In India, a dove was uniformly the

emblem of the Holy Spirit or Spirit of God. A dove stood for a third member of

the Trinity, and was the regenerator or regeneratory power. Compare this with

Titus (3:5): regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost. A person being

baptized under the Brahminical theocracy was said to be regenerated and born

again, or, they were born into the spirit, or the spirit into them — the dove

into or upon them.

 

In Rome a dove or pigeon was a legendary spirit, the accompaniment of Venus, the

emblem of female procreative energy. It is therefore appropriately shown as

descending at baptism in the character of the third member of the Trinity. The

dove also fills the Grecian oracles with their spirit and power. A dove was, in

several ancient religions, the Spirit of God (Holy Ghost) moving on the face of

the waters at creation (Gen. 1:2), though a pigeon was often substituted. The

dove and the pigeon were used interchangeably.

 

In the ancient Syrian temple of Hierapolis, Semiramis is shown with a dove on

her head, the prototype of the dove on the head of the Christian messiah at

baptism. At the feast of Whitsuntide, the descent of the Holy Ghost was

symbolised in London by a pigeon being let fly out of a hole in the midst of the

roof of the great aisle of St Paul's Cathedral. It is more than likely that this

continues an ancient tradition. On solemn occasions when the Holy Ghost was

expected or invited to descend, it was more than likely that originally no one

in the congregation noticed that it did. The custom therefore arose of

liberating pigeons or doves at the appropriate moment.

 

Naturally, these doves would have been actually ascending, having realised that

they were no longer constrained, but that would not have bothered the faithful

who eventually came to understand the symbolism. In any case, the doves would

most likely have been tame ones bred for the purpose and possibly made no great

effort to escape, like the pigeons in crowded city plazas. So, it is quite

possible that sometimes one of the tame birds did alight on the priest – perhaps

they were trained to do just that. The pictures of priests or gods with a dove

on their head might be depictions of actual rituals.

 

The Holy Ghost was the third member of the Trinity in several Eastern religions

as well as the Gothic and Celtic nations. This notion of a third person in the

godhead was diffused among all the nations of the earth. Father, Son and Holy

Ghost, or Father, Word and Holy Ghost (1 John 5:7) express the divine triad of

which the Holy Ghost was the third member. The Holy Spirit and the Evil Spirit

were, each in their turn, third member of the Trinity.

 

In these triads the third member was not of equal rank with the other two. In

the Theban Trinity, Khonso was inferior to Arion and Mant. In the Hindu triad,

Siva was subordinate to Brahma and Vishnu. The Holy Ghost conception of the

Christian world is an exact correspondence with these older ideas. It has always

stood third in rank after the Father and the Son or the Word, a slave doing all

the hard work and getting little worship for it. Today it is still seldom

addressed in Christian devotion, but perhaps that is because it was so badly

treated that it was not too diligent in its tasks. It was not too good, for

example, at making the holy book of Christianity infallible.

 

 

 

The Holy Ghost was the Holy Breath, which, in the Hindu traditions, moved on the

face of the waters at creation, and imparted vitality into everything created. A

similar conception appears in the scriptures. In Psalms 33:6 the Word of the

Lord made the heavens, and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth. The

Brahminical conception of creation by the Divine Breath, the Holy Ghost, which

was breathed into Adam to make him a living soul. The Prana or principle of life

of the Hindus is the breath of life by which the Brahma, the Creator, animates

the clay to make man a living soul.

 

Holy Ghost, Holy Breath and Holy Wind were equivalent terms for the sigh from

the mouth of the Supreme God, as laid down in pagan traditions. The Holy Wind is

suggested by the mighty rushing wind from heaven, which filled the house on the

day of Pentecost (Acts :2). The Holy Wind is an accepted term for the Holy Ghost

in ancient religions. The doxology, reported by a missionary, in the religious

service of the Syrian church runs thus:

 

Praise to the Holy Spiritual Wind, which is the Holy Ghost; Praise to the three

persons which are one true God.

 

The Hebrew Ruh Elohim, translated Spirit of God (Gen. 1:2) in our version, is

literally, Wind of the Gods. The word Pneuma, of the Greek New Testament, is

sometimes translated Ghost and sometimes Wind, as suited the fancy of the

translators. In John 3:5 the word is Spirit, in verse eight both Wind and

Spirit, and in Luke 1:35 the term is Holy Ghost—all translated from the same

word. In the Greek Testament the word Pneuma is used for Spirit, Holy Ghost,

breath and Wind so that in the Christian Scriptures they are synonymous. An

unwarranted license has been assumed by translators in rendering the same word

different ways.

 

The Holy Ghost appears also as a tongue of fire, which sat upon each of the

apostles in Acts 2:3.

 

Buddha, an incarnate God of the Hindus over two thousand years ago, is often

seen with a glory or tongue of fire upon his head. The visible form of the Holy

Ghost as fire was accepted among the Buddhists, Druids and Etrurians. The Holy

Ghost, or Holy Spirit when visible, was in the form of fire or a bird and was

always accompanied with wisdom and power. The Hindus, Persians and Chaldeans

made offerings to fire, emblem of the Holy Ghost or Holy Spirit as the solar

fire.

 

Holy men of God, like some of the prophets, are considered inspired by the Holy

Ghost (2 Peter 1:21; Acts 28:25). The ancient Celts were moved by the Holy Ghost

and also claimed that their Salic laws (seventy-two in number) were inspired by

the Salo Ghost or Holy Ghost, known also as the Wisdom of the Spirit, or the

Voice of the Spirit.

 

The Holy Ghost imparted by the laying on of hands is also an ancient custom. By

the putting hands on the head of the candidate, the Celts conveyed the Holy

Ghost or Holy Spirit.

 

Baptism by or into the Holy Ghost accompanied with fire (Mt 3:2) is also

traceable to a very ancient period. The Tuscans, or Etrurians, baptized with

fire, wind (ghost) and water. Baptism into the first member of the Trinity, the

Father, was with fire: baptism into the second member of the Trinity, the Word,

was with water: baptism into the third member of the Trinity, the Holy Ghost or

Holy Spirit, was with breath, gas, gast, ghost, wind, or spirit. In ancient

countries, the child was taken to the priest, who named him before the sacred

fire. Then he was sprinkled with holy water from a vessel made of the sacred

tree known as the Holme. To impart the Holy Ghost by breathing (John 20:22), the

priest blew his breath upon the child to transfer the Holy Ghost, thus baptising

the child by air, spiritus sanctus or ghost. The practice of breathing in or

upon was quite common among the ancient heathen.

 

The Holy Ghost as the agent in divine conception, or the procreation of other

Gods. Jesus is said to have been conceived by the Holy Ghost (Mt 1:18), and we

find similar claims of divine procreation via the Holy Ghost in the old

religions. In the Hindu myths, Sakya was conceived by the Holy Ghost Nara-an.

 

Sesostris of Egypt, according to Manetho, asked the oracle: Tell me, O thou

strong in fire! who before me could subjugate all things, and who shall after

me? The oracle rebuked him, saying, First God, then the Word, and with them the

Spirit. And Plutarch, in his Life of Numa, confirms that the incarnation of the

Holy Spirit was known both to the ancient Romans and Egyptians. The doctrine was

nearly universal.

 

The origin of the tradition of the Holy Ghost is easily traced to the

Brahminical trifold conception of God. First is the god of power or might,

Brahma or Brahm, the Father, second is the god of creation, the Word, answering

to John's creative Word (John 1:3), third is the god of generation and

regeneration, the Holy Spirit or Holy Ghost. Under the Brahminical theocracy,

the Holy Ghost was the living, vital, active, life-imparting agent.

 

The Holy Ghost in the Christian Scripture is the agent of Christ's conception,

because, as Matthew declares, he was conceived by the Holy Ghost. The Holy Ghost

was also the regenerating agent at his baptism, although Luke, who relates it,

does not say why the Holy Spirit in the form of a bird, alighted and sat upon

his head. The reason is nevertheless fully disclosed in the older mythical

religions. Christians claim baptism imparts a new spiritual life—they are born

again. This new spirit appeared as a dove or a pigeon.

 

The spirit was originally female so that the Trinity consisted of two masculine

principles and a feminine one, the latter being the procreative or regenerative

principle. At the imposition of Patriarchy the sex of the Holy Ghost altered

from female to neuter.

 

The primary windy idea of the Holy Ghost is traceable to that early period of

society when the untutored people of the earth in their ignorance of nature

easily believed that movement signified the passage of a god.

 

The Buddhists had their god Vasus, who manifested himself as fire, wind, storms,

gas, ghosts, gusts, and the breath, thus being nearly a counterpart of the

Christian Holy Ghost. This god sprang from the supreme, primordial God, who was

to Brahmins and Buddhists a fine, spiritual substance—aura, anima, wind, ether,

igneous fluid, or electrical fire or fire from the sun, giving rise to baptism

by fire. The third member of the Trinity, subsequently seems to have arisen from

this being and had the same properties.

 

What was a sin against the Holy Ghost and why was it unpardonable? It was

refusing to allow the Holy Ghost to effect the second birth. Since baptism by

whatever means into the Holy Ghost was the only means of redeeming sins against

the Father or the Son, the refusal or prevention of baptism meant there could be

no forgiveness. It was the only route so could not be avoided if sin was to be

pardoned. An offence committed against the third limb of the Godhead barred the

door to forgiveness, in this life or that to come. To sin against the Holy Ghost

was to block the path by which the door of heaven was to be reached.

 

©Copyright Knowledge of Reality Magazine 1996-2006. All rights reserved.

 

http://www.sol.com.au/kor/22_01.htm

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