<This short text gives an
unusually lucid overview of the foundations of Hermetic thought. The stress
on rejection of the body and its pleasures, and on the division of humanity
into those with Mind and those without, are reminiscent of some of the
so-called "Gnostic" writings of the same period. The idea that the division
is a matter of choice, on the other hand, is a pleasant variation on the
almost Calvinist flavor of writings such as the Apocalypse of
Adam.
<Mead speculates that the
imagery of the Cup in this text may have a distant connection, by way of
unorthodox ideas about Communion, with the legends of the Holy Grail. - JMG>
1. Hermes: With Reason
(Logos), not with hands, did the World-maker make the universal World; so
that thou shouldst think of him as everywhere and ever-being, the Author of
all things, and One and Only, who by His Will all beings hath created.
This Body of Him is a
thing no man can touch, or see, or measure, a body inextensible, like to no
other frame. 'Tis neither Fire nor Water, Air nor Breath; yet all of them
come from it. Now being Good he willed to consecrate this [Body] to Himself
alone, and set its Earth in order and adorn it.
2. So down [to Earth] He
sent the Cosmos of this Frame Divine - man, a life that cannot die, and yet
a life that dies. And o'er [all other] lives and over Cosmos [too], did man
excel by reason of the Reason (Logos) and the Mind. For contemplator of
God's works did man become; he marvelled and did strive to know their
Author.
3. Reason (Logos) indeed,
O Tat, among all men hath He distributed, but Mind not yet; not that He
grudgeth any, for grudging cometh not from Him, but hath its place below,
within the souls of men who have no Mind.
Tat: Why then did God, O
father, not on all bestow a share of Mind?
H: He willed, my son, to
have it set up in the midst for souls, just as it were a prize.
4. T: And where hath He
set it up?
H: He filled a mighty Cup
with it, and sent it down, joining a Herald [to it], to whom He gave command
to make this proclamation to the hearts of men:
Baptize thyself with this
Cup's baptism, what heart can do so, thou that hast faith thou canst ascend
to him that hath sent down the Cup, thou that dost know for what thoudidst
come into being!
As many then as
understood the Herald's tidings and doused themselves in Mind, became
partakers in the Gnosis; and when they had "received the Mind" they were
made "perfect men".
But they who do not
understand the tidings, these, since they possess the aid of Reason [only]
and not Mind, are ignorant wherefor they have come into being and whereby.
5. The senses of such men
are like irrational creatures'; and as their [whole] make-up is in their
feelings and their impulses, they fail in all appreciation of <lit.: "they
do not wonder at"> those things which really are worth contemplation. These
center all their thought upon the pleasures of the body and its appetites,
in the belief that for its sake man hath come into being.
But they who have
received some portion of God's gift, these, Tat, if we judge by their deeds,
have from Death's bonds won their release; for they embrace in their own
Mind all things, things on the earth, things in the heaven, and things above
the heaven - if there be aught. And having raised themselves so far they
sight the Good; and having sighted it, they look upon their sojourn here as
a mischance; and in disdain of all, both things in body and the bodiless,
they speed their way unto that One and Only One.
6. This is, O Tat, the
Gnosis of the Mind, Vision of things Divine; God-knowledge is it, for the
Cup is God's.
T: Father, I, too, would
be baptized.
H: Unless thou first
shall hate thy Body, son, thou canst not love thy Self. But if thou lov'st
thy Self thou shalt have Mind, and having Mind thou shalt share in the
Gnosis.
T: Father, what dost thou
mean?
H: It is not possible, my
son, to give thyself to both - I mean to things that perish and to things
divine. For seeing that existing things are twain, Body and Bodiless, in
which the perishing and the divine are understood, the man who hath the will
to choose is left the choice of one or the other; for it can never be the
twain should meet. And in those souls to whom the choice is left, the waning
of the one causes the other's growth to show itself.
7. Now the choosing of
the Better not only proves a lot most fair for him who makes the choice,
seeing it makes the man a God, but also shows his piety to God. Whereas the
[choosing] of the Worse, although it doth destroy the "man", it doth only
disturb God's harmony to this extent, that as processions pass by in the
middle of the way, without being able to do anything but take the road from
others, so do such men move in procession through the world led by their
bodies' pleasures.
8. This being so, O Tat,
what comes from God hath been and will be ours; but that which is dependent
on ourselves, let this press onward and have no delay, for 'tis not God,
'tis we who are the cause of evil things, preferring them to good.
Thou see'st, son, how
many are the bodies through which we have to pass, how many are the choirs
of daimones, how vast the system of the star-courses [through which our Path
doth lie], to hasten to the One and Only God.
For to the Good there is
no other shore; It hath no bounds; It is without an end; and for Itself It
is without beginning, too, though unto us it seemeth to have one - the
Gnosis.
9. Therefore to It Gnosis
is no beginning; rather is it [that Gnosis doth afford] to us the first
beginning of its being known.
Let us lay hold,
therefore, of the beginning. and quickly speed through all [we have to
pass].
`Tis very hard, to leave
the things we have grown used to, which meet our gaze on every side, and
turn ourselves back to the Old Old [Path].
Appearances delight us,
whereas things which appear not make their believing hard.
Now evils are the more
apparent things, whereas the Good can never show Itself unto the eyes, for
It hath neither form nor figure.
Therefore the Good is
like Itself alone, and unlike all things else; or `tis impossible that That
which hath no body should make Itself apparent to a body.
10. The "Like's"
superiority to the "Unlike" and the "Unlike's" inferiority unto the "Like"
consists in this:
The Oneness being Source
and Root of all, is in all things as Root and Source. Without [this] Source
is naught; whereas the Source [Itself] is from naught but itself, since it
is Source of all the rest. It is Itself Its Source, since It may have no
other Source.
The Oneness then being
Source, containeth every number, but is contained by none; engendereth every
number, but is engendered by no other one.
11. Now all that is
engendered is imperfect, it is divisible, to increase subject and to
decrease; but with the Perfect [One] none of these things doth hold. Now
that which is increasable increases from the Oneness, but succumbs through
its own feebleness when it no longer can contain the One.
And now, O Tat, God's
Image hath been sketched for thee, as far as it can be; and if thou wilt
attentively dwell on it and observe it with thine heart's eyes, believe me,
son, thou'lt find the Path that leads above; nay, that Image shall become
thy Guide itself, because the Sight [Divine] hath this peculiar [charm], it
holdeth fast and draweth unto it those who succeed in opening their eyes,
just as, they say, the magnet [draweth] iron.