The Two Babylons Chapter V Section IV
The
Rosary and the Worship of the Sacred Heart
Every one knows how thoroughly Romanist
is the use of the rosary; and how the devotees of Rome mechanically tell their
prayers upon their beads. The rosary, however, is no invention of the Papacy. It
is of the highest antiquity, and almost universally found among Pagan nations.
The rosary was used as a sacred instrument among the ancient Mexicans. It is
commonly employed among the Brahmins of Hindustan; and in the Hindoo sacred
books reference is made to it again and again. Thus, in an account of the death
of Sati, the wife of Shiva, we find the rosary introduced: "On hearing of this
event, Shiva fainted from grief; then, having recovered, he hastened to the
banks of the river of heaven, where he beheld lying the body of his beloved
Sati, arrayed in white garments, holding a rosary in her hand, and
glowing with splendour, bright as burnished gold." In Thibet it has been used
from time immemorial, and among all the millions in the East that adhere to the
Buddhist faith. The following, from Sir John F. Davis, will show how it is
employed in China: "From the Tartar religion of the Lamas, the rosary of 108
beads has become a part of the ceremonial dress attached to the nine grades of
official rank. It consists of a necklace of stones and coral, nearly as large as
a pigeon's egg, descending to the waist, and distinguished by various beads,
according to the quality of the wearer. There is a small rosary of eighteen
beads, of inferior size, with which the bonzes count their prayers and
ejaculations exactly as in the Romish ritual. The laity in China sometimes
wear this at the wrist, perfumed with musk, and give it the name of Heang-choo,
or fragrant beads." In Asiatic Greece the rosary was commonly used, as may be
seen from the image of the Ephesian Diana. In Pagan Rome the same appears to
have been the case. The necklaces which the Roman ladies wore were not merely
ornamental bands about the neck, but hung down the breast, just as the modern
rosaries do; and the name by which they were called indicates the use to which
they were applied. "Monile," the ordinary word for a necklace, can have
no other meaning than that of a "Remembrancer." Now, whatever might be the
pretence, in the first instance, for the introduction of such "Rosaries" or "Remembrancers,"
the very idea of such a thing is thoroughly Pagan. * It supposes that a certain
number of prayers must be regularly gone over; it overlooks the grand demand
which God makes for the heart, and leads those who use them to believe that form
and routine are everything, and that "they must be heard for their much
speaking."
* "Rosary" itself seems to be from
the Chaldee "Ro," "thought," and "Shareh," "director."
In the Church of Rome a new kind of
devotion has of late been largely introduced, in which the beads play an
important part, and which shows what new and additional strides in the direction
of the old Babylonian Paganism the Papacy every day is steadily making. I refer
to the "Rosary of the Sacred Heart." It is not very long since the worship of
the "Sacred Heart" was first introduced; and now, everywhere it is the favourite
worship. It was so in ancient Babylon, as is evident from the Babylonian system
as it appeared in Egypt. There also a "Sacred Heart" was venerated. The "Heart"
was one of the sacred symbols of Osiris when he was born again, and appeared as
Harpocrates, or the infant divinity, * borne in the arms of his mother Isis.
* The name Harpocrates, as shown by
Bunsen, signifies "Horus, the child."
Therefore, the fruit of the Egyptian
Persea was peculiarly sacred to him, from its resemblance to the "HUMAN HEART."
Hence this infant divinity was frequently represented with a heart, or the
heart-shaped fruit of the Persea, in one of his hands (Fig.
40). The following extract, from John Bell's criticism on the
antiques in the Picture Gallery of Florence, will show that the boyish divinity
had been represented elsewhere also in ancient times in the same manner.
Speaking of a statue of Cupid, he says it is "a fair, full, fleshy, round boy,
in fine and sportive action, tossing back a heart." Thus the boy-god came
to be regarded as the "god of the heart," in other words, as Cupid, or the god
of love. To identify this infant divinity, with his father "the mighty hunter,"
he was equipped with "bow and arrows"; and in the hands of the poets, for the
amusement of the profane vulgar, this sportive boy-god was celebrated as taking
aim with his gold-tipped shafts at the hearts of mankind. His real character,
however, as the above statement shows, and as we have seen reason already to
conclude, was far higher and of a very different kind. He was the woman's seed.
Venus and her son Cupid, then, were none other than the Madonna and the child.
Looking at the subject in this light, the real force and meaning of the language
will appear, which Virgil puts into the mouth of Venus, when addressing the
youthful Cupid:--
"My son, my strength,
whose mighty power alone
Controls the thunderer on his awful throne,
To thee thy much afflicted mother flies,
And on thy succour and thy faith relies."
From what we have seen already as to
the power and glory of the Goddess Mother being entirely built on the
divine character attributed to her Son, the reader must see how exactly
this is brought out, when the Son is called "THE STRENGTH" of his Mother. As the
boy-god, whose symbol was the heart, was recognised as the god of
childhood, this very satisfactorily accounts for one of the peculiar customs of
the Romans. Kennett tells us, in his Antiquities, that the Roman youths,
in their tender years, used to wear a golden ornament suspended from their
necks, called bulla, which was hollow, and heart-shaped. Barker,
in his work on Cilicia, while admitting that the Roman bulla was heart-shaped,
further states, that "it was usual at the birth of a child to name it after some
divine personage, who was supposed to receive it under his care"; but that the
"name was not retained beyond infancy, when the bulla was given up." Who so
likely to be the god under whose guardianship the Roman children were put, as
the god under one or other of his many names whose express symbol they wore, and
who, while he was recognised as the great and mighty war-god, who also
exhibited himself in his favourite form as a little child?
The veneration of the "sacred heart"
seems also to have extended to India, for there Vishnu, the Mediatorial god, in
one of his forms, with the mark of the wound in his foot, in consequence
of which he died, and for which such lamentation is annually made, is
represented as wearing a heart suspended on his breast (Fig.
41). It is asked, How came it that the "Heart" became the
recognised symbol of the Child of the great Mother? The answer is, "The Heart"
in Chaldee is "BEL"; and as, at first, after the check given to idolatry, almost
all the most important elements of the Chaldean system were introduced under a
veil, so under that veil they continued to be shrouded from the gaze of the
uninitiated, after the first reason--the reason of fear--had long ceased to
operate. Now, the worship of the "Sacred Heart" was just, under a symbol, the
worship of the "Sacred Bel," that mighty one of Babylon, who had died a
martyr for idolatry; for Harpocrates, or Horus, the infant god, was regarded as
Bel, born again. That this was in very deed the case, the following extract from
Taylor, in one of his notes to his translation of the Orphic Hymns, will
show. "While Bacchus," says he, was "beholding himself" with admiration "in a
mirror, he was miserably torn to pieces by the Titans, who, not content with
this cruelty, first boiled his members in water, and afterwards roasted them in
the fire; but while they were tasting his flesh thus dressed, Jupiter, excited
by the steam, and perceiving the cruelty of the deed, hurled his thunder at the
Titans, but committed his members to Apollo, the brother of Bacchus, that they
might be properly interred. And this being performed, Dionysius [i.e., Bacchus],
(whose HEART, during his laceration, was snatched away by Minerva and preserved)
by a new REGENERATION, again emerged, and he being restored to his pristine life
and integrity, afterwards filled up the number of the gods." This surely shows,
in a striking light, the peculiar sacredness of the heart of
Bacchus; and that the regeneration of his heart has the very meaning I
have attached to it--viz., the new birth or new incarnation of Nimrod or Bel.
When Bel, however was born again as a child, he was, as we have seen,
represented as an incarnation of the sun. Therefore, to indicate his connection
with the fiery and burning sun, the "sacred heart" was frequently represented as
a "heart of flame." So the "Sacred Heart" of Rome is actually worshipped
as a flaming heart, as may be seen on the rosaries devoted to that
worship. Of what use, then, is it to say that the "Sacred Heart" which Rome
worships is called by the name of "Jesus," when not only is the devotion given
to a material image borrowed from the worship of the Babylonian Antichrist, but
when the attributes ascribed to that "Jesus" are not the attributes of
the living and loving Saviour, but the genuine attributes of the ancient Moloch
or Bel?