GREAT THEOSOPHISTS
APOLLONIUS OF TYANA
First Century AD
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THEOSOPHY, Vol. 24, No. 9, July, 1936
(Pages 385-395; Size: 30K)
(Number 4 of a 29-part series) GREAT THEOSOPHISTS
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Human beings who do not want to belong to
the mass need only to stop, and not be comfortable;
follow their conscience, which cries out:
"Be yourself! All you are now doing,
thinking, desiring, is not you yourself."...your
educators can be only your liberators...
—Schopenhauer as Educator, §1 - From Untimely Meditationsm
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APOLLONIUS OF TYANA
THE great Theosophist of the first century
B. C. was Jesus the Christ. The great Theosophist
of the first century A. D. was Apollonius
of Tyana. The lives of these two men are
marked by striking similarities and by equally
striking differences. The similarities are
found in their aim, purpose and teaching,
and are explained by the fact that both were
members of that great Fraternity of Perfected
Men who stand behind the Theosophical Movement.
The differences are found in their personal
lives and in the way they presented their
philosophy.
Jesus is not an historical character. The
great historians of the first two centuries
do not mention him. As Moncure D. Conway
says in Modern Thought:
"The world has been for a long time
engaged in writing lives of Jesus. In the
fourth gospel it is said: 'There are also
many other things that Jesus did, the which,
if they should be written every one, I suppose
that even the world itself could not contain
the books that should be written. Amen.'
The library of such books has grown since
then. But when we come to examine them, one
startling fact confronts us: all of these
books relate to a personage concerning whom
there does not exist a single scrap of contemporary
information -- not one! By accepted tradition
he was born in the reign of Augustus, the
great literary age of the nation of which
he was a subject. In the Augustan age historians
flourished; poets, orators, critics and travelers
abounded. Yet not one mentions the name of
Jesus Christ, much less any incident in his
life." Apollonius of Tyana was, on the
contrary, a well-known historical figure.
The parents of Jesus -- whoever they were
-- were obscure and humble people. Apollonius
belonged to a prominent and well-known family,
whose ancestors had founded the city of Tyana
where he was born. The friends and disciples
of Jesus were drawn from the poorer classes.
Apollonius was the friend of Kings and Emperors.
He was at one time the personal adviser of
the Emperor Vespasian, and the great Emperor-philosopher
Marcus Aurelius admitted that he owed his
philosophy to Apollonius.
"From Apollonius I have learned freedom
of will and understanding, steadiness of
purpose, and to look to nothing else, not
even for a moment, except to reason."
(Marcus Aurelius). Jesus was not one of the
travelling Adepts. There is no record of
his having been in any country save his own
native Judea and Egypt. Apollonius was the
most famous traveller of his day. He visited
every country in the then known world with
the exception of Britain, Germany and China.
He travelled extensively through Italy, Greece,
Spain, Africa, Asia Minor, Persia and India,
teaching wherever he went. In Athens, Apollonius
taught from the same porch which had once
echoed to the wisdom of Socrates. He lectured
on the island of Samos, where Pythagoras
had conducted his school. He spoke in the
grounds where Plato's Academy had stood.
He taught in the Temple of Apollo in Delphi,
above the entrance of which were engraved
those immortal words: Man, know thyself!
He was teaching in Crete on the day of the
great eruption of Vesuvius, when the cities
of Pompeii and Herculaneum were destroyed.
He taught in Italy, Spain and northern Africa,
which was then called Mauretania. He lived
for a long time in the city of Alexandria,
holding his classes in the Temple of Serapis.
He went up the Nile as far as Thebes and
Karnak. He celebrated the festival of Neith
in the ancient city of Saïs, where stands
the ever-veiled statue of this goddess with
its inscription: I am all that has been,
and is, and shall be, and my veil no mortal
has withdrawn. And all of these travels were
carefully recorded and preserved.
Jesus left nothing in writing. Apollonius
was the author of a voluminous philosophical
literature. All of his works were collected
by the Emperor Hadrian, and preserved in
his palace at Antium. The records of Apollonius'
life in Greece are so important that, were
it not for the works of Apollonius and the
books of Pausanius, we would have had no
history of Greece between the year 52 B.
C. and the fifth century A. D.
There is, unfortunately, no accurate record
of Jesus' life. The one most commonly accepted
is found in the four Gospels. But this record
was not written by Jesus himself, nor by
any of his immediate disciples. As Fauste,
the great Manichean of the third century
writes:
"Every one knows that the Evangeliums
were written neither by Jesus nor his apostles,
but long after their time by some unknown
persons, who, judging well that they would
hardly be believed when telling of things
they had not seen themselves, headed their
narratives with the names of the apostles
or of disciples contemporaneous with the
latter." The record of Apollonius' life
is, on the contrary, quite complete. It was
written by a personal friend and devoted
disciple of Apollonius who was his constant
companion for more than fifty years, and
who made a daily report of all that Apollonius
did or said during that time. This record
was transcribed and put into book form by
one of the most famous historians of the
day, and was published in the year 210 A.
D. -- over a hundred years before the Gospels
appeared. The compiler of this book was Philostratus,
who is called the Talleyrand of the second
century. He was a famous scholar, the author
of a large number of philosophical and historical
books, and the close friend of the Emperor
Severus and his wife, Julia Domna. Severus
was a Neo-Platonist and Julia Domna was one
of the most famous women in history. She
was a philosopher of note, and surrounded
herself with the greatest intellects of the
day. She also founded one of the great libraries
of that age, which was subsequently "cleared
of its philosophical chaff" by the Christian
Emperor Justinian, and completely destroyed
in the sixth century by Pope Gregory.
The Emperor Severus and his wife were great
admirers of Apollonius, and it was at the
Empress' request that Philostratus compiled
his Life of Apollonius from the manuscripts
which had been entrusted to her care. A copy
of this work, written in Greek, may be found
in the Library of Congress. No English translation
appeared until the year 1809. In that year
the Reverend Edward Berwick, Vicar of Leixlip,
Ireland, published his own translation with
profuse apologies to the Christian world
for the similarities
(which all would notice) between the life
of Jesus and that of Apollonius.
The world today may be unaware of those similarities.
The world of the second and third centuries
was only too well aware of them. The Church
of that day was basing its claim of Jesus'
divinity upon the miracles that he is said
to have performed. But Apollonius was performing
the same miracles before their very eyes,
and at the same time refusing to call them
miracles, claiming them to be but expressions
of natural law. One day Apollonius met a
funeral procession, bearing the body of a
young girl who had just died. He stopped
the procession with these words: "Set
down the bier, and I will dry the tears being
shed for this maid." In a few moments
the maid arose and joined her friends. Apollonius
was asked how such "miracles" were
possible, and answered:
"There is no death of anything save
in appearance. That which passes over from
essence to nature seems to be birth, and
what passes over from nature to essence seems
to be death. Nothing really is originated,
and nothing ever perishes; but only now comes
into sight and now vanishes. It appears by
reason of the density of matter, and disappears
by reason of the tenuity of essence. But
it is always the same, differing only in
motion and condition." The "miracles"
performed by Apollonius caused great consternation
in the young Christian Church. Justin Martyr,
the great Church Father of the second century,
pertinently asked: "How is it that the
talismans of Apollonius have power over certain
members of creation, for they prevent, as
we see, the fury of the waves, the violence
of the winds, and the attacks of wild beasts.
And whilst Our Lord's miracles are preserved
by tradition alone, those of Apollonius are
most numerous, and actually manifested in
present facts, so as to lead astray all beholders?"
Ralston Skinner, author of the Source of
Measures, believes that this similarity "serves
to explain why the Life of Apollonius of
Tyana by Philostratus has been so carefully
kept back from translation and popular reading."
He says that those who have studied this
work in the original are forced to the conclusion
that either the Life of Apollonius has been
taken from the New Testament, or the New
Testament from Philostratus' work. As the
New Testament did not appear until a hundred
years after the publication of Philostratus'
book, the reader is left to draw his own
conclusions. Philostratus probably knew the
commotion his book would cause in the Christian
world. Possibly he wrote it for that very
reason. For he was a devoted admirer of Pythagoras,
and as such must have taken pleasure in bringing
into public notice the noble character of
one who was a strict and zealous follower
of the Pythagorean School. In defending the
position of Apollonius, Philostratus says:
"Some consider him as one of the Magi(1),
because he conversed with the Magi of Babylon
and the Brahmans of India and the Gymnosophists
of Egypt. But even his wisdom is reviled
as being acquired by the magic art, so erroneous
are the opinions formed of him. Whereas Empedocles
and Pythagoras and Democritus, though they
conversed with the same Magi, and advanced
many paradoxical sentiments, have not fallen
under the like imputation. Even Plato, who
travelled in Egypt, and blended with his
doctrines many opinions collected there from
the priests and prophets, incurred not such
a suspicion, though envied above all men
on account of his superior wisdom."
Philostratus, then, must be admired as one
of those who called for a restitution of
borrowed robes, and the vindication of calumniated,
but glorious reputations. And in bringing
certain parts of this old book, (now long
out of print) to the notice of Theosophical
students, the same object is kept in view.
This book, like all others of a similar character,
has both a literal and a symbolic meaning.
If it is studied symbolically, it will be
found to contain the whole of the Hermetic
philosophy. Apollonius' journey to India
represents the trials of a neophyte, and
his conversations with the Sages of Kashmir
would, if properly interpreted, give the
esoteric catechism. Many of the secret dogmas
of Hermes are explained in symbolical language
by the great Adept Iarchas, and his words
would disclose, if understood, some of the
most important secrets of nature.
Apollonius was born in the year 1 A. D. in
the Greek town of Tyana in Cappadocia. He
came of an ancient and aristocratic line,
and was brought up in wealth and luxury.
His birth, like that of most great Teachers,
was out of the ordinary.
"Whilst his mother was of child with
him, Proteus the Egyptian God appeared to
her. The woman asked him what she should
bring forth. To which he replied: 'Thou shalt
bring forth me!' This you may suppose excited
her curiosity to ask again who he was, and
he said he was the Egyptian God Proteus."
When his mother neared the time of her delivery,
she was told to go to a certain meadow and
gather flowers. When she approached the meadow,
a flock of swans formed a circle around her,
singing and clapping their wings. At the
moment of Apollonius' birth, a thunderbolt
came out of the sky, arose to heaven and
disappeared in the blue. The child Apollonius
possessed great intelligence. At the age
of fourteen he was sent to the city of Tarsus,
then a place of great learning and culture.
But Apollonius would not rest until he had
gained his father's permission to leave Tarsus
and go to Aegea, where he hoped to find a
more congenial atmosphere and a greater opportunity
for philosophical study. In Aegea he soon
contacted disciples of the Pythagorean School,
and at the age of sixteen he adopted the
Pythagorean discipline. From that time on
he ate no meat, drank no wine, wore clothes
made entirely of plant fibres, and allowed
his hair to grow long. There he entered the
Temple of Aesculapius, was initiated by the
priests, and learned the art of healing as
Jesus had learned it with the Therapeutae
in Egypt. Later he turned the Temple of Aesculapius
into a Lyceum similar in character to the
Lyceums founded by Pericles, Cicero and Aristotle.
Finally he took a vow of silence which lasted
for five years, during which period he never
uttered a word.
At the end of his stay in Aegea he went to
Antioch, where he taught for many years.
The platform of his work is described by
one of his biographers, Daniel M. Tredwell.
"He maintained that the only good was
moral excellence, the only true satisfaction,
independence of external circumstances, and
consequently held that wealth was an obstacle
to the development of virtue. The whole of
his life was spent, the whole of his teachings
are founded, on the idea that all men are
called to receive and practice truth. He
speaks and acts as a reformer everywhere.
He had no narrow notions of nationality,
no local clique to serve. He came to no chosen
people, but to all mankind." All during
those years his thoughts had been fixed on
far-off India where he had been told that
those Mahatmas lived who stood nearest to
the source of wisdom. During his stay in
Antioch he had acquired seven disciples.
But when he spoke of a journey to India,
their enthusiasm waned. And so he finally
set off on his journey accompanied only by
two scribes, one of whom could write rapidly,
the other beautifully. When he reached the
city of Ninus, a young man by the name of
Damis attached himself to Apollonius and
accompanied him throughout all his subsequent
wanderings. It was Damis who wrote the account
of Apollonius' travels which Philostratus
compiled at the request of the Empress Julia
Domna. After all their arrangements had been
completed, the wanderers set out upon their
long journey, which would carry them into
new and strange places and finally lead them
into the presence of the Masters. Their first
resting place was the city of Babylon, where
Apollonius met the Magi and was initiated
by them into the Chaldean Mysteries. The
King of Babylon became his friend and furnished
him with camels and a guide for his trip.
It was early spring when Apollonius and Damis
began their long journey. We can see them,
mounted upon their camels, crossing the desert
wastes of Arabia, finally reaching the rose-scented
land of Persia where Omar, a thousand years
later, begged that he might be buried "so
that roses might blow over his tomb."
They were received everywhere with enthusiasm,
for their caravan was headed by a camel wearing
an ornament of gold, proclaiming to the world
that friends of the King of Babylon were
upon the road.
And all through the sultry days, lulled by
the sleepy tinkle of the camel bells, Apollonius
talked with his friend Damis. Sometimes they
laughed and spoke of trivial things. But
Apollonius always tried to bring the mind
of his friend to the consideration of spiritual
matters, using the commonplace to illustrate
the divine. One day, shortly after they had
begun their ascent of the Hindu Kush, Apollonius
said to Damis:
"Pray tell me, Damis, where were we
yesterday?" "On the plain,"
answered Damis.
"And where are we today?"
"On the Caucusus, if I am not mistaken."
"Then," said Apollonius, "yesterday
we were below; today we are above. In what
respect do these conditions differ?"
"In this," said Damis, "that
yesterday's journey has been made by many
travellers; but this day's journey has been
made by the few."
And so, in this simple manner, Apollonius
was able to call the attention of his friend
to the Path and the Few that find it. On
another day they were watching the great
white eagles that soared majestically above
their heads. And Apollonius used this occasion
to tell his friend the story of Prometheus
and how it symbolized the Egos who incarnated
in men long, long ago. Then he explained
the Indian origin of the Greek myths, and
told Damis that
"The Greeks and Indians have different
opinions about Bacchus. The Indians affirm
that Bacchus was the son of the River Indus,
and that the Theban Bacchus was his disciple."
At last they reached the city of Taxila,
which lies near the modern city of Rawalpindi,
close to the border of Kashmir. In front
of the city walls stood a large Temple made
of porphyry and enriched with ornaments of
gold. There they rested until the King was
ready to receive them, and there Apollonius,
speaking of the art of painting, told Damis
how the mind itself paints indelible pictures
on the astral light(2). Apollonius found
the King of Taxila a philosopher and a disciple
of the very Mahatmas he was seeking. The
King gave him the necessary requirements
for one who wished to study with the Masters.
He said:
"A young man must go beyond the Hyphasis
and see the men to whom you are going. When
he comes into their presence, he must make
a public declaration of studying philosophy;
and they have it in their power, if they
think proper, to refuse admitting him to
their society if he does not come pure. And
when no stigma is discovered, the youth's
character is then examined. Such information
as relates to the candidates individually,
is acquired by a minute investigation of
their looks. Wise men, and such as are deep
read in nature, see the tempers and dispositions
of men just as they see objects in a mirror.
In this country philosophy is deemed of such
high price, and so honored by the Indians,
that it is very necessary to have all examined
who approach her." When Apollonius and
Damis took their departure, they carried
with them a letter from the King of Taxila
to the Sages of Kashmir: "King Phroates
to Iarchas, his Master; and to the Wise Men
with him -- health. Apollonius, a man famed
for wisdom, thinks you have more knowledge
than himself, and goes to be instructed in
it. Send him away learned in all you know,
and believe that nothing you teach him will
be lost."
According to the description given by Philostratus,
the travellers must have taken the same route
across the mountains that goes from Rawalpindi
at the present day. They must have followed
the gorge of the Hyphasis (now the Jhelum
river) and watched it foaming and swirling
between its ochre banks. They travelled through
the great deodar forests, and may have stopped
for a moment at the spot where Vishnu is
said to have rested after the Great Flood.
They caught their first glimpse of the Valley
of Kashmir in the late summer, when the roses
and lotus are in full bloom. What they thought
of this "emerald valley set in a rim
of pearls," Damis does not say. His
mind was occupied with the tales that Apollonius
told him of the Dragons who lived in the
hills. But the Theosophist knows that the
Dragons that Apollonius was seeking were
the Nagas, or Sages of Kashmir. At last they
reached the hill where the Wise Men lived.
It rose majestically from the plain, defended
on all sides by an immense pile of rocks.
There was a Castle on the top of the hill.
Apollonius could see the entrance to the
Castle, but Damis could see only the cloud
that enveloped it.
As soon as they had dismounted from their
camels, a messenger from the Masters appeared,
wearing a caduceus on his brow. He brought
Apollonius a letter of welcome from the Wise
Men on the Hill. When Apollonius was conducted
into their presence, their Chief -- Iarchas
-- addressed him in Greek, minutely describing
the journey which had brought him to Kashmir.
Apollonius, following the instructions given
to him by the King of Taxila, asked Iarchas
if he would instruct him in philosophy. Iarchas
replied:
"I will, with all my heart, for the
communication of knowledge is much more becoming
the character of philosophy than the concealment
of what ought to be known." Then Iarchas
begged Apollonius to propose whatever questions
he pleased, "for you know you speak
with men who know all things." Remembering
the inscription carved over the entrance
of the Temple of Apollo in Delphi, Apollonius
asked: "Do you know yourselves?"
Iarchas answered: "We know all things
because we know ourselves. For there is not
one among us who would have been admitted
to the study of philosophy had he not had
that previous knowledge." Apollonius
then asked: "As what, then, do you consider
yourselves?" "As Gods," Iarchas
replied. "And why Gods?" said Apollonius.
"Because we are good men," was
the answer.
This conversation led naturally to a discussion
of the Soul, and Apollonius inquired what
their teaching was in regard to the Soul.
"The same," said Iarchas, "as
was delivered to you by Pythagoras, and by
us to the Egyptians." This statement,
so strange to modern ears, could not have
been a surprise to Apollonius. For both Homer
and Herodotus had spoken of that colony of
dark-skinned Aryans, known as the Eastern
Ethiopians, who had taken their civilization
and their arts from India to Egypt in pre-Vedic
days. Iarchas spoke at great length about
these Eastern Ethiopians, saying: "There
was a time when this country was inhabited
by the Ethiopians, an Indian nation. Ethiopia
did not then exist. Whilst the Ethiopians
lived in this country now possessed by us,
and were obedient to a sovereign named Ganges,
they had all the productions of the earth
in plenty." Apollonius must have had
many opportunities, during his stay in Kashmir,
to observe the relics of this ancient connection
between Kashmir, Ceylon and Egypt. For even
today there is a little island in the very
center of the Valley called Lanka, which
is the ancient name of Ceylon. And the grand
old mountain that stands like a sentinel
overlooking the Valley is called Hari-mouk,
the name under which the Egyptians once worshipped
the Sphinx. Iarchas told Apollonius many
things about the state of the country when
it was inhabited by the Eastern Ethiopians,
and informed him that he was speaking from
personal knowledge, as he himself had been
this same King Ganges in a former incarnation.
He then
"... asked Apollonius if he could tell
the last body in which he appeared, and in
what condition of life he was before the
one he was in at present. To this Apollonius
replied: 'As it was ignoble, I remember little
of it.' 'What?' said Iarchas, 'do you consider
the being pilot of an Egyptian vessel as
ignoble? For I know you were one!'
'You are right,' said Apollonius, 'I was.'"
Apollonius spent thirteen years with the
Sages of Kashmir, and at the end of his visit
Iarchas gave him seven rings, which he was
told to wear alternately during the seven
days of the week, according to the particular
planet that gave its name to the day. When
he was ready to depart, Iarchas furnished
him with camels, and at the end of ten days
he had reached the sea. From there he sent
back a letter to Iarches which read: "Apollonius
to Iarchas and other sages -- health. I came
to you by land; you have given me the sea.
In communicating to me your wisdom, you have
opened the road to heaven. I will remember
this among the Greeks; I will continue to
enjoy your conversation as if still with
you, if I have not drunk of the cup of Tantalus
in vain. Farewell, excellent philosophers."
That Apollonius did not "drink of the
cup of Tantalus in vain" is witnessed
by his later work. He brought the Wisdom-Religion
back to Europe and laid down lines of force
which were continued by his successor, Ammonius
Saccas. He established an esoteric school
in Ephesus, and is said by some of his biographers
to have died at the age of a hundred years.
By others it is claimed that he lived to
the age of a hundred and thirty, and by still
others that he did not "die" at
all, but "disappeared from view."
In the very heart of the Valley of Kashmir
there stands the little town of Srinagar,
the home of Sri-Naga, the "Serpent-King".
The present town was founded 300 B. C. by
the great Buddhist King Asoka, and was therefore
in existence when Apollonius was in Kashmir.
There is a tradition among the inhabitants
of this town that a great Adept came there
from Europe in the first century, and that
he died there.
A few miles beyond the outskirts of Srinagar
are found the magnificent ruins of an ancient
Temple of the Sun. It stands upon a high
plateau facing the East, its trefoil arches
forming graceful frames for the mighty panorama
of the Himalayas beyond. So old is this Temple
that the five Pandu brothers of Mahabharata
fame are said to have worshipped there. Everywhere
appears the figure of the triangle super-imposed
upon the square -- the ancient symbol of
septenary man. Philostratus' description
of the Temple of the Sun where Apollonius
worshipped closely resembles this ancient
Kashmiri Temple of Martand.
A two-week's journey on mule-back will take
the traveller up the mountains into the little
city of Lhadak, in Western Thibet. There
he may have the good fortune to discover
an ancient Buddhist monastery perched like
an eagle's nest on the overhanging crags.
There the monks may tell him (as they have
told other travellers) of certain manuscripts
in their possession which were left to them
by the great European Adept of the first
century when he passed through Lhadak. And
on the other side of the Himalayas, in the
sacred city of Lhassa, there are said to
be other men who possess records of the Adept
who taught in Europe during the first century,
and came back "home" when his work
was done.
Perhaps, after all, Apollonius did not die
in Europe, but started out on a second journey
to India, passing through all these places
on his way "Home." Next article:
Great Theosophists First Century Christianity
TWO (2) FOOTNOTES LISTED BELOW: COMPILER'S
NOTE: I added these footnotes; they were
not in the article. If any of them don't
paint an accurate enough picture, or are
incorrect, I hope the Editors of THEOSOPHY
magazine will spot them and point the inaccuracies
out to me, so that I can make the necessary
corrections.
(1) "Magi" are great Adepts, Sages,
Wise Men, Masters of Wisdom, etc. Back to
text.
(2) "Astral" means the Electro-Magnetic
spectrum at every level. The "Astral
Body" is the electromagnetic design
body that the physical molecules adhere to
in the building up of every form, in every
kingdom, on the physical plane. The theosophical
"Astral Light" is the "Ether"
of modern science. It is the source of the
idea known as the "Recording Angel"
-- because every thought, word, and deed
is recorded, stored, and magnetically reflected
back to its source at a dynamically proper
time: in other words, when conditions naturally
warrant or permit it. We call this Karma,
or Lawful action and reaction. All of us
are also magnets for imprints in the "Astral
Light" which were put there by others
and which are similar to us in character.
So we constantly affect and infect each other
in this way -- for good or for bad. 
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