If you think for one moment that the fire that “destroyed” the Cathedral spire, or the timing of the “RESURRECTION” of the Cathedral were accidental you are deceived. This whole business plays right into the plans of the elite. They allow nothing to chance. They are constantly consulting the scriptures, their horrorscope charts, channeling their favorite demons, and seeking the favor of their Lord SATAN. They have mapped everything and everybody. They control the weather, they control the air, the water, the wind and the rain. They create earthquakes and volcanoes, they start fires, they pollute all flesh, they plan all wars, they control ALL THE MONEY AND RICHES of this earth. NOW, they want to control YOU…body, mind and spirit!
Beware my friends. Time is running out.
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NOTRE DAME RESTORED
Well, NOTRE DAME has been re-established and in time for the Olympics. It is not fully open to the public, but it stands. But, there are some issues and some curiosities regarding the new Spire. I don’t know how many of you were following the story of the Notre Dame Fire in 2019. I found … Click Here to Read More
Update 4-22-19 – Notre Dame – Part 4 – Accident or Sacrifice – You Decide
RESTORED: 09/14/2021 I am not a believer in coincidences or accidents. EVERYTHING that happens originates in the SPIRITUAL. Forces are working in our lives, both of evil and good. Our choices determine which forces dominate at any given time. In the past I have researched disasters and found that almost without exception they occurred on … Click Here to Read More
Notre Dame – Part 3 – World Heritage
RESTORED: 09/14/2021 Beside the fact that the fires at Notre Dame Cathedral, St John the Divine Cathedral and the Al Aqsa Mosque all occurred in close relation to Beltaine, and many of the huge catastrophic events like the WACO Brand Davidian Tragedy, the Oklahoman Bombing, Columbine, and so many others, it also happens to coincide … Click Here to Read More
Notre Dame – Part 2
RESTORED 8/8/22 Well, this entire thing is getting weirder all the time. Turns out that one day before the fire at Notre Dame, there was a fire at St John the Devine Cathedral in New York. Not only that but on the very same day as the Notre Dame … Click Here to Read More
NOTRE DAME – Part 1 – Notre Dame Aflame
I was shocked as most were, to see and hear the news that the Notre Dame Cathedral was on fire. There are probably very few buildings that are as famous as that one. We are all very familiar with the ICON, or at least have all heard of it. Many have a very deep attachment … Click Here to Read More
FOR WHOM DO BELLS TOLL?
DID GOD AT ANYTIME IN HIS WORD OR IN THE SPOKEN WORDS OF JESUS CHRIST SAY… “I HAVE GIVEN YOU FREQUENCIES TO HEAL YOU? DID GOD SAY “YOU ARE HEALED BY SOUNDS OF BELLS?”? DID GOD SAY LEARN THE “SCIENCE” OF ENERGY AND FREQUENCIES, STUDY TO SHOW YOURSELF APPROVED IN THIS AND YOU WILL FIND … Click Here to Read More
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Notre Dame: Where All Unite Around Our Lady
The restoration of Notre Dame enthralled the world. Global leaders flocked to Paris to represent their nations. The media broadcast the opening ceremonies that celebrated this grand achievement, noble quest and supreme act of love.
Such gatherings are rare, considering the state of the world. In these times of extreme polarization, few issues arise where people might find common ground. In these times of decadence, nothing appears spotless and undefiled. Grand events no longer attract most people as they are absorbed in the petty interests of their lives.
Suddenly, there appears on the horizon a resplendent palace, an almighty fortress and a dazzling sanctuary. Its splendor gladdens the hearts of all who view its marvels. Its strength buttresses the weak and faltering. It awakens sentiments of great hope and admiration in countless souls.
Everyone watched in awe as this august monument emerged radiant from the catastrophic 2019 fire and decades of neglect. People rejoiced, seeing that the impossible became possible. (It is very true that a fire was the only solution to the financial stress of restoring the Cathedral.)
The beauty of Notre Dame’s restoration is that it invites people to think of higher and greater things to which they might give themselves with joy. Its message appeals to innocent Christians everywhere, asking them to believe that restoration—even their own—is possible. From the darkest tragedy of world events, a bright light shone forth.
This scene of extreme beauty awakened in hardened hearts the cry of Saint Augustine, who exclaimed: “Too late have I loved thee, O beauty so ancient and so new. Too late have I loved thee!”
Of course, the world was not only celebrating the physical reconstruction of a fire-ravaged building or marveling at the technical methods employed. The attempt to turn this religious event into a secular cultural one is deplorable.
Notre Dame speaks to souls about the inspirer of the building. This marvelous medieval relic leads to Our Lady, the Mother of God, who is venerated inside its walls, portrayed in its stained glass and found in its symbolism. The building invites all to enter and pray.
Notre Dame recalls the litany of titles that Catholics use to honor her. Our Lady is addressed as the mirror of justice, vessel of honor, tower of David, tower of ivory, house of gold, Ark of the Covenant and gate of heaven. For this reason, she is the “cause of our joy.”
This grand return to the splendor of Notre Dame contains a message to all of Our Lady’s devotees and admirers. Our Lady, represented by Notre Dame, does not return as she was. Only an immensely greater beauty can move the hardened hearts of this world immersed in chaos and decay.
To attract humanity, she returns with unimaginable grandeur to an undeserving world. As a mother, she displays imaginable tenderness to those who long for a return to order.
To those who will hear her message, she presents a promise of hope to a forlorn world. She will unite everyone of goodwill under her maternal mantle.
Photo Credit: © Augustin Lazaroiu- stock.adobe.com
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“Notre Dame: Where All Unite Around Our Lady” This terminology and imagery is being used to bring the world back into Paganism and under the Authority of the Fallen Angels and their progeny. All pagans, not knowing the Creator were subject to spirits of all kinds. All pagan worship included both male and female gods. That is how Rome got people to convert to ROMAN CATHOLICISM, by blending the old pagan beliefs with the “NEW” Christianity. Rome allowed the people to continue to worship their gods and goddesses and nature spirits with only one minor change. They changed their names to those of “Saints”. And paganism continued in disguise. The same is true today. In order to “UNITE” the world once again, they are returning to mainstreaming all pagan religions. They are bringing back the “Divine Feminine”. That even why many are converting to “Christianity” because they relate to Mary as the goddess.
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excerpts from: What is Paganism?
A definition of a Pagan: A follower of a polytheistic or pantheistic nature-worshipping religion.
A definition of Paganism: A polytheistic or pantheistic nature-worshipping religion.
What Paganism Is
Paganism is the ancestral religion of the whole of humanity. This ancient religious outlook remains active throughout much of the world today, both in complex civilisations such as Japan and India, and in less complex tribal societies world-wide. It was the outlook of the European religions of classical antiquity – Persia, Egypt, Greece and Rome – as well as of their “barbarian” neighbours on the northern fringes, and its European form is re-emerging into explicit awareness in the modern West as the articulation of urgent contemporary religious priorities.
The Pagan outlook can be seen as threefold. Its adherents venerate Nature and worship many deities, both goddesses and gods.
The Goddess
Pagan religions all recognise the feminine face of divinity. A religion without goddesses can hardly be classified as Pagan. Some Pagan paths, such as the cult of Odin or of Mithras, offer exclusive allegiance to one male god. But they do not deny the reality of other gods and goddesses, as monotheists do. (The word ‘cult’ has always meant the specialised veneration of one particular deity or pantheon, and has only recently been extended to mean the worship of a deified or semi-divine human leader.) By contrast, non-Pagan religions, such as Judaism, Christianity and Islam, often abhor the very idea of female divinity. The (then) Anglican Bishop of London even said a few years ago that religions with goddesses were ‘degenerate’!
Modern Paganism
With its respect for plurality, the refusal to judge other ways of life as wrong simply because they are different from one’s own, with its veneration of a natural (and supernatural) world from which Westerners in the age of technology have become increasingly isolated, and with its respect for women and the feminine principle as embodied in the many goddesses of the various pantheons, Paganism has much to offer people of European background today. Hence it is being taken up by them in droves. When they realise that it is in fact their ancestral heritage, its attraction grows. Democracy, for example, was pioneered by the ancient Athenians and much later reinvented by the Pagan colonisers of Iceland, home of Europe’s oldest parliament. Our modern love of the arts was fostered in Pagan antiquity, with its pageants and its temples, but had no place in iconoclastic Christianity and Islam. The development of science as we know it began in the desire of the Greeks and Babylonians to understand the hidden patterns of Nature, and the cultivation of humane urbanity, the ideal of the well-rounded, cultured personality, was imported by Renaissance thinkers from the writings of Cicero. In the Pagan cities of the Mediterranean lands the countryside was never far from people’s awareness, with parks, gardens and even zoos, all re-introduced into modern Europe, not by the religions of the Book, and not by utilitarian atheists, but by the Classically-inspired planners of the Enlightenment.
In the present day, the Pagan tradition manifests both as communities reclaiming their ancient sites and ceremonies (especially in Eastern Europe), to put humankind back in harmony with the Earth, and as individuals pursuing a personal spiritual path alone or in a small group (especially in Western Europe and the European-settled countries abroad), under the tutelage of one of the Pagan divinities. To most modern Pagans in the West, the whole of life is to be affirmed joyfully and without shame, as long as other people are not harmed by one’s own tastes. Modern Pagans tend to be relaxed and at ease with themselves and others, and women in particular have a dignity which is not always found outside Pagan circles.
Modern Pagans, not tied down either by the customs of an established religion or by the dogmas of a revealed one, are often creative, playful and individualistic, affirming the importance of the individual psyche as it interfaces with a greater power. There is a respect for all of life and usually a desire to participate with rather than to dominate other beings. What playwright Eugene O’Neil called “the creative Pagan acceptance of life” is at the forefront of the modern movement. This is bringing something new to religious life and to social behaviour, a way of pluralism without fragmentation, of creativity without anarchy. Here is an age-old current surfacing in a new form suited to the needs of the present day.
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CNA Staff, Dec 11, 2024 / 14:35 pm
The chief architect of the Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris shared in an interview with EWTN that he felt Our Lady guided the restoration of the 861-year-old cathedral following the fire that ravaged the building in April 2019.
In an interview with Colm Flynn on “EWTN News In Depth,” architect Philippe Villeneuve said that he was a believer with a “particular devotion to Mary.”
When asked if he was “a man of faith,” Villeneuve explained that he had kept this private during the rebuilding, but now he is ready to reveal it.
“I spent five years saying nothing about this because I’m a civil servant in a secular republic, and therefore, I couldn’t say something like this,” Villeneuve told Flynn. “But now, I have to reveal that yes.”
“I have a particular devotion to the Virgin Mary, and at the risk of sounding totally crazy — or like Joan of Arc — I never stopped feeling support coming from up there,” he said.
The reconstruction of Notre Dame was no small undertaking. A team of more than 2,000 people worked on the 800 million euro (about $840 million) restoration. The original building had taken nearly 200 years to build, but Villeneuve had only five years to restore it.
“I don’t think this project would’ve been possible otherwise, and I think that’s what gave me the strength and determination to move forward because I knew I was supported from up there,” Villeneuve said.
The fire had destroyed the cathedral’s roof, spire, and three sections of the vault — but the organ, paintings, stained glass, and furniture were intact.
With pressure from the French government and the 340,000 private donors from around the world, Villeneuve had to ensure that original techniques and materials were used as much as possible.
“It was an enormous amount of work,” he continued. “I realize it now looking at where we came from. I’m really amazed by the beauty — amazed by the work, by the quality of work.”
Villeneuve has long had a love for the historic cathedral.
“I’ve been madly in love with Notre Dame de Paris since I was little,” he said. “Growing up, it was inside the cathedral where I felt good.”
Villeneuve shared that he had made a model of the cathedral when he was 16 years old.
“I was really captivated by it, moved by it,” he said. “And little did I know as a kid when I was building the cathedral out of card and paper that one day I would be working on the real cathedral.”
“When I laid the last stone of the vault in the north transept, it brought me back,” the architect recalled. “And I saw myself as a kid again building this vault with paper and cardboard.”
The cathedral has a deeper spiritual meaning, not just for its architect, but for those across France and even around the world.
Monsignor Olivier Ribadeau Dumas, the rector and archpriest of Notre Dame Cathedral, called the building “the soul of France.”
“Because this cathedral is something of the soul of France, the history of our country is intimately linked with the history of the cathedral,” Dumas told Flynn.
But its “influence extends far beyond France,” the rector noted.
“The cathedral does not belong to Parisians, nor to Catholics, nor to the French, but it is the common good of all humanity,” Dumas continued. “And its stones speak of God because they have been animated by prayer for more than 800 years.”
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The Alchemist.
Notre-Dame-de-Paris.
Alchemy.
Bas-relief of the large portico of Notre-Dame-de-Paris.
Hieratic, the figure seated on a chair that the circular mandorla protects has in one hand the books of wisdom (Gnostic Wisdom), in the other the sceptre (representing POWER and AUTHORITY) and supported on his chest the ladder that, like Jacob’s ladder, will allow him to reach the sphere of divine knowledge. (In other words to become DIVINE, become GOD)
See Fulcanelli, Le Mystère des Cathédrales, Paris 1964
G.J.Witkowski, L’Art Profane à l’Église, Paris, 1908
portico (n.)from PIE root *per- (2) “to lead, pass over.” Especially of the Painted Porch in Athens. |
hieratic (adj.) |
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iconography
mandorla, (Italian: “almond”), in religious art, almond-shaped aureole of light surrounding the entire figure of a holy person; it was By the 6th century the mandorla had become a standard attribute of Christ in scenes of the Transfiguration (in which Christ shows
himself to his Apostles transformed into his celestial appearance) and the Ascension (in which the resurrected Christ ascends to heaven) and, later, in other scenes involving the resurrected or celestial Christ, the death of the Virgin (in which, having descended from heaven, Christ stands by the deathbed of his mother), the descent into limbo, the Last Judgment, and the nonhistorical theme of Christ in majesty. In the late Middle Ages the mandorla also occasionally enclosed the Virgin in scenes of the Last Judgment and of her Assumption into heaven, reflecting her increased popularity. In the 15th century, however, with the growth of naturalism in art, the mandorla became less popular, being incongruous in a naturalistic context, and it was abandoned by the painters of the Renaissance. |
atmospheric science
aureole, brightly illuminated area surrounding an atmospheric light source, such as the Sun, when the light is propagated |
SPIRITUAL MEANING OF THE ALMOND (from a pagan perspective) The almond has also found its place in various mythologies and cultural traditions.– In Chinese culture, almond flowers are believed to bring good fortune and happiness, making them a popular choice for decorations during the Lunar New Year celebrations.– In Buddhism, the almond tree and its flowers are associated with the concept of enlightenment and the awakening of one’s spiritual potential.The myth of the Phrygian deities Agdistis and Attis, later adopted by the Greeks and Romans, is closely linked to the almond tree. As the story goes, the almond tree played a crucial role in the birth of these gods, further highlighting the almond’s connection to life, renewal, and divinity.Agdistis is a complex figure in ancient mythology, often depicted as a powerful and androgynous deity. The goddess embodies both male and female attributes, symbolizing the unity and harmony of opposites. The connection between Agdistis and the almond tree is established through the following aspects: – The origin of the almond tree: According to the legend, the almond tree was born from the blood of Agdistis. After being castrated by the gods, the blood that fell on the earth gave rise to an almond tree, which laer played a crucial role in the story of Attis and his love for Agdistis. – The symbolism of the almond tree: In the myth, the almond tree is a symbol of transformation, regeneration, and the unity of opposites. This symbolism is closely related to the dual nature of Agdistis and the deity’s power over life and death. – The role of the almond tree in the story of Attis: The beautiful nymph Nana, daughter of the river god Sangarius, became pregnant after eating an almond from the tree that had grown from Agdistis’ blood. She gave birth to Attis, who later became the lover of Agdistis. The almond tree, therefore, serves as a link between the two deities and is an essential element in their mythological story. In ancient Greece, almond flowers were associated with the mythological figure of the nymph Phyllis, who transformed into an almond tree after being abandoned by her lover Demophon. The almond tree’s blossoming thus came to symbolize the reunion of the two lovers and the triumph of love over separation. In (Roman) Christianity, the almond holds a special place as a symbol of the divine hidden within the human form. The seed, concealed by an outer hull and a hard shell, represents the godliness veiled within the incarnate Jesus Christ. This spiritual metaphor extends to the Virgin Mary, with the almond symbolizing her purity and the divine nature within her. This association is often depicted in Christian iconography, where the sacred figures of Mary and Jesus are enshrined within an almond-shaped mandorla or frame. This symbolism highlights the concealed godliness and immaculate nature of these revered figures. |
The almond remains an enduring presence in the realm of human spirituality, transcending time and culture to hold a cherished place in the hearts and minds of seekers across the ages.
One of the most striking aspects of the almond tree is its early flowering, often being the first to burst into bloom in many countries. This characteristic has led to the almond tree becoming a symbol of watchfulness and the promise of new life, as it heralds the arrival of spring and the awakening of the natural world. In this way, the almond tree serves as a reminder of the cyclical nature of existence and the perpetual renewal of life. Almonds hold a significant spiritual symbolism in various religious and spiritual traditions. They are associaed with different concepts, such as purity, divine wisdom, and resurrection. The spiritual representation of almonds can be understood through the following aspects: 1. Purity and Virginity: In Christianity, almonds symbolize the purity of the Virgin Mary. Their seed, hidden behind an outer hull and a hard shell, represents the concealed divinity within the human form Symbol of Hope and Renewal: |
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Chapter Twelve
And so, at long last, we arrive at the point where Fulcanelli began, the Gothic Cathedrals of Europe. In his 1926 masterpiece, The Mystery of the Cathedrals, Fulcanelli claimed that the Gothic Cathedrals were Hermetic libraries in stone with the secret of alchemy displayed for all who could to read it. When our investigation began, this seemed, in its own way, the most incredible of all Fulcannelli’s claims. It was easier to believe that someone had stumbled privately onto the real secret behind the alchemical transformation, than it was to believe that some secret society, or societies, had encoded this information deliberately into the design and the decorations of the greatest of all Christian monuments.
For this to be true, several important preconditions would also have to be true, such as the existence of a secret, or not so secret, group with access to the highest levels of the church, bottomless wealth, connections with the Holy Land and the Moslem world, and knowledge of the inner core of alchemy. Before we, as researchers, could take Fulcanelli’s claims seriously, we needed to validate the existence of such a group. The importance of this point is obvious. If Fulcanelli were merely projecting from his own unconscious the meanings he gives certain images and motifs found in the cathedrals, rather than revealing an ancient alchemical tradition, then Mystery of the Cathedrals is reduced to a work of symbolist fantasy. Interesting, and useful to the psychologist perhaps, but of limited value in terms of alchemy.
Yet this is, if anything, Fulcanelli’s main point. Mystery is not the usual alchemical cookbook or grimoire. Fulcanelli implies that he is revealing the mystery of alchemy as it was taught to him, by reference to the Hermetic meanings embodied within the cathedrals. It is therefore a demonstration not just of the alchemical philosophy, but of how this philosophy animated a lost medieval golden age. The key to understanding Fulcanelli’s importance, and not just the value of his work, lies in the reality of this lost knowledge and the fact of its emergence as symbols on the walls of these imposing Christian structures.
We began our search with the origin of alchemy and discovered that alchemy, while referencing back to the knowledge of a pre-catastrophe civilization, appeared in its modern form as part of the Gnostic ferment of the 1st century CE. This Gnostic world view, derived from the mystery cults of the rapidly collapsing ancient world, supplied a theological and mythological framework for the emerging wave of monotheistic mysticism, such as Christianity and Essene Judaism. This framework also contained the essential ideas of alchemy’s triple transformation. The specific magickal technology of the triple transformation — inner yogic psycho-sexual disciplines, magickal ceremonies combined with manipulation of sacred metals, and the secret of time and timing, including the beginning and end of time — developed first within the Gnostic cults, including Christianity, and then dispersed into the intellectual underground of the Dark Ages.
As part of the Gnostic paradigm, alchemy was influenced by Gnostic eschatological teachings, such as the path of return by the small lights to the One Light. Two thirds of the transmutational secret was persecuted out of Orthodox and Imperial Christianity, while the remaining third of the secret, that of time itself, was co-opted by its temporal leaders, such Constantine, Charlemagne and Otto I. For the Christians, the whole idea of the end of time became confused with the fall of the Roman State, and the apocalypse against heretics became an institution of the church. But the idea of a transformed reality, the Chilaist vision of a new heaven and a new earth purged of sin, refused to die out.
This concept of a spiritually animated matter became the keystone of the alchemical process. The illuminated Hebrew mystics of the Bahir recorded the techniques of animating matter and related them directly to the transformational process of galactic alignment. The Shi’ites, Fatimids and Ismailis alike, believed that Mohammed had received this information and passed on the secret of time, and the coming of the Day of Judgment, through the family of Ali. The Sufis, of all persuasions, retained the most complete understanding of the internal psycho-sexual transformation.
We found that by the 10th century, alchemical knowledge had fragmented to the point that the secret had effectively been lost. The Byzantine Greek compilations of that era are composed of older material, much of it from the 1st century, such as the “Isis the Prophetess” story. The Islamic current had likewise split into the compilers and philosophers versus the mystical and the political. Among the Jews of the Dispersion, knowledge of the Bahir was limited to several small family groups in Spain and Palestine. The information was on the verge of being lost, and it was hard to see how in a few short centuries it could have been revived and then become influential enough to appear on the cathedral walls.
Working backward from the cathedrals themselves, we found that there were indeed enough mysteries to drive a small army of secret societies through. “Why did western Europe build so many churches in the three hundred years after the year 1000? What need was there, in a Europe with hardly a fifth of its present population, for temples so vast that they are now rarely filled even on the holiest days? How could an agricultural civilization afford to build such costly edifices, which a wealthy industrialism can barely maintain?” These questions were asked by no less an authority than Will Durant in his chapter, in volume IV of the History of Civilization, on the development of the Gothic cathedrals.
And who designed them? Who decided on the artwork, laid out the ground plan, supervised the construction and the decoration? These are mostly unanswered, and now unanswerable, questions. We know the names of these “master masons,” but their history and the story of their work has for the most part been lost. But the fact of that work, its skill and symbolic integrity, points to the sophisticated degree of organization, perhaps even on an international level, required to produce such elaborate and long term projects. Buildings of such complexity and elegance do not happen by accident.
As Durant noted, the year 1000 was a significant one to western Christendom. As we began to investigate this significance, we came face to face with one of the seminal figures in the transition from the Dark Ages to the medieval world, Pope Sylvester II. As we saw in a previous chapter, The Hermetic Pope proved to be the lynch-pin in a complex series of events that resulted in effects as wide ranging as the Crusades, the Templars, the Peace of God movement and its heretical offshoots, the Grail Romances and eventually, the cathedral building movement itself.
As we followed the tangled pattern of Sylvester’s career, we found the seeds of our sophisticated international organization in the various chronicling orders established by Sylvester within, and on the edges of, the other monastic orders, the Benedictines, the Cluniacs and the Cistercians. This fluidity of organization gained a central focus with the establishment of the group of chroniclers at Jerusalem in 1002. From that point on we can safely speak of an Order of Sion, in Jerusalem, with connections among all three major monastic orders back in Europe.
During the 11th century, all of these monastic orders began to build in the pre-Gothic style known as Romanesque. Within these monastic communities, groups of specialists developed. These were monks and scholars who knew Greek and mathematics, especially geometry, and were also skilled in building. As these “schools” grew, they were influenced by architecture from many distant places, the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, the Al-Aqsa Mosque, The Dome of the Rock, in Jerusalem, and the Mosque of ibn Tulun in Cairo. It is not hard to see the Order of Sion, with its Byzantine and Fatimid connections, as the source of that influence.
After the First Crusade conquered Jerusalem, The Order of Sion became, in various ways, the “rock” upon which the Kingdom of Jerusalem was founded. The Order used its connections back in Europe to capitalize on the discovery, around the 1102, of the alchemical and cosmological secrets. A decade later, wealth began flowing back to Europe, mostly to the Cistercians, a formerly bankrupt splinter group of Cluniac monks led by the future St. Bernard. By 1130, the Templars had been established, St. Bernard was the foremost Christian of his day, and Europe was poised on the edge of the cathedral building mania. Gothic is in the air, but has yet to be given form. For that we have to thank St. Denis and the Abbot Suger.
* * * * *
A few miles north of the Ile de Citie, The Abbey of St. Denis, patron saint of Paris and by extension France itself and its Capetian kings, grew up around the tomb of the saint and his venerable relics. St. Denis had been recognized by the heirs of Charlemagne and a small Carolingian church was built on the site in the mid-9th century. The abbey itself was founded by Hugh Capet and our old friend Gerbert of Aurillac, Archbishop of Rheims, in the early 990’s, and become over time the family chapel of the French dynasty. As St. Remy and Rheims became associated with the founding of the first Merovingian dynasty, St. Denis became associated with its Capetian revival.
The future Abbot Suger was born in poverty in the village of St. Denis. His innate intelligence won him a place in the local monastery school, the Prieure de l’Estree, where he became friends with the future King of France, Louis VI. Suger was noticed by the royal family. Phillip I encouraged the friendship between his son and the brilliant scholar. In the early 1120’s, Suger was sent to Rome several times on diplomatic missions. During his time at the Holy Curia in the early 12th century, Suger came into contact with all the major intellectual currents of his age, including perhaps the secret discoveries in the Holy Land.
During the second decade of the 12th century, Suger served as prime minister of France and was at the center of the struggle between the French state and the church. Suger naturally sided with his old school chum, Louis VI, and his son, Louis VII, against the anti-Popes of the Holy Roman Empire. He was a man who spent most of his life dealing with the intricacies of medieval power politics, and when he talked, the King of France listened.
In 1123, at the height of his power and influence, Suger became the Abbot of St. Denis. Perhaps because of his knowledge of the discoveries in Jerusalem and their apparently inexhaustible wealth, Suger pressed for the re-building of the old Carolingian church into something that would be the wonder of Europe and the proper venue in which to display the relics of St. Denis and the regalia of the Capetian Kings. Abbot Suger envisioned his church as the center of the new illuminated Christianity that seemed to be overtaking the old politically compromised Roman church in the early years of the 12th century.
That St. Denis, rather than say Rheims with its much more prominent Merovingian connections, was singled out as the source point for the Gothic transformation depends as much on a mis-identification as it does on Abbot Suger energy and political savy. Not much was known of the historical saint. The abbey library contained a volume of works attributed to him, but which were actually written by the 2nd century Gnostic philosopher Dionysius the Areopagite. The book, given to one of Charlemagne’s sons by the Byzantine Emperor Michael the Stammerer, ended up in the abbey’s library perhaps as the result of Pope Sylvester’s chroniclers.
Abbot Suger was greatly influenced by Dionysius’ Gnostic theology of light. Dionysius believed that “every creature, visible or invisible, is a light brought into being by the Father of Lights,” and celebrated the Divine Light, God’s holy fire, which animated the entire universe. This is amazingly similar to the basic Gnostic concept of the path of return. Abbot Suger took this theme to heart. In his three books on the building and consecration of the church, we find no less than thirteen separate inscriptions celebrating the holy Light. In one of them, a verse written to celebrate a gilded bronze gate, Suger tells us: “Bright is the noble work, this work shining nobly/ Enlightens the mind so that it may travel through the true lights/ To the True Light where Christ is the true door.”
From these ideas, Abbot Suger developed his theory of lux continua, or continuous light. With these two words, Suger announced the birth of the Gothic style and at the same time pointed to its spiritual roots in the Gnostic illuminism of alchemy. From this point on, the walls of sanctity would be shattered to let the light in. The solemn and suffering darkness of the Romanesque would be replaced by the flow of continuous radiance at the heart of the Gothic.
By 1133, Abbot Suger informs us, he had collected artists and craftsmen “from all lands,” including a contingent of Arabic glass makers. Suger did not invent stained glass; as we saw above, the Fatimids had used it in their mosques for over a century. Glass making seems to have been a component of the alchemical process. We find it mentioned in the preparations of certain “sands” described in the “Isis the Prophetess” text. The Fatimid scholars and mystics of Cairo used colored glass fashioned in geometrical patterns as a meditation tool, as seen in the remaining stained glass of the Al-Azhar mosque. The good Abbot’s idea was to use the stained glass to fill the interior of his church with sparkling jewel-like color.
Bright indeed is the noble work. Abbot Suger approached the building of his new church with all the enthusiasm, and attention to detail, of the Renaissance alchemist in pursuit of the Philosopher’s Stone. To Abbot Suger, perhaps, his new light filled church was the true Philosopher’s Stone.
It was finished in 1144, and the dedication was attended by a veritable who’s who of the mid-12th century. Louis VII attended with his soon to be divorced wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine, as did most of the bishops of the western church and hundreds of knighted nobles. Even St. Bernard, who was heard to grumble at the expense of gilding a church, attended, compelled perhaps by an authority greater than his own ego, the power brokers of Sion.
From its beginnings at St. Denis, the new style spread first through central France, and then all over Europe, from England to Germany, Portugal to Northern Italy. The collection of artists and craftsmen assembled by Abbot Suger developed into schools and guilds that traveled throughout Europe for the next two centuries or so creating a vast collection of Gothic churches and civic buildings. Twelve years after the good Abbot’s death in 1151, his student, the Bishop of Paris, Maurice de Sully, and his “master mason,” William of Paris, paid him the compliment of bettering his design.
On an island in the Seine, the new cathedral of Notre Dame de Paris rose slowly into the light filled sky. Work on the choir and transepts were begun in 1163 and not completed until 1182. By the time the construction of the nave was under way, another change was sweeping through Christendom.
Jerusalem and most of Holy Land was conquered in 1187 by the forces of the Seljuk Sultan Saladin. The west was stunned and plans began for an immediate Crusade, the Third according to modern historians. (The Second Crusade had been the unhappy affair undertaken in 1147 by Louis VII, during which the Abbot Suger of St. Denis ruled France as regent. Suger in fact did do so well with the realm’s finances that Louis’ disastrous crusade hardly made a dent in the royal coffers.) In the midst of this political upheaval occurred the Cutting of the Elm at Gisors, the schism between the Order of Our Lady of Sion and the Knights of the Temple of Solomon. For over a decade, Sion had been building a private power base back in Europe, and after the loss of the abbey on Mount Sion, the entire Order relocated.
This shift began in 1152, the year after Abbot Suger’s death, with Louis VII’s gift to the Order of the large priory at Orleans of St. Samson, another Dark Age saint with Merovingian connections. By 1178, as we noted above, the Order was confirmed by the Pope in the possession of houses and large tracts of land from the Holy Land to Spain. The Cutting of the Elm at Gisors did more than just split the Templars off from its parent Order, it defined the boundary line between the Plantagenets on one side, supported by the Templars, and the Capetians on the other, supported by Sion. This division would eventually produce not just the destruction of the Templars by the French King, Philip III and his puppet Pope, Clement V, but the catastrophe of the Hundred Years War between France and England.
As the walls of Notre Dame de Paris rose, the foundations of the new illuminated Christendom began to crumble. Loss of Jerusalem, and eventually the rest of Outremer, made the universal nature of the church questionable. The Grail Romances, whose imagery would appear in the decorations of both Notre Dame de Paris and the cathedral at Amiens, attempted an end-run around the church itself by appealing directly to a chivalric sense of destiny. With the failure of the Third Crusade and the subsequent strife among its leaders, the grand plan began to falter.
The Orthodox church fought back in the so-called crusades against Christians. First, almost by accident, Constantinople was conquered by the Fourth Crusade. This empowered Pope Innocent III to go after the heretics in southern France. Fifty years later, with southern France and its culture destroyed, the hope of a new kind of Christianity, once so promising, had been lost.
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For a century after the discoveries in the Holy Land, alchemy remained the secret preserve of the initiates within the church. The Order of Sion and the Templars seem to have had their own alchemical processes and their own individual codes for referring to it. Not until the middle of the 13th century did alchemy surface in a direct and unambiguous way.
By the time the external decorations, including the magnificent bas-relief rendition of Alchemy itself on the Great Porch of Notre Dame de Paris, were finished in 1235 the reason for secrecy had passed. The Imperial Orthodox Church of Rome was in ascendancy with both the Templars and the Order of Sion struggling to find a new mission. Power politics had also stabilized, somewhat, with the Holy Roman Empire as top dog of the feudal pack. The Middle Ages were reaching for their apogee, while falling, at the same time, far short of the glorious millenarial visions of Sylvester II and the pilgrim/warriors of the First Crusade.
The greatest scholar of the 12th century, Albert the Great of Cologne, or Albertus Magnus, turned to alchemy in the mid century, and produced the first original work on the subject since the late fifth century. His treatise, On Alchemy, champions alchemy as a difficult but true art. He does not tell us if he actually made gold, but his directions to the practitioner indicates not only a knowledge of the triple nature of alchemy, but an awareness of the changes in the political winds. He warns the alchemist to chose the right hour for his operations, be patience and diligent in his prayers and exhortations, operate by the rules (here Albert gives us the necessary steps: trituration, sublimation, fixation, calcination, solution, distillation and coagulation, seven in all), and to always avoid contact with princes and rulers.
Albert was also reputed to have had a fortune-telling “head” and seems by contemporary accounts to have been an adept of the Hebraic work of creation. We are told that he had constructed an artificial man, a Golem, endowed with the ability to speak but not to reason. The golem’s inane chattering so disturbed Albert’s pupil, the future saint, Thomas of Aquinas, that Albert finally had to destroy it. Another interesting alchemical story, related by William II, Count of Holland, has Albert setting a feast in the frozen and snow covered garden of the monastery, only to have it magically become summer, with birds, butterflies and blossoming trees, as the diners sat down to their meal.
Intriguing as these suggestions are, it was not the aristocratic Albert the Great who brought alchemy firmly into the mainstream of medieval thought, but the humble scholar Arnold of Villanova. Arnold was born in Valencia about the time that Notre Dame de Paris was finished. He gained his initial fame as a physician, and could be called the first psychologist, having written a surprisingly modern work on the interpretation of dreams. Although seemingly not a member of any monastic or clerical order, Arnold conducted secret missions for kings, Emperors and Popes alike.
In his works, Arnold emphasized the reality of alchemical transformation. To demonstrate this, he performed a transmutation in front of Pope Boniface VIII. It was successful, the first documented account of such a transmutation. A witness, John Andre, the Major Domo of the Papal Curia, reports that Arnold “submitted the gold sticks he produced to everyone for examination.” This is very significant for the simple reason that since the second century, no one, no matter how much they seemed to know about alchemy, had actually done the transmutation in front of witnesses. Arnold’s performance in front of Boniface was the turning point in alchemical history. Unfortunately, it was also the beginning of the end for the Templars, and in a lesser way, for the Order of Sion.
One of those observing Arnold’s transmutation was the future Pope Clement V. Bertrand de Got, the former Archbishop of Bordeaux, became the first Pope of the so-called French captivity after the strife caused by Boniface VIII’s assertion of absolute Papal rights. The King of France, asserting a higher spiritual and political authority than the Pope swooped down on Rome and literally captured the church. Eleven months later, Bertrand, a Frenchman, was finally elected as Clement V. Arnold, unfortunately, had been in the thick of the political in-fighting.
Phillip, the French King, used his power over the Pope to recall Boniface’s proclamation. And then the King set in motion an idea that had stirring in his brain since Arnold’s demonstration. The King called a General Council and proscribed the Templars. Pope Clement V, wanting his piece of the vast Templar wealth, went along with Phillip, even though he knew the charges against the Templars were basically groundless.