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Just this past year,
Time magazine featured a cover story on the “legacy of Abraham”
which suggested that, as author of the monotheistic idea and more,
Abraham was responsible for “a complete departure from everything” that
went before. Like many essays on the history of religion, the Time
piece confused the stories from three different religious traditions
with actual history and the search for truth. The author did admit that
“there is no way to know what century Abraham lived in, or even whether
he actually existed as a person.” Unmentioned in the article is the fact
that there is substantial evidence that Zarathushtra, almost certainly a
genuine historical figure, may really have been responsible for the
“complete departure from everything” that the author attributes to
Abraham. However, the road traveled by the “great religions” since this
departure has had some dramatic detours from what Zarathushtra taught.
Nowhere is this divergence more manifest than in the answer to the
seemingly simple question: what is it that Zoroastrians worship?
There is strong
basis in the historical record of religions to conclude that the idea of
a single, universal, creative force came to the three “Abrahamic”
religions through the influence of Zoroastrians on the Jews during the
Babylonian exile. Since the traditions of those religions came to
dominate so much of our world, we are in the peculiar position of
examining and interpreting Zarathushtra’s concept of “Ahura Mazda”
backwards in time through the lens of the Abrahamic concept of “God” as
if it were one and the same thing. It is not.
The term “Ahura
Mazda” has been variously translated “Wise Lord,” “Lord Wisdom,”
“Supreme Wisdom,” or “Supreme Mind.” The followers of the religion
called themselves “Mazdayasni,” which could loosely be interpreted as
“Worshippers of Supreme Wisdom” or, perhaps more appropriately,
“Worshippers of the Mind.”
The Zarathushtrian
object of worship is so altogether different from the personified form
of the Abrahamic religions that the very use of the term “God” to
describe these divergent concepts can be confusing. Zarathushtra’s
“God”—Ahura Mazda—is simply not there in a material or geographical
sense. Instead, “God” is the origin and precondition of thought and of
all we perceive with our senses: uncaused and eternal. Zoroastrian
scholar Farhang Mehr[ii]
has defined it as wisdom and truth in essence (Y28, and Y51.7) and
infinitude in time and space (Y31.8) (Mehr, An Introduction to the
Gathas of Zarathushtra, May 1990). The Gathas describe Ahura Mazda
as “the most ancient and the youngest” or that which “has always been
and always will be” or which has “no beginning and no end.” (Y31.8).
Simply put, Ahura
Mazda is an idea: the mind of the universe—the origin of existence and,
indeed, existence itself, infinite and eternal. There is striking
similarity between Zarathushta’s concept of Ahura Mazda and the “God”
described by the European philosopher Spinoza thousands of years later:
“…there exists in nature an infinite power of thinking, which… contains
subjectively the whole of nature, and its thoughts proceed in the same
manner as nature—that is, in the sphere of ideas.” (Spinoza’s letter to
Oldenburg, 1665).
Ahura Mazda works as
a process through a kind of “divine” law, the built in conditions of the
universe and, therefore, of humanity. That law of the universe is known
as “Asha,” a term which has been translated as truth, righteousness,
universal order, and even justice, but which is perhaps best left
untranslated. The infinite variety we experience in this fast moving
world of change is the expression of Asha.
Where do human
beings fit in this picture? Human intelligence is a spark of the cosmic
mind: the fire of Ahura Mazda is within each of us. Again, shades of
Spinoza who wrote that “the human mind is part of the infinite intellect
of God.” (Spinoza, Ethics). Yet human beings play a less
restrained, more intense role than Spinoza may have envisioned. To
Zarathushtra, we humans are co-creators of the universe. In this sense,
“Zarathushtra wants every person to be godlike.” (Jafarey,[iii]
“Spenta Mainyu,” Introduction to the Gathas).
The God posited by
Zarathushtra is neither to be feared nor begged. Ahura Mazda does not
punish or reward. Rather than trying to please God, we are enriched by
acting in conformity with the nature of God and the true nature of the
world. We participate in Asha in proportion to the degree to which we
understand Ahura Mazda and conform our actions to the law of the
universe. The saoshyants or saviors are “those who follow their
knowledge of thy teaching with actions in harmony with good thinking and
with truth, Wise One.” Y48.12 (Insler[iv]
Tr.) There is a profound joy that comes with this experience. In words
that echo Zarathushtrian sentiments, Albert Einstein described a feeling
“that takes the form of a rapturous amazement at the harmony of natural
law” and is “a sort of intoxicated joy and amazement at the beauty and
grandeur of this world…” (Einstein, The World as I See It, 1934).
Zarathushtra’s
concept of the single, universal, creative “God” has been translated
through the ages into a highly personified form. Yet personification, if
it has any validity, is only for the purpose of helping us comprehend
the vision of “Supreme Mind” that is Ahura Mazda. As finite beings, we
cannot easily grasp infinity and eternity so a degree of
anthropomorphism is helpful. But Zarathushtra used such analogies
sparingly and only in allegorical or poetic expressions. Indeed, he
rebelled against what he called “false gods” that he condemned as
unreal—manipulative tools of evil minds.
In examining
Zarathushtra’s influences on philosophy and religion, his revolutionary
concept of “God” as mind is only a beginning. Beyond this, the powerful,
moral dimension to religious teaching, and the future-orientation of
religious and political/social thought with its accompanying apocalyptic
vision, can be traced directly to Zoroastrian influences. Likewise, such
emblems of western religion as heaven and hell, angels, the devil, the
messiah, and even resurrection have clear connections to the Good
Religion. The powerful impact of Zarathushtra’s philosophy can thus be
seen as much in the distortion of his teaching as in the embrace.
For example, the
morality of the Abrahamic religions—the notions of “good and evil”—are
derived from something quite different in Zoroastrianism: the idea of
drawing distinctions that Zarathushtra understood as so important to
establishing life in settled communities. What Zarathushtra taught was a
pragmatic ethics, promoting that which works, that which promotes the
full range of our potential. It is a philosophy of joy that relentlessly
seeks truth, starting with laser sharp focus on seeking to know the
world as it is and dealing with it, questioning our assumptions
constantly along the way. Indeed, only as we question our beliefs do we
learn to become more true to ourselves and more aligned with Asha, the
way of the universe.
The apocalyptic
vision—the whole idea of looking toward a "final battle" or resolution
bringing on a "perfect world"—has been shown to be directly attributable
to early (but post-Zarathushtra) Zoroastrianism. Indeed, this concept is
really very much the same whether it is the Christian version or the
Marxist/utopian version. But while
Zarathushtra’s concept of the future inspired much utopian thought, it
was something quite different from the apocalyptic idea it inspired.
Zarathushtra offered an innovative future perspective representing an
enormous shift from the then-dominant view of endless cycles controlled
by the gods. His “making wonderful” is a process of continual
re-invention, a constant evolution that starts anew with each life. The
future offers an ever-deepening array of exciting, joy-bringing
delightful (and surprising) things, if only we struggle for it. It is a
process and something more—it is life itself.
There
can be little doubt of the enormous impact that Zarathushtra has had on
the development of civilization and ideas. Being among the first to
understand the ethical requirements for settled living, Zarathustra was
the original spokesman for civilization as we know it. And though many
of his once innovative ideas have emerged through the millennia in
almost unrecognizable form, the most powerful impact of his inspiring
message surely lies ahead—in the future of civilization.
[i]
This paper is based on a presentation made at Pomona college,
Southern California, on February 8, 2004 on the occasion of
“Festival of Fire” (Jashne Sadeh). It was posted on vohuman.org
on December 22, 2005.
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