|
-II-
The Inside Story on the Kabbalah
The statue that the Jews worshipped when they
departed from their true religion was, according to many researchers,
was an Egyptian idol made of gold in the form of a calf.
|
"Exodus" is the title of the second book of the Torah. This book describes
how the Israelites, under the leadership of Moses, left Egypt and escaped
the tyranny of Pharaoh. Pharaoh made the Israelites work as slaves and
would not consent to set them free. But, when confronted by the miracles
God performed through Moses, and the disasters He inflicted on his people,
Pharaoh relented. And so, one night the Israelites gathered en masse,
and began their emigration from Egypt. Later, Pharaoh attacked the Israelites,
but God saved them through a further miracle He performed through Moses.
But, it is in the Qur'an that we find the most accurate account of the
exodus from Egypt, because the Torah underwent much textual corruption
after it was originally revealed to Moses. An important proof of this
is that in the five books of the Torah-Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers
and Deuteronomy-there are many contradictions. The fact that the book
of Deuteronomy ends with an account of the death and burial of Moses is
indisputable proof that this portion would have to have been added after
Moses' death.
In the Qur'an, in the account of the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt,
as in all other stories related in it, there is not the slightest contradiction;
the story is recounted soundly. Moreover, as with other stories, God reveals
much wisdom and many secrets in the course of what is related. For this
reason, when we examine these stories closely, we can extract a number
of lessons from them.
THE GOLDEN CALF
One of the important facts concerning the exodus of the Israelites from
Egypt, as related in the Qur'an, is that they rebelled against the religion
revealed to them by God in spite of the fact that God had rescued them
through Moses from the tyranny of Pharaoh. The Israelites were not able
to comprehend the monotheism that Moses communicated to them, but tended
continually toward idolatry.
The Qur'an describes this strange tendency here:
We conveyed the tribe of Israel across the sea and
they came upon some people who were devoting themselves to some idols
which they had. They said, "Moses, give us a god just as these people
have gods." He said, "You are indeed an ignorant people.
What these people are doing is destined for destruction.
What they are doing is purposeless." (Qur'an, 7: 138-139)
Despite Moses' warnings, the Israelites continued in such perversion,
and when Moses left them, to ascend alone to Mt. Sinai, it manifested
itself fully. Taking advantage of Moses' absence, a man by the name of
Samiri came forth. He fanned the sparks of the Israelites' inclination
towards idolatry, and persuaded them to fabricate the statue of a calf
and worship it.
Moses returned to his people in anger and great sorrow.
He said, "My people, did not your Lord make you a handsome promise?
Did the fulfillment of the contract seem too long to you or did you want
to unleash your Lord's anger upon yourselves, so you broke your promise
to me?"
They said, "We did not break our promise to you of
our own volition. But we were weighed down with the heavy loads of the
people's jewelry and we threw them in, for that is what the Samaritan
did."
Then he produced a calf for them, a physical form which
made a lowing sound. So they said, "This is your god-and Moses's god
as well, but he forgot." (Qur'an, 20: 86-88)
Why was there such a persistent tendency among the Israelites to erect
idols and worship them? What was the source of this inclination?
Clearly, a society that had never before believed in idols would not
suddenly adopt such inane behavior as to construct an idol and begin to
worship it. Only those for whom idolatry was natural inclination could
have believed in such nonsense.

Another Ancient Egyptian idol: Hathor, the golden calf.
|
However, the Israelites were a people that had believed in one God since
the days of their ancestor Abraham. The name "Israelites" or "the Sons
of Israel" was given first to the sons of Jacob, Abraham's grandson, and
afterwards to the whole Jewish people who derived from him. The Israelites
had safeguarded the monotheistic faith that they had inherited from their
ancestors Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, peace be upon them. Together with
Joseph, peace be upon him, they went into Egypt and preserved their monotheism
for a long period of time, despite the fact that they had lived amidst
Egyptian idolatry. It is clear from the stories related in the Qur'an
that, when Moses came to them, the Israelites were a people that believed
in one God.
The only explanation for this is that the Israelites, however much they
adhered to a monotheistic belief, were influenced by the pagan peoples
among whom them lived, and began to imitate them, replacing the religion
chosen for them by God with the idolatry of foreign nations.
When we investigate this matter in light of historical records, we see
that the pagan cult that influenced the Israelites was that of Ancient
Egypt. An important evidence in support of this conclusion is that the
golden calf the Israelites worshipped, while Moses was on Mt. Sinai,
was actually a replica of the Egyptian idols Hathor
and Aphis. In his book, Too Long in the Sun, the Christian
author Richard Rives writes:
Hathor and Aphis, the cow and bull gods of Egypt,
were representatives of sun worship. Their worship was just one stage
in the long Egyptian history of solar veneration. The golden calf at
Mount Sinai is more than sufficient evidence to prove that the feast
proclaimed was related to sun worship…23

An Ancient Egyptian statue of Hathor.
|
The influence of the Egyptian pagan religion on the Israelites occurred
in many different stages. As soon as they had encountered a pagan people,
this leaning towards heretical belief appeared and, as the verse maintains,
they said "Moses, give us a god just as these people
have gods." (Qur'an, 7: 138) What they said to their Prophet, "Moses,
we will not believe in you until we see God with our own eyes."
(Qur'an, 2: 55) reveals that they were inclined to worship a material
being that they could see, as their pagan religion provided the Egyptians
with.
The tendency of the Israelites to the paganism of Ancient Egypt, that
we have here outlined, is important to understand and gives us some insight
into the corruption of the text of the Torah and the origins of the Kabbalah.
When we consider these two topics carefully, we will see that, at their
source, is found Ancient Egyptian paganism and the materialist philosophy.
FROM ANCIENT EGYPT TO THE KABBALAH
While Moses was still alive, the Israelites began to create likenesses
of the idols they had seen in Egypt and to worship them. After Moses died,
there was less to deter them from backsliding farther into perversity.
Of course, the same thing cannot be said of all Jews, but some of them
did adopt Egyptian paganism. Indeed, they carried on the doctrines of
the Egyptian priesthood (Pharaoh's magicians), that lay at the foundation
of that society's beliefs, and corrupted their own faith by introducing
these doctrines into it.
The doctrine that was introduced into Judaism from Ancient Egypt was
the Kabbalah. Like the system of the Egyptian priests, the Kabbalah was
an esoteric system, and its basis was the practice of magic. Interestingly,
the Kabbalah provides an account of creation quite different from that
found in the Torah. It is a materialist account, based on the Ancient
Egyptian idea of the eternal existence of matter. Murat Ozgen, a Turkish
Freemason, has this to say on this topic:
It is evident that the Kabbalah was composed many
years before the Torah came into existence. The most important section
of the Kabbalah is a theory about the formation of the universe. This
theory is very different from the story of creation accepted by theist
religions. According to the Kabbalah, at the beginning of creation,
things called Sefiroth, meaning "circles" or "orbits," with both
material and spiritual characteristics came into being. The total number
of these things was 32. The first ten represented the solar system and
the others represented the masses of stars in space. This particularity
of the Kabbalah shows that it is closely connected to ancient astrological
systems of belief... So, the Kabbalah is far removed from Jewish religion
and much more closely related to the ancient mystery religions of the
East.24

A sefiroth is one of the most blatant expressions of the pagan teachings
of the Kabbalah.
The figure composed of circles on the Kabbalistic engraving on the
right is a sefiroth. Kabbalists attempt to explain the process of
creation by means of the sefiroth. The scenario they propose is
really a pagan myth totally at odds with the facts revealed in holy
books.
|
The Jews, by adopting these Ancient Egyptian materialist and esoteric
doctrines that were founded on magic, ignored the related prohibitions
in the Torah. They took on the magic rituals of other pagan peoples, and
thus, the Kabbalah became a mystical doctrine within Judaism, but contrary
to the Torah. In her book entitled Secret Societies and Subversive
Movements, the English writer Nesta H. Webster says:
Sorcery, as we know, had been practised by the Canaanites
before the occupation of Palestine by the Israelites; Egypt, India,
and Greece also had their soothsayers and diviners. In spite of the
imprecations against sorcery contained in the Law of Moses,
the Jews, disregarding these warnings, caught the contagion and
mingled the sacred tradition they had inherited with magical ideas partly
borrowed from other races partly of their own devising. At the
same time the speculative side of the Jewish Cabala borrowed from the
philosophy of the Persian Magi, of the Neo-Platonists, and of the Neo-Pythagoreans.
There is, then, some justification for the anti-Cabalists' contention
that what we know to-day as the Cabala is not of purely Jewish origin.25
There is a verse in the Qur'an that refers to this topic. God says that
the Israelites learned satanic sorcery rituals from sources outside their
own religion:
They follow what the satans recited in the reign of
Solomon. Solomon did not become unbeliever, but the satans did, teaching
people sorcery and what had been sent down to Harut and Marut, the two
angels in Babylon, who taught no one without first saying to him, "We
are merely a trial and temptation, so do not become unbeliever." People
learned from them how to separate a man and his wife but they cannot
harm anyone by it, except with God's permission. They have learned what
will harm them and will not benefit them. They know that any who deal
in it will have no share in the hereafter. What an evil thing they have
sold themselves for if they only knew! (Qur'an, 2: 102)
This verse maintains that certain Jews, although they knew that they
would lose out in the hereafter, learned and adopted the practices of
magic. Thus, they strayed away from the Law that God had sent them and,
having sold their own souls, fell into paganism (magic doctrines). "They
have sold themselves" for an evil thing, in other words, they abandoned
their faith.
The facts related in this verse demonstrate the main features of an important
conflict in Jewish history. This struggle was, on the one hand, between
the prophets that God sent to the Jews and those believing Jews who obeyed
them, and on the other hand, those perverse Jews who rebelled against
God's commandments, imitated the pagan culture of the peoples around them,
and followed their cultural practices rather than the Law of God.

Some Jews, influenced by the cultures of the pagan civilizations
of Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, turned away from the Torah that
God gave them as a guide, and began to worship various material
objects. Above is pictured a pagan temple to the sun.
|
PAGAN DOCTRINES ADDED TO THE TORAH
It is important to note that the sins of the corrupt Jews are often reported
in the holy book of the Jews itself-the Old Testament. In the book of
Nehemiah, a kind of history book within the Old Testament, the Jews confess
their sins and repent:
Then those of Israelite lineage separated themselves from all foreigners;
and they stood and confessed their sins and the iniquities of their
fathers. And they stood up in their place and read from the Book of
the Law of the LORD their God [for one-fourth] of the day; and [for
another] fourth they confessed and worshiped the LORD their God. Then
Jeshua, Bani, Kadmiel, Shebaniah, Bunni, Sherebiah, Bani, [and] Chenani
stood on the stairs of the Levites and cried out with a loud voice to
the LORD their God.
...[They said:] "...they [our fathers] were disobedient
and rebelled against You, cast Your law behind their backs and killed
Your prophets, who testified against them to turn them to Yourself;
And they worked great provocations. Therefore You delivered them
into the hand of their enemies, who oppressed them; And in the time
of their trouble, when they cried to You, You heard from heaven; And
according to Your abundant mercies You gave them deliverers who saved
them from the hand of their enemies.But after they had rest, They again
did evil before You. Therefore You left them in the hand of their enemies,
so that they had dominion over them; Yet when they returned and cried
out to You, You heard from heaven; And many times You delivered them
according to Your mercies, and testified against them, that You might
bring them back to Your law. Yet they acted proudly, and did not heed
Your commandments, but sinned against Your judgments,
which if a man does, he shall live by them. And they shrugged
their shoulders, stiffened their necks, and would not hear.
...Nevertheless in Your great mercy You did not utterly consume them
nor forsake them; For You [are] God, gracious and merciful.
Now therefore, our God, The great, the mighty, and awesome God, ...You
[are] just in all that has befallen us; For You have dealt faithfully,
but we have done wickedly. Neither our kings nor
our princes, our priests nor our fathers, have kept Your law, nor heeded
Your commandments and Your testimonies, with which You testified against
them. For they have not served You in their kingdom, or in the
many good [things] that You gave them, or in the large and rich land
which You set before them; Nor did they turn from their wicked works."
(Nehemiah 9: 2-4, 26-29, 31-35)
This passage expresses the desire that a number of Jews had in returning
to their faith in God, but in the course of Jewish history a different
segment gradually gained strength, and came to dominate the Jews and later
thoroughly altered the religion itself. For this reason, in the Torah
and the other books of the Old Testament, there are elements that derive
from heretical pagan doctrines, as well as those mentioned above which
urge a return to the true religion. For example:
- In the first book of the Torah, it is said that God created the entire
universe in six days from nothing. This is correct and derives from
the original revelation. But, then it maintains that God rested on the
seventh day, though it is a completely fabricated assertion. It is a
perverse idea derived from paganism which attributes human qualities
to God. In a verse of the Qur'an, God says:
We created the heavens and the earth and all between
them in six days, nor did any sense of weariness touch Us. (Qur'an,
50: 38)
- In other parts of the Torah, there is a style of writing that is
not respectful of the honor of God, especially in those places where
human weakness is falsely attributed to Him. (God is surely beyond that)
These anthropomorphisms are made to resemble the human weaknesses that
pagans applied to their own fictitious gods.
- One such blasphemous assertion is another that claims that Jacob,
ancestor of the Israelites, wrestled with God, and won. This is clearly
a story invented to confer the Israelites with racial superiority, in
emulation of the racial feelings widespread among pagan peoples. (or,
in the words of the Qur'an: "fanatical rage")
- There is a tendency in the Old Testament to present God as a national
deity-that He is God of the Isrealites only. However, God is the Lord
and God of the universe and of all human beings. This notion of national
religion, in the Old Testament, corresponds to tendencies of paganism,
in which every tribe worships its own god.
- In some books of the Old Testament (for example, Joshua) commandments
are given to commit horrible violence against non-Jewish peoples. Mass
murder is commanded, with no regard for women, children or the elderly.
This merciless savagery is totally against God's justice, and recalls
the barbarism of pagan cultures, who worshipped a mythical god of war.
These pagan ideas that were introduced into the Torah
must have an origin. There must have been Jews who adopted, honored and
cherished a tradition foreign to the Torah, and changed the latter by
adding into it ideas derived from the tradition they espoused. The origin
of this tradition stretches back to the priests of Ancient Egypt (the
magicians of Pharaoh's regime). It is, in fact, the Kabbalah which was
passed on from there by a number of Jews. The Kabbalah assumed a form
that enabled Ancient Egyptian and other pagan doctrines to insinuate themselves
into Judaism and develop within it. Kabbalists, of course, assert that
the Kabbalah simply explains in more detail the hidden secrets of the
Torah, but, in reality, as Jewish historian of the Kabbalah, Theodore
Reinach, says, the Kabbalah is "a subtle poison
which enters into the veins of Judaism and wholly infests it."26
It is possible, then, to find in the Kabbalah clear traces of the materialist
ideology of the Ancient Egyptians.
THE KABBALAH-A DOCTRINE OPPOSED TO CREATIONISM
God reveals in the Qur'an that the Torah is a divine book that was sent
as a light to humanity:
We sent down the Torah containing guidance and light,
and the Prophets who had submitted themselves gave judgment by it for
the Jews-as did their scholars and their rabbis-by what they had been
allowed to preserve of God's Book to which they were witnesses…(Qur'an,
5: 44)
Therefore, the Torah, like the Qur'an, is a book that contains knowledge
and commands related to such topics as the existence of God, His unity,
His qualities, the creation of human beings and other creatures, the purpose
of human creation, and God's moral laws for humanity. (But, this original
Torah is not extant today. What we possess today is an "altered" version
of the Torah, corrupted by human hands.)
There is an important point that both the true Torah and the Qur'an share
in common: God is recognized as Creator. God is absolute, and has existed
since the beginning of time. Everything other than God is His creation,
created by Him from nothing. He has created and formed the whole universe,
the heavenly bodies, lifeless matter, human beings and all living things.
God is One; He exists alone.

The Kabbalah's teaching about the origins of the universe and living
things is a story replete with myths totally contrary to the facts
of creation revealed in holy books.
|
While this is the truth, there is a quite different interpretation found
in the Kabbalah, that "subtle poison which enters into the veins of Judaism
and wholly infests it." Its doctrine of God is totally opposed to the
"fact of creation," found in the real Torah and the Qur'an. In one of
his works on the Kabbalah, the American researcher, Lance S. Owens, presents
his view on the possible origins of this doctrine:
Kabbalistic experience engendered several perceptions about the Divine,
many of which departured from the orthodox view. The most central tenet
of Israel's faith had been the proclamation that "our God is One." But
Kabbalah asserted that while God exists in highest form as a totally
ineffable unity-called by Kabbalah Ein Sof, the infinite-this unknowable
singularity had necessarily emanated into a great number of Divine forms:
a plurality of Gods. These the Kabbalist called Sefiroth, the
vessels or faces of God. The manner by which God descended from incomprehensible
unity into plurality was a mystery to which Kabbalists devoted a great
deal of meditation and speculation. Obviously, this multifaceted God
image admits to accusations of being polytheistic, a charge which was
vehemently, if never entirely successfully, rebutted by the Kabbalists.
Not only was the Divine plural in Kabbalistic theosophy,
but in its first subtle emanation from unknowable unity God had taken
on a dual form as Male and Female; a supernal Father and Mother, Hokhmah
and Binah, were God's first emanated forms. Kabbalists used frankly
sexual metaphors to explain how the creative intercourse of Hokhmah
and Binah generated further creation...27
An interesting feature of this mystical theology is that, according to
it, human beings are not created, but are in some way divine. Owens describes
this myth:
The complex Divine image …was also visualized by Kabbalah
as having a unitary, anthropomorphic form. God was, by one Kabbalistic
recension, Adam Kadmon: the first primordial or archetypal Man. Man
shared with God both an intrinsic, uncreated divine spark and a complex,
organic form. This strange equation of Adam as God was supported
by a Kabbalistic cipher: the numerical value in Hebrew of the names
Adam and Jehovah (the Tetragrammaton, Yod he vav he) was both 45. Thus
in Kabbalistic exegesis Jehovah equaled Adam:
Adam was God. With this affirmation went the assertion that all humankind
in highest realization was like God.28
This theology comprises of a mythology of paganism, and formed the basis
of the degeneration of Judaism. Jewish Kabbalists breached the limits
of common sense to such an extent that they even tried to make human beings
into gods. In addition, according to this theology, not only was humanity
divine, but it consisted only of Jews; other races were not considered
human. As a result, within Judaism, which was originally founded on the
basis of service and obedience to God, this corrupt doctrine began to
develop, whose intent was to satiate Jewish arrogance. In spite of its
contrary nature to the Torah, the Kabbalah was introduced into Judaism.
Eventually though, it began to corrupt the Torah itself.
Another interesting point about the corrupt doctrines of the Kabbalah
is its similarity to the pagan ideas of Ancient Egypt. As we have discussed
in earlier pages, the Ancient Egyptians believed that matter had always
existed; in other words, they rejected the idea that matter was created
from nothing. The Kabbalah asserts the same thing in relation to human
beings; it claims that human beings were not created, and that they are
responsible for regulating their own existence.
To state it in modern terms: the Ancient Egyptians were materialists,
and, essentially, the doctrine of the Kabbalah can be called secular
humanism.
It is interesting to note that these two concepts-materialism and secular
humanism-describe the ideology that has dominated the world over the last
two centuries.
It is tempting to ask if there are forces who have carried the doctrines
of Ancient Egypt and the Kabbalah from the midst of ancient history to
the present day.
FROM THE TEMPLARS TO THE MASONS
When we mentioned the Templars earlier, we noted that
this peculiar order of crusaders was affected by a "secret" found in Jerusalem,
as a result of which they abandoned Christianity and began to practice
magic rites. We said that many researchers had reached the opinion that
this secret was related to the Kabbalah. For example, in his book Histoire
de la Magie (The History of Magic) the French writer, Eliphas Lévi, presents
detailed evidence that the Templars were initiated into the mysterious
doctrines of the Kabbalah, that is, they were secretly trained in this
doctrine.29 Therefore, a doctrine with its roots
in Ancient Egypt was transmitted to the Templars through the Kabbalah.
In Foucault's Pendulum, the famous Italian novelist, Umberto Eco,
relates these facts in the course of the plot. Throughout the novel, he
relates, through the mouths of its protagonists, that the Templars were
influenced by the Kabbalah and that the Kabbalists possessed a secret
that could be traced back to the Ancient Egyptian pharaohs. According
to Eco, some prominent Jews learned certain secrets taken from the Ancient
Egyptians, and later inserted these into the first five books of the Old
Testament (Pentateuch). But, this secret, which was transmitted secretly,
could be understood only by the Kabbalists. (The Zohar, written later
in Spain, and forming the fundamental book of the Kabbalah, deals with
the secrets of these five books) After stating that the Kabbalists read
this Ancient Egyptian secret also in the geometric measurements of the
temple of Solomon, Eco writes that the Templars learned it from the Kabbalist
rabbis in Jerusalem:
The secret-what the Temple already
said in full-is suspected only by a small group of rabbis who remained
in Palestine… And from them the Templars learn it.30
When the Templars adopted this ancient Egyptian-Kabbalist doctrine, naturally,
they came into conflict with the Christian establishment that dominated
Europe. This was a conflict they shared with another important force-the
Jews. After the Templars were arrested, by joint order of the king of
France and the Pope in 1307, the order went underground, but its influence
continued, and in a more radical and determined way.
As we said earlier, a significant number of Templars escaped arrest and
appealed to the king of Scotland, the only European kingdom at that time
that had not accepted the authority of the Pope. In Scotland, they infiltrated
the wall-builders' guild and, in time, took it over. The guilds adopted
the traditions of the Templars, and thus, the Masonic seed was planted
in Scotland. Still, to this day, the mainline of Masonry is the "Ancient
and Accepted Scottish Rite."

A model of Solomon's Temple. The Templars and Masons, because of
their superstitious beliefs concerning Solomon, believe that there
is a "secret" in this temple passed down from ancient
pagan civilizations. It is for this reason that Masonic literature
places so much emphasis on the temple of Solomon.
|
As we investigated in detail in The New Masonic Order, from the
beginnings of the fourteenth century it is possible to detect traces of
the Templars-and some Jews associated with them-at various stages of European
history. Without going into detail, here are some of the headings under
which we examined this topic:
- In Provence, in France, there was an important Templar refuge. During
the arrests, very many hid here. Another important feature of the area
is that it is the most well known center of Kabbalism in Europe. Provence
is the place where the oral tradition of the Kabbalah was made into
a book.
- The Peasants Revolt in England, in 1381, was, according
to some historians, fanned to flame by a secret organization. Those
experts who study the history of Masonry agree that this secret organization
was the Templars. It was more than a mere civil uprising, it was a planned
assault on the Catholic Church. 31
- Half a century after this revolt, a clergyman in
Bohemia by the name of John Huss started an uprising in opposition to
the Catholic Church. Behind the scenes of this uprising were again the
Templars. Moreover, Huss was very interested in the Kabbalah. Avigdor
Ben Isaac Kara was one of the most important names that he was influenced
by in the development of his doctrines. Kara was a rabbi of the Jewish
community in Prague and a Kabbalist. 32
Examples such as these are signs that the alliance between the Templars
and the Kabbalists was directed at a change in the social order of Europe.
This change involved an alteration in the basic Christian culture of Europe,
and its replacement by a culture based on pagan doctrines, like the Kabbalah.
And, after this cultural change, political changes would follow. The French
and Italian revolutions, for example…
In the coming sections, we will look at some important turning-points
in the history of Europe. At every stage the fact that will confront us
is that there existed a force that wanted to alienate Europe from its
Christian heritage, replace it with a secular ideology and, with this
program in mind, to destroy its religious institutions. This force attempted
to cause Europe to accept a doctrine that had been handed down from Ancient
Egypt through the Kabbalah. As we pointed out earlier, at the basis of
this doctrine were two important concepts: humanism and materialism.
First, let us look at humanism.
|