The Temple of Set I

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by Michael A Aquino


  not to the people. Justice was meted out by viziers (internal roving ambassadors of the pharaoh)

  and nome governors according to the neter of justice, Maat, on an individual-case basis. There

  was no concept of individual rights against the government, because government was viewed as

  a system imposed from without by the neteru. Similarly each Egyptian, whether high- or

  lowborn, participated in this system. Crime and corruption were of course possible, but

  inadvisable because of the conviction that viciousness, callousness, or cruelty would be punished

  severely after Earthly death. 20 [It is of note that such posthumous judgment focused upon

  individual virtue/vice rather than, as in later Christian/Islamic doctrine, upon mere orthodoxy

  and obedience to religious institutions.]

  Old Kingdom Egypt was largely insulated from foreign invasion or conflict, hence Egypt

  spent its early years as a peaceful culture with no standing military. Egypt is credited with

  invention of the alphabet, as well as the use of currency as a medium of exchange. It is

  noteworthy for having produced the first national (as opposed to city-state) political system, as

  well as the most enduring one in recorded history (more than 3,000 years). There was no caste,

  racial, or sexual discrimination; foreigners were considered “less than human (=Egyptian)”, but

  could remedy this misfortune simply by moving to Egypt and adopting Egyptian culture.

  Egypt was ultimately destroyed by foreign conquerors (Persia, Macedonia, Rome) and by her

  inability to adapt to the continuing competition of foreign cultures. Her New Empire of the

  Setian (XIX-XX) Dynasties was a protectionist backlash rather than an effort to “civilize” or

  create a permanent empire [after the fashion of Persia, Macedonia, or Rome].

  19 Cf. Fagan, Brian M., The Rape of the Nile. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1975.

  20 Wilson, John A., “Egypt” in Frankfort, Henri (Ed.), Before Philosophy. Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1946.

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  The Neteru

  The Egyptians perceived the Universe as actively controlled by conscious, natural principles

  ( neteru) of which Sir E.A. Wallis Budge remarks:

  The word neter has been translated “godlike”, “holy”, “divine”, “sacred”, “power”, “strength”,

  “force”, “strong”, “fortify”, “mighty”, “protect”; but it is quite impossible to be certain that any

  word which we may use represents the meaning of neter, because no one knows exactly what idea

  the ancient Egyptians attached to the word. The truth is that the exact meaning of neter was lost at

  a very early period of Egyptian history, and even the Coptic does not help us to recover it. 21

  To the Egyptians, all of “nature” (derived from neter) was alive and the direct consequence of

  the wills of the neteru. Nature was intelligible not just through inanimate, automatic, general

  regularities which could be discovered via the “scientific method”; but also through

  connections and associations between things and events perceived in the human

  mind. There was no distinction between “reality” and “appearance”; anything capable of

  exerting an effect upon the mind thereby existed. Hence a dream could be considered just as

  “real” and thus significant as a daytime experience. No more eloquently has this been

  summarized than by She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed in H. Rider Haggard’s She and Allan:

  [Allan Quatermain] “I have heard of Isis of

  the Egyptians, Lady of the Moon, Mother of

  Mysteries, spouse of Osiris whose child was

  Horus the Avenger.”

  [Ayesha] “Aye, and I think will hear more

  of her before you have done, Allan, for now

  something comes back to me concerning you

  and her and another. I am not the only one who

  has broken the oaths of Isis and received her

  curse, Allan, as you may find out in the days to

  come. But what of these heavenly queens?”

  “Only this, Ayesha: I have been taught that

  they were but phantasms fabled by men with

  many another false divinity, and could have

  sworn that this was true. And yet you talk of

  them as real and living, which perplexes me.”

  “Being dull of understanding doubtless it

  perplexes you, Allan. Yet if you had imagination,

  you might understand that these goddesses are

  great principles of nature: Isis of throned

  21 Budge, E. A. Wallis, The Book of the Dead. New Hyde Park: University Books, 1960, page #99.

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  Wisdom and strait virtue, and Aphrodite of Love as it is known to men and women who, being

  human, have it laid upon them that they must hand on the torch of life in their little hour. Also you

  would know that such principles can seem to take shape and form and at certain ages of he world

  appear to their servants visible in majesty, though perchance today others with changed names

  wield their sceptres and work their will. Now you are answered on this matter.”

  The Egyptian concept of “magic”, correspondingly, was neither unusual or exceptional. It

  merely represented the setting in motion of appropriate neteru forces to accomplish a desired

  end: which could be through physical action, symbolic ritual, art, or speech ( heka). A magical

  operation thus initially required perception ( sia) of a necessity, followed by utterance of the heka

  ( hw) to address it.

  Egyptian art, literature, and science looked for beauty and symmetry (felt to be indications of

  divine perfection), rather than for cause-and-effect relationships. Hence Egyptian thought is

  sometimes called “geometric” as opposed to the “algebraic” thought of Hellenic and later

  logicians.

  Since impressions and appearances substantiated reality, the Egyptian emphasis on portraits

  and statues of the neteru was not merely decorative, metaphorical, or symbolic. Rather an image

  was a medium whereby the neter in question could make an actual appearance in the material

  world. 22

  Similarly part of something could substitute for the whole as long as the mind completed the

  connection. Mental imagery created by viewing the portrait of a dead relative, for example,

  brought that relative to true life.

  Persons unfamiliar with the ancient Egyptian culture often assume that the Egyptian

  religion, like those of later Mediterranean civilizations, consisted of a single, integrated pantheon

  of anthropomorphic gods and goddesses. It is rather the case that the earliest Egyptian neteru

  were provincial, being patrons of individual cities and districts (nomes). Nor, despite their

  famous human/beast composite appearances, were they mere “supernatural persons” in the later

  Greek, Mesopotamian, or Roman mold. While popular stories were woven about them -

  presumably for popular consumption - the hieroglyphic treatment of the Egyptian neteru

  suggests that they actually represented various aspects of existence - the “Forms” or “First

  Principles” discussed by Pythagoras and Plato in a more abstract manner. 23

  Intriguingly the neteru may have had a physical presence as well. The 30-Dynasty dating

  system most archæologists use for ancient Egypt comes from Manetho, an Egyptian priest at

  Sebennytos in the Nile Delta ca. 280 BCE. Manetho’s dynastic list extends backward before

  Menes and the I Dynasty date of 3100 B
CE: 350 years Thinites; 1,790 years other Memphite

  kings; 1,817 years other kings; 1,255 years “Heroes”; and before that 13,900 years in which the

  neteru reigned physically on Earth.

  Obviously this chronology would conflict with the “accepted” prehistory of Egypt as

  summarized at the beginning of this chapter. Conventional Egyptologists are comfortable only

  with a “civilization began suddenly in 3100 BCE” scenario, hence Manetho is relied upon very

  strongly after that date, but swept under the rug prior to it. 24

  22 Cf. Schaefer, Heinrich, Principles of Egyptian Art. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1974. Contrast Egyptian statuary

  with Greek, Roman, or later European. The “living presence” in the former will be dramatically evident.

  23 Cf. Winspear, Alban D., The Genesis of Plato’s Thought. New York: S.A. Russell, 1940. Also Cf. Aquino, M.A., “The

  Sphinx and the Chimæra” (Appendix #1).

  24 Hoffman, Michael A., Egypt Before the Pharaohs. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1979. Fix, Wm. R., Pyramid

  Odyssey. New York: Mayflower Books, 1978.

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  Commerce, protective alliances, cultural contact, and finally the unification of the entire

  nation ca. 3100 BCE resulted in the gradual incorporation of local neteru into regional groups,

  and then into a loosely-knit national pantheon. Local and regional cult centers continued to hold

  their respective patrons in especial regard, however, and so the character and role of a specific

  neter might vary remarkably from place to place. Individual dynasties also tended to be oriented

  to particular cult centers, and so the neteru in question would be elevated - at least for a time - to

  the status of national patrons. 25

  The information concerning these cults which is available to modern Egyptologists is both

  sparse and confusing. Since a given neter could be portrayed in a number of different ways,

  identifying the “core neter” is difficult. The images and inscriptions concerning a neter were

  often altered or appropriated by cultists of rival neteru. In Christian and Islamic times all “old

  gods” were considered blasphemous, and monuments to them were regularly defaced and

  destroyed. By the end of the fifth century CE, knowledge of hieroglyphics had died out, not to

  reappear until the nineteenth century; meanwhile many “useless” records perished through

  neglect.

  For two reasons the cult of Osiris ( Asar) and Isis ( Asa) has been emphasized in modern

  literature: First, it was the last cult to dominate the entire Egyptian nation. Thus it was in a

  position to do a “final editing” of non-Osirian manuscripts and monuments. Secondly it was

  described in detail by Plutarch, permitting its study long after the hieroglyphic records of the

  other cults had become unreadable. 26

  Set

  No records of the ancient Priesthood of Set survived first the Osirian-dynastic persecution

  and later the more general vandalism of the Christian/Islamic eras. We know of it only by its

  reflection, both in the character of Set as he was portrayed symbolically and mythologically and

  in the nature of Egyptian priesthoods in general. Three significant facts are known about the

  Priesthood of Set:

  (1) Together with the Priesthood of Horus [the Elder], it was the oldest of the

  Egyptian priesthoods. If we date it to the earliest predynastic images of Set found by

  archæologists, we can establish an origin of at least 3200 BCE. Working with the Egyptians’ own

  25 Ions, Veronica, Egyptian Mythology. New York: Hamlyn Publishing Group, 1968, pages #11-13.

  26 Budge, Egyptian Language. New York: Dover Publications, 1971, page #15. Ions, op.cit. , pages #50-55. Fagan,

  op.cit. , pages #34-36. Plutarch, Isis and Osiris, Volume V in Moralia (14 volumes), F.C. Babbitt (Ed. & Trans.).

  London: Loeb Classical Library, 1936.

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  astronomically-based records, we may approximate 5000 BCE. 27 If we are to assume the final

  eclipse of the Priesthood at the end of the XIX-XX [Setian] Dynasties ca. 1085 BCE, we are

  looking at an institution which existed at least two thousand and possibly as many as four

  thousand years. “In the early dynasties,” observes Budge:

  Set was a beneficent god, and one whose favor was sought after by the living and by the dead,

  and so late as the XIX Dynasty kings delighted to call themselves “Beloved of Set”. After the cult of

  Osiris was firmly established and this god was the “great god” of all Egypt, it became the fashion to

  regard Set as the origin of all evil, and his statues and images were so effectively destroyed that

  only a few which have escaped by accident have come down to us. 28

  One may note that Set was by no means the only “fabulous” creature ever portrayed by

  Egyptian artists. But he was the only one represented as a principal neter, as opposed to a

  purely-animalistic monster of the Tuat.

  (2) Set was the neter who was “different” from all of the others. Too often this is

  simplified into his being the “evil” slayer of Osiris, hence the personification of “evil”; yet any but

  the most cursory study of Egyptian religious symbolism is sufficient to dispel this caricature. He

  was rather a neter “against the neteru”: the entity who symbolized that which is not of nature.

  This is a very curious role for a neter in Egyptian cosmology: to be a presence and force

  which alone could not be apprehended by perceptions of the natural senses. Set thus represents

  the nameless “thing” whose existence we know of by the shadow it casts on things apprehended

  and things perceived by it: the non-natural “presence of self” in individual intelligent life.

  We have generalized the vehicle by which this presence is manifest as the ba, spirit, psyche,

  or soul, but increased precision is possible. We must subtract from the psyche what is “life

  force”, and focus our attention on that which remains: the very awareness of self. In doing so

  we have in one sense retraced the path of Descartes to the cogito ergo sum proposition. Unlike

  Descartes, however, we see this phenomenon to be a “thing totally apart” which is not an

  extension of “God” or anything else. Set is the conceptualizer of this principle: the designer. To

  rewrite the crucial sentence in the above quote from the point of view of a neter: “A thing created

  in the mind thereby exists.”

  This is delicate ground to tread, so much more so for an ancient Egyptian civilization whose

  entire “natural” cosmology was based upon the perfection and harmony of the Universe.

  (3) Despite this unique and disturbing image, or perhaps because of it, Set

  became the patron of the two most powerful dynasties in Egypt’s long history, the

  XIX and XX. Herein there is an interesting “theological succession”:

  The early XVIII Dynasty (ca. 1580-1372) was that of the great Amenhoteps, during whose

  reigns the Priesthood of Amon at Thebes was preeminent. The dynasty disintegrated during the

  “Amarna period” (ca. 1372-1343) of Akhenaten, during which the solar disk of Aton was

  considered supreme if not indeed all-inclusive of the neteru. When the new XIX Dynasty arose

  under Rameses I and Seti I, the state role of Amon was restored - but the pharaohs directed

  much of their efforts towards Set. Recounts Sauneron:

  The new dynasty in power, careful to appear to be “restoring everything to order”, had many
<
br />   reasons for mistrusting the Amonian priesthood. Descendants of a military family of the eastern

  delta, the new pharaohs were traditionally devoted to a god little esteemed by the masses because

  27 Lockyer, J. Norman, The Dawn of Astronomy. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1964, page #215.

  28 Budge, The Book of the Dead, page #181.

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  of the role that he had been assigned in the death of Osiris. But they preserved nevertheless, here

  and there, the temples and priesthoods of the god Set.

  The Amarnian experience had demonstrated the cost of too abrupt a break with the beliefs

  central to the entire nation, and of entering into open warfare against a priesthood practically as

  powerful as the throne itself. Thus the politics of Seti I (1312-1301) and of Rameses II (1301-1235)

  were infinitely more subtle than those of their predecessors. There was no rupture with Thebes;

  the constructions continued, and magnificent edifices were raised to the glory of Amon at Karnak,

  Gourna, and Ramesseum. But it was from the [Osirian] center of Abydos that Rameses appointed

  the High Priest of Amon. Then he installed two of his sons, Merytum and Khamuast, as the High

  Priests of Ra at Heliopolis and Ptah at Memphis, and demonstrated by further monuments and

  political favors his public support of these gods. But finally, wearied of Thebes and its ambitious

  priests, he departed to build a new capital, Pi-Rameses, in the eastern delta - where he could

  quietly worship the god dearest to him, with Amon occupying a secondary prominence.

  The provincial cities where Set had been worshipped from all eternity - among them Ombos,

  Tjebu, and Sepermeru - gained new preeminence from the favor accorded by the Ramesside

  leaders to the god of the Eastern Delta. Above all, Pi-Rameses, the new capital, brilliantly restored

  the worship that Set had formerly received in the Avaris of the Hyksos. 29

  During the Setian Dynasties - most probably during the reign of Merenptah - the revolt and

  “exodus” of a number of nomads (hieroglyphic habiru) living in Egypt’s Goshen province

  occurred - or at least did so in Jewish legend. Although “Old Testament” lore states that the

 

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