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As we enter on the artificially created moment of the new
Millennium
set by the Christian calendar, an
observer skeptical of the eschatological visions of doomsday apocalyptics might
yet consider that mankind is passing through a crisis in human history as a
whole, the end of a long beginning since the passing of the last Ice Age.
Globalization
and economic interpenetration, the
onrush of technology, political cyclone, ecological and demographic alarm,
coexist with futurist expectation, and the hopes of temporal salvation rendered
over to providential certainties. Ideas of progress
and decline seem finally to blend in
the antique hope of ‘end-time’ redemption, to pass as the ultimate ‘quick
fix’ uttered in slogans. Some see the end of the ‘modern age’, and in a
postmodernist mood, survey twentieth century as the close of an era. At least, the
expectation of millennial completion seems a desperate impatience in a vault of
centuries and a progression of epochs barely underway, barely able to begin. The
nature of futurist beliefs, themselves the source of endless confusion, generate
historical misperception in the traffic between archetypal ‘crisis’ and the
console red-warning lights of real issues.
It is interesting that the roots of millennial conceptions
in their current form emerged from the ideas of Zarathustra, in the second
Millennium
BC, passed through the vehicle of the
Persian
Empire into the parallel world of
emerging Judaism during the period of the Exile
and thence into Christianity
and Islam. By this reckoning our
crisis is quite ancient indeed, as recycled eschatology. It is difficult to
reconstruct the exact relationship of Zoroastrianism and the Hebraic monotheism,
although the Book of Daniel shows the
clear footprints leading back to the era of the Persian
Empire in the time of Cyrus the Great.[i]
Our sense of universal history springs from the Old
Testament epic. But this is a complex hybrid of multiple origins. The blend of
indigenous Judaic monotheism, as it emerged from its Canaanite, thence Egyptian
and Mesopotamian traditions, along with the themes of Iranian dualism and
eschatological messianism during the period of the Exile
and after, resurfacing strongly
during the Qumranic period near the birth of Christianity, is one of the most
confusing overlays of the period of cultural advance and integration that
occurred with a center of gravity ca. -600, thence to generate the pillars of a
great constellation of traditions. This complex parallel emergence and
interactive blending constitutes one of the central mysteries of the western
religious tradition.
That the record of the period of Exile given in the Old
Testament should have preserved the forgotten connection of eschatological ideas
with the parallel Zoroastrianism in the world of the Persian
Empire is a piece of a greater
puzzle. It is the period ca. -600, plus and minus, that is in fact our subject,
for it is this era that is the rough center of gravity of a great
transformation, known as the Axial Age
.
It is the era
of the birth of the great religions in concert at the fountainhead of the
traditions of classical antiquity. The process transcends the phenomenon of
religion and we see that the synchronous effect applies as well to the
polytheistic Greece in the period of the Ionian Enlightenment. The seeds of
modern secular culture are there sown at the same time, there is no clear
differentiation. The Old Testament conceals a riddle, but cannot do justice to
its own discovery of the Axial Age. Its perspective is too localized.
The
Birth of Universal History
The Biblical tradition
gives testimony to the birth of ideas of universal, or progressive history,
against the backdrop of cyclical myths, and this was influenced by Zorastrianism.
The irony that this linear, escahatological view of history should emerge in the
mysterious moment of the so-called Axial Age, whose cyclical interpretation we
will discover, and which will drive us to see their synthesis, the cyclical
driving the linear, in the eonic effect.[ii]
The myths of the Old Testament require a new understanding
in the wake of the findings of Biblical Criticism, and the phenomenon of the
Axial Age. We need to recast our understanding of the remarkable significance
and context of the Old Testament. It is pointing indirectly to a great
historical transition, in the evolution of religion itself toward a new form of
monotheism. But that transformation is larger than the phenomenon of religion.
Even secular philosophy finds itself unable to do justice
to this seminal epic at the dawn of middle antiquity. It is important to
consider how little accurate information we have for this period. By comparison
the histories of the Greek period are rich in data. We could not reliably speak
of the historical existence of Abraham, Moses, the Exodus, or any of the other
details of a history rendered into an ideological collation in the generation
before the Exile.
The
Bible Unearthed A renewed sense of the extraordinary significance of the Old
Testament leaves us with a question, What is the Bible recording? Theistic
historicism or an Axial transformation? The natural division into three
sections, the Torah, the Prophets, and the post-exilic writings of the period
Ezra and Nehemiah, gives the clue: the prophetic period straddles the Axial
interval and this, as we will see, is period of transition to a new era, leading
to its conclusion at a point of ‘divide’, ca. -600, in its enigmatic
synchrony with Greek, Indian, Chinese, and other parallels. We can decipher this
transition by comparison with its isomorphic instances, as in the emergence of
Classical Greece from the Greek Archaic. The Bible comes into existence and begins to crystallize in the generation of
the Great Reformation of Josiah at the conclusion of its Axial transition.[iii]
Seen rightly, the Old Testament’s core account,
the rough interval from -900 to the Exile, unwittingly records an incident in
the Axial Age. The puzzle of continuity and discontinuity perplexed the
redactors of the Judaic corpus who attempted to seek the sources of their
suddenly appearing tradition in earlier figures. Yet the sagas of Abraham and
Moses
, if historical, clearly precede the crucial phase. One irony of our enquiry
will be to inherit the true beauty of the Old Testament in a secular
interpretation.[iv]
This period seems the source, as an age of
‘revelation’, of our sense of the sacred. Yet we can now see that the
Zoroastrian, Abrahamic, and other sources precede this period, whose relative transformation
of outstanding cultural streams
seems to generate the illusion of an absolute or transcendental source. This is
a challenge to our idea of an age of Revelation. Further, Christianity and Islam
arise much later, but seem to look backward to this period, whose actual core
shows something quite different, the history of a Canaanite culture zone,
‘Israel/Judah’, whose religious traditions suddenly transform into a
monotheistic vehicle, as it sows the seeds of the religions to come. An almost
identical phenomenon, at this high level of abstraction, is visible in India,
and in a comparable time frame. In fact this entire period was extraordinary in
its generation, and all at once, of new cultural traditions. The complexity of
this picture requires a new type of historical model.
The
Evolution of Religion? The Old Testament records a paradox: monotheism seems
to begin with an ‘Abraham’, yet also seems to come into existence in the
Axial interval. This problem of relative transformation is a prime candidate for
analysis using our eonic model. The ‘evolution
’ of religion in the emergence of civilization is a complex overlay of two
processes, macro and micro. The micro aspect develops at all times, while the
macro is expressed in a larger discontinuous series. The intersection of the two
is what leads to the remarkable florescence we see in the Israelite monotheism
that surges outward, like an amplified signal, in the wake of the Axial
interval. One and the same effect, and one and the same timing, is visible in
the emergence of the parallel Axial Buddhism in India.
With the increase of modern historical knowledge this
strange phenomenon of synchronous parallelism has become an enigma replacing a
myth, in the process casting the Occidental myths of revelation in a most ironic
light. This constellation of creative individuals generates a new age of
history, and leads us into causal perplexity before such a complex temporal
correlation over independent regions of so many effects. It is a phenomenon of
Gaian proportions, yet we see only a series of outcomes, never the dynamic
behind them. There is nothing simple about it, for while it is true that the Old
Testament demonstrates the appearance of Biblical prophets in this period, the
effect has nothing as such to do with prophets. Prophets existed before, but
none quite like this unique series in their anticipations of a new world to
come.
From its archetypal roots, the eschatological idea
forever resurfaces, as evidenced in the versions of early modernism
, as they influenced, for example, the German and English Civil Wars, Hegel, and
Marx. The eschatological nexus moves between its twin realizations, the slow,
and the fast, the one conservative dangling the carrot of hope, the other
radical, pedal to the floor acceleration and social tumult. The ‘end times’
are the grounds for the last revolution, or else the ‘end of history’ is the
rationale for the end of revolutions. It is no accident that much contemporary
social criticism attempted to expose the fast version embedded in leftist
communism, looking the other way at the slow version granted the weight of
religious tradition.
The eschatological idea echoes throughout history, reaching
the modern world in its inverted secular forms, such as the Hegelian ‘end of
history’ showing the connection between state and transcendence in direct
fashion. This thinking echoes the question posed by the philosopher Kant in his
classic essay Idea For A Universal History
. Our secular Zarathustras live in the acceleration
of history, the exponential curve as
myth. Francis Fukuyama
finds, in The
End
of
History and the Last Man
, that we have reached a political final state, the end
of world-historical political
evolution
in the form of the liberal state. If
this is true, it should better be called the Beginning of History, the real New
Age, if its creature could reach future history as a New Man. But the point is
rather that in the perception of Hegel the evolution of freedom visible in the
realizations of modern democracy tokens a New Axial transformation of the worlds
inherited from antiquity. Finally, in the vault of time, the scale of the
historical passes to the moment of Earth time and the evolution of life, thence
to embrace the Big Bang and even, in new crypto-Zoroastrian theories of physics,
a final relativistic Omega Point
of converging world-lines at the
“end of time”.[v]
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