The Mithraic Ladder

Readers of Manly P Hall’s The Secret Teachings Of All Ages will have found reference to an occult concept called the Mithraic Ladder. In its exoteric form, this is the name given to the ladder of seven rungs by which initiates ascended the grades in the Mithraic Mysteries. Its esoteric meaning, as this essay will explore, means something different.

In the physical world, the Mithraic Ladder represents the ascension through the seven grades of the Mithraic Mysteries, from the Corax degree through the Nymphus, Miles, Leo, Perses, Heliodromus and Pater degrees (it’s possible that these degrees were for the Mithraic priesthood and not for mainstream initiates). Thus, the Corax degree is the lowest and the Pater degree the highest.

In the metaphysical world, the Mithraic Ladder represents the spectrum between good and bad/evil, divided into seven steps. The bottommost step is always taken to represent the base, ignorant, animalistic state of humankind, and the uppermost step to represent the perfect and divine state that can be achieved in enlightenment. This metaphorical Mithraic Ladder underpins a great deal of occultist thought.

This division of the spectrum between good and bad/evil into seven stages was commonplace in ancient occultism. Not only was it the basis of the Mithraic Ladder, it was also the basis of the Sanskrit chakra system, the Mysteries of Brahma, the Seven Masculine Elements in Western Hermeticism and the Kabbalistic Tree of Life.

These seven stages are often referred to by their corresponding alchemical element. The lowest stage is lead. Next is tin, then iron, then copper, then silver, then mercury, with gold as the highest stage. This arrangement reflects how a person’s soul seems to emit more light the higher they climb up the Mithraic Ladder.

These seven stages can be arranged into three groups, corresponding to the three parts of the Platonic soul. Hence, lead and tin represent the appetitive soul, iron and copper the spirited soul, and silver, mercury and gold the rational soul (iron and silver might be considered parts of the appetitive and spirited souls, respectively).

Because the Mithraic Ladder reflects a fundamental pattern within the Great Fractal, namely the existence of the Great Masculine Axis, it can be seen everywhere.

The most obvious place is in the heavens, where the uppermost step is represented by the Sun, and the lowermost step by Saturn, with Mercury, Venus, the Moon, Mars and Jupiter in between. Whether this is a fluke, or whether the architect of the material world saw fit to encode a Mithraic Ladder in the heavens, remains a mystery.

A rainbow is not a Mithraic Ladder. Although the rainbow is divided into seven distinct bands, these are not steps, as there is no sense that any are of higher value to any other. The rainbow, like other natural phenomena, operates along the Great Feminine Axis. It could thus be argued that the Mithraic Ladder is orthogonal to the rainbow.

The Mithraic Ladder can be found in many academic fields, particularly psychology.

Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs is a description of the biological organism ascending the Mithraic Ladder as it meets its instinctual needs through time. Here, lead and tin are represented by physiological needs, iron by security needs, copper and silver by social and career needs, and mercury and gold by self-actualisation needs.

Erik Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development describes the human being ascending the Mithraic Ladder as it grows older. The trust vs. mistrust stage corresponds to lead, the autonomy vs. shame and doubt stage to tin, the initiative vs. guilt and industry vs. inferiority stages to iron, the identity vs. role confusion and intimacy vs. isolation stages to copper, the generativity vs. stagnation stage to silver and the ego integrity vs. despair stage to mercury/gold.

Lawrence Kohlberg’s theory of moral development also describes an ascension of the Mithraic Ladder, in the form of the human consciousness developing moral sophistication. Kohlberg’s theory divides moral development into six stages comprised of three groups, so that pre-conventional morality corresponds to the appetitive soul, conventional morality with the spirited soul, and post-conventional morality with the rational soul.

All of these theories describe a journey up the Mithraic Ladder, wherein the initial state of existence is transcended, and then the second state is transcended, and so on until the seventh and highest state is reached. The phrases “to have ascended to the crown chakra” and “to be in seventh heaven” reflects the bliss of having seen beyond the veils of illusion and transcended material suffering by reaching the seventh rung of the Ladder – in other words, to have turned lead into gold.

My theory of female mate selection, as discussed on the Clown World Dating podcast with Chad Chaddington, is that female mate choice is primarily a function of each woman’s frequency of consciousness, i.e. where her consciousness is on the Mithraic Ladder. For example, women with souls of lead will be attracted to low-frequency men and will discount high-frequency men, whereas women with souls of gold will do the opposite.

My contention is that this theory explains the sometimes baffling mating choices made by women in Clown World better than any alternative theory. This superior explanatory power is generally true of theories based on the Mithraic Ladder, which describes a person’s spiritual development, and which therefore can be found in a multitude of expressions in the material world.

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The Elementalist Conception of War and Peace

1. The Third Tenet reminds us that the Great Fractal is the eternal and infinite interplay of the war between good and evil and the dance between masculine and feminine.

2. When two sides exchange in the belief that the other is evil, one has war.

3. When two sides exchange in the belief that the other is good, one has peace.

4. War is when good and evil exchange.

5. Peace is when masculine and feminine exchange.

6. The absence of exchange does not connotate peace, but an excess of order. Because an excess of order does not entertain the gods, they tend to cause it to dissolve in warfare.

7. War is not an inherent evil, but rather an intensification of the experience of passing through the Great Fractal.

8. Peace is not an inherent good, but rather a relaxation of the experience of passing through the Great Fractal.

9. While at war, one can be certain that the gods are watching.

10. While at festival, one can also be certain that the gods are watching.

11. It is false that peace does not entertain the gods, but they prefer festivals to stagnant peace.

12. The gods are appalled by those who live in peace but fail to appreciate it. They bring war upon such ungrateful types.

13. If one can learn to overcome the suffering of war, then one is likely to entertain the gods.

14. If one can learn to appreciate the suffering of war, then one is certain to entertain the gods.

15. War is the natural order of material life, therefore those who overcome it entertain the gods.

16. Peace inherently entertains the gods by virtue of being unusual. A stagnating peace, however, causes them to will chaos upon the stagnant.

17. Without awareness of the Four Tenets, there exists only war.

18. Understanding the First Tenet means having compassion for all living beings.

19. Understanding the Fourth Tenet means that one’s fragment of consciousness radiates peace into the material world.

20. The Elementalist is not prejudiced, neither for or against, either war or peace. The most important thing is to play one’s role in entertaining the gods.

21. War and peace span a spectrum of intensity that is akin to the spectrum spanned by fire and earth. The most intense warfare can be compared to the hottest fire.

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This chapter is an excerpt from Elemental Elementalism, the foundational scripture of the new religion of the Age of Aquarius.

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The Elementalist Conception of How Everything Evens Out

1. The Quadrijitu shows us that masculine becomes feminine, feminine becomes masculine, good becomes evil and evil becomes good.

2. The shape of the Quadrijitu reflects the Hermetic Principle of Correspondence.

3. As above, so below. As below, so above. As within, so without. As without, so within. As before, so after. As after, so before. As included, so excluded. As excluded, so included.

4. Every physical action has an equal and opposite reaction.

5. Every emotional action has an equal and opposite reaction.

6. Every mental action has an equal and opposite reaction.

7. Every spiritual action has an equal and opposite reaction.

8. Suffering inures the mind to suffering; joy inures the mind to joy.

9. Verticalisation inclines the mind to see the benefits of the horizontal; horizontalisation inclines the mind to see the benefits of the vertical.

10. When the Northern Hemisphere stands in the light, the Southern Hemisphere stands in the darkness. When the Southern Hemisphere stands in the light, the Northern Hemisphere stands in the darkness.

11. When the Occident stands in the light, the Orient stands in the darkness. When the Orient stands in the light, the Occident stands in the darkness.

12. When the soul stands in the light, the body stands in the darkness. When the body stands in the light, the soul stands in the darkness.

13. Consciousness exists at the intersection between the eternal past and the eternal future. Within it, all things are possible.

14. Energy flows where attention goes. To observe something is to make it more real.

15. To pay regard to any one aspect of life is to neglect all the others. Thus, appreciating one aspect of life primes oneself to appreciate the others in turn.

16. The gods are bored by the excessively good, and wish evil upon it.

17. The sum total of all positive values and all negative values is zero.

18. The sum total of one entire rotation around the Quadrijitu is zero.

19. Bad luck affords a greater opportunity to entertain the gods, for they are most entertained by those who successfully overcome.

20. Good luck tempts fate, therefore it should be appreciated and not desired.

21. Great suffering can bring great wisdom. The purest gold can only be found after the hottest fires.

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This chapter is an excerpt from Elemental Elementalism, the foundational scripture of the new religion of the Age of Aquarius.

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The Elementalist Conception Of How Life Began

1. The great and the learned have long debated how life began on this planet.

2. One popular theory is that life sparked into being when lightning struck a pool of water containing the right chemicals.

3. Another popular theory is that life came to Earth from elsewhere in the galaxy, perhaps on a comet or fragment of planet that exploded, and upon seeding the Earth began to evolve.

4. Yet another popular theory is that a god outside of the physical world created it for various reasons, willing life into being and then abandoning it to run its natural course.

5. The Elementalist, knowing consciousness to be the prima materia, laughs upon hearing all such nonsense.

6. There is no such thing as life; there is consciousness and the contents of consciousness.

7. The various fragments of consciousness incarnate into this world as the various creatures.

8. When these fragments of consciousness perceive each other’s physical forms through the sensory organs of their incarnations, it appears as if the physical world is the prima materia and that life has appeared on it.

9. The Elementalist knows this to be the Prime Illusion.

10. The physical world is a hallucination that is maintained by consciousness observing it.

11. The greater the number of fragments of consciousness that perceive any one part of the physical world, the more intensely real that part appears.

12. The apparent beginning of life on Earth, in proto-bacterial form, is illusory, as there is no such thing as time.

13. Life as a proto-bacteria, as with all other lives, is merely another set of perceptions that can be experienced by consciousness.

14. Life is precious because it is an incarnation of the divine.

15. All living things are incarnations of the divine experiencing the Great Fractal. Therefore, to cause suffering to life is to go against the will of the divine.

16. It’s not a crime to cause suffering to life if this should entertain the gods.

17. Few things appall the gods more than mindlessly causing suffering to life.

18. Each fragment of consciousness descends from a higher dimension into this physical world, and therein incarnates into a body. So begins each and every life.

19. Each of these bodies is fundamentally a vibration that resolves as different proportions of fire, air, water and earth, and from there to the infinite forms.

20. The fragment of consciousness ensouling each of these bodies is fundamentally a frequency that resolves as different proportions of clay, iron, silver and gold, and from there to the infinite forms.

21. The combination of vibrations of fire, air, water and earth and frequencies of clay, iron, silver and gold produce all the expressions of life on this planet.

22. Every form of life that could ever possibly exist exists within the Great Fractal, and always has, and always will.

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This chapter is an excerpt from Elemental Elementalism, the foundational scripture of the new religion of the Age of Aquarius.

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If you enjoyed reading this essay/article, you can get a compilation of the Best VJMP Essays and Articles of 2020 from Amazon for Kindle or Amazon for CreateSpace (for international readers), or TradeMe (for Kiwis). A compilation of the Best VJMP Essays and Articles of 2019, the Best VJMP Essays and Articles of 2018 and the Best VJMP Essays and Articles of 2017 are also available.

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