P1027:2, 94:1.1
In the days of Melchizedek, India was a cosmopolitan country which had recently
come under the political and religious dominance of the
Aryan-Andite invaders
from the north and west. At this time only the northern and western portions
of the peninsula had been extensively permeated by the Aryans. These Vedic
newcomers had brought along with them their many tribal deities. Their religious
forms of worship followed closely the ceremonial practices of their earlier
Andite forebears in that the father still functioned as a priest and the mother
as a
priestess, and the family hearth was still utilized as an altar.
P1027:3, 94:1.2
The Vedic cult was then in process of growth and metamorphosis under the direction
of the Brahman caste of teacher-priests, who were gradually assuming control
over the expanding ritual of worship. The amalgamation of the onetime thirty-three
Aryan deities was well under way when the Salem missionaries penetrated the
north of India.
P1027:4, 94:1.3
The polytheism of these Aryans represented a degeneration of their earlier
monotheism occasioned by their separation into tribal units, each tribe having
its venerated god. This
devolution of the original monotheism and trinitarianism
of Andite Mesopotamia was in process of
resynthesis in the early centuries
of the second millennium before Christ. The many gods were organized into
a pantheon under the triune leadership of Dyaus
pitar, the lord of heaven;
Indra, the
tempestuous lord of the atmosphere; and Agni, the three-headed
fire god, lord of the earth and the vestigial symbol of an earlier Trinity
concept.
P1027:5, 94:1.4
Definite henotheistic developments were
paving the way for an evolved monotheism.
Agni, the most ancient deity, was often exalted as the
father-head of the
entire pantheon. The
deity-father principle, sometimes called
Prajapati, sometimes
termed Brahma, was submerged in the theologic battle which the Brahman priests
later fought with the Salem teachers. The Brahman was conceived as
the
energy-divinity principle activating the entire Vedic pantheon.
P1028:1, 94:1.5
The Salem missionaries preached the one God of Melchizedek, the Most High
of heaven. This portrayal was not altogether disharmonious with the emerging
concept of the
Father-Brahma as the source of all gods, but the Salem doctrine
was
nonritualistic and hence ran directly counter to the dogmas, traditions,
and teachings of the Brahman priesthood. Never would the Brahman priests accept
the Salem teaching of salvation through faith, favor with God apart from ritualistic
observances and sacrificial ceremonials.
P1028:2, 94:1.6
The rejection of the Melchizedek gospel of trust in God and salvation through
faith marked a vital turning point for India. The Salem missionaries had contributed
much to the loss of faith in all the ancient Vedic gods, but the leaders,
the priests of Vedism, refused to accept the Melchizedek teaching of one God
and one simple faith.
P1028:3, 94:1.7
The Brahmans
culled the sacred writings of their day in an effort to combat
the Salem teachers, and this compilation, as later revised, has come on down
to modern times as the Rig-Veda, one of the most ancient of sacred books.
The second, third, and fourth Vedas followed as the Brahmans sought to crystallize,
formalize, and fix their rituals of worship and sacrifice upon the peoples
of those days. Taken at their best, these writings are the equal of any other
body of similar character in beauty of concept and truth of discernment. But
as this superior religion became contaminated with the thousands upon thousands
of superstitions, cults, and rituals of southern India, it progressively metamorphosed
into the most variegated system of theology ever developed by mortal man.
An examination of the Vedas will disclose some of the highest and some of
the most debased concepts of Deity ever to be conceived.