Sunday, March 7, 2021

Satan being "the black one"

  

In the two aspects of the mystery of baptism discussed so far we have recognized the aim and the source of the Christian mystery: the aim is the Ogdoad of eternal life—the source is the redeeming power of the Cross. In between lies the earthly life span of the mystes: there the divine power of the initiation received in baptism is at work, but has not yet achieved its own “fulfillment”: for the end and goal (τελος) of Christian teleiosis is the eschatological vision of God in the transfiguration of the flesh. In this earthly life, he who has received the initiation of baptism is indeed possessed of life everlasting (he has entered into the Ogdoad but he cannot yet behold it: “it hath not yet appeared what we shall be, [but] we know that when he shall appear, we shall be like to him; because we shall see him as he is”—I John 3:2), but his possession of it is not secure. The mystery of baptism is a lifelong decision between light and darkness, between Christ and Belial, life and death. Or else, to use another early Christian image: the mystes has already reached the harbor of the transcendent world, and yet his perilous voyage continues; he bears in his soul the seal that opens all gates on his heavenward journey, but his ascent is still threatened by demons and spirits. This is the paradox of the mystery. It would be highly profitable to adduce all the profound ideas and precious images with which the early Christians adorned this “mystery of the interim.” It would be profitable to show how the mystery of decision is expressed in the ritual of baptism: how the mystes turns away from Satan, the “black one,” and toward Christ the king of light, who comes from the East like the sun and brings him the illumination (φωτισμος) of baptism. Such a study would be particularly significant because the ritual of this mystery of the fundamental Christian decision contains much Greek material, emanating largely from that common sphere which also forms the background of the symbolic usages of the mysteries. To this category belong the image of Satan dwelling in the dark West; the breathing and spitting upon the evil one; mil and honey as the food of the mystes; and the symbolism of the salt. (Hugh Rahner, “The Christian Mystery and the Pagan Mysteries,” in Joseph Campbell, ed., The Mysteries: Papers from the Eranos Yearbooks [Bollingen Series XXX 2; Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1955], 337-401, here, pp. 398-99, emphasis added)

 

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