Greco-Christian stream·Chaldean Oracles·The Oracles of Zoroaster
The Oracles of Zoroaster
The largest section — the body of fragments traditionally grouped as the Oracles of Zoroaster. The doctrines of the Paternal Fountain, the Intelligible Triad, the empyrean and ethereal worlds, the iynges and the great chain of being. The cosmological core of the Chaldean tradition.
Source context
- Theme
- oracular transmission attributed to Zoroaster as a channel of pre-Christian cosmic wisdom
Steiner
- GA 112, 1909-06-29Steiner situates the post-Atlantean oracle institutions as successors to the Atlantean oracles, establishing the broader cultural-initiatory context within which a Zoroastrian oracle tradition would belong.
- GA 104a, 1909-05-10Steiner identifies the great Sun Oracle of ancient Atlantis as the source inspiring the successive post-Atlantean cultural epochs, providing a cosmological framework for understanding oracular streams such as the Chaldean-Zoroastrian.
- GA 13, chapter 4Steiner describes how specific Atlantean oracle centres — Mercury, Venus, and others — were transplanted into post-Atlantean mystery sanctuaries, indicating an ongoing transmission of oracle wisdom into the Chaldean and Hermetic streams.
Cross-tradition
- Zoroastrianism / Mazdean cosmologyThe attribution of the Chaldean Oracles to Zoroaster reflects a Neoplatonic practice of grounding theurgic wisdom in the Mazdean prophetic lineage, establishing cross-tradition congruence between Iranian fire-theology and Greek theurgy.
- Neoplatonism (Porphyry, Iamblichus, Proclus)Neoplatonic commentators received the oracles as authoritative theurgic scripture, treating the Zoroastrian attribution as a marker of primordial revelation, exhibiting cross-tradition congruence with their doctrine of a single divine source behind multiple oracular streams.
- Hermetic traditionThe Hermetic corpus shares with the Chaldean Oracles the structural pattern of revealed cosmic law transmitted through a named divine mediator, constituting cross-tradition congruence in the architecture of initiatory disclosure.
The Oracles of Zoroaster
THE
CAUSE. GOD.
FATHER.
MIND.
FIRE.
MONAD.
DYAD.
TRIAD.
1But God is He having the head of the Hawk. The same is the first, incorruptible, eternal, unbegotten, indivisible, dissimilar: the dispenser of all good; indestructible; the best of the good, the Wisest of the wise; He is the Father of Equity and Justice, self-taught, physical, perfect, and wise--He who inspires the Sacred Philosophy.
Eusebius. *Præparatio Evangelica*, liber. I., chap. X. *This Oracle does not appear in either of the ancient collections, nor in the group of oracles given by any of the mediæval occultists. Cory seems to have been the first to discover it in the voluminous writings of Eusebius, who attributes the authorship to the Persian Zoroaster * ________
2Theurgists assert that He is a God and celebrate him as both older and younger, as a circulating and eternal God, as understanding the whole number of all things moving in the World, and moreover infinite through his power and energizing a spiral force.
Proclus on the *Timæus* of Plato, 244. Z. or T. *The Egyptian Pantheon had an Elder and a Younger Horus--a God--son of Osiris and Isis. Taylor suggests that He refers to Kronos, Time, or Chronos, as the later Platonists wrote the name. Kronos, or Saturnus, of the Romans, was son of Uranos and Gaia, husband of Rhea, father of Zeus*. ________
3The God of the Universe, eternal, limitless, both young and old, having a spiral force.
*Cory includes this Oracle in his collection, but he gives no authority for it.* *Lobeck doubted its authenticity*. ________
4For the Eternal Æon *--according to the Oracle--is the cause of never failing life, of unwearied power and unsluggish energy.
Taylor.--T. ________
5Hence the inscrutable God is called silent by the divine ones, and is said to consent with Mind, and to be known to human souls through the power of the Mind alone.
Proclus in *Theologiam Platonis*, 321. T. *Inscrutable. Taylor gives "stable;" perhaps "incomprehensible" is better*. ________
6The Chaldæans call the God Dionysos (or Bacchus), Iao in the Phœnician tongue (instead of
the Intelligible Light), and he is also called Sabaoth, * signifying that he is above the Seven poles, that is the Demiurgos. Lydus, *De Mensibus*, 83. T. ________
7Containing all things in the one summit of his own Hyparxis, He Himself subsists wholly beyond.
Proclus in *Theologiam Platonis*, 212. T. *Hyparxis, is generally deemed to mean "Subsistence." Hupar is *Reality* as distinct from *appearance;* Huparche is a *Beginning*.* ________
8Measuring and bounding all things.
Proclus in *Theologiam Platonis*, 386. T. *"Thus he speaks the words," is omitted by Taylor and Cory, but present in the Greek*. ________
9For nothing imperfect emanates from the Paternal Principle,
*Psellus*, 38; *Pletho*. Z. *This implies--but only from a succedent emanation*. ________
10The Father effused not Fear, but He infused persuasion.
*Pletho*. Z. ________
11The Father hath apprehended Himself, and hath not restricted his Fire to his own intellectual power.
*Psellus*, 30; *Pletho*, 33. Z. Taylor gives:--The Father hath hastily withdrawn Himself, but hath not shut up his own Fire in his intellectual power. *The Greek text has no word "hastily," and as to withdrawn--Arpazo means, grasp or snatch, but also "apprehend with the mind." * ________
12Such is the Mind which is energized before energy, while yet it had not gone forth, but abode in the Paternal Depth, and in the Adytum of God nourished silence.
Proc. in *Tim*., 167. T.
13All things have issued from that one Fire.
The Father perfected all things, and delivered them over to the Second Mind, whom all Nations of Men call the First. *Psellus*, 24; *Pletho*, 30. Z.
14The Second Mind conducts the Empyrean World.
Damascius, *De Principiis*. T.
15What the Intelligible saith, it saith by understanding.
*Psellus*, 35. Z.
16Power is with them, but Mind is from Him.
Proclus in *Platonis Theologiam*, 365. T.
17The Mind of the Father riding on the subtle Guiders, which glitter with the tracings of inflexible and relentless Fire.
Proclus on the *Cratylus of Plato*. T.
18. . . . After the Paternal Conception
I the Soul reside, a heat animating all things. . . . . For he placed p. 27 The Intelligible in the Soul, and the Soul in dull body, Even so the Father of Gods and Men placed them in us. Proclus in *Tim. Plat*., 124.. Z. or T.
19Natural works co-exist with the intellectual light of the Father. For it is the Soul which adorned the vast Heaven, and which adorneth it after the Father, but her dominion is established on high.
Proclus in Tim., 106. Z. or T. *Dominion, krata: some copies give kerata, horns*. ________
20The Soul, being a brilliant Fire, by the power of the Father remaineth immortal, and is Mistress of Life, and filleth up the many recesses of the bosom of the World.
*Psellus*, 28; *Pletho*, 11. Z.
21The channels being intermixed, therein she performeth the works of incorruptible Fire.
Proclus in *Politico*, p. 399. Z. or T.
22For not in Matter did the Fire which is in the first beyond enclose His active Power, but in Mind; for the framer of the Fiery World is the Mind of Mind.
Proclus in *Theologian*, 333, and *Tim*., 157. T.
23Who first sprang from Mind, clothing the one Fire with the other Fire, binding them together, that he might mingle the fountainous craters, while preserving unsullied the brilliance of His own Fire.
Proclus in *Parm. Platonis*. T.
24And thence a Fiery Whirlwind drawing down the brilliance of the flashing flame, penetrating the abysses of the Universe; for from thence downwards do extend their wondrous rays.
Proclus in *Theologian Platonis*, 171 and 172. T.
25The Monad first existed, and the Paternal Monad still subsists.
Proclus in *Euclidem*, 27. T.
26When the Monad is extended, the Dyad is generated.
Proclus in *Euclidemi*, 27. T. *Note that" What the Pythagoreans signify by Monad, Duad and Triad, or Plato by Bound, Infinite and Mixed; that the Oracles of the Gods intend by Hyparxis, Power and Energy." * Damascius *De Principiis*. Taylor. ________
27And beside Him is seated the Dyad which glitters with intellectual sections, to govern all things and to order everything not ordered.
Proclus in *Platonis Theologiam*, 376. T.
28The Mind of the Father said that all things should be cut into Three, whose Will assented, and immediately all things were so divided.
Proclus in *Parmen*. T.
29The Mind of the Eternal Father said into Three, governing all things by Mind.
Proclus, *Timæus of Plato*. T.
30The Father mingled every Spirit from this Triad.
Lydus, *De Mensibus*, 20. Taylor.
31All things are supplied from the bosom of this Triad.
Lydus, *De Mensibus*, 20. Taylor.
32All things are governed and subsist in this Triad.
Proclus in I. *Alcibiades*. T.
33For thou must know that all things bow before the Three Supernals.
Damascius, *De Principiis*. T.
34From thence floweth forth the Form of the Triad, being preëxistent; not the first Essence, but that whereby all things are measured.
Anon. Z. or T.
35And there appeared in it Virtue and Wisdom, and multiscient Truth.
Anon. Z. or T.
36For in each World shineth the Triad, over which the Monad ruleth.
Damascius in *Parmenidem*. T.
37The First Course is Sacred, in the middle place courses the Sun, * in the third the Earth is heated by the internal fire.
Anon. Z. or T. ________
38Exalted upon High and animating Light, Fire Ether and Worlds.
Simplicius in his *Physica*, 143. Z. or T.
Footnotes
24: "For the First Æon, the Eternal one," or as Taylor gives, "Eternity."*
25: This word is Chaldee, TzBAUT, meaning hosts; but there is also a word SHBOH, meaning The Seven*.
29: Jones gives Sun from Helios, but some Greek versions give Herios, which Cory translates, air*.
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