The Eleusinian Mysteries:

Healing and Transformation

Stages of A Mystery Religion

[From "The Mystery Religions & Christianity" by S. Angus]

I. Preparation and Probation

II. Initiation and Communion

Initiation:

Communion and Identification with God/Gods:

Ascent of the soul:

III. Epopteia of the Mystery-God and Blessedness

The immediate result of Initiation was to behold an Epiphany of the Deity, whether through vision, dreams, trances, ecstasy, or hypnotic conditions.

Blessedness and Salvation in General:

Mystery-Gods were primarily Savior Gods, offering atonement for the past, comfort in the present, a participation in the Divine Life, and assurance of an after-life or immortality 'Beautiful, indeed is the mystery given to us by The blessed Gods: Death is for mortals no longer an evil, but a blessing.' (Glaucus, Eleusinian Heirophant)

These mysteries-and all the paths of initiation-have a common characteristic, they are preoccupied with the 'flight of the one to the one' that is man's exit from the world in which he as an individual is 'alone' to achieve union of his whole being with the universal being.

But what of the 'Mysteria'? This name designates a festival in the sense of a time filled with sacred events...the mystes suffers the mysteries, he becomes their object, but he also takes an active part in them. What was kept secret in ancient religion?...what is nature itself?: a sacred open secret. What was concealed in the Greek cult must have certainly been known to all those who lived in the vicinity of the cult sites, but it was unutterable. It possessed this character...for in the profoundest sense it was ineffable: a true mystery.

The Mysteries were so essentially nocturnal that in them every aspect of the night was experienced even that power residing solely in the night, the power to engender the light as it were to help it come forth. They were not merely a nocturnal festival, they actually solemnized the feeling of being shut in by the night, culminating in a sudden great radiance. Surely it is no accident that the Mysteria took place at the waning of the moon.

It is a threefold darkness-the darkness of the veiling, that of the sacred nights in Agrae and Eleusis, and their own inner darkness-that the Mystai find their way back to their own suffering and conceiving motherliness. And at the same time they are filled with wonder at the eternal and common element in their lives beginning, the archetypal in that unique conjugal union which was their origin as they see it in the persons and destinies of the gods.

C. Kerenyi, The Mysteries of the Kabeiroi

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