Iranian
Religions: Zoroastrianism
ZOROASTRIANISM
UNDER
THE ACHAEMENIDS
By:
Kersi B. Shroff
Introduction: The religion of Zoroaster
Man in his spiritual quest has always longed for a higher being. Prophet
Zoroaster (Zarathushtra) was one of the first religious genius with an
original mind who merged powerful logic with spiritual thinking. The great
prophet of Zoroastrianism is considered to be the first theologian to have
sought new answers to the problems that were developing on earth.
The Iranian society in which Zoroaster was born was semi-nomadic. The Asian
steppes on which they lived has been compared to a sea of grass and the
inhabitants considered themselves not as dominant over creation but as no more
than a part (albeit a responsible one) of the chain of being. They developed a
kinship with the cattle on which their lives depended and in tending them they
evolved an orderly and mostly peaceful society.
Their chief form of worship was offered to a group of divinities called the
Ahuras or Lords who were the ethical guardians of Ashâ. This concept embraced
all the three spheres of life, the physical, moral and spiritual. Their late
stone age culture was materially simple but had a religious tradition full of
depth. This they shared with their Indo Aryan cousins, an offshoot of which
developed slowly into Hinduism. But the great difference was that Zoroastrianism
was essentially revealed by one man, Zoroaster.
Zoroaster was born into a time when life was getting hard. The old order was
breaking down through the development of a disruptive militarism. An important
element in the changes was the coming of the bronze age to the steppes, which
led to the invention of the war-chariot and new weapons. Bands of chariot riders
terrorized the people, killing herdsmen and stealing the cattle. The rule of Ashâ
became imperiled by these godless greedy men who worshipped mainly the daevas
rather than the ethical Ahuras. The victims were suffering and in distress,
creating the classical situation for a prophet to arise to offer salvation
through consolation and hope to the people. The revealed faith of Zoroaster was
to become the oldest recorded faith of salvation.
Zoroaster developed his beliefs from the old polytheism of Iran. The greatest
religious thought that he offered was to acknowledge Ahura Mazda, the Lord of
Wisdom, the Wise Lord, as God, the divine creator, the only eternal being. Ahura
Mazda is self-existing, wholly wise and wholly good. The expression Ahura Mazda
also stresses the mental, and not the naturalistic, concept of God, and was
therefore a complete innovation in the meaning of the idea of God.
Fundamentally, Zoroaster's religion was the result of a conscious rebellion
against the pre-existing polytheistic religion.
Under the Zoroastrian concept Ahura Mazda created the world and all that is in
it, including man, who is good, but the world becomes a battleground where the
good meets evil, the source of all corruption, misery and vice. The world has
thus to strive towards victory, i.e. salvation from evil. This dualism was
expressed in the Gathas as the opposition of the two principles of Ashâ and
Drug, between which man has to choose.
Zoroaster also evoked a number of lesser divinities, who strive with Ahura
Mazda, with different functions, to fulfill the single aim of salvation. These
are the Amesha Spentas, the "beneficent immortals" who are described
as a "spiritualization of the abstract notions of good thoughts and deeds,
truth, desirable power, wholeness and immortality."
Zoroaster also believed in the justice of God. To address the injustices in
society, he taught that man and woman can attain heaven by accepting his
revelation and acting justly in accordance with the revelation. These actions
are judged on the third day of the death of a person when his or her good
thoughts, words and deeds are weighed in balance against the bad. If the good
actions are in the majority, the soul passes on to heaven. If the deeds weigh
more heavily on the evil side, the soul plunges into the underworld, a place of
punishment and retribution. Later, when the struggle against evil on earth is
finally over, there will be a resurrection and a last judgment will take place
when molten metal will form a burning river and the reincarnated souls, along
with those then living, will pass in the flesh through the metal. The good will
be saved by divine intervention and the wicked will perish together with all
evil.
These are some of the fundamental doctrines included in the Gathas.
Subsequently, another belief evolved that in the last battle the good will be
led by a world savior, the Saoshyant, who will be born miraculously of a virgin
mother.
The doctrines propounded in the Gathas gave mankind with a satisfying theology,
providing a noble goal for living, along with specific rules for achieving that
goal. This inherent religious strength enabled Zoroastrianism to survive without
any secular or worldly support, and its adherents lived by the religion and
showed themselves ready to endure persecution and death. After Zoroaster's
death, his followers underwent a dark period.
When Zoroastrianism encountered writing, sometime around 8th century BC, its
priests rejected the use of this foreign invention for their holy texts. These
were a profoundly conservative class of hereditary priests who believed in the
efficacy of the oral word as a union of sound and sense. All the forms of
writing that they came across, from the cuneiform to the alphabet of the
Aramaic, were not thought to be adequate to represent the sounds of the
Indo-Iranian language. These languages were found to be unfitted for sacred
purposes and the priests continued to rely on their trained and vast memories.
Several centuries were to pass before an unknown genius invented, the language
of Avesta, based on Aramaic, with an alphabet of 44 characters, carefully
designed to render the sounds of the ancient holy tongue. It was still later
that the whole Avesta, i.e. the scripture, was committed into writing, along
with its Zand, i.e. its translation into the then colloquial, Middle Persian or
Pahlavi.
Achaemenian period
The main topic to be discussed in this paper is an examination of the ways in
which the Zoroastrian religion had impacted during the Achaemenian dynasty. A
introductory word about them.
Historical accounts tell us that
Zoroastrianism evolved in northeastern Iran and moved west nearly 1000 years
after Zoroaster. There it influenced the Median tribes which had moved eastwards
from the Zagros mountains. Of the five Median tribes, one was Magoi (Magi), who
are believed to have been literate and provided the priesthood for the Medes and
western Persians. They moved into the plains of Kermanshah and established
contact with Zoroastrians.
In that same time period, Persians from southern Iran moved eastwards and
overpowered a tribe known as the Elamites and became the rulers of the kingdom
of Anshân near Pars (north of Shiraz). They ruled as the vassals of the Medians
for a century, while Zoroastrianism progressed among the Medians and the
Persians moving eastwards. The Achaemenian era truly began with the successful
rebellion in 558 BC by Cyrus the Great against his father in law Astyages, the
ruler of the Medians. Under the Achaemenians, the religion of Zoroaster joined
forces with the secular world of the Persian empire. The inscriptions left by
the Achaemenians show a religion that through diffusion, adaptation and priestly
elaborations developed syncretisticlly i.e. through the combination or
reconciliation of differing religious beliefs or practices. The old traditions
were creeping back into the religion and due to contact with other religious
worlds that were alien to the Iranian traditions (the civilizations of Elam and
Mesopotamia), new features were being incorporated. Although the religion of
Zoroaster was a rebellion against the pre-existent polytheistic religion, some
of the old deities from the mythological and naturalist era were readmitted into
the practice of the religion. These were brought in in the form of the Yazatas
and recognized as Amesha Spentas. While Ahura Mazda still remained the supreme
God, the religion lost its concept of a true monotheism in the real sense. The
cult of Anahita and Tiri were reintroduced, the latter becoming associated with
the Indo-Iranian Tishtrya, a divinity associated with the bringing of rain.
We can trace the evidence of these later incorporations in the inscriptions left
by the Achaemenians. The ancestor of Cyrus, Aryaramnes, referred to Ahura Mazda
as God on a tabernacle discovered in Hamadan in 1920. Aryaramnes inscribed thus:
"The country which I possess was bestowed upon me by Ahura Mazda. By the
grace of Ahura Mazda I am the monarch of this country. I pray that Ahura Mazda
may help me." Similar inscriptions by Cyrus the Great and Darius I the
Great, refer to their allegiance with Ahura Mazda. Darius I has said "I
worshipped Ahura Mazda. I am the King by Grace of Ahura Mazda."
Even Xerxes, Darius' son, following his father's beliefs, praises Ahura Mazda
and says "where previously Daivas were worshipped .. I destroyed Daivas and
proclaimed that Daivas shall not be worshipped." During his military
exploits Xerxes incorporated part of Egypt into his kingdom and on the western
side marched into Greece. This brought in several foreign influences and
Zoroastrian theologians had to make compromises to assimilate several
non-Zoroastrian divinities. Thus, Artxerses II broke the tradition of
exceptional praise to Ahura Mazda. At Persepolis he inscribed that "by the
will of Ahura Mazda, Anahita and Mithra, I built this palace. May Ahura Mazda,
Mithra and Anahita protect me from the evil." The cult of Mithra goes back
before Zoroaster's time in Iran, but it is disputed whether Zoroaster accepted
or denied Mithra. Yet, in contrast to his predecessors Cyrus and Darius,
Ataxerxes II incorporated Mithra in the pantheon of deities, a long time after
the birth of Zoroaster.
The dualism expressed in the Gathas is the opposition of two PRINCIPLES, Ashâ
and Drug. This was simplistically transformed by the Achaemenians into a
straightforward opposition between Ahura Mazda and Angra Mainyu, or, Ormosd
versus Areimanios. The God of Zoroaster is thus demoted to the same rank as the
destroying spirit, and made his symmetrical opposite. This symmetry is found
only in the historical sources from Achaemenian times onwards.
A dualistic approach is also found in the religions of Babylonia and Assyria and
this approach influenced Zurvanism, a sort of cult of Zoroastrianism or one
based on Indo-Iranian religious thought. The theme is very characteristic in
philosophical and religious thought in the Mediterranean in the last few
centuries before the birth of Christ. This dualism became a characteristic
feature of the Zurvanites. It has also been expressed in the first chapter of
the Bundihishn which translates the Gathic passage in Yasna, XXX, para. 3-5,
concerning the two opposing principles, as being the twin spirits of Ohrmozd and
Ahriman. The same is done by the Pahlavi commentary to the passage in the
Gathas.
It was later under Mani that Zurvanite dualism was greatly condemned. In fact
Manicheans violently attacked those who claimed that Ormazd and Ahriman were two
brothers or that God created both Good and Evil. Manichaesim also believed in a
dualism of its own, but it at least placed man again at the center of salvation,
redeeming Ormazd from the Zurvanite disgrace and made him the true redeeming
God.
This new form of dualism must be considered to be a very important phenomenon
because it did not leave untouched Zoroaster's teachings with regard to moral
value and the dignity and freedom of man, and caused a great reversal. Thus,
whereas, Gathic tradition gave the central place to Ahura Mazda, and therefore
to man as the bodily symbol of Ahura Mazda on earth, the new approach gave the
most important place to Time and Destiny. Destiny displaces the central concept
of choice that requires man to choose between good and evil and be individually
responsible. Destiny is a concept which provides the human soul with no escape.
Another change introduced during the Achaemenian period concerned sacred
buildings as places of worship. Gathic tradition does not recognize sacred
buildings as Zoroastrians considered it wrong to keep God shut up in the walls
the dwelling place of whom was the whole world. Regardless, the Achaemenians
erected temples for Anahita and other temples were constructed in which man made
images were replaced by a sacred fire.2
It was also during Ataxerxes's time that the cult of the Yazatas became deeply
rooted as a second pantheon of Zoroastrian divinities as part of an evolved
religion. All these deities were honored and venerated with a special day of
dedication in the Zoroastrian calendar.
There were several other difference that were also introduced during the
Achaemenian period. Take the case of the symbol that we recognize as the
Fravashi- the divine essence of the creator. This is also a concept that is
alien to the Gathas. Later in the younger Avesta we come across the concept of
Khvarenah - Divine Grace or Divine Fortune. This comes from a Median term Farnah
which means "having the radiance of." When Darius conquered Egypt, the
Egyptian symbol of Sun God, their divine grace, became accepted in Iranian
culture. The Achaemenian monarchs were considered to possess the divine grace.
The male figure in the Fravashi has been interpreted as being the farvsashi of
the monarchs holding the ring as a symbol of power and prosperity through
divinity.
Reference has also been made to the fact that the name of Zoroaster is nowhere
mentioned on Achaemenian inscriptions. This indicates that Gathic teaching,
while supported in principle, was becoming diluted by pre-Zoroastrian
Indo-Iranian thoughts as well as the influence of Babylonia and Egypt. But it
has also been argued that the inscriptions are secular writings as evidenced by
the fact that even in Sasanian times when Zoroastrianism became a state religion
their inscriptions do not refer to Zoroaster.
The foundation and consolidation of the Persian Empire brought the control of
religious policy into the hands of the Achaemenian Kings. In order to justify
the authority of the Great King in the various lands that had been conquered, he
was made into a King with divine authority. Just as Ahura Mazda is the greatest
of the Gods, the Great King became the King of Kings.
The King claimed to have a special relationship with the supreme God. He was
King by virtue of God's will. Having conquered foreign lands, Iranian
interpretations of the gods of other peoples were introduced, thus allowing for
the syncretistic influence on Zoroastrianism. It is a paradox that while these
Zoroastrian rulers would not impose their religious beliefs on the peoples they
had captured, those very peoples were to change Zoroastrianism drastically.
The sovereignty of the King became protected by the divine triad of Ahura Mazda,
Anahita and Mithra in reflection of Babylonian and Assyrian beliefs and
concepts. At Persepolis, these deities were celebrated at the great New Year
feast. Complicated court ceremonies made the Great King an inaccessible figure
and the public had to pay divine homage by way of prostration before the King.
The reasons for the changes introduced by the Achaemenians are more complex than
just the religious and political that I have described. This was a period of
great transition and adoption to new developments. The tribal organization gave
way to a Unitarian state that was soon to become a worldwide monarchy. This was
the greatest empire known to man then, founded by a military aristocracy which
ended up governing from the Nile to the Indus to the Aegean, a vast number of
people of various cultures and beliefs, cultures which like them were also
hundreds and thousands of years old.
Trade and commerce was increasing, new administrative structures created. Long
journeys were undertaken by the Persians which involved lengthy stays in various
satrapies. All these factors provided the basis for the very profound religious
and cultural changes that were introduced into Zoroastrianism by the
Achaemenians.
Foot Notes:
1. The paper was presented in September 1996 during the
series of adult discussion classes held by the Zoroastrian Association of
Metropolitan Washington (ZAMWI) at the Mobed's Residence in Vienna, Virginia.
The topics were developed by Mr. Adi Davar, the Director of adult religious
programs for ZAMWI. The views expressed are those of the author alone and were
developed from publications included in the reading list for the classes.
2. During a recent visit to Iran, the author visited the ruins of a temple
dedicated to Anahita located in Kangavar.
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