That
Ancient Quest For The Holy Grail
By
James Donahue
Historians,
theologians, fiction writers and poets have all created volumes of copy about the human quest for the Holy Grail.
So
just what is this artifact, and why is it considered so precious, especially within the Christian community?
Medieval
legend has it that the grail was a cup that Jesus drank from with his disciples at the last supper, on the night before he
was arrested, brought before Pilot, and sentenced to death.
Yet
another story identifies the grail as a cup that a Roman soldier used to catch the blood of Jesus after his side was pierced
as he hung dying on the cross.
Both
stories float through the mythology of the death of Jesus. The quest for that object, that "grail," has captured the imaginations
of poets, theologians and philosophers for centuries. No one knows for sure if such a cup really existed, and what might have
happened to it if there ever was a grail.
The
word grail is an old English noun that means platter, which offers very little help in this story. The legend identifies the
Holy Grail as a cup or chalice associated with unusual magical powers associated with the regeneration of life and even Christian
purity.
The
stories give us images of knights off on a quest to find this precious artifact. The stories traditionally link the search
to Perceval, one of the knights of King Arthur's legendary Round Table, who devoted his life in search of the Holy Grail.
The
story of King Arthur is English mythology that some say may be based on some degree of real history. Yet when we examine the
knights that were really linked to any kind of search for artificts linked to the Christian story, we must look at the Knights
Templar.
The
Knights Templar was a political and religious group of soldiers who had a powerful influence in the Middle East and Europe
during the time of the Crusades. Some say the Masonic Order had its roots in the Knights Templar, thus keeping the organization
and the "quest" alive even to this day.
It
should be no surprise that a contemporary dictionary identifies the word "grail" as not only the cup of blood associated with
the death of Jesus, but also a "quest" or search for spiritual truth. This search also has been identified as "the object
of a prolonged endeavor.
There
is something else linked to this bloody cup that archaeologists, historians and theologians appear to be missing completely.
Author Michael Baigent came close to identifying this link when he titled his best-selling book "Holy Blood, Holy Grail,"
but in his book, he completely missed the point.
Stan
Gooch, in his work Guardians of the Ancient Wisdom, writes: "it does not require an over-active imagination to see
the symbolism of the story the elements of the male and female principles. The lance or sword (worn by the knights) is the
penis and the bowl is the vagina.
There
are secret magickal rituals used by many practicing magickians and probably including those achieving high status within the
Masonic Order, that involve sexual union with a menstruating woman. It is well known among gnostics that ancient monthly festivals
literally celebrated the menstrual cycle as an important and magical time.
Thus
the image of blood at the end of the lance is highly symbolic of this magickal union in an act of love.
But
why would this act be kept so concealed by symbolism and images? Why not just come right out and identify things for what
they are? If the Holy Grail represents the vagina of a menstruating woman, who have we kept this fact so carefully hidden
in the cloak of legend and mythology for hundreds, if not thousands of years?
Believe
this or not, the problem has been religious dogma that has dominated the politics and actions of humans for a very long time.
And sex has always been under severe attack from religious circles.
Gooch
writes: "intercourse with a menstruating woman (the piestess) was the most important part of the most important ceremoney."
But he noted that an iron law within Judaism forbids intercourse with a menstruating woman, and for the Jews it was a crime
so severe it was punishable by death. The Jews also believed that any child resulting from such an act was a bastard, even
if a husband and wife were involved.
"The total
denial of the role of blood in all facets of Jewish life really tells us that Judaism was originally a blood-worshipping religion.
Tales of vampires and werewolves are faint memories of such practice. In the subsequent Cro-Magnon turn around on these matters,
all such central features of the Old Religion were repressed. For this reason, menstruation is today known as 'the curse'
and a very great number of other derogatory names. It was, therefore, probably once 'the blessing.'" Gooch concludes.