INTRODUCTION
One of the most interesting reads is a book from a 19th century University scholar named James Ralston Skinner (1830-1893) called Key to the Hebrew‑Egyptian Mystery in the Source of Measures (1875). Few names were as authoritative as Skinner and Movers. Skinner’s ideas became part of the intellectual background of late nineteenth-century Occultism. In his work, his thesis is that the Bible, especially Genesis, is a numerical‑geometric cryptogram rather than a narrative. There exists a canon of proportion or universal system of measures reflected in certain ancient sacred texts, mathematics in the architecture of temples and measures expressed in numbers, geometry, and metrology, e.g., the British inch, ancient cubit, pyramid dimensions, Temple of Solomon, from which these derive. This system of geometry is theology, and the Hebrew Bible’s “god‑names” and biblical phrases are in-fact compressed numerical formulae. The Hebrew Bible, ancient Egyptian metrology and Jewish mysticism preserve a single esoteric engineering system. The stories disguise the measures.
A main subject of Theosophy is the MYSTERIES, and one of the aims of Theosophists was to recover this system and its keys. Skinner provided the mathematical and numerical key, and connected Egypt, Israel and early Christianity. Blavatsky stated that basically only a trained initiate-adept could master this whole system and synthesize the keys. This goes back to why Blavatsky criticized the mythicists of her time as well as other notable scholars who discovered, intimated or interpreted solely through one key. I will not say that only an initiate is capable of such, but that someone trained in comparative mythology, ancient languages and symbolic interpretation. There are many “initiates” of some occult group who know nothing but mysticism and allegories. Skinner was an engineer and Freemason, and Movers belonged to a heavy school of notable German antiquarians along with Georg Friedrich Creuzer, Robert Bunsen and others. This is a different class engaged in massively, dense philological complexities. These complexities, as in Movers’ work reconstructs Phoenician religion and its connection to Egypt, Syria, Babylon, Israel, Greece and early Gnosticism. Movers already provided hefty evidence that the same gods appear under different names across cultures, that myths are syncretic, symbols migrate and cults share a common structure. Collecting their works, Blavatsky insisted therefore that ancient religions, myths, alphabets, symbols and cosmologies were not separate traditions, but fragments of a single system.
Her thesis does not claim that all religions are “fragments of a single revealed doctrine” in a literalist sense or in the form of any type of religion as we understand, nor does it exoticize living traditions as fossils. It asserts that various ancient exoteric forms are outer shells of this prehistoric symbolic composite system of numbers, sound, geometry, myth and ritual, preserving the mysteries of Nature. So, the Bible, the Vedas, the Zohar, the Egyptian Book of the Dead and the myths of Phoenicia and Chaldea were encrypted texts. The keys unveil deeper layers of meaning, and only someone who had been trained in all the symbolic languages of this symbolic‑mathematical‑mythological system could unveil them.
DEVELOPING THE AUTHORITY OF BLAVATSKY’S SYSTEM
Textual interpretation is only one possible application of the ancient Mysteries, because for a great deal of this history, there is the less documented case of oral initiatory (or shamanic) transmission. The difference between the authority of the Hebrew Bible and Theosophy reflects a difference between the fourfold Jewish model (Peshat or literal, Remez or allegorical, Derash or the homiletic, comparative, or midrashic, and Sod or secret meaning) and sevenfold model. She introduces the oldest expression of this universal pattern through the Indo-Iranian and Central Asian septenary cosmological system (although not a hermeneutic system like the Kabbalah) belonging to the same symbolic architecture as the later Hindu, Chaldean, Hermetic, Gnostic, Egyptian, Mithraic and Pythagorean cosmology as part of the ancient Mystery system. It is difficult to track the claim of Blavatsky’s idea that this pre-Biblical cosmological numerological system connected to her theory of the evolution of human language and history of Adepts is exactly seven in number, but the fact is that ancient encoded systems of communication and transmission exist, that could not possibly be understood by any mere person in the street. Although Karl Franz Movers, Creuzer, Bunsen, Skinner, Higgins and Dunlap all argue that myths are multi-layered and symbols are polysemic, they do not give an exact number. It becomes formalized into an exact number in Blavatsky’s system and synthesized into a textual key system in The Secret Doctrine.
However, it is important to understand, that the Indo‑Iranian and Central Asian systems were not about interpreting or reading texts, but involved cosmic ascent, ritual purification, ritual dramas, ceremonial performances, astral initiation and symbolic reenactment of the cosmic structure. All these elements constitute the Mysteries.
INVENTION OF MYSTERY BABYLON CONSPIRACY INTO THE INFORMATION-DIGITAL AGE
Unlike the Freemasons and Rosicrucians, Theosophy diverges from Biblical, Abrahamic centrality and Christian primacy. One can then argue that Theosophy decenters the spiritual origin-point from the Near East to various points across the globe but mainly focused on Central Asia and Tibet for a historical reason. The main point is that even the fragmentary elements of the Mysteries predate the Abrahamic traditions, making the latter traditions late, partial expressions, not the core or origin-source of religious authority.
This history is not seen from the constructed historiography of the ancient Israelites through their theological storytelling shaped by exile and imperial domination by flattening, e.g., Babylonian religion into a caricature. Later Christian writers created conspiratorial narratives about Babylon called the “mystery Babylon” conspiracy to develop anti‑pagan polemics against interest in esotericism by distorting the origin of “the Mysteries.” It is a long-standing conspiracy from the nineteenth-century that spreads more during the popularization of personal computing in the Information Age, specifically the early 97-00s. Christian writers invented a “Babylonian mystery religion” and an evil secret Chaldean priesthood to incorporate into a universal pagan and revolutionary conspiracy of networks that challenged to overthrow Christian Theocratic power. The conspiracy is essentially built upon medieval demonology, Protestant anti‑Catholic writings and nineteenth-century pseudo‑scholarship like Alexander Hislop.
SHARED ARYAN CONNECTION
The popularity of Theosophy in her time led to selective appropriation or borrowing of the term, though not her ideas. This epoch in her system was designated “Aryan” not on a racial basis, but because the Indo-Iranian peoples shaped the post‑Vedic world. H.P. Blavatsky believed the post‑Vedic Indo‑Iranian worldview shaped the present cycle as a dominant cultural matrix, and thus human consciousness. Its symbolic system defines the era, or epoch and is a temporary category. She believed, that the next epoch after major geological and cultural changes would begin to form in America. It is not a future ethnicity, but a new mode of consciousness.
Despite attempts by Christian polemics, modern tools actually increasingly corroborate the shared technical substrate, even if scholars stop short or reject initiatory epistemology. There existed a shared ancestor of both early Vedic religion and ancient Iranian religion, sometimes described as “tantric-alchemical.” It developed among the Sintashta and Andronovo cultures of the Eurasian Steppe (c. 2200-1150 BCE). This much older esoteric system, or pre‑Vedic system is described by various generic markers, e.g., the “Wisdom‑Religion” is also defined as esoteric BODHISM or BUDHISM (based on the Sanskrit root budh “to awaken”), and Blavatsky believed its custodians preserved it in Central Asia and Tibet. BODHISM does not describe a singular sect or a historical religion, but a primordial doctrine of awakening underlying later religions. Blavatsky therefore did not invent this notion of a shared proto-tradition preserved in both Brahmanic and Zoroastrian tradition.
All the elements that exist in Theosophy are strongly rooted in pre-Islamic Iranian oral mythic belief systems and across Southwestern Asia into the history of the pre-Vedic and non-Vedic systems of Central Asia. So, the story is not rooted in Babylon and Chaldea, and the conspiracy is not a realistic history of Mesopotamian religions, and how these people defined themselves as opposed to their rivals.
Every culture interpreted rival empires through its own worldview, true. The problem is that our world has been shaped for two millennia by the biases of Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
This is why the Theosophists declared that it is time everyone gets their due. This decentering of the “Abrahamic religions” isn’t about attacking them, but this has been used in the polemics to defend their worldviews about the outsider and ancient rivals in their narratives. This is mainly about correcting a distorted picture of world history focused exclusively on theistic traditions. Theosophy is saying, this ancient system was non-dual and non-theistic, rather than a system of devotional theism to a singular tribal-protector god and a promise of land.
TEACHINGS OF SALVIFIC GNOSIS PREDATE CHRISTIANITY

Even the Nag Hammadi texts reveal a broader phenomenon of salvific gnosis, rather than belief in Jesus through faith; and interacting with Hellenistic, Hermetic, Jewish, and pre-Christian mystery traditions, as opposed to being an aberrative Christian variant or heresy subject to the judgement and interpretations of the Christian usurpers of the MYSTERIES. The ancient Mediterranean was full of Mystery cults, and Christianity was born from within this rich cultural environment. The form of initiation rites, ritual banquets, symbolic themes, ritual drama, communal identity exists in them all. Even The New Testament adapts the Hebrew mysteries, with its parables “for those with ears to hear” and deeper teachings for disciples. What constitutes the “deeper teachings,” and what are its origins? The Christians have re-constructed their answers to this question to run from giving any credence to the “Gnostics.” These religions have often just thrown dirt in the eyes of people who saw the holes in the narratives and truth-claims of the rival sect that emerged as the authoritative Church and Vicar, even though it will open people to a new understanding that challenges the powers that have been set up. Scholars now emphasize the independence and diversity of the “Gnostics,” which is exactly Theosophy’s view of Gnosticism as a fragmentary survival of the universal esoteric current.
BIASES IN MODERN SKEPTICISM
It is central to Theosophy to assert the historical existence of a multi-modal “Mystery Language” of symbolism across cultures in antiquity, deliberately veiled in myths, scriptures, geometry and emblems for both protection and efficacy. We are forced to challenge modern skepticism philosophically and historically, highlighting how reductionist materialism, literalism, and institutional biases limit engagement with these ideas.
The idea is that a single prehistoric symbolic system (not ordinary speech) encodes cosmic principles across all ancient religions, that is multi-layered (numbers, geometry, symbols, narratives) and recoverable through initiates, or hierophants. It is their language. Vedic, Egyptian, Chaldean, Zoroastrian, and Mesoamerican systems, predating diffusion explanations reveal this system. Sacred geometry and numerical correspondences (e.g., π approximations in Hebrew gematria, Egyptian cubits, Vedic altars) appear independently in disconnected cultures, as noted in nineteenth-century metrological studies revived by modern archaeoastronomy. This multi-modal system is a symbolic meta-system (not phonetic language), expressed in myths, pictographs and architecture and many writers devoted the rest of their lives to understand it. The kind of efforts, e.g., of Ralston Skinner hardly exists in our time. The interest has become distorted by speculative “occult geopolitics” and conspiratorial instigations such as fixating determining who is actually “controlling the world.” In these conspiracies, the MYSTERIES is demonized and solely portrayed through Jewish and Christian theological interpretations and modern conspiracies about the Tower of Babel.
Modern linguistics and philology dismiss this as unfalsifiable because they prioritize phonetic evolution over symbolic embedding, yet cognitive linguistics (e.g., conceptual metaphor theory) and embodied cognition now validate multi-modal symbolism as a stable knowledge-preservation tool. Post-Enlightenment scientism inherited a Protestant literalism that flattens symbols into “primitive superstition,” ignoring how Renaissance Kabbalists and Neoplatonists (Ficino, Pico) recovered similar systems philosophically. Skepticism becomes unmasked as not empirical rigor, but ontological prejudice against non-discursive knowledge.
REALITIES OF THE HYBRID SYMBOLIC SYSTEM
John Algeo, a notable American Theosophist speaking of the ideas of Ralston Skinner pointed out that Skinner says the mystery language can be expressed through the symbolism of the letter shapes or parabolic stories and visually not a single form, but a symbolic use of many different forms, archetypal symbols in myths, and a visual representation in pictographs or hieroglyphic. This Mystery Language is therefore a hybrid symbolic protocol combining narrative, geometric and pictorial representation embeddable in any medium, conveying “double interpretations” for initiates. This is the ignored side of the History of Religions I never find scholars dealing with. Never.
Skinner’s Hebrew-Egyptian Mystery and the Source of Measures demonstrate π and geometric ratios are basically encoded in Bere’shith through Hebrew letter-values and narrative structure. These are patterns in Egyptian pyramid proportions and Vedic fire-altars. How and Why? Ordinary scholarship does not explain it.
Global archaeoastronomy demonstrates that visual and symbolic crypt is represented by the Göbekli Tepe’s T-pillars, Nabta Playa stone circles, and the Mayan stelae use pictographic and numerical systems for cosmic cycles. Also, archetypal symbols (e.g., world-tree, flood, septenary division) exists as cross-cultural constants, not by coincidence or diffusion alone.
This invisibility in scholarship is a problem. Academia’s structuralist and functionalist turn (post-Müller) still treat symbols as psychological projections or social glue, not deliberate technical codes. Yet phenomenology in the ideas of Merleau-Ponty and semiotics have led to conclusions that multi-modal systems can transmit precise knowledge beyond language. Nineteenth-century “solar myth” reductionism (now discredited) blinded scholars to non-solar technical layers, and any modern dismissal of Skinner as “numerology” repeats this error, prioritizing peer-reviewed literalism over initiatory epistemology.
THE FRAGMENTATION AND LIMITATIONS OF SCHOLARSHIP
Blavatsky stated in The Secret Doctrine, that the proofs of this system are scattered widely, but no one has ever gone to the trouble of collecting and collating the facts that demonstrate ancient scriptures embed verifiable historical and technical facts in symbolic form, such as the odd alignment of calendrical knowledge at Stonehenge, Giza, Teotihuacan, and Angkor (myths directly lead to observable phenomena of solstices and precession); or the shared motifs in Puranic, Avestan and Egyptian texts. This reveals a history of humanity on a grander scale than history surrounding Christology or the family histories of the ancient Israelites.
Specialization in academia seems to naturally fragment scholarship, where there exists no single discipline that “collects and collates” across linguistics, archaeology and astronomy as Blavatsky urged us to do. Kantian epistemology limits knowledge to phenomena, excluding a such thing as a noumenal “Wisdom Science.” Colonial-era Orientalism dismissed Eastern texts as “myth” while privileging Greco-Roman literalism, yet postcolonial studies now validate the very synthesis Theosophy pioneered, while ignoring it.
Nineteenth-century Müllerian solarism collapsed under its own absurdity, while Theosophy sought to demonstrate that the solar myth symbologists were reading the ancient texts through a particular lens, and were not capable of pushing beyond the veil. Positivism rejects “historical lining” in myth because it threatens materialist origins narratives, but this view served Victorian progressivism by portraying the ancients as irrational, ignoring how Plato, Plutarch, and Iamblichus treated myths as veiled philosophy.
PEARLS AND STREAMS OF WISDOM
Theosophists are saying, that a primordial “Wisdom Religion” or Perennial Philosophy underlies all exoteric faiths, and that it is knowledge-based, preserved by initiates through various means of transmission, and that these systems, means, institutions, etc, predate the established religious forms. The history of these transmissions are usually left out of the common telling of how these religio-philosophical ideas are migrating and developing. Blavatsky focuses on the pre-Vedic mythology and systems that influenced later Brahmanism and Buddhism, demonstrating this “stream.” Pythagoras, Plato and others that studied in Egypt and India, along with the Neoplatonists also demonstrate another means of transmission and preservation of this “stream of knowledge.” However, academic historicism demands linear “development” and dismisses “perennial” claims as ahistorical romanticism. Eliade and Campbell have questioned this, however. The universal experiential facts challenge nominalism, because if truths recur independently, they point to a shared ontological ground modern materialism denies. Church suppression of “pagan” wisdom (Justinian’s 529 CE closure of Plato’s Academy) created the very fragmentation we are led to critique.
Symbology is essential for reading any of the ancient sacred scriptures, poetry, etc, because every major tradition uses layered symbols, even sidereal-terrestrial imagery across the globe. Post-structuralism reduces symbols to power discourses, but symbols can induce real psycho-physical states. German Romantic philology prefigured this but was sidelined by Müller’s literalism. Take Freemasonry for example. Freemasonry’s public face hides deeper layers through guarded transmission. This violates Popperian falsifiability, yet initiatory systems is the verification method rejected by empiricism. History shows secrecy preserved knowledge through inquisitions and colonial erasure. This shows that this knowledge is initiatory and dangerous if wielded by the public to distort and misuse as it pleases, and Christianity is an example of this. Mystery schools (Eleusis, Pythagorean, Egyptian) enforced strict secrecy with oaths and graded initiation. It was the ancient colleges that transmitted this knowledge symbolically, and the adepts of these ancient colleges preserved it across ages.
POST-PRINTING PRESS
Liberal rationalism equates secrecy with elitism or fraud, ignoring pragmatic dangers (e.g., misuse of psycho-physical techniques similarly to the misuse of nuclear science). The shift from initiatory to public knowledge (post-Reformation and printing press) coincided with scientism’s rise, but the perennialist revival (Theosophy, Guénon) shows the intuition persists because exoteric modernity lacks integrative wisdom. Theosophy’s framework is not disproven by modern tools but rendered invisible by them. Archaeology, cognitive science and perennial philosophy increasingly supply the “collation” Blavatsky called for, suggesting the “adepts” transmission network is less fantasy than a functional historical reality modern ontology refuses to name. The limitation is not evidence, but the lens through which we view it.
The next page contains quotes about the Mystery-Language.
REFERENCES
- Helena Blavatsky, The Secret Doctrine, Vol. 1, 1888
- James Ralston Skinner, The Hebrew-Egyptian Mystery and the Source of Measures.
- See Sun and Lunar Worship: Adonai, Baal and Moloch in the Mysteries
- See The Connection of Theosophy to Tibet, Iran and Chaldea


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