Time As God and Devil
Time As God and Devil
Time As God and Devil
T IME is one of the most familiar, and yet one of the most
mysterious, of the basic concepts of the human mind. St.
Augustine perceived this long ago, and he denned the enigma in
memorable words : " What then is time ? If no one asks me, I
know : if I wish to explain it to one that asketh, I know not: yet
I say boldly, that I know, that if nothing passed away, time past
were not; and if nothing were coming, a time to come were not;
and if nothing were, time present were not. Those two times then,
past and to come, how are they, seeing the past is not, and that to
come is not yet ? But the present, should it always be the
present, and never pass into time past, verily it should not be
time, but eternity." 2
The enigma, which Augustine here describes in terms of its
curious paradoxes, is, however, but one of the aspects of Time
as experienced by man. There is another aspect of it that is
not enigmatical; indeed it makes its meaning clear with a ruth-
less unmistakable logic. It is the fact that Time manifests
itself in change, decay and death. The dawning mind of the
child soon grasps the fact he is living in a world where all things
do not continue the same, and that change in his circumstances
will often affect him personally, for good or ill. But this is not
all: the child soon learns that people grow old and die. And
he quickly perceives the significance of this knowledge for
himself. His consciousness of Time causes him to envisage a
future, in which, he knows, his own death will inevitably occur.
Hence, for him, as he grows older, the passage of Time appears
1 A lecture delivered in the Library series of public lectures. The subject of
this lecture, with fuller documentation and illustrations, is incorporated in a book
by the author entitled History, Time and Deity (Manchester University Press,
forthcoming).
a Confessions, xi. 17 (trans. E. B. Pusey).
12
TIME AS GOD AND DEVIL 13
increasingly menacing; for it threatens his sense of security and
well-being in the most absolute manner, namely, by bringing
ever nearer the extinction of his very self.1
The experience of the child, which we have briefly sketched
here, represents, of course, the experience of us all. Now, since
the experience is common, we might well expect that reaction to
it will show a common pattern. And, indeed it does ; although
the forms in which that reaction has most naturally found
expression, namely, in religion have varied considerably. The
pattern, that underlies this variety reveals itself in a seeking for
security from the effacing flux of Time ; in an endeavour to find
a safe refuge from Time's menace of decay and death. Thus,
to give three examples for illustration : the ancient Egyptians
believed that they would be eternally safe after death if they
could join the sun-god, Re, in his unceasing journey through
the heavens2 ; in Buddhism security from Time has been sought
by identifying it as the inexorable law to which all become subject
who mistake this phenomenal world for reality 3 ; Christianity,
through its doctrine of baptism, promises a new transcendental
life through incorporation in Christ, its summum bonum being
the eternal Vision of God.4
This common quest for security from Time's menace, which
has found such various expression in the religions of the world,
naturally suggests that Time must be imagined in corres-
pondingly different forms, and that these forms will indicate the
estimate of Time's origin and nature held in each of the religions
concerned. To examine and evaluate some of these conceptions
of Time will be the object of the rest of this lecture.
It will be most convenient to begin our task by considering
the interpretation of Time that finds expression in the Bhagavad-
Gttd, the great religious epic of Hinduism. By so doing we shall
at once become acquainted not only with a most impressive
1 Cf. S. G. F. Brandon, Men and his Destiny in the Great Religions (Man-
chester University Press, 1962), pp. 6-7, 384-5.
2 Pyramid Texts, 167. 775, 1453, 1477 1466d. Cf. Brandon in The Saviour
God (Manchester University Press, 1963), p. 19.
8 Cf. History, Time, and Deity, chap. IV.
4 Cf. op. cit. chap. II.
14 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
image of Time, seen in one of the great world-religions, but we
shall be afforded insight into one of the most significant traditions
concerning the nature and status of Time.
The Bhagavad-Gitd, which was probably composed in the
third or second century B.C., is concerned to present the god
Vishnu, in his form of Vasudeva, as the supreme deity. 1 The
poem takes the form of a dialogue between a prince Arjuna and
his charioteer, who is Vishnu in disguise. The occasion is the
eve of a battle, when Arjuna hesitates to commence the action,
being appalled by the prospect of the slaughter that must result
from so doing. In the course of the long dialogue, which
follows, the subject of human duty is discussed in terms of the
doctrine of " samsara", or the transmigration of souls. As the
dialogue proceeds, Arjuna becomes aware of the identity of his
companion, and he beseeches him to reveal his true self. Vishnu
consents, and Arjuna sees a vision of deity as the beneficent Creator
of the universe. Arjuna is profoundly impressed by this revela-
tion of the immensity and multiplicity of the divine creative
power. But he feels that he has not seen all; that there is yet
another side to the supreme deity. He asks that this might also
be shown to him. He is warned not to ask for this; but he
persists and the revelation is given, and it is terrible. In pro-
found terror, Arjuna beholds all forms of being passing swiftly
to their destruction in the awful mouths of Vishnu. Horrified,
he cries out: " Thy mouths with many dreadful fangs beholding,
Like to Time's universal conflagration, I know the quarters not,
I find no shelter. Be gracious, Lord of gods, the world's pro-
tector." Then Vishnu answers : " Know I am Time, that
makes the worlds to perish, when ripe, and brings on them
destruction." 2
1 Cf. Cumont, The Mysteries of Mithra (E.T., New York, 1956 reprint), pp.
105-9;Pettazzoni, p. 181.
a Textes et Monuments, i. 78, cf. p. 301. Cf. Cumont, Les religions orientales
dans le paganisme romain (Paris, 1939), pp. 140, 277, n. 46.
3 Cf. Zaehner, Zurvan, pp. viii-ix, Dawn and Twilight, pp. 129-30; Duchesne-
Guillemin, Ormazdet Ahriman (Paris, 1953), pp. 126-8, in Numen, ii (1955), 190-5,
Symbolik, PP- 86-89; Brandon, Man and his Destiny, pp. 291 ff.
4 De Iside et Osiride, 46. Cf. Bidez-Cumont, ii. 70-74.
26 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY
it would be reasonable to suppose that Mithraism took account
of this aspect of Time. What this signified seems reason-
ably clear : the dominion of Zurvan " daregho-chvadhata "
extended over all who lived in this world, and they were sub-
ject to his inexorable law of old age, decay and death. If
Mithra was the Mediator, as Plutarch says, between Ohrmazd
and Ahriman, he, therefore, mediated in some manner between
the two forms of Time which these two deities severally per-
sonified. In what manner he did this is not known ; but his
slaying of the Cosmic Bull was undoubtedly regarded as pro-
viding new life or immortality for those who were initiated into
his mysteries. And such provision would surely have been
tantamount to salvation from the dominion of "Time the
Destroyer "; in turn, the endowment of immortality would mean
that the initiates were brought into communion with Ohrmazd,
who was Zurvan " akarana " or Infinite Time.1