P790:4, 70:7.1
Blood kinship determined the first social groups; association enlarged the
kinship clan. Intermarriage was the next step in group enlargement, and the
resultant complex tribe was the first true political body. The next advance
in social development was the evolution of religious cults and the political
clubs. These first appeared as secret societies and originally were wholly
religious; subsequently they became regulative. At first they were men's clubs;
later women's groups appeared. Presently they became divided into two classes:
sociopolitical and
religio-mystical.
P790:5, 70:7.2
There were many reasons for the secrecy of these societies, such as:
P791:1, 70:7.4
Primitive people very early taught their adolescent youths sex control. It
became the custom to take boys away from parents from puberty to marriage,
their education and training being intrusted to the men's secret societies.
And one of the chief functions of these clubs was to keep control of adolescent
young men, thus preventing illegitimate children.
P791:2, 70:7.5
Commercialized prostitution began when these men's clubs paid money for the
use of women from other tribes. But the earlier groups were remarkably free
from sex laxity.
P791:3, 70:7.6
The puberty initiation ceremony usually extended over a period of five years.
Much self-torture and painful cutting entered into these ceremonies. Circumcision
was first practiced as a rite of initiation into one of these secret fraternities.
The tribal marks were cut on the body as a part of the puberty initiation;
the tattoo originated as such a badge of membership. Such torture, together
with much privation, was designed to harden these youths, to impress them
with the reality of life and its inevitable hardships. This purpose is better
accomplished by the later appearing athletic games and physical contests.
P791:4, 70:7.7
But the secret societies did aim at the improvement of adolescent morals;
one of the chief purposes of the puberty ceremonies was to impress upon the
boy that he must leave other men's wives alone.
P791:5, 70:7.8
Following these years of rigorous discipline and training and just before
marriage, the young men were usually released for a short period of leisure
and freedom, after which they returned to marry and to submit to lifelong
subjection to the tribal taboos. And this ancient custom has continued down
to modern times as the foolish notion of "sowing wild oats."
P791:6, 70:7.9
Many later tribes sanctioned the formation of women's secret clubs, the purpose
of which was to prepare adolescent girls for
wifehood and motherhood. After
initiation girls were eligible for marriage and were permitted to attend the
"bride show," the
coming-out party of those days. Women's orders pledged against
marriage early came into existence.
P791:7, 70:7.10
Presently
nonsecret clubs made their appearance when groups of unmarried men
and groups of unattached women formed their separate organizations. These
associations were really the first schools. And while men's and women's clubs
were often given to persecuting each other, some advanced tribes, after contact
with the Dalamatia teachers,
experimented with coeducation, having
boarding
schools for both sexes.
P791:8, 70:7.11
Secret societies contributed to the building up of social castes chiefly by
the mysterious character of their
initiations. The members of these societies
first wore
masks to frighten the curious away from their mourning rites --
ancestor worship. Later this ritual developed into a pseudo
seance at which
ghosts were reputed to have appeared. The ancient societies of the "new birth"
used signs and employed a special secret language; they also
forswore certain
foods and drinks. They acted as night police and otherwise functioned in a
wide range of social activities.
P792:1, 70:7.12
All secret associations imposed an oath, enjoined confidence, and taught the
keeping of secrets. These orders awed and controlled the
mobs; they also acted
as vigilance societies, thus practicing lynch law. They were the first spies
when the tribes were at war and the first secret police during times of peace.
Best of all they kept unscrupulous kings on the anxious seat. To offset them,
the kings fostered their own secret police.
P792:2, 70:7.13
These societies gave rise to the first political parties. The first party
government was "the strong" vs."the weak." In ancient times a change
of administration only followed civil war, abundant proof that the weak had
become strong.
P792:3, 70:7.14
These clubs were employed by merchants to collect debts and by rulers to collect
taxes. Taxation has been a long struggle, one of the earliest forms being
the tithe, one tenth of the hunt or spoils. Taxes were originally levied to
keep up the king's house, but it was found that they were easier to collect
when disguised as an offering for the support of the temple service.
P792:4, 70:7.15
By and by these secret associations grew into the first
charitable organizations
and later evolved into the earlier religious societies -- the forerunners
of churches. Finally some of these societies became intertribal, the first
international fraternities.