Worshipping the Sun is the greatest abomination of the four God
showed Ezekiel because it is the false angel of light worship = Lucifer
Ezekiel 8:15 Then said he unto me, Hast thou seen this, O son of man? turn thee yet again, and thou shalt see greater abominations than these.
IN Ezekiel 8:16 And he brought me into the inner court of the LORD's house, and, behold, at the door of the temple of the LORD, between the porch and the altar, were about five and twenty men, with their backs toward the temple of the LORD, and their faces toward the east; and they worshipped the sun toward the east.
Reading these false teachings and I can see solid proof the Catholic Church worships the Unconquered Sun god
and they have corrupted the entire world into worshipping Lucifer the Pope through these clearly false teachings.
We are to celebrate Jesus Birth daily not on any specific date or Jesus would have celebrated it with us be fore he died.
http:nventure.com/sunworship.htm&w=worship+worships+sun+god
This page was found under = How to worship the Sun god ...Note Dec 25 all through the history of these occult practises.
Sun Worship, religious devotion paid to the sun either as a deity or as the
symbol of a deity. Sun worship was practiced by the Iroquois, Plains, and
Tsimshian peoples of North America and reached a high state of development
among the Native Americans of Mexico and Peru. The sun was also a Hindu deity,
regarded as maleficent by the Dravidians of southern India and as benevolent
by the Munda of the central parts. The Babylonians were sun worshipers, and in
ancient Persia worship of the sun was an integral part of the elaborate cult
of Mithras. The ancient Egyptians worshiped the sun god Ra.
In ancient Greece the deities of the sun were Helios and Apollo. The worship
of Helios was widespread; temples were built in Corinth, Árgos, Troezen (no
longer in existence), and many other cities, but the principal seat was on the
island of Rhodes, in the Dodecanese, where four white horses were sacrificed
annually to the god. A similar sacrifice was offered on the summit of Mount
Hagios Elias, in the Taďyetos Mountains, in Laconia. In time virtually all the
functions of Helios were transferred to the god Apollo, in his identity as
Phoebus. Sun worship persisted in Europe even after the introduction of
Christianity, as is evidenced by its disguised survival in such traditional
Christian practices as the Easter bonfire and the Yule log on Christmas.
- "Sun Worship," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000 http://encarta.msn.com
The Sun God
from Christianity Unadorned
Christmas
Why was the only true god born on a Pagan date—25 December?
The Christian world had no chronology. There is no clue in the gospels to the
time of the year when Jesus was born except that it cannot have been the rainy
season, winter, for shepherds would not have been out at night. Mary forgot
the date of a uniquely wonderful day or forgot to mention it in the story.
Early Christians found themselves having to tell the world of the most
tremendous birth there ever was on this planet not knowing when it happened.
No event of their history was marked by justifiable dates for nearly four
hundred years. Centuries later the year of Christ's birth was determined but
was determined wrongly. Nobody now holds that Jesus was born in the year 1 AD.
For several hundred years various Churches celebrated the birthday of Jesus on
different dates. The eastern Churches kept it on January 6th, now the
Epiphany. Other Churches chose April 24th or 25th and some placed it in May.
Only in 354 AD did the Church choose December 25th as the birth date of
Christ. Rome was then the leading Church but Romans had celebrated this
festival for centuries as Pagans.
Considering that an omnipotent God descended from heaven and performed
astounding miracles to proof that people could now be saved in everlasting
life, it seems odd that no one noted the year of his birth, even though many
beings from shepherds to angels knew about it. This itself should be
sufficient to banish all faith in Christianity.
The birth date of Jesus was unknown. Admittedly, poor and illiterate parents
in undeveloped societies do not remember the dates when their children were
born and often do not even remember the year—simple people are not ruled by
clocks and calendars as we are. If, as Acts claims, Mary, Jesus's mother,
lived with the disciples after the crucifixion, evidently she had forgotten
when her son was born. But this is surprising even for a poor person
considering the interest shown by kings, shepherds and angels at the time.
Mary could not have experienced any of this because the gospels indicate that
she had no recollection of it.
Nor had the first Christians ever heard of it, scholars of the first two
centuries even differing over the year he was born, some believing that he was
born fully twenty years before the currently accepted date. Most believed that
Jesus's birth date was irrelevant—only his divine life was relevant and that
began at his baptism. Sadly they did not know the date of the baptism either
and arbitrarily chose 6 January.
Why? Because that date had long been associated with people bathing in blessed
water. Followers of the god Osiris, the deity of the Nile, had held a
festival, the "Festival of the Immersion", on the river on 6 January from time
immemorial. Christian Copts celebrate it still. The Hierophant poured holy
water into the river and blessed it, then people bathed in it. The Greeks
identified Dionysos with Osiris and so on 6 January the sacred waters were
blessed in both the religions of Osiris and Dionysos! Epiphany is a
continuation of these Pagan rites.
The Egyptian Gnostics known as Basilidians, seeing the immersion ceremonies as
a symbol of the baptism of Jesus, celebrated it on 6 January and gradually
Christians elsewhere adopted this date as the anniversary of the Jesus's
baptism. By 386 AD the two great Christian festivals were Easter, the festival
of the crucifixion, and Epiphany when rivers and springs were blessed and
water was drawn and saved for baptisms throughout the year. Aristides Rhetor
in about 160 AD tells us that water drawn from the Nile at the "Festival of
the Immersion" is at its purest. Stored in wine jars, he says, it improves
with time just like wine. And so does the myth! Two centuries later Epiphanius
writes that the stored water actually changes into wine! In Dionysos worship
water turns to wine on 6 January. The miracle at Cana when Jesus turned water
into wine is celebrated in the Christian calendar on 6 January!
Today the Epiphany celebration is most closely associated with the visit of
the Magi at Jesus's birth and has been since the fourth century AD. Magi were
Persian priests so it seems likely that the legend was introduced from Mithras
worship, originally a Persian religion. The babe Mithras was adored by
shepherds who brought gifts as in the Luke version of Jesus's birth. Rather
than merely equalling a rival, the editor who inserted the birth narrative
into Matthew took a more positive tack. He aimed to show the superiority of
Christianity over the other eastern religions: the divine baby Jesus is
superior to the divine baby Mithras whose priests bring gifts to the new god.
So the three Zadokites who officiated at Jesus's rebirth were adapted into
Magi from Persia appearing at his actual birth to prove that even the priests
of Mithras worshipped the Christian God.
Cassian at about the beginning of the fifth century says the Egyptian
provinces regarded Epiphany as being the birth date of Jesus. This was because
Jesus was thought to be exactly 30 years old on his baptism. Note also that
the Persian law-giver Zoroaster was exactly thirty when the spirit of god
descended on him, and the Egyptian Pharaoh's held a celebration called Sed
exactly 30 years after the day they had been chosen by their father as his
successor, their spiritual birthday.
Toward the end of the fourth century, hoping to counteract the Manichaean
heresy—that Jesus was never born at all but was a phantasm—church leaders
decided to move the date of Jesus's birth "after the flesh" from 6 January to
25 December, which since 274 AD under the emperor Aurelian, Rome had
celebrated as Natalis Solis Invicti, the Birthday of the Unconquerable Sun.
During the third and fourth centuries Mithraism had become the most important
solar religion in the Empire, Mithras being called, "the Unconquerable Sun".
Thus 25 December was celebrated as the "Birthday of the Unconquerable Sun" in
the calendar of Philocalus in 336 AD, only a year before Constantine dies and
a quarter of a century after he had supposedly made the empire Christian.
The solar celebration was so widespread and popular that the church could
neither stop it, nor stop it being identified in the popular mind with Jesus's
birth anyway. The importance of 25 December to Pagans made Christian converts
think it must also be important to their newly adopted religion. They easily
supposed it must have been the birthday of their messiah.
Every Roman was familiar from childhood with the great midwinter festival, and
in the earliest days of the Christian era the religions of Persia and Egypt,
with similar festivals, had spread over the Empire. The Romans later presided
over the council of Nicea (325 AD) which lead to the official Christian
recognition of the Trinity as the true nature of God. Since his birth date had
been forgotten, when Jesus was made a god by Constantine, 25 December was
selected as his birthday, because it was the birthday of other gods, and
particularly that of the chief rivals to Christianity in the Roman Empire, Sol
Invictus and Mithras. The Pagan emperor Constantine, who presided over the
council of Nicea, was popularly considered the embodiment or incarnation of
the this supreme Roman sun god. The bishops were typically opportunistic. By
celebrating at the same time as Pagan religions they hoped to offer the same
benefits and pull in some Pagan punters. Christmas remained the start of a new
year up to the tenth century.
The Emperor Honorius (395 to 423) speaks of 25 December as being a "new"
festival, and a text of about the same time says it is one of the three great
Christian festivals so holy that theatres had to close by law. The churches of
the Eastern Empire accused the Western Church of idolatry and sun worship.
Jesus was identified with the sun by both Cyprian and Ambrose. Jesus and
Mithras had become almost identical in the minds of the western populace.
Saint Augustine was one who did not approve of this particular concession to
Paganism.
Christmas festivals today incorporate many other Pagan customs, such as the
use of holly, mistletoe, Yule logs, and wassail bowls. The Christmas tree
itself is the most obvious aspect of ancient Pagan celebrations which were
later incorporated into church rites. Scholars believe that the Christian
celebration was originally derived in part from rites held by pre-Christian
Germanic and Celtic peoples to celebrate the winter solstice. The Christmas
tree, an evergreen trimmed with lights and other decorations, because it keeps
its green needles throughout the winter months, was believed by pre-Christian
Pagans to have special powers of protection against the forces of nature and
evil spirits. The Christmas tree is derived from the so-called paradise tree,
symbolizing Eden, of German mystery plays. The use of a Christmas tree began
early in the 17th century, in Strasbourg, France, spreading from there through
Germany, into northern Europe and Great Britain, and then on to the United
States.
Christmas is not the only Christian festival which was borrowed from ancient
Paganism and adapted to the Essenism of Jesus. There is also Easter, the Feast
of St John, the Holy communion, the Annunciation of the virgin, the assumption
of the virgin, and many others have their roots in ancient Pagan worship.
Midsummer Day is the Feast of St John the Baptist and is dedicated also to
Saints Philip and James. Saints Peter, James, Andrew and Paul were given
unimportant days even though we are told they were Christ's Apostles.
Christians were never too keen on following the instructions of their holy
texts though they usually made a great show of studying them. Had they taken
notice they could not have taken these Pagan practices into the divine
religion of Essenism. The scriptures warned against it quite explicitly:
Take heed to thyself that thou be not snared by following them, after that
they be destroyed from before thee; and that thou inquire not after their
gods, saying, How did these nations serve their gods? even so will I do
likewise. (Deut 12:30)
It was hard for the gentile Christian converts though. They had lately been
celebrating these festivals and all their friends still were. So they thought:
"What does it matter?" That has often been the enduring strength of
Christianity. Its ministers have been so flexible in the face of serious
rivalry as to be unprincipled. Yet in the face of weak or isolated rivals, it
has applied the devil's own punishments as if they were the guardians of hell
not heaven.
Christmas Before Christ
Long before Christianity, as mid-winter ap<font color="#000000">proached, Rome
was lit up with joy. It was the festival of the old vegetation-god Saturn who,
as a god, died or was displaced by Jupiter, the sky-god, but had a fine temple
on the Capitol. His festival lasted seven days, from December 17th to 24th,
and was the most joyous time of the joyous Roman year. For the whole week, no
work was done, the one law being good cheer and good nature, but the 25th was
the culmination of it all, the greatest festival in the Roman calendar—the
Birthday of the Unconquered Sun…
There was great rejoicing, illuminations and public games, and all shops were
closed. Presents were exchanged, and the slaves were indulged in special
liberties—on this one day they were free. They donned the conical cap of the
freedman—as frolickers continue at Christmas, and on other festive occasions
today, to don caps of paper—and sit at table while masters wait on them.
On 25 December, crowds filled the streets and raised festive cries, and the
women of Rome paraded, singing in a loud voice, Unto us a child is born this
day. Stalls laden with presents lined the streets near the Forum, but the
great present of the season was a doll, of wax or terracotta. Hundreds of
thousands of these dolls were on sale on the stalls and held in the arms of
passers by. Once human beings were sacrificed to Saturn, and, as human life
grew more important than religion, the god or his priests had to be content
with effigies of men or maids—dolls! It was a time of peace on earth, for by
Roman law no war could begin during the Saturnalia, and of good-will toward
all men.
The festival went back far into the mists of prehistoric times. It had been
earlier a one-day festival, the feast of Saturn, an important magico-religious
festival for insuring the harvest of the next year, rejoicing that the year's
work was over, and helping and propitiating the god of fecundity by generous
indulgence in wine and love. The mysterious winter dying of the sun was also
arrested. When it was on the turn, it seemed to hover at the same altitude in
the sky for three days, from the solstice, before observably beginning to rise
on the 25th, the great day of the sun's rebirth.
Christians never think it strange that the birth date of Jesus is also the
birth date of many of the incarnated gods of antiquity. They never think it
curious that it was for ancient astronomers the last day of the year—when the
year was re-born and a new sun began to climb again in the heavens. That
Pagans venerated the birthday of Christ as the birthday of their gods is
beyond coincidence .
At the first moment after midnight of 24 December the nations of the East
would rise at midnight to celebrate the arrival of 25 December, the birthday
of their gods. At midnight on the twenty-fifth of the month Savarana, which is
our December, millions of Krishna's disciples celebrated his birthday by
decorating their houses with garlands and gilt paper, and giving presents to
friends. The people of China also traditionally celebrated this day, closing
their shops. Buddha is said to have been born on this day after the Holy Ghost
had descended on his virgin mother Maya. The god of the Persians, Mithras, was
born on the 25th of December long before the coming of Jesus.
The Egyptians celebrated this day as the birth day of their great saviour
Horus, the Egyptian god of light and son of a virgin mother, the queen of the
heaven, Isis. Osiris, god of the dead and the underworld in Egypt, another son
of a holy virgin, was born on the 25th of December. Adonis, revered as a dying
and rising god among the Phrygians then the Greeks, was born on the 25th of
December. His worshipers held him a yearly festival representing his death and
resurrection, in midsummer. Even the temple at Jerusalem was used to celebrate
the birthday of the god Adonis in the years when Jesus might have been born,
Herod being no Jew by conviction. The cave in Bethlehem which is said to have
been the birth place of Jesus was also previously a place in which the
birthday of Adonis was celebrated.
The Greeks celebrated the 25th of December as the birthday of Hercules, the
son of their supreme god, Zeus, through the mortal woman Alcmene. Bacchus, the
god of wine and revelry among the Romans, known among the Greeks as Dionysos,
was born on this day.
The nations of the north also had their greatest festival of the year in
midwinter. To these northern barbarians, shuddering in the snow laden forests
beyond the Danube, the return of the sun was the most desired event of the
year, and they soon learned the time—the winter solstice—when the "wheel"
turned. The sun was figured as a fiery wheel, and as late as the nineteenth
century there were parts of France where a straw wheel was set on fire and
rolled down a hill, to give an augury of the next harvest.
Hence "Yule" (from the Teutonic word "hoel" or "wheel") was the outstanding
festival of the ancestors of the French and Germans, the English and
Scandinavians. The sun was born, and fires ("Yule logs," still traditionally
symbols of Christmas, though usually in the form of a chocolate cake) flamed
in the forest villages, the huts were decorated with holly and evergreens,
Yule trees were laden with presents, and stores of solid food and strong drink
were lavishly opened. This lasted until Twelfth Day, now Epiphany. The
Scandinavians celebrated the 25th of December as the birth day of their god
Freyr, the son of their supreme god of the heavens, Odin.
The entire known world of two thousand years ago had its "Christmas without
Christ." The figure of Christ was drawn in all its chief features before a
line of the gospels was written, unarguably in the details relevant to
Christmas. The first symbol of the Christian religion, the manger or basket
cradle of the divine child, the supposed unique exhortation to humility, was
one of the most familiar religious emblems of the Pagan world. Had it been
exhibited to a crowd in one of the cosmopolitan cities of the Empire, it would
have been strange or new to few. One might pronounce it Horus, another Mithras,
another Hermes, another Dionysos, but all would have shrugged their shoulders
nonchalantly at the news that it was just another divine sun child in the
great family of gods. The world flowed on. The names only were changed.
For Christians, Christ was the real sun that had risen upon the world. Why not
boldly pinch the birthday of the unconquered sun? The masses could then be
told they were celebrating Jesus—but the ribaldry, license and fooling were
contrary to Essenic, now Christian, prudery, and despite attempts to stop it
all, it thankfully persists until today.
Sun Gods
A prosperous Asiatic sun religion was housed on the Vatican hill before the
Popes commandeered it for Christianity. Mithraism spread rapidly, was
respected, and was strikingly like Christianity.
Mithras was an old Aryan sun god. The reform of the Persian religion by
Zoroaster (Zarathrustra) had put the ethical deity Ormuzd so high above the
old nature gods that he was practically the one god. But Mithras stole upward,
as gods do, and Persian kings of the fifth century BC put him on a level with
Ormuzd.
The Persians conquered and blended with Babylon, and Mithras rose to the
supreme position and became an intensely ethical deity. He was, like Aten and
Christ, the sun of the world. He sacrificed the pleasures of life, like Christ
but unlike Zeus. Drastic asceticism and purity were demanded of his
worshippers. They were baptized in blood. They practiced the most severe
austerities and fasts. They had a communion supper of bread and wine. They
worshiped Mithras in underground temples, artificial caves called grottos,
which blazed with the light of candles and reeked with incense.
Every year they celebrated the birthday of this god, who had come to take away
the sins of the world, and the day was December 25th. As that day approached,
near midnight of the 24th, Christians might see the stern devotees of Mithras
going to their temple on the Vatican, and at midnight it would shine with joy
and light. The Saviour of the world was born. He had been born in a cave, like
so many other sun-gods, and some of the apocryphal gospels put the birth of
Christ in a cave. He had had no earthly father. He was born to free men from
sin, to redeem them.
F Cumont, the great authority on Mithras, who it is now fashionable to
disparage, has laboriously collected for us all these details about the
Persian religion, and more than one of the Christian Fathers refers nervously
to the close parallel of the two religions. The Saviour Mithras was in
possession, had been in possession for ages, of December 25th as his birthday.
He was the real "unconquered sun", a sun god transformed into a spiritual god,
with light as his emblem and purity his supreme command. What could the
Christians do? Nothing, until they had the ear of the emperors. Then they
appropriated December 25th, and even bits of the Mithraic ritual, and they so
zealously destroyed the traces of the Mithraic religion that one has to be a
scholar to know anything about it.
There is more. A Roman writer of the fourth century, Macrobius, in a work
called "Saturnalia" (1:18) discusses the practice of representing the gods in
the temples as of different ages. He says:
These differences of age refer to the sun, which seems to be a babe at the
winter solstice, as the Egyptians represent him in their temples on a certain
day, that being the shortest day, he is then supposed to be small and an
infant.
This is confirmed and elaborated by a Christian writer, the author of the
"Paschal Chronicle," who says:
Jeremiah gave a sign to the Egyptian priests, saying that their idols would be
destroyed by a child-Saviour, born of a virgin and lying in a manger. That is
why they still worship as a goddess a virgin-mother, and adore an infant in a
manger.
He wants to explain age old customs to which their god is indebted as
imitations of their own much later god. Horus, the god in question, was an old
sun god of the Egyptians. In the adjustment of the rival Egyptian gods, when
the tribes were amalgamated in one kingdom, about 3000 years before Jesus was
born, Horus was made the son of Osiris and Isis. The latter goddess was the
sister and the spouse or lover of Osiris, but whether we should speak of her
as "a virgin mother" is a matter of words. In one Egyptian myth she was
fecundated by Osiris in their mother's womb, in another and more popular, she
was miraculously impregnated by contact with the false phallus of the dead
Osiris. Virginity in goddesses is a relative matter.
Whatever we make of the myths, Isis seems to have been originally a virgin
goddess, and in the later period of Egyptian religion she was again considered
a virgin goddess, demanding strict abstinence from her devotees. At this
period, apparently the birthday of Horus was annually celebrated, about
December 25th, in the temples. As both Macrobius and the Christian writer say,
a figure of Horus as a baby was laid in a manger, in a scenic reconstruction
of a stable, and a statue of Isis was placed beside it. Horus was, in a sense,
the Saviour of mankind. He was their avenger against the powers of darkness,
he was the light of the world. His birth festival was Christmas without
Christ.
This spectacle is presented in every church in the world on December 25th.
Catholic priests have taught their flocks to believe St Francis of Assisi
invented this touching scene of the humble birth of the redeemer. Francis of
Assisi will never have read the obscure "Paschal Chronicle," but some other
Christian writer had seen and reproduced it, and it had come to the knowledge
of Francis. Christ's crib is an exact reproduction of the scene exhibited in
Egyptian temples centuries before Christ, and the Egyptian legend itself is
thousands of years older than Jeremiah. On the analogy of the Christian
practice, the Egyptian legend must have described Isis as having given birth
to her divine son in a stable. In Alexandria, there was a similar Greek
celebration on December 25th of the birth of a divine son to Kore (the
"virgin").
And this is not the end. The Greeks had a similar celebration. The idea of a
divine son being born in a cave was common, or there were actually several
scenic representations of the birth of these gods in their festivals. J M
Robertson gives three in Christianity and Mythology. Hermes, the Logos (like
Jesus in John), the messenger of the gods, son of Zeus and the virgin Maia,
was born in a cave, and he performed extraordinary prodigies a few hours after
birth. He was represented as a "child wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying
in a manger." Dionysos (or Bacchus) was similarly represented. The image of
him as a babe was laid in a basket cradle in the cave in which he was born.
There is good reason to think that Mithras was figured in the same way.
From end to end of the Roman Empire December 25th was the birthday of the
unconquered sun, of the Saviour Mithras, and of the divine Horus and they and
the others, whose festivals were in other seasons, were represented almost
exactly as the birth of Christ was described in the gospels and is depicted in
Catholic churches today.
Astronomical Origin
The tradition of divine saviours being born of undeflowered women has an
astronomical aspect. It has been said, "the adventures of Jesus Christ are all
depicted among the stars," and this is why the Romans saw him as a sun god
like Mithras with whom he eventually became identified.
The myth of the Star of Bethlehem comes from the prophecy of Numbers 24:17:
There shall come a Star out of Jacob, and a Sceptre shall rise out of Israel,
and shall smite the corners of Moab, and destroy all the children of Seth.
This is a text often quoted by Christian writers as having a prophetic
reference to the Christian Messiah. The same text goes on to say, "It shall
destroy the children of Seth," a prophecy which is plainly false if it is
meant, like the rest of it, to apply to Jesus Christ. This prophecy is
obviously a prophecy of a traditional victorious messiah of Israel, modelled
on king David.
The star of Jacob or Judah, both being the same, is shown on astronomical maps
as prominent in the constellation Virgo, the Virgin, called by the Hebrews,
Ephraim. It was known in the Syrian, Arabian and Persian Systems of astronomy
as Messaeil and was considered the ruling genius of the constellation.
Messaeil is Messiah El (Son of God)—apparently the star, Spica. The star of
Jacob was evidently a figure from astrology, in which the virgin is shown
rising with an infant son of God in her arms.
The virgin, with her god-begotten child, the bright star, Spica, represented
as an ear of corn (the meaning of the name of the star), was pictured in the
heavens from time immemorial. They are present in the Hindu zodiac, at least
three thousand years old, and in the ancient Egyptian one. Virgo commences
rising at midnight, on the 25th of December, with this star in the east in her
arms—the star which piloted the wise men.
According to Albertus Magnus, in his Book on the Universe:
The sign of the celestial virgin rises above the horizon, at the moment we
find fixed for the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Sir William Drummond adds in Śdipus Judaicus:
The anointed of El, the male infant, who rises in the arms of Virgo, was
called Jesus by the Hebrews… and was hailed as the anointed king or Messiah.
Now though the sun is annually reborn on the date chosen for Christ's birth,
25th of December, the midwinter solstice, for a period the sun was also born
at the autumnal equinox as the infant son of God, the bread of life. This is
the time of the original Jewish New Year, Rosh ha Shanah, 1 Tishri, the
religious new year as opposed to the civil new year which began on 1 Nisan.
Rosh ha Shanah was designated in Jewish religious law as a festival and a time
of great rejoicing. Paradoxically it was also the Day of Judgement because it
was an anniversary of the creation. This is the real date of the birth of
Christ, if Christians want to celebrate it.
The reason is that in the centuries ending the first millenium BC the
precession of the equinoxes led to a curious celestial event. The child of the
cosmic virgin, Spica, rose on the Eastern horizon at the autumnal equinox at
the same time as the sun. So after the constellation of the virgin had risen
just before dawn in the east, the sun rose just when the bright star Spica was
expected to rise. It seemed as if the son of the virgin, the ear of corn
symbolising the bread of life (Rosh ha Shanah celebrated the beginning of the
agricultural year), had risen as the glorious sun. The virgin had given birth
to a god.
What was even more spectacular on some of these occasions was that the morning
star, Venus, the Queen of Heaven, rose in the constellation of Virgo before
the sun! So the sun rises as the child of the virgin Queen of Heaven over the
eastern horizon, appearing out of the sea in many countries. In Latin sea is
Mare whence Maria or Mary. The infant god arises as the light of the East in
the arms of his mother, Mary or Venus, the morning star, which rises minutes
before the child.
Also interesting is the fact that the Virgin in ancient zodiacs is associated
with a tree, in which case the son would be an offshoot, a shoot or a branch,
all of which were messianic names, and the word Nazarene comes from the word
Neser meaning a branch. The messianic name, Shiloh, which puzzled scholars for
a long time also means branch and therefore means the star Spica. When the
branch or son of the virgin appears as the light of the east in all his glory
then the messiah has been born. Whence:
We have seen his star in the east, and have come to worship him (Mt 2:8).
This phenomenon occurred in 11 BC and 3 BC and either might have been
associated with Jesus, though the earlier one is the favourite. The Essenes
who were astrologers trained in Babylonian exile would have seen all this. It
later escaped into the empire as literal truth instead of the astrological
signs it originally was.
The story of the slaughter of the innocents is also widespread because
originally it was again part of the allegory of the sun's journey through the
heavens. When the sun passed through the constellation of Gemini in May, he
was imagined to have destroyed them. The Greek word to destroy is anaireo
which literally means to pass through or withdraw from as well as to take
away. The sun takes on the characteristics of each constellation it proceeds
through so here Hercules is an infant twin. In myth that is, of course, what
he was, his brother being Iphicles. So Hercules was a sun god who in his
journey through the heavens threatens to kill himself as an infant of the
constellation, Gemini. His earthly, adopted father had to flee with him and
his mother to Galem for protection from threatening danger. Herod's name
suggested a link with Hercules so he fitted appropriately into the legend.
Jesus was, of course, supposed to have had a twin brother, Thomas.
Pharaoh's slaughter of the children, Christians believe, is referred to in the
Bible when Rachel weeps for her children, a passage introduced by: "In Rama
there was a voice heard."
Note that Rama is the Indian and Phoenican name for the zodiac, and that
Rachel had two children only—Joseph and Benjamin—equivalent to Castor and
Pollux. Rachel then was the queen of heaven, Venus, because for the Assyrians
and the Phoenicians she wept when the sun passed through the astronomical
twins, the constellation of Gemini, doubtless fearing their destruction.
The stories of gods cohabiting with virgins, and begetting other gods, are of
astronomical origin. Astronomy and religion were interwoven at an early period
of time.
Jesus as a Sun God
The idea of a Son of God is amongst the oldest cults of the patriarchal god
worshippers. The sun is the son of heaven in all primitive faiths. The
firmament is personified as the Father on High and the sun becomes the Son of
God. Then, because no wrongdoing is missed by the sun in its travels around
the heavens, it becomes the Son of Righteousness. The sun in its annual course
around the zodiac and its regular daily periodicity typified the ever present,
everlasting, ever faithful qualities that reassured people.
For Christian clergy who are always scared that one of these days their flocks
will catch on and be outraged at the confidence trick they have been subject
to, the Jesus of the New Testament bears an uncomfortable resemblance to other
mythical figures like Bacchus, the Phoenician Ies, the Hindu Krishna, the
Persian Mithras, the Egyptian Horus and other sun gods.
Many of the patriarchs, prophets, priests and kings of the Bible are sun gods
allegoricized as men by ancient poets. They can be recognized because there is
negligible historical evidence for them. Many scholars agree that the
patriarchs of the Bible and even Saul, David, Solomon and Samson are ancient
gods whose myths have been ludicrously accepted as history even by the most
scholarly of men.
The ancients saw in the sun's annual course round the heavens an image of
human experience—conception in June, birth into the world of fleshly life in
the autumn, spiritual awakening or rebirth at Christmas, and glorious
resurrection from the dead body of this life at Easter. In the dramas of the
mystery religions the central character was the initiate in the role of the
sun god.
Christians have confounded pre-Christian Persian and Hellenistic cosmic
principles with Jesus, a historical human being, a national hero of the Jewish
nation fighting repression. The Jesus of the gospels, whether he was a
historical person or not, was given the characteristics of a solar god.
When the sun rose in the constellation of Virgo, the sun was born of a Virgin.
Light imagery is wisespread in descriptions of Jesus. He is the "Light of the
World" (Jn 8:12) but the only proper Light of the World is the sun. He cometh
on clouds, and every eye shall see him (Rev 1:7), a description of the sun.
The sun, in the form of its reflexion as it rises and sets, walks on water.
Jesus is the saviour of mankind, but truly the proper saviour of mankind and
all life on earth is the sun—without it we should be unable to survive.
The sun's corona is traditionally depicted by a halo, a sunburst or a crown of
thorns, and indeed the halo can be taken as an indication of a sun god in
pre-Christian art. Sun gods such as Horus, Buddha and Krishna are shown with
haloes before it became a Christian convention. Often Jesus is depicted
surrounded by a sunburst of rays. The horns of the older deities and the rays
of light radiating from the heads of Hindu and Pagan gods show that gods were
often given the attributes of the sun. The halo, that originally indicated a
solar god, was transferred to other divine people in Christian art. The halo
became the symbol of a god and then a holy person because it is a
characteristic of the holy sun.
The sun has 12 aspects being the 12 signs of the zodiac or constellations,
through which it must pass in its yearly journey. It is born in the sign of
the goat, the Augean stable of the Greeks, then has an adventure as it enters
each different sign during the course of a year. Finally it dies and is reborn
or resurrected after three days on the twenty-fifth of December in the same
sign of the celestial goat. From ancient times the year was partitioned into
the 12 segments based on the constellation that the sun was in at the time,
and from this the sun itself was given the aspects of the imagined signs in
the heavens or friends or foes were given these imagined characteristics.
The magic number 12 is usually derived from this source and so it is with the
twelve Labours of Hercules and the tribes of Israel. The rationalisation of
the number twelve of the apostles is that they were to rule over the twelve
tribes, but the origin of the twelve is then still solar. In fact, there were
not twelve tribes and the number is only chosen to meet the requirements of a
sun god.
People in agrarian societies appreciated the importance of the sun in
agriculture. Farmers noted that the sun descended in altitude in the sky as it
moved southwards until 21 or 22 December, the winter solstice, when it stoped
declining for three days and thereafter started to ascend and move north
again. The sun seemed to die for three days on 22 December when it ceased its
heavenly motion and was born again on December 25th, when it resumes its
heavenly motion. The punter worried that the sun might really die and not
begin its annual ascent again, just as primitive peoples worried that the
night might not end when the sun had set.
Ancients astronomer–priests knew of the annual cycles of the sun and told the
punters that they could influence it in its journeys—if they were rewarded for
their skills. Priests always were frauds—modern ones are no different in
claiming they can help people get eternal life—and pretended they had rituals
to revive the sun each winter. Each year on 25 December, when it was born
again, people celebrated its birthday. Sons of god usually are born on
December 25th. Jesus has no known birthdate but he was given the birthdate of
the Unconquerable Sun because he was perceived by the Romans and the Greeks as
a sun god.
The sun is hung on a cross or crucified when it passes through the equinoxes.
At the vernal equinox at Easter, it is resurrected, rising above the celestial
equator. Jesus' death was accompanied by the darkening of the sun. The date of
his resurrection is the position of the sun at the time of the vernal equinox
when the priests could declare that the rebirth was complete—the day was now
longer than the night. March 25th was considered the end of the sun's passing
through the vernal equinox, when the sun was resurrected.
Early Christians repudiated the cross because it was Pagan. The first images
of Jesus show him as an androgynous youth, the Good Shepherd, carrying a lamb.
The original occupant of the cross was this lamb. A man was not shown hanging
on a cross until the 7th century AD.
That Christians worship on Sunday shows the origins of their god—Jesus is
actually the sun, the Light of the world that every eye can see. The sun has
been viewed consistently throughout history as the saviour of mankind for
reasons that are obvious. Without the sun, life on the planet would die.
The ancients had no only-begotten son of the Christian type because the term
they used was in Greek monogenes, and in Latin unigenitus, and did not mean
only-begotten, but that which was begotten of one parent, the father, alone.
The ancients meant by the term to designate the projection into matter by God
of the force of life, not the sole and unique product of the union of spirit
and matter, or a male god and a female human.
The Etymology of God's Names
The name Jesus is cognate with Jehovah, properly, Yehouah, who was apparently
a fertility god. It is not the personal name of an historical being but a
title. This illuminates the concept of the Messiah and the coming Son, or sun
god.
Alvin Boyd Kuhn, in a lecture 100 years ago, explained that Jesus and Jehovah
derive from the two letters—consonants not vowels—I (Yeh) and O (oo), which in
the beginning of writing symbolized the two elements, spirit and matter, male
and female, into which the primal One Life bifurcated. The I symbolises a
phallus, the male or spirit, and the O symbolises the vagina or womb, the
female or material universe. Together they represented the biune male-female
deity, Yeho. We have, then, the letters IO.
The invention of written vowels was a great discovery which the priests kept
secret for a long time just as they had kept writing secret. The name of god
was also a secret never to be pronounced except by those authorised—the
priests—on solemn occasions. So the expression of God's name in writing seems
to have been rendered apparently unpronounceable by writing it as the set of
vowel sounds discovered and currently expressed in symbolic form. The words
actually were pronounceable because, paradoxically, some of the vowel symbols
were pronounced as consonants.
Vowels never remain fixed. As the vowels changed, in ancient languages,
expression of the different pronunciations of the sacred name caused it to be
rendered as IO, IA, IE, or IU. All these forms are found. Meanwhile, when the
symbol I began to be used as a pure vowel, it was replaced as a consonant by J
(as it is in Latin), so that we find the names JO, JA, JE and JU.
That the priests were linking their secret discovery of the alphabet and
writing with the gods is suggested by the use of the Word or Logos as the name
of the Son. When the male and female which emerged from the Primal Creation
had given birth to the Son or Logos, the first trinity was formed and the
written name of the threefold god was expressed as three letters yielding
names like IAO, JAH, IEO, JEU, ZUE. Observation of another vowel sound brought
the number to four matching the four cardinal points, the square of four
dimensions, and the four elements, so the holy name was spelled variously as
IEOU, JOVE, ZEUS, JEVE, DIOS, (TH)EOS, HUHI, IHUH and others.
Finally, the early priestly linguistic discoveries were brought to a halt with
the agreement that five vowel sounds sufficed. Thus we got IEOUA, pronounced
as Yehouah, as the name of god. This is Jehovah, the V being properly a W,
pronounced as a long O sound (OO) as it is in the alternative written form
Yahweh. Later, some priests seemed to settle on the magic number seven, giving
seven-lettered names for God. YEHOUAH, SABAOTH, DEBORAH, DELILAH, SE(PH)IROT,
SEPIRO(TH), MICHAEL and SOLOMON might reflect this phase.
The I also transmuted into L (el) and transposed, so that IE became LE and
then EL, the Semitic name of God. The EL and the IAH (JAH), became the most
frequent names of God among the Semites and were used in hosts of personal
names. The Jews have names like Bethel, Emanuel, Michael, Israel, Gabriel,
Samuel, Abdiel, Uriel, Muriel, Azazel and many others featuring the EL form.
The IO form appears as JO and JEHO in many Hebrew names like Joseph, Joshua,
John and Jehosephat, while the JAH form is equally seen in such names as
Elijah and Abijah, and the IAH form comes in a such names as Nehemiah,
Jeremiah, Obediah, Hezekiah, Isaiah, Messiah and Alleluiah. These endings are
usually written in the Greek Testaments in the Greek form IAS, which is the
same as IES and IHS. IES was the Phoenician Bacchus, or the Sun personified.
This name is found everywhere on Christian altars, both Protestant and
Catholic.
This looks like a linguistic accident but the central S in Jesus's name
curiously matches an Egyptian suffix written either SA, SE, SI, SU, or SAF,
SEF, SIF or SUF—alternatively SAPH, SEPH, SIPH or SUPH. The F is an Egyptian
ending for the masculine singular so the meaning of it is the son, heir,
prince or masculine successor to the father. When the original symbol of
divinity, IO or IE, JO or JE, was combined with the Egyptian suffix for the
succeeding heir, SU or SA, the resultant was the name IUSA, IUSE, IUSU, or
IOSE; or IESU, JESU, IUSEF, IOSEF, JOSEF. One of the many forms was JESU and
another was JOSEF.
Jesus therefore means the divine son, and combined in the Egyptian IU the idea
of the coming one. Hence JESUS was the Messiah, the coming son of the divine
life. Indeed messiah is a combination of the Egyptian word MS and the word for
god, IAH. MS means son so the meaning of Messiah is precisely son of God. It
is the same word as Rameses where Ra, the name of the sun god replaces Iah and
the words are reversed in order. Scholars, Christian and Jewish alike, say
Messiah means the anointed one, deriving Messiah from the word for anointing
with oil. They have, of course, got the derivations back to front. The word
for making someone a son of God by anointing them with oil was derived from
the purpose of the ritual, not the other way round.
Startling as this etymology is, more amazing is the realisation that the Old
Testament of the Bible itself has about twenty sun gods called Jesus or one of
its cognate forms! Besides the variant forms of Jesus already noted, there are
still others in the Jewish scriptures which most people do not suspect as
being related to the name of the Christian saviour—Joshua, Hosea and Jesse are
indisputably of the same root. Among Semitic people we also find other related
names like Yusuf, Yehoshua and Yeshu. Isaac, Esau, Jacob, Jeshu, Joachim and
Jonah might not seem so clearly the same.
Jonah and the whale is a story which refers to the Mesopotamian town of
Nineveh, where in the earliest tradition Tiamat, the earth mother, and sea
goddess, swallows the sun, Marduk, at the end of his journey across the
heavens. The scriptural story depicts the messenger of God, Jonah, as Marduk
and the monster, Tiamat, as the whale. Jonah who therefore represents the sun
is saved by God from the Babylonian monster and goes on to convert the whole
city of Nineveh. Noah's Ark is similarly an adaptation of the journey of the
sun around the heavens, the animals being the constellations.
There are yet other sun god figures in the Old Testament under unrelated
names. Samson or Sampson whose name means solar and whose hair (rays) was cut
off by Delilah is perhaps the most obvious one, being a Semitic Hercules.
Solomon and Saul both derive from the same root as soul and sol, the sun in
Latin. David, Abraham, Moses, Gideon, Jephtha are also among those whose
actions identify them as solar representatives. In 2 Kings 23:11 is clear
evidence of Jewish sun worshipping, when king Josiah, removed the horses that
the kings of Judah had dedicated to the sun.
The Book of Joshua leads us to think that he had several attributes of the sun
god, and that, like Samson and Moses, he was an ancient deity reduced to human
status. He is the son of Nun, the primeval Egyptian god who created everything
but then receded into the waters to lift up the sun each dawn. His symbol was
a fish. Horus in Egypt had been a fish from time immemorial, and when the
equinox entered the sign of Pisces, Horus, was portrayed as Ichthys with the
fish sign of over his head. Joshua might originally have been Horus as Iusa,
it being a cult of Horus which left Egypt and found a home in the promised
land of Canaan when it was part of the Egyptian kingdom, its followers being
called Israelites. Israel then means "Our God is the Son of Ra!" When the
equinox entered Pisces, this perhaps signified to some Jews that Joshua was
the messiah.
The historicity of the Exodus is undermined by the lack of archaeological
evidence. By coincidence, it is celebrated at the festival of Passover at the
vernal equinox, in spring when the Paschal supper is consumed. It is a well
known principle that legends are often invented to explain ritual practices,
the origins of which have been forgotten or have become inappropriate. It is
clear then that the Passover really celebrates the passing over of the sun
from being below the celestial horizon to being above it. Both the Book of
Enoch and the Jewish Kaballah put the Exodus in the sky not in true history.
The events of the Exodus are historically impossible, in any case. 600,000 men
could not have been mobilized in a single night. Nor could three million
people with their flocks and herds have drawn water from a single well.
Horus of Egypt
For millennia in Egypt the messianic idea was expressed in the name IUSA. A
19th Dynasty king list says that the pre-dynastic rulers of Egypt were
followers of Horus. Later he was the Iu-em-hotep, which means the divine son
is peace (hotep). Hotep also means seven. IU comes to complete the six
elementary powers of natural evolution with the gift of divine knowledge. Love
and intelligence supplant elementary chaos and bring peace. Jesus is the
seventh cosmic principle announced in all religious lore as he who brings
peace and good will to men. The Christian gospels announced him thus but Jesus
or IUSA or IU was known before the coming of any historical Jesus. IUSA, IAO
and IESU were alternative names of Horus, the Egyptian Son (of Ra or Osiris)
who was himself a sun god.
The stories of Jesus and Horus are very similar. In the later Egyptian
religion, Osiris, the father of Horus was essentially a supreme and
transcendental god who had acquired the attributes of most other Egyptian
gods. Among his many titles were Lord of Lords, King of Kings, God of Gods,
the Resurrection and the Life, the Good Shepherd, Eternity and
Everlastingness, the god who "made men and women to be born again." Even Horus
and his Father, Osiris, were interchangeable, reminding us that Jesus said: "I
and my Father are one."
Osiris was the god who suffered, died and rose again, to reign eternally over
the souls of the righteous dead. His worshippers believed that, like their
god, they would inherit eternal life. Osiris's coming was announced by the
Three Kings or the Three Wise Men: the three stars Mintaka, Anilam and Alnitak
in the belt of Orion, which point directly to Osiris's star in the east,
Sirius (Sothis), the sign of his birth. Osiris typified the Christian idea of
a messiah, a saviour god, rather than the Jewish idea of a conquering king.
His flesh was also eaten in the form of communion cakes of wheat, the plant of
Truth, just as Christians devour wafers which are the body of their saviour
god.
In the Bible, the 23rd Psalm is an Egyptian appeal to Osiris. A hymn to Osiris
as the Good Shepherd begs him to lead the deceased to the green pastures and
still waters of Paradise, the nefer-nefer or beautiful, beautiful land, to
restore the soul to the body and give protection in the valley of the shadow
of death (the Tuat). The Lord's Prayer was prefigured by an Egyptian hymn to
Osiris-Amun (Amen) beginning, "O Amen, O Amen, who art in heaven." Amen was
also invoked at the end of every prayer.
Horus was born of the virgin Isis-Meri, Isis the Beloved, on December 25th,
and like his father, his birth was announced by that star in the east (Sothis)
and attended by the three wise men. When the birthplace was in the sign of the
Bull, 6000 years ago (4000 BC), the constellation in the east that arose to
attend the birth of the babe was Orion.
The identity of these old traditions with Christmas are no longer disputed by
scholars. Only ignorant fundamentalist ministers and some barmy priests of
other denominations deny it. The celebrations of the birthdays of Mithras and
Horus are as certain as the Saturnalia. Legends of the miraculous birth of
gods, demigods, and heroes in the ancient world were as certain as that the
Chaldeans knew astronomy and the Romans built tenement buildings.
The whole story of Jesus cannot be reduced to solar mythology. Once the legend
of the historic Jesus had been carried into the Pagan empire he came to be
understood as a sun god. He collected bits of sun god mythology, but some
people today, strain to explain every element of the biography of Jesus in the
gospels in terms of sun mythology. There is plainly a genuine story of a
living human at the core of the gospels, most clearly seen unadorned in Mark's
gospel. This was its novelty—here was a sun god that had lived on earth
recently!
The chief mythical constituents of the life of Jesus were known all over the
cosmopolitan Grćco-Roman world, most particularly in the overlapping fringe of
the Grćco-Roman and the Persian-Egyptian worlds—the eastern coast of the
Mediterranean—where the gospels were certainly composed. Whatever city we may
favour as the cradle of the gospels, Alexandria or Antioch, Smyrna or Ephesus,
every myth and ritual representation mentioned was familiar there. Mithraism
spread from Persia to Britain. Roman soldiers prayed to Mithras in the towers
in which they guarded the north of England from the marauding Scots. The
religion of Isis and Horus was even more familiar round the Mediterranean. The
legend and ritual of Dionysos were hardly less familiar.
The death and resurrection legends were just as widely diffused. Why should
Pagan beliefs have to be used to explain the virgin birth myth? The Septuagint
plainly, but in a false translation, said, "A virgin shall conceive", and this
was taken to refer to the Messiah. Moreover, if Jesus despised conjugal
relations, as early Christians believed, they could not accept that he, as a
god, would have chosen such a vile union necessary to enter the world. The
early Christians in whose circles the gospel stories developed, will have seen
this as a reference to the popular Pagan legends of gods born to virgins.
In the catacombs at Rome are pictures of the baby Horus being held by the
virgin mother Isis—the original Madonna and Child. The Gnostics said to the
Christians:
You poor ignoramuses (idiotai), you have mistaken the mysteries of old for
modern history, and accepted literally all that was only meant mystically.
Addition by Larry Wright
The worship of the Virgin Mary is, in all relevant details, the same as the
worship of all the other Goddesses that were prevalent in the ancient world.
Mary is Isis, or Venus, or Aphrodite, or Semiramis, et al… She is the "Queen
of Heaven" or the "Mother of God", or the "Star of the Sea", or the
"Immaculate Virgin". The Mother and Child were worshipped in Babylon, as were
Isis and Horus in Egypt. In Greece there was Ceres as the Great Mother with a
babe at her breast, or Irene with Plutus, and even in China there was Shing
Moo, also with a babe. The ancient Etruscans and Italians worshipped the
goddess Nutria, who also had a son in her arms, and the Virgin mother Devaki
suckled the divine Krishna. Minerva was honoured by the title "Virgin Queen",
as was Juno who was called the "Virgin queen of Heaven".
The Virgin Mary, the Grecian Venus, and the Egyptian Isis et al… are all
Queens of the starry heavens, for they are all personifications of Virgo, the
eternal virgin of the zodiac. The constellation Virgo is a Y shaped group,
which the star at the foot is the well known Spica, a star of the first
magnitude. The whole resembles more a cup than the human figure; but when we
remember the symbolic meaning of the cup, that seems to be an obvious
explanation of the name Virgo, which the constellation has borne since the
earliest times. Virgo lies very nearly on the ecliptic, that is the imagined
path of the sun.
In Egypt 3000 years ago, the birthday of the sun god was celebrated on the 25
December, the first day to noticeably lengthen after the day of the winter
solstice—the 21 December. At the midnight hour on the first minutes of the 25
December the birthday of the sun was celebrated. The sun was then in the
zodiacal sign of Capricorn, then known as the Stable of Augeus, so the infant
sun god was said to have been born in a stable.
Brightly shining on the meridian was Sirius—the "Star from the East", while
rising in the east was Virgo the Virgin of the zodiac, with the horizon
passing through the centre of the constellation. It is this astronomical fact
that is the basis of the many legends of virgin born world saviours. To the
right of Sirius was the constellation Orion, "The Great Hunter", with three
stars in his belt. These stars, in a straight line, point at Sirius and were
anciently known as "The Three Kings". Depicted in the Zodiac of the temple
Denderah, the constellation Virgo was pictured as a woman with a spike of corn
in one hand, and on the adjacent margin the Virgin was denoted by a figure of
Isis with Horus in her arms. Carpenter remarks:
But it is well known as a matter of history that the worship of Isis and Horus
descended in the early Christian centuries to Alexandria, where it took the
form of the worship of the Virgin Mary and the infant saviour, and so passed
into the European ceremonial. We have therefore the Virgin Mary connected by
linear succession and descent with that remote Zodiacal cluster in the sky! A
curious confirmation of the same astrological connection is afforded by the
Roman Catholic Calendar. For if this be consulted, it will be found that the
festival of the Assumption of the Virgin is placed on the 15 August, while the
festival of the birth of the Virgin is dated the 8 September… At the present
day, the Zodiacal signs— owing to the precession of the Equinoxes—have shifted
some distance from the constellations of the same name. But at the time when
the Zodiac was constituted and these names were given, the first date
obviously would signalise the actual disappearance of the cluster Virgo in the
sun's rays, i.e. the Assumption of the Virgin into the glory of the god, while
the second date would signalise the reappearance of the constellation—or the
birth of the Virgin.
The Jews held that the time of the messiah's advent was to be astrologically
indicated by the conjunction of the planets Jupiter and Saturn, in the
constellation of the Fishes. The prophecy related to the entrance of the
vernal equinox into the zodiacal sign of Pisces the Fishes—due to the
precession of the equinoxes—in approximately 255 BC. Bethlehem means the "The
house of the bread corn", in the mansions of the zodiac, Virgo is the place of
the seed for sowing, and the opposite sign Pisces, is the mansion of the
"Bringer forth in fruitfulness", first set in heaven in accordance with the
seasons of Egypt. The Hebrew messiah was to be born in Bethlehem, because the
birthplace above was localised in the city of Judea, the land of the solar
birthplace in the sign of the Fishes.
The ancient starry drama was played out yet again. At midnight on the 24th of
December Virgo rose in the east and a new infant saviour was stable born. All
the sins committed on earth gradually drifted down to Capricorn, hence the
filthy condition of the stable, whose cleansing was one of the twelve zodiacal
labours of Hercules, himself a sun god. The second-century church father
Justin Martyr remarked that Christ was born when the sun had its birth in the
Augean stable, Jesus coming as a second Hercules to cleanse the foul world.
There is another stable in the constellation Auriga on either side of which
are Taurus the bull and Ursa Major, known in Egypt as the "Ass of Typhon".
Here we have the ox and ass of the traditional nativity scene. It is also
worth noting that the stars of the Great Bear were known to the Arabians as
"Martha and Mary", and also the "Coffin of Lazarus".
"The Three Kings"—the stars of Orion— the Magi from the east mentioned in the
Gospels (Mt 2:11), at the birth of the sun god, came to pay homage, and bring
gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh. The reason for presenting these
particular gifts is explained by the fact that of the seven metals dedicated
to the genie of the planets, gold was the one consecrated to the sun god, and
frankincense and myrrh were the gums burnt in censers, at his worship.
Despite their astral origins, Christians later "discovered" the bodies of
Melchior, Gaspar and Balthassar; and placed them in their new cathedral in
Constantinople. From Constantinople the bones of the three kings were, as a
special favour to Milan, allowed to be moved to that city. When Milan was
captured by Frederick Barbarossa in 1162 AD, the Archbishop of Cologne
persuaded the Emperor to transfer these relics to his cathedral; and there for
the last eight centuries the bones have rested. The shrine of the "Three
Kings" thereafter became one of the greatest treasures of Cologne cathedral.
The Egyptian astrological elements in the stable myth are provided by Massey:
The manger is the celestial, zodiacal and the actual birthplace of the messiah
in Egyptian mythology. The typical birthplace was designated Apt or Aptu,
whence came the name of Abydus. Ap means to manifest and expose to view, also
to guide; Apt is the place or person. Apt, as person, was the most ancient
genitrix who first brought forth from the waters as the fish, dragon or
hippopotamus, hence Aptu is the mythical fish. Apt as place was also the pool
of two truths, the piscina of the beginning, which was made zodiacal at last
in the sign of Pisces. The pool, fish, uterus and crib, are all types of the
birthplace named apt, and the "apt" is also a manger. The manger, apt, is a
sign of the birthplace in Thebes, as in Aptu (Abydus). Thus the hieroglyphics
will explain why the divine child, as Ichthyus, was born in a manger. One
position of the manger can be identified by the asterism called Proesepe, in
the sign of Cancer, which was at one time the place of birth of the god at
summer solstice. The manger at Bethlehem had been the birthplace of the divine
babe in a far earlier cult. Hieronymus describes the Syrian Adonis, extant in
his time 331-420 AD and says that in the place where the redeemer cried in the
manger, the lament of the women mourning for Adonis had been heard even in
later times, as it assuredly had been in the pre-Christian period.
According to the "Chronicle Of Alexandria", the Egyptians not only consecrated
the nativity of the new-born babe and the virgin mother, they had the symbolic
custom of exposing a child in a crib to the adoration of the people. When
Ptolemy asked why this was done, he was informed that it was an ancient
mystery—the crib or Apt being identical to the manger, thus being the same
babe in the manger—that was born in the Apt above.
It is clear that the worship of the virgin mother was a common practice in the
ancient world. In the sixth or seventh century the Roman Pagan festival of
Diana celebrated by torch light on August 13th, was adopted by the Christian
cult as the "Dormition" or "Falling asleep of the Mother of God". This later
became known as the "Assumption of the Blessed Virgin", and was celebrated two
days later than the Pagan festival—on August 15th.
The worship of the Virgin, the Queen of Heaven, became one of the grand
features of the Christian religion. Mary the mother of Jesus, was pronounced
Theotokus— "Mother of God"— by the Council of Ephesus 431 AD, and a church on
the site was made sacred to her. Twenty years later in 451 AD at the council
of Chalcedon Mary was further likened to the many virgin mothers that had
preceded her by being pronounced a Virgin. Ephesus was chosen, because here
had stood the great temple of Artemis, the great Virgin mother of Asia
minor—of whom Isis was the prototype.
Artemis was to the Greeks what Diana was to the Romans (Acts 19:27). Her
temple had been rebuilt for the fourth time under the patronage of the
fabulously rich Croesus. It took 140 years to complete and was dedicated in
430 BC. It was destroyed by fire, but was rebuilt to even greater magnificence
by about 356 BC, and became known as one of the seven wonders of the ancient
world. It was finally destroyed by an edict of the Christian Emperor
Theodosius in 381 AD. Her Assumption was decreed in 813 AD, her Immaculate
Conception became dogma during the pontificate of Pope Pius IX in 1854.
Although the former was not made official papal dogma until the pontificate of
Pius XII in 1950 AD.
Regarding the elevation of Mary, Smith remarks:
Mary soon began to compete in popular affection with Isis, Cybele and Demeter.
It required but slight and easy changes to transfer to her the stately ritual
of the goddess Isis, with its shaven and tonsured priests, its matins and
vespers, its tinkling music, its jewelled images of the mother of god; the
ancient portrait of Isis and the child Horus was ultimately accepted not only
in popular opinion, but by formal Episcopal sanction, as the portrait of the
virgin and her child.
There can be little doubt that the Virgin Mary has been modelled directly upon
the Egyptian Isis, for the two are virtually indistinguishable. The qualities
which so endear Mary to the Catholics are the ones which made Isis so popular
in Egypt. Both goddesses, gentle mothers that they were, could intercede with
the all-powerful creator and stern judge far more effectively than their sons,
and accordingly both have been styled Intercessor. Other titles of Isis
include Saviour of Souls and Immaculate Virgin, all appropriated by her
Christian counterpart. Like Isis before her, Mary is portrayed standing on a
crescent moon with an arch of stars above her head.
Certain images of Isis were celebrated for their miraculous movements, or the
shedding of tears, and she was even said to have appeared to her worshippers
on rare but special occasion. This miraculous work of "Our Lady" was naturally
continued by the Christian church which gradually took over the cult of Isis.
In fourth-century Alexandria, the Temple of Isis and the Church of Saint Mary
stood side by side, the devotees of the mother goddesses indifferently
frequenting either. The end came in the sixth century, when the last remaining
Temple of Isis, on the Nile island of Philae, became a Christian church at the
point of a sword under an edict of Justinian.
In the foregoing it has been argued that Mary the virgin mother of Jesus, like
her counterparts in the many saviour cults of antiquity, had their origin in
the starry heavens, patterned on Virgo the celestial world virgin of the
zodiac. This symbolism of the birth of a new sun god, with its attendant
message of hope and redemption at the winter solstice, originated in Egypt
with the infant Horus and his mother Isis, the Egyptian Madonna. The doctrine
of the Mother of God was brought in along with the worship of the Madonna by
Bishop Cyril, and the monks of Alexandria, in the 5th century AD. Figures of
Isis nursing the infant Horus were taken from the temples to serve as the
Madonna and Child. The name Madonna is no more than a contraction of Mater
Domina or Great Mother—in Roman times a title of mother goddesses in general.
As we have noted, Isis was also represented like Mary standing on the crescent
moon with twelve stars surrounding her head, and with the infant saviour in
her arms enclosed in a framework of the flowers of the Egyptian bean or lotus.
The Virgin Mary was often depicted in this manner in medieval art; and she was
represented in statuary as being black or dark skinned; black Madonnas exist
today in many of the cathedrals of Europe. The most ancient pictures and
statues in Italy and other parts of Europe, of what are supposed to be
representations of the Christian Virgin Mary and the infant Jesus are black.
The infant god, is depicted in the arms of his black mother, his eyes and
drapery white, but he is himself is perfectly black. The reason why these
early representations of the Virgin Mary and Jesus are black, crowned, and
covered with jewels, is that they are of pre-Christian origin; as Isis the
Egyptian "Queen of Heaven" was worshipped in Europe for centuries before the
Christian Era.
Temples and statues were erected to her at Bologna in Italy, and the church of
Notre Dame in Paris is built on the original site of a Temple of Isis. On the
entrance to the north cloister is figured the signs of the Zodiac, except that
the sign Virgo is replaced by the figure of the Madonna and Child. Finally, in
many parts of Italy can be seen pictures of the Virgin with her infant in her
arms, inscribed with the words, "Deo Soli" (Sun God). This betrays their Pagan
origin.
- Christianity Unadorned, http://www.askwhy.co.uk/awcnotes/cn2/0105SunGod.html
from Pre-game school prayer protest drowned out on field
09/03/2000, C. Bryson Hull; The Associated Press
"The loudspeakers are paid for with our tax dollars, so we should be able to
use them as we wish. If other groups want to pray that way, let them put their
Buddhas or their wooden statues up there and pray to their dead gods." (Jackie
Nelson, Santa Fe resident, referring to the U.S. Supreme Court ban on
school-sanctioned pre-game prayer)
from "The Worship of the Sun among the Ancient Romans"
by Sir James G. Frazer
The imperial patronage thus accorded to Sun-worship for at least half a
century before the establishment of Christianity was little more than an
official recognition of a universal solar religion which had long been
spreading in the empire under the combined influences of philosophic thought,
astrological speculation, and Oriental mysteries. Among these mysteries none
were more popular, none proved more dangerous rivals to Christianity, than the
worship of the old Persian god Mithra, who was now definitely identified with
the Sun-god under the title of the Unconquered Sun. About the beginning of our
era Strabo affirms without hesitation or ambiguity that the Persian deity
Mithra was the Sun. Yet in the opinion of some good modern scholars Mithra
originally personified the light, not of the Sun, but of the luminous heaven
in general. As to the mode, place, and date of the process which transformed
him from a god of light in general into a god of the Sun in particular we have
no information. The change perhaps took place in Babylonia, where, under the
powerful influence of Chaldean theology and astrology, the Iranian deities
were assimilated to their nearest Semitic counterparts, the Supreme God Ahura
Mazda being identified with the Sky-god Bel, while the goddess Anahita was
confused with Ishtar (Astarte), the goddess of the planet Venus, and Mithra
was equated with the Sun-god Shamash. But Babylonia was only a stage in the
triumphal march of Mithra westward. Even under the early kings of the
Achemenidian dynasty Persian colonists seem to have settled in Armenia, where,
according to Strabo, all the Persian deities were worshipped. It is said that
the governor of Armenia used to send no less than twenty thousand colts a year
to the Persian king for use at the Mithrakana or festival of Mithra. Of the
mode of celebrating the festival at the Persian court we know little or
nothing except that the only day on which the king was allowed to be drunk was
the day on which sacrifices were offered to Mithra, and on that day he also
danced a Persian dance. But the wave of Persian colonization rolled westward
beyond the boundaries of Armenia. In its climate, as in its natural products,
the tableland of Anatolia resembles that of Iran, and lent itself particularly
to the breeding of horses, and hence to the formation of a native cavalry, the
arm in which the Persians always excelled. Under the sway of Persia the
nobility who owned the land appear to have belonged to the conquering race in
Cappadocia and Pontus as well as in Armenia, and despite all the changes of
government which followed the death of Alexander these noble lords remained
the real masters of the country, ruling each the particular canton in which
his domains were situated and, on the borders of Armenia at least, preserving
through all political vicissitudes down to the time of Justinian the
hereditary title of satrap which recalled their Iranian origin. This military
and feudal aristocracy furnished Mithridates Eupator with many of the
officers, by whose help he was so long able to set the power of Rome at
defiance, and still later it offered a stout resistance to the efforts of the
Roman emperors to subjugate Armenia. Now these warlike grandees worshipped
Mithra as the patron-saint of chivalry; hence it was natural enough that even
in the Latin world Mithra always passed for the "Invincible," the guardian of
armies, the soldier's god. In the time of Strabo the Magians were still to be
found in large numbers, scattered over Cappadocia, where they maintained the
perpetual fires in their chapels, intoning the liturgy with the regular
Persian ritual. A century and a half later the same sacred fires still blazed
to the drone of the same liturgy in certain cities in Lydia: for Pausanias
tells us that:
The Lydians have sanctuaries of the Persian goddess, as she is called, in the
cities of Hierocaesarea and Hypaepa, and in each of the sanctuaries is a
chapel, and in the chapel there are ashes on an altar, but the colour of the
ashes is not that of ordinary ashes. A magician, after entering the chapel and
piling dry wood on the altar, first claps a tiara on his head, and next chants
an invocation of some god in a barbarous and, to a Greek, utterly
unintelligible tongue: he chants the words from a book. Then without the
application of fire the wood must needs kindle and a bright blaze shoot up
from it.
Outside of the Anatolian tableland the first to observe the rites of Mithra
are said to have been the Cilician pirates. During the civil wars which
distracted the attention and absorbed the energies of the Romans in the first
century [B.C.], these daring rovers seized the opportunity to issue from the
secret creeks and winding rivers of Cilicia and scour the seas, landing from
time to time, harrying islands, holding cities to ransom, and carrying off
from some of the most famous sanctuaries the wealth which had been accumulated
there by the piety of ages. Gorged with plunder and elated by the impunity
which they long enjoyed, the corsairs rose to an extraordinary pitch of
audacity and effrontery, marching up the highroads of Italy, plundering
villas, and abducting Roman magistrates in their robes of office; while at sea
they displayed a pomp and pageantry proportioned to the riches which they had
amassed by their successful forays. Their galleys flaunted gilded sails and
purple awnings, and glided along to the measured plash of silver oars, while
the sounds of music and revelry, wafted across the water, told to the
trembling inhabitants of the neighbouring coasts the riot and debauchery of
the buccaneers. The worship of Mithra, which these sanctified ruffians
practised in their fastnesses among the wild Cilician mountains, may have been
learned by them from Mithridates Eupator, King of Pontus, whom they assisted
in his wars with the Romans.
By the end of the first century of our era the worship of Mithra and his
identification with the Sun appear to have been familiar to the Romans; for in
an address to Apollo the poet Statius, enumerating the titles by which that
deity was called, suggests that the god might prefer to be known as "Mithra,
who under the rocks of the Persian cave twists the bull's struggling horns."
The allusion is plainly to the most widespread and familiar monument of
Mithraism, the sculpture which represents Mithra in a cave, kneeling on the
back of a bull and twisting its head back with one hand, while with the other
he plunges a knife into its flank. The ancient scholiast Lactantius Placidus,
commenting on this passage of Statius, not only explains Mithra as the Sun
whom the Persians worhipped in caves, but completes the solar interpretation
by adding that the horned bull is the horned Moon, and that the scene is laid
in a cave to signify an eclipse of the sun by the interposition of the moon.
In the group of Mithra and the bull, as the scholiast correctly observes,
Mithra is regularly portrayed in Persian costume wearing the usual tiara or
peaked Phrygian cap; but the scholiast proceeds to say that Mithra was also
represented with the head of a lion, and he explains this representation
either with reference to the constellation of the Lion which the Sun enters in
his course through the zodiac, or as a symbol of the superiority of the
Sun-god over all the other gods, like the superiority of the lion over all the
other beasts. In this interpretation the scholiast appears to have erred. The
figure of a lion-headed god, standing with a serpent twined round his body and
holding one or two keys in his hands, is explained with greater probability as
a personification of Time, answering to the Persian divinity Zervan Akarana,
Infinite Time, which from the period of the Achemenides was deemed by a Magian
sect to be the origin of all things and the begetter both of Ormuzd and
Ahriman.
Compared to the other Oriental deities, such as the Phrygian Great Mother, the
Carthaginian Astarte, and the Egyptian Isis and Serapis, the Phrygian god
Mithra was a late arrival in Rome. The nature of the Anatolian plateau
explains in some measure the long seclusion of the deity from the western
world. It is a bleak upland region of steppes and forests and precipices,
which offers few attractions to the stranger; and there, in the solitude of
the mountains or the dreary expanse of the unending plains, Mithra remained
for ages isolated amid natural surroundings which formed a not unsuitable
setting for his stern and soldierly religion. Even during the Alexandrian age,
after the victorious Greek armies had swept over the country, Mithra never
descended from his highland home to the soft skies and blue seas of Ionia. A
single late dedication to the Sun Mithra, found at the Piraeus, is the only
monument of his worship on the coasts of the Aegean. The Greeks never welcomed
this god of their ancient enemies to their hospitable pantheon.
But no sooner was the Anatolian tableland overrun by Roman armies and annexed
to the Roman empire than the worship of Mithra spread like wildfire to the
remotest regions of the west and south. The soldiers adopted it with
enthusiasm, and from about the end of the first century of our era they
carried it with them to their distant camps on the Danube and the Rhine, on
the coast of France, among the mountains of Wales and Scotland, in the valleys
of the Asturias, and even on the edge of the Sahara, where a line of military
posts guarded the southern frontier of the empire. In all these widely
separated quarters of the globe they left memorials of their devotion to
Mithra in the shape of monuments dedicated to his worship. At the same time
merchants of Asia introduced the religion into the ports of the Mediterranean
and carried it far into the interior by waterways or roadways to all the
important trading cities and marts of commerce. In our own country Mithraic
monuments have been found in London, York and Chester. Finally, among the
apostles of the new faith must be reckoned the Oriental slaves, who were
everywhere and had a hand in everything, being employed in the public service
as well as in private families, whether they toiled as labourers in the fields
and the mines, or as clerks and bookkeepers in counting-houses and government
offices, where their number was legion.
At last the foreign deity wormed his way into the favour of the high officials
and even of the emperor. Towards the close of the second century of our era an
immense impulse was given to the propagation of the religion by the attention
bestowed on it by the Emperor Commodus, who, in keeping with his brutal and
cruel character, is said to have polluted the rites by human sacrifice. The
dedications, "to The Unconquered Sun Mithra for the safety of Commodus
Antoninus Augustus, our Lord," and numerous other Mithraic dedications dating
from the reign of Commodus, attest the popularity which the worship attained
in the sunshine of imperial favour. From the early years of the third century
the religion was served by a domestic chaplain in the palace of the Caesars,
and inscriptions record the vows and offerings of its devotees for the
prosperity of the Emperors Septimius and Alexander Severus, and afterwards of
Philip. Still later the Emperor Aurelian, who, as we have seen, established an
official cult of the Sun at Rome, could not but sympathize with Mithra, the
god who was himself now regularly identified with the Sun.
By the beginning of the fourth century the Mithraic faith had spread so widely
and struck its roots so deep, that for a moment it seemed as if it would
overshadow all its rivals and dominate the Roman world from end to end. In the
year 307 A. D., Diocletian, Galerius, and Licinius had a solemn meeting at
Carnuntum on the Danube, and there consecrated together a sanctuary "to the
Unconquered Sun-god Mithra, the favourer of their empire." So near did Mithra
come to being the Supreme God of the Roman empire. Yet a few years later and
that same empire bowed its neck to the yoke of another Oriental god, and the
Sun, the nconquered Sun, of Mithra set forever.
The popular identification of Mithra with the Sun in the later times of
classical antiquity is placed beyond the reach of doubt by a multitude of
inscriptions, found in all parts of the Roman empire, which directly qualify
Mithra as the Sun or more usually as Mithra the Unconquered Sun. Nevertheless
on many monuments of the worship Mithra and the Sun are represented by
separate figures as if they were distinct deities. In one scene we see Mithra
standing in his usual Oriental costume opposite a young man, naked or clad in
a simple cloak, who is either standing or kneeling at the feet of Mithra. In
some reliefs Mithra is putting on his companion's head or removing from it a
large curved object which sometimes resembles a horn or a deflated leathern
bottle. The kneeling personage is usually passive, but sometimes he lifts his
arms, whether in supplication or to put aside or retain the mysterious object
which is being placed on his head or removed from it. In some reliefs the
scene is more complicated: Mithra is displacing the enigmatical object with
his right hand, while with his left he places on his companion's head a
radiant crown. In one scene of a great relief found at Osterburken we see
Mithra holding the same object over the head of the kneeling figure with his
right hand, while he puts his left hand to the hilt of his sword at his belt,
and the radiant crown lies on the ground between them. The exact significance
of the scene is uncertain, but the standing or kneeling figure who receives or
loses the radiant crown is interpreted as the Sun, towards whom Mithra seems
to adopt an attitude of superiority by conferring upon him or removing from
him the crown of rays which is the emblem of his solar character. Perhaps the
scene refers to a contest between the two deities in which Mithra remained the
victor. It has also been suggested that Mithra is pouring oil or other liquid
from a horn on the head of the Sun as a solemn form of baptism or investiture
in sign of the powers which that deity will wield when he is crowned with the
diadem of rays. In another scene of a great relief found at Heddernheim we see
Mithra holding out his hand to the kneeling Sun as if helping him to rise: the
head of the Sun is surrounded by a nimbus. On several monuments the two gods
are represented standing opposite each other and shaking hands. Mithra wears
his usual costume: the Sun is either naked with a nimbus round his head, or he
wears a cloak and the radiant crown and carries a whip. The meaning of the
scene is obvious. The two deities have concluded a treaty of alliance, and
peace and harmony will henceforth reign between them. In the relief at
Osterburken, as if to give a religious consecration to the union of the two
gods, they are represented shaking hands over an altar. Further, the peace
between Mithra and the Sun is sealed by a banquet, at which they are portrayed
reclining side by side at the festive board and holding up goblets in their
right hands, while about the table are gathered a number of guests as
partakers of the sacred feast. The importance attached to this divine banquet
is attested both by the number of the monuments on which it is figured and by
the important place assigned to it in the series of subsidiary scenes arranged
around the central piece, the sacrifice of the bull by Mithra. Often,
especially in the great sculptured reliefs which have been found in the valley
of the Rhine, the relief representing the banquet is the last of the whole
series, as if it formed the concluding act in the history of the god's
exploits, the Last Supper of which he partook before quitting the scene of his
earthly labours.
Remembering that according to the Christian Fathers a sort of communion was
celebrated in the Mithraic mysteries, we can understand why the devotees of
the religion set so high a value on this last feast of Mithra and his
companions, or should we say his disciples? The sacramental act which the
liturgy appears to have prescribed was accomplished in memory of the example
set by the Divine Master. This relation between a legend and the ritual is
established by a fragmentary relief discovered in Bosnia. It represents two
devotees reclining at a table on which loaves are set out: one of them holds a
drinking horn: both are in the attitude in which Mithra and the Sun are
regularly represented on the other monuments. Round about the two devotees, or
rather communicants, are grouped the initiated of various grades in the mystic
hierarchy, including the Raven, the Persian, the Soldier, and the Lion,
wearing the masks which are appropriate to their names and which they are
known from other sources to have worn in the sacred rites. A text of St.
Jerome, confirmed by a series of inscriptions, informs us that there were
seven degrees of initiation in the Mithraic mysteries, and that the initiated
took successively the names of the Raven, the Occult, the Soldier, the Lion,
the Persian, the Courier of the Sun (heliodromus), and the Father. These
strange names were not simply honorary titles. On certain occasions the
officiants disguised themselves in costumes appropriate to the names they
bore. These sacred masquerades were variously interpreted by the ancients with
reference either to the signs of the zodiac or to the theory of
transmigration. Such differences of opinion only prove that the original
meaning of the disguises was forgotten. Probably the masquerade was a survival
from a time when the gods were supposed to wear or assume the form of animals,
and when the worshipper attempted to identify himself with his deity by
dressing in the skin and other trappings of the divine creature. Similar
survivals in ritual are common in many religions.
To complete the history of Mithra we must notice the monuments on which the
Sun is represented driving his chariot, which is drawn by four horses at full
gallop. With the left hand he grasps the reins, while he holds out his right
hand to Mithra, who approaches to take his place beside the Sun in the
chariot: sometimes, indeed, Mithra clings to the arm of the Sun-god as if
preparing to leap into the whirling car. Sometimes the Ocean, into which the
Sun's chariot descends at night, is indicated by the figure of a bearded man
reclining on the ground and leaning on an urn or holding a reed. Yet the daily
disappearance of the Sun setting in the sea does not suffice to explain this
scene nor the part which Mithra plays in it. To understand it we must compare
the scenes carved on some Christian sarcophaguses, which present so striking a
resemblance to the Mithraic sculptures that the two series can hardly be
independent of each other. On the Christian sarcophaguses it is the prophet
Elijah who stands erect in his car drawn by four galloping steeds. He grasps
the reins with his left hand, while with his right he holds out his mantle to
the prophet Elisha, who stands on the ground behind the car. In front of the
car, and beneath the rearing steeds, the figure of a bearded man is stretched,
leaning with his left arm on an urn from which water is flowing. The reclining
figure represents the Jordan, from whose banks the prophet Elijah was swept
away to heaven on the chariot and horses of fire. In the light of this
parallel we may suppose that Mithra, like the prophet of Israel, his earthly
labours over, was believed to have ascended up to heaven in the Sun's bright
chariot, though doubtless he was thought still to look down upon and protect
the faithful worshippers whom he left behind him on earth. Sic itur ad astra.
It remains to mention among the Mithraic sculptures two figures which are
commonly supposed to be connected with the solar character of Mithra. The
great scene of the sacrifice of the bull, which occupied the central place in
Mithraic art and probably in Mithraic religion, is regularly flanked by two
youthful male figures dressed like Mithra and wearing the usual peaked
Phrygian cap. Each of them grasps a burning torch, but one of them holds the
burning end of the torch up, while the other turns it down towards the earth.
Though they are most commonly represented in the scene of the sacrifice, where
they are in a sense the acolytes or satellites of Mithra, yet they also occur
in large numbers as detached sculptures. For example, they are found in
couples as votive offerings in the usual subterranean sanctuaries. In the
scene of the sacrifice they are portrayed as smaller than Mithra, but not
disproportionately so, and they are always dressed exactly like him. For the
most part they take no part in the sacrifice, but stand motionless as statues,
gazing into space or absorbed in the contemplation of the flame of their
torch. Sometimes, however, the torch-bearer who stands behind the bull grips
the animal's tale below the bunch of ears of corn in which the tail
terminates: the gestures seems to indicate that he is about to detach the
bunch of ears from the tail. Two pairs of statues of these torch-bearers are
accompanied by inscriptions, from which we learn that the one who held up his
torch was called Cautes, and that the one who held down his torch was called
Cautopates. Elsewhere the same names have been found on inscribed pairs of
pedestals, though the statues which stood on the pedestals are lost. The
addition of the words "deus" ("god") to the names in some of the inscriptions
proves that both Cautes and Cautopates were regarded as divine.
The meaning and etymology of these two barbarous names are uncertain, attempts
to derive them from the Persian appear to have hitherto failed; but from some
of the inscriptions in which they occur it seems indubitable that both names
are merely epithets of Mithra himself. One of these inscriptions reads, "d(eo)
i(nvicto) M(ithrae) Cautopati," that is, "To the Unconquered god Mithra
Cautopates," and a certain number of dedications ought to be read similarly.
Another inscription runs, "deo M(ithrae) C(autopati) S(oli) i(nvicto)," that
is, "To the god Mithra Cautopates, the Unconquered Sun." Hence it would seem
that in the great scene of the sacrifice of the bull, which occurs so often in
Mithraic art, Mithra is represented thrice over. Now we are told by the
Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite that the Magians celebrated a festival of the
Triple Mithra; and this statement, which has been much discussed, is
illustrated by the monuments in question, which represent Mithra in three
distinct forms, namely, the central figure of Mithra slaying the bull, flanked
by two torch-bearers Cautes and Cautopates. Hence apparently we are driven to
conclude that the sculptor meant to portray a triune god or a single deity at
three different moments of his existence.
This Mithraic trinity has nothing to correspond to it in the religion of
Zoroaster, but it may well be of Babylonian origin. Now according to Semitic
astrology Mithra is a solar god; hence the two torch-bearers must also be the
Sun, but they must represent him under different aspects or at different
moments of his course. Perhaps the two youths stand for the brightening or the
fading glow of the morning or evening twilight, while the god stabbing the
bull between them may represent the splendour of noon. Long ago the learned
French antiquary Montfaucon interpreted the three figures of these reliefs as
the rising sun, the mid-day sun, and the setting sun. This would explain why
in many reliefs the figure of Cautes, who holds up his torch, is accompanied
by a cock, the herald of the dawn. So in Greek mythology the cock was regarded
as the herald of the Sun and was accounted sacred to him; and Plutarch speaks
of an image of Apollo holding a cock in his hand, which he naturally
interprets as a symbol of the dawn and sunrise. Similarly in two Mithraic
monuments the torch-bearer who holds up his torch in one hand supports a cock
on the other. Hence we infer that this youth, named Cautes, was regarded as an
emblem of the rising sun, and we may suppose that in the daily liturgy Cautes
was invoked at sunrise, the bull-slaying god at noon, and Cautopates at
sunset.
A more recondite theory would explain the two torch- bearers as symbols of the
vernal and the autumnal sun respectively, the one waxing and the other waning
in power and splendour. In favour of this interpretation it is pointed out
that Cautes and Cautopates are sometimes represented holding in their hands,
the one the head of a bull, and the other a scorpion; or a bull is seen
browsing or resting beside Cautes, while a scorpion crawls at the feet of
Cautopates. Now at a very remote date the Bull and the Scorpion were the signs
of the zodiac which the sun occupied at the vernal and the autumnal equinoxes
respectively, although in classical times, as a consequence of the precession
of the equinoxes, the sun had long retrograded to the signs of the Ram and the
Balance. It is tempting to conjecture that the traditional emblems of the
constellations which once marked the beginning of spring and the beginning of
autumn were transmitted from Chaldea to the west and preserved in the
symbolism of the mysteries long after they had ceased to correspond with the
facts of astronomy.
Be that as it may, we may be fairly certain as to the general significance of
the two torch-bearers in Mithraic art. The one who lifts his torch is a
personification either of the matutinal or of the vernal sun which mounts
higher and higher in the sky and by its growing light and strength imparts
fertility to the earth. The other who depresses his torch personifies the
declining sun, whether the great luminary appears to haste at evening to his
setting, or to sink day by day lower and lower in the autumnal and wintry sky.
Far more obscure and difficult to interpret is the scene of the sacrifice of
the bull, which, as we have seen, occupies the central place in Mithraic art,
as the sacrifice itself doubtless formed the supreme act in the Mithraic
religion. In the crypts, which constituted the Mithraic temples, a sculptured
group representing Mithra in the act of slaying the bull was regularly placed
at the far end, facing the entrance, in a position corresponding to that which
is occupied by the altar in Christian churches. Not only so, but reduced
copies of the group were placed, like crucifixes with Christians, in domestic
oratories and no doubt in the private apartments of the faithful. The number
of reproductions of it which have come down to us is enormous, comparable to
the number of crucifixes which would be found in the ruins of Europe by the
hordes of infidel and iconoclastic invaders which may one day lay the whole
fabric of western civilization in the dust.
A possible clue to the meaning of the mysterious sacrifice is furnished by
certain curious details of the sculptures which represent it. On almost all
the monuments the tail of the dying bull ends in a bunch of ears of corn, and
on the most ancient of the Italian monuments three ears of corn are distinctly
represented issuing instead of blood from the wound in the bull's side. The
inference seems inevitable that the bull was supposed to contain in itself
certain powers of vegetable fertility, which were liberated by its death.
Now according to the ancient Avestan system of cosmogony the primeval ox,
created by the Supreme God Ahura Mazda, contained in itself the seeds of all
plants and of all animals except man; it was slain by the evil demon Ahriman,
but in its death it gave birth to the whole vegetable and animal creation,
always with the exception of the human species, which was supposed to have had
a different origin. Thus in the Bundahish, an ancient Pahlavi work on
cosmology, mythology, and legendary history, we read:
On the nature of the five classes of animals it says in revelation that, when
the primeval ox passed away, there where the marrow came out grain grew up of
fifty and five species, and twelve species of medicinal plants grew; as it
says that out of the marrow is every separate creature, every single thing
whose lodgment is in the marrow. From the horns arose peas, from the nose the
leek, from the blood the grape-vine from which they make wine -- on this
account wine abounds with blood -- from the lungs the rue-like herbs, from the
middle of the heart thyme for keeping away stench, and every one of the others
as revealed in the Avesta. The seed of the ox was carried up to the moon
station; there it was thoroughly purified, and produced the manifold species
of animals. First, two oxen, one male and one female, and, afterwards, one
pair of every single species was let go into the earth.
Again, in another passage of the same treatise we read:
As it (the primeval ox) passed away, owing to the vegetable principle
proceeding from every limb of the ox, fifty and five species of grain and
twelve species of medicinal plants grew forth from the earth, and their
splendour and strength were the seminal energy of the ox. Delivered to the
moon station, that seed was thoroughly purified by the light of the moon,
fully prepared in every way, and produced life in a body. Thence arose two
oxen, one male and one female; and, afterwards, two hundred and eighty-two
species of each kind became manifest upon the earth.
Hence it seems highly probable that the Mithraic sculpture of the sacrifice of
the bull represents the slaughter of the primeval ox, which in dying produced
from the various parts of its body the whole vegetable and animal creation,
always with the exception of mankind. We can now understand why, in the
Mithraic group of the slaughter of the bull, the animal is always represented
fallen with its head to the right, never to the left. The reason is given in
the Bundahish, which tells us that "when the primeval ox passed away it fell
to the right hand." Thus we may fairly conclude that in the belief of the
Mithraic devotees the slaughter of the primeval ox was a creative act to which
plants and animals alike owed their origin. We can therefore understand why
the priests should have transferred that beneficent, though painful, act from
Ahriman, the evil spirit, to Mithra, the good and beneficent god. In this way
Mithra apparently came to be deemed the creator and source of life, as indeed
he is described in a passage of Porphyry. Thus the sad and solemn scene which
always met the eyes of Mithraic worshippers in the apse at the far end of
their temples commemorated the consummation of the great sacrifice which in
ages gone by had given life and fertility to the world.
But perhaps the sight of the tragic group in the religious gloom of the
vaulted temple awakened in the minds of the worshippers other thoughts which
moved them still more deeply. For it is possible, we are told, that in the
Mithraic religion the cosmogonic myths were correlated with the ideas
entertained by the Magians as to the end of the world. In fact, the two sets
of beliefs present a resemblance which is naturally explained by the identity
of their origin, if we suppose that both narratives are variants of a single
primitive theme. We know, both from Greek writers and the Mazdean scriptures,
that the ancient Persians believed in a resurrection of the dead at the end of
this present world. Thus the Greek historian Theopompus recorded that
according to the Magians men would come to life again and be immortal.
According to Aeneas of Gaza, in his treatise on the immortality of the soul,
"Zoroaster predicts that a time will come in which there will be a
resurrection of all the dead." The statements of these Greek writers are amply
confirmed by the sacred books of the ancient Persian religion, which
explicitly teach the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead, good and bad
alike, at the end of the present dispensation. They predict that in these last
days there will rise a Redeemer or Saviour named Soshyans or Saoshyant, who
will be the agent of the resurrection. He it is, we are told, "who makes the
evil spirit impotent, and causes the resurrection and future existence." In
the task of bringing the dead to life the Redeemer will be assisted by fifteen
men and fifteen damsels, and their labours will last for seven and fifty
years. Now the way in which they will bring about the resurrection is this.
They will slay an ox called Hadhayos, and from the fat of that ox and the
sacred white "hom" or "haoma" (the equivalent of the Sanscrit "soma") they
will prepare ambrosia ("hush"), and they will give it to all the men, and all
men will drink of it and become immortal forever and ever. Then will all men
stand up, the righteous and the wicked alike. Every human creature will arise,
each on the spot where he died. The souls of the dead will resume their former
bodies and they will gather in one place, and they will know those whom they
knew formerly in life. They will say, "This is my father, and this is mother,
and this is my brother, and this is my wife, and these are some other of my
nearest relations." They will come together with the greatest affection,
father and son and brother and friend, and they will ask one another, saying,
"Where hast thou been these many years? and what was the judgment upon thy
soul? hast thou been righteous or wicked?" And all will join with one voice
and praise aloud the Lord God Almighty (Ahura Mazda) and the archangels. There
in that assembly, which no man can number, all men will stand together, and
every man will see his own good deeds and his own evil deeds, and in that
assembly a wicked man will be as plain to see as a white sheep among black. In
that day the wicked man who was a friend of a righteous man will make his
moan, saying, "Why, when he was in the world, did he not make me acquainted
with the good deeds which he practised himself?" Afterwards they will separate
the righteous from the wicked, and the righteous will be carried up to heaven,
but the wicked will be cast down into hell. For at the bidding of the Lord God
Almighty (Ahura Mazda), the Redeemer and his assistants will give to every man
the reward and recompense of his deeds.
Hence it would seem that Mithra succeeded to the place which in the old
Persian religion had been occupied by Soshyans or Saoshyant, the Redeemer or
Saviour. Thus in the belief of his worshippers "the sacrifice of the divine
bull was in truth the great event in the history of the world, the event which
stands alike at the beginning of the ages and at the consummation of time, the
event which is the source at once of the earthly life and of the life eternal.
We can therefore understand why among all the sacred imagery of the mysteries
the place of honour was reserved for the representation of this supreme
sacrifice, and why always and everywhere it was exposed in the apse of the
temples to the adoration of the worshippers." [F. Cumont, "Textes et
Monuments," i. 188.] On the minds of worshippers, seated in the religious
gloom of the subterranean temple, the mournful scene of the slaughter of the
bull, dimly discerned at the far end of the sanctuary, was doubtless well
fitted to impress solemn thoughts, not only of the great sacrifice which in
days long gone by had been the source of life on earth, but also of that other
great sacrifice, still to come, on which depended all their hopes of a
blissful immortality.
A rite which presents a superficial resemblance to the sacrifice of the bull
in the Mithraic religion was the ceremony known as a "taurobolium." This
strange sacrament consisted essentially in a baptism or bath of bull's blood,
which was believed to wash away sin, and from which the devotee was supposed
to emerge born again to eternal life. Crowned with gold and wreathed with
fillets, the candidates for the new birth descended into a pit, the mouth of
which was covered with a wooden grating. A bull, adorned with garlands of
flowers, its forehead plastered with gold leaf, was then driven on to the
grating and there slaughtered with a sacred spear. Its hot reeking blood
poured through the grating on the worshipper in the pit, who received it with
devout eagerness on every part of his person and garments, till at last he
emerged gory from head to foot, and received the homage, nay, the adoration,
of his fellows as one who had been born again to eternal life and had washed
away his sins in the blood of the bull. It does not appear that this baptism
of blood ever formed part of the regular Mithraic ritual. The many
inscriptions which mention it, with the exception of one which appears to be
forged, explicitly refer the rite to the worship of the Great Mother and Attis.
Yet worshippers of Mithra are known to have sometimes submitted to the
repulsive rite; for we possess the dedication of an altar to the Mother of the
Gods and Attis by a certain Sextilius Agesilaus Aedesius, who describes
himself as Father of Fathers in the religion of the Unconquered Sun-god Mithra,
and at the same time claims to have been "born again to eternal life by the
sacrifices of a bull and a ram." But the Father of Fathers ranked as the
highest dignitary, a sort of little pope, in the Mithraic hierarchy;
accordingly we can hardly doubt that the example set by so exalted a prelate
was often followed by the inferior clergy. In fact, we hear of another Father
of Fathers who boasted, with honest pride, that not only he himself but his
wife also, with whom he lived for forty years, had been washed in the blood of
the bull. Another high dignitary of the Mithraic church was the Father of the
Sacred Rites, though presumably he ranked below the supreme pontiff, the
Father of Fathers. Two of these Fathers of Sacred Rites similarly bragged of
having been regenerated by the application of bull's blood. Again, one of the
inferior clergy, a simple Father and Sacred Herald of the Unconquered Sun-god
Mithra, records that he too had partaken of the sacrament of the bull. This
last prelate would seem to have mixed up his religions in a very liberal
spirit, for, apart from the preferments which he held in the Mithraic
communion, he informs us that he was priest of Isis, hierophant of Hecate, and
arch-cowkeeper of the god Liber, who apparently laid himself out for
cattle-breeding. And far from being ashamed of having been drenched with the
blood of the slaughtered bull, this reverend pluralist prayed that he might
live to repeat the performance twenty years later; for though in theory the
blood was supposed to regenerate the votary forever, it seems that in practice
its saving efficacy could not safely be trusted to last longer than twenty
years at the most, after which the sacrament had to be repeated. Thus we may
conclude that the worshippers of Mithra were often glad to practise a
barbarous rite which, though it formed no part of their own religious service,
yet served to remind them of that supreme sacrifice to which they attached the
deepest importance as being nothing less than the great central fact in the
history of the world.
The striking similarities which may be traced in certain points between
Mithraism and Christianity were clearly perceived by the Christian Fathers;
indeed we are indebted to their writings for our knowledge of some of the
parallels which otherwise might have been forgotten. In accordance with their
general theory of the world, they explained the resemblances as wiles of the
devil, who sought to beguile poor souls by a spurious imitation of the true
faith. Thus Justin Martyr tells us that in the mysteries of Mithra the evil
spirits mimicked the eucharist by setting before the initiates a loaf of bread
and a cup of water with certain forms of words. But the Father who appears to
have possessed the most intimate knowledge of Satan and the greatest skill in
unmasking him under all his disguises, was Tertullian, and to his ruthless
exposure of the great Enemy of Mankind we are indebted for certain particulars
which, but for his scathing denunciation, might long have been consigned to
the peaceful limbo of oblivion. Thus in his essay on "The Soldier's Crown" he
reveals some points in the curious ritual observed when a Mithraic votary was
promoted to the rank of soldier in the sacred hierarchy, for Mithraism had its
Salvation Army. The ceremony took place in one of the crypts which formed the
regular Mithraic temples. There a crown was offered to the candidate on the
point of a sword, and a pretence was made of placing it on his head; but he
was instructed to wave it aside and to say that his crown was Mithra. Thus was
his constancy put to the proof, and he was counted a true soldier of Mithra if
he cast down the crown and said that his crown was his god. This, according to
Tertullian, was a diabolic counterfeit of the conduct of a true Christian who
should learn to despise the glories of this frail fleeting world in the
prospect of a better world that will last forever. "What hast thou to do,"
asks the Father in a glow of religious emotion, "what hast thou to do with
flowers that fade? Thou hast a flower from the rod of Jesse, a flower on which
hath rested the whole grace of the Holy Spirit, a flower incorruptible,
unfading, eternal." He reminds the Christian soldier of the Spirit's promise:
"Be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a crown of life"; and he
recalls the boast of the great Apostle of the Gentiles uttered when the time
of his departure was at hand: "I have fought a good fight, I have finished my
course, I have kept the faith: henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of
righteousness which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day:
and not to me only, but unto all them also that love his appearing."
Further, we learn from Tertullian that among the Mithraic rites there was a
species of baptism at which remission of sins was promised to the initiate at
the baptismal font. This also, according to Tertullian, was a device of Satan,
whose cue it is to invert the truth by aping the holy sacraments in the
mysteries of idols. In further proof of the craft and subtlety of the devil
Tertullian adds: "And if I remember aright, Mithra marks his soldiers on their
foreheads: he celebrates the offering of bread: he enacts a parody of the
resurrection; and he redeems the crown at the point of the sword. Nay more, he
enacts that his high priest shall marry but once, and he has his virgins and
celibates." Here "the offering of bread" obviously refers to the same
sacrament of bread and water which Justin Martyr stigmatizes as a diabolic
imitation of the eucharist. The virgins and celibates of Mithra appear to have
anticipated the nuns and monks of Christianity. It is not so certain what "the
parody of the resurrection" alludes to. But from the words which Lampridius
uses in describing the profanation of the mysteries by Commodus, it seems
clearly to follow that the death of a man by violence was dramatically
represented in the mysteries. For the historian says that Commodus "polluted
the Mithraic rites with real homicide, whereas the custom in them is only to
say or to pretend something that creates an appearance of fright." Again,
Zacharias the Scholiast, in a life of the Patriarch Severus of Antioch, which
must have been written about 514 A.D., asks, "Why in the mysteries of the Sun
do the pretended gods reveal themselves to the initiates only at the moment
when the priest produces a sword stained with the blood of a man who has died
by violence? It is because they only consent to impart their revelations when
they see a man violently put to death by their machinations." The mysteries of
the Sun here referred to are probably those of Mithra, but the writer appears
to be mistaken in supposing that human sacrifices ever formed part of the
Mithraic ritual. All that we can safely infer from his testimony, confirmed by
that of Lampridius, is that one of the scenes acted in the mysteries was the
pretended killing of a man, and that a bloody sword was produced in proof that
the slaughter had actually been perpetrated. We may conjecture that the
supposed dead man was afterwards brought to life, and that this was the parody
of the resurrection which Tertullian denounced as a device of the devil.
If the Mithraic mysteries were indeed a Satanic copy of a divine original, we
are driven to conclude that Christianity took a leaf out of the devil's book
when it fixed the birth of the Saviour on the twenty-fifth of December; for
there can be no doubt that the day in question was celebrated as the birthday
of the Sun by the heathen before the Church, by an afterthought, arbitrarily
transferred the Nativity of its Founder from the sixth of January to the
twenty-fifth of December. From the calendar of Philocalus, which was drawn up
at Rome about 354 A.D., we learn that the twenty-fifth of December was
celebrated as the birthday of the Unconquered Sun by games in the circus.
These games are mentioned by the Emperor Julian, who tells us that they were
performed with great magnificence in honour of the Unconquered Sun immediately
after the end of the Saturnalia in December. The motives which induced the
ecclesiastical authorities to transfer the festival of Christmas from the
sixth of January to the twenty-fifth of December are explained with great
frankness by a Syrian scholiast on Bar Salibi. He says:
The reason why the fathers transferred the celebration of the sixth of January
to the twenty-fifth of December was this. It was a custom of the heathen to
celebrate on the same twenty-fifth of December the birthday of the Sun, at
which they kindled lights in token of festivity. In these solemnities and
festivals the Christians also took part. Accordingly when the doctors of the
Church perceived that the Christians had a leaning to this festival, they took
counsel and resolved that the true Nativity should be solemnized on that day
and the festival of the Epiphany on the sixth of January. Accordingly, along
with this custom, the practice has prevailed of kindling fires until the
sixth.
The custom of holding a festival of the Sun on the twenty-fifth of December
persisted in Syria among the pagans down at least to the first half of the
sixth century, for a Syriac writer of that period, Thomas of Edessa, in a
treatise on the Nativity of Christ, informs us that at the winter solstice
"the heathen, the worshippers of the elements, to this day everywhere
celebrate annually a great festival, for the reason that then the sun begins
to conquer and to extend his kingdom." But the pious writer adds that, though
the power of the Sun waxes from that day, it will afterwards wane again;
whereas, "Holy Church celebrates the festival of the Nativity of Christ, the
Sun of Righteousness, who begins to conquer error and Satan, and will never
wane." This opposition between the natural Sun of the heathen and the
metaphorical Sun of Righteousness of the Christians is a rhetorical
commonplace of ecclesiastical writers, who make use of it particularly with
reference to the Nativity. The pagan origin of Christmas is plainly hinted at,
if not exactly admitted by St. Augustine in a sermon wherein he exorts his
Christian brethren not to solemnize that day like the heathen on account of
the sun, but on account of Him who made the sun. Similarly Leo the Great
rebuked the pestilent belief of those who thought that Christmas was to be
observed for the sake of the birth of the new sun, as it was called, and not
for the sake of the Nativity of Christ.
The last stand for the worship of the Sun in antiquity was made by the Emperor
Julian. In a rhapsody addressed to the orb of day, the grave and philosophic
emperor professes himself a follower of King Sun. He declares that the Sun is
the common Father of all men, since he begat us and feeds us and gives us all
good things; there is no single blessing in our lives which we do not receive
from him alone, or at the hand of the other gods perfected by him. And Julian
concludes his enthusiastic panegyric with a prayer that the Sun, the King of
the Universe, would be gracious to him, granting him, as a reward for his
pious zeal, a virtuous life and more perfect wisdom, and in due time an easy
and peaceful departure from this life, that he might ascend to his God in
heaven, there to dwell with him for ever. However the deity to whom he prayed
may have granted him a virtuous life, he withheld from his worshipper the boon
of an easy and peaceful end. It was in the press of battle that this last
imperial votary of the Sun received his mortal wound and met a most painful
death with the fortitude of a hero and the serenity of a saint. With him the
sun of pagan and imperial Rome set not ingloriously.
- Sir James G. Frazer, The worship of the Sun Among the Aryan Peoples of
Antiquity (Chapter XII of The Worship of Nature); 1925; http://members.aol.com/zoticus/bathlib/helios/index.htm
Astro-Theology: Retelling an Ancient Story
from Jordan Maxwell's BBC of America
The Judaic-Christian Bible tells a wonderful story. It is, in fact, often
referred to as "The Greatest Story Ever Told". And so it is! You are now about
to find out why!
In the New Testament of Christian Bible, a provocative and most serious
challenge is laid on the whole of Christianity. Since it bears directly on our
subject, we will quote it: "...if Christ be not risen, then our preaching is
in vain, and your faith is also in vain. Yea, and we are found false witnesses
of God ... And if Christ be not raised, your faith is vain; ye are yet in your
sins." (I Cor 15:14, 15, 17)
In the New Testament there is a warning given to all who would build a house.
Namely, before you lay the foundation, find out what the foundation itself
will rest on - solid rock, or sand? The reason is obvious...
or said another way; "You need to stand under the foundation to get a true
under-standing!"
THE FOUNDATIONS
Let's closely examine the original, conceptual foundations of the faith, and
then decide "...if Christ be not risen. " But in order to do that, we must go
back, not 2.000 years to the birth of Christ, but 8 to 10,000 years to the
birth of modern man. For when one seeks to establish foundations, one must
begin at the beginning.
Many thousands of years ago in what we refer to as the the "primordial world"
of the ancients, human life was a far different experience to that which we
enjoy today. While it is true that we have less documentation on that
prehistoric world than we have on our own age, ample enough is known from the
ancient writings to paint a rather clear picture of our primitive ancestry. If
we have learned anything at all, it is this: The more we change, the more we
stay the same. And nowhere is this more clearly demonstrated than in the
history of man's quest for "God", and the ancient religion we still keep holy
today.
According to the best understanding we have gleaned from the available
records, life for our ancient forefathers was a mixture of wonder and fear.
Each day, just finding food for one's family without becoming a meal yourself
for the roaming predatory animals, was a life and death struggle. (If you have
ever ventured out on a cold night with insufficient clothing, and without
friend or family near, you could quickly see how fearful the dark, cold
primordial nights could be) And then came winter!
It was from these meager, distressful conditions of the human race that our
long history of the search for God and meaning has come. Any evolution, at
it's most accelerated rate, is always agonisingly slow. But from the
beginning, man's' profound questions demanded answers. When no clear answers
were forthcoming from the universe, man turned inward, and developed his own.
Keep in mind that all the theological teachings of the Western World were
developed in the Northern Hemisphere. The study of this subject is properly
called
- "Astro-Theology" or, "The Worship of the Heavens".
ASTRO-THEOLOGY
This is the first, original, and therefore the oldest, and most respected
story on Earth! It did not take ancient man very long to decide that in this
world the single greatest enemy to be feared was the darkness of night, and
all the unknown dangers that came with it. Simply stated, man's first enemy
was darkness.
Understanding this one fact alone, people can readily see why the greatest and
most trustworthy friend the human race could ever have was by far, heaven's
greatest gift to the world ... that Glorious Rising Orb of Day ...
the SUN.
With this simple truth understood, we can now begin to unravel an ancient and
wonderful story. Today, as in all mankind's history, it has once again been
told anew.
Modern-day Christianity has often belittled our ancient ancestors who are not
here to defend themselves. They falsely accuse that they were nothing more
than ignorant worshippers of the sun. Therefore we can, with assurance,
summarily dismiss thousands of years of human spirituality as ignominious
myth, believed by well-meaning, but gullible primitives. Too much of this kind
of spiritual arrogance and religious pride has continued without challenge.
The time has come to set matters straight.
THE CHALLENGE
First. no people of the ancient world believed the "Sun" to be "God". That
belongs in the "disinformation file".
In point of fact, every Ancient culture and nation on Earth have all used the
Sun as the most logically appropriate symbol to represent the Glory of the
unseen Creator of the heavens. Here it is important to remember two points.
First, with the exception of Japan, the ancient world mythologies always
understood the Sun to be masculine in qualities, and the moon feminine.
Second, the English language is derived from the German. In the Germanic, the
word 'Sun' is spelled 'Sonne'. The two words can (and have been) used
interchangeably.
Old Testament:
"The heavens are declaring the Glory of God." (Ps. 19: 1)
New Testament:
"Jesus is the Glory of God." (2 Cor 4:6)
Old Testament:
"The SUN of Righteousness will arise with healings in His wings." (Mal 4:2)
New Testament:
"God's Son/Sun...he is risen!" (Matt 4:16)
Saying. "How, often I wanted to gather you under my wing. "
The "Ancient Story" went something like this ...
1. The ancient peoples reasoned that no one on Earth could ever lay claim of
ownership to the Great Orb of Day. It must belong to the unseen Creator of the
Universe. It was, figuratively speaking, not man's, but "GOD'S SUN". Truly,
"God's Sun/Son was ... THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD.
2. As stated before, in the dark cold of night man realised his utter
vulnerability to the elements. Each night, mankind was forced to wait for the
" Risen Sun" to chase away the physical and mental insecurity brought on by
the darkness. Therefore, the morning Sun focused man's attention on heavenly
dependents for his frail, short existence on Earth, and in doing so, it became
the appropriate symbol of divine benevolence from heaven.
3. So just as small fire brought limited light into man's own little world of
darkness, likewise the "Great Fire of Day" served the whole Earth with its
heavenly presence. For this reason, it was said at Deut 4:24, and Heb 12:29
that the God of the Bible was a "Consuming Fire" in heaven. And so He is!
4. It was accepted by all that man was bound to a life on Earth, but the sky
was God the Father's abode - His dwelling place. Naturally, God's Son/Sun
would also reside with his Father "up in HEAVEN".
5. Ancient man saw in his male offspring his own image and likeness, and his
own existence as a father was proved by the person of his son. It was assumed
that God's 'Sun was but a visible representative of the unseen Creator in
heaven. So it was said, "When you have seen the Sun, you have seen the
Father"; or "the Father is glorified in his Sun."
6. Ancient man had no problem understanding that all life on Earth depended
directly on life-giving energy from the Sun. Consequently, all life was lost
without the Sun. It followed that God's "Sun" was nothing less than "Our very
Saviour". If you don't think so, wait 'till it don't come up!
7. Since life is energy, and energy from the Sun gave life, and we sustained
our very existence by taking energy in from our food (which came directly from
God's Sun), the Sun must give up its life supporting energy so that we may
continue to live. "God's Sun gives his life for us to live."
8. While it was plainly true that our life came from and was sustained each
day by "Our Saviour... God's Sun", it was and would be true only as long as
the Sun would return each morning. Our hope of salvation would be secure only
in a "RISEN saviour". For if he did not rise from his grave of darkness, all
would be lost. All the world waited patiently for His 'imminent return". The
Divine Father would never leave us at the mercy of this world of darkness. His
Heavenly promise concerning his Sun was surely that..."He would come
again"...to light our path, and save those lost in the darkness ... And He
still does ... every morning about 5:30 am.
9. Logically, even if man himself died, as long as the Sun comes up each day,
life on Earth will continue forever. Therefore, it was said in the ancient
texts that everlasting life was "the gift" that the Father gives through his
Sun. For..."God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten SUN that we
may have life everlasting"....on Earth! Not for you personally - but ON
EARTH... everlasting life!
10. Since evil and harm lurked at every turn in the fearful dark of night, all
evil or harmful deeds were naturally, the..."works of darkness."
11. With the return of the Sun each morning, man felt more secure in his world
and therefore, was at peace. Therefore, God's 'Sun' was with his warm rays of
life and hope...The Great "Prince of Peace".
12. And of course the reverse was equally true. The dark evil of night was
ruled by none other than..."Prince of Darkness"... The EVIL/DEVIL.
13. Our English words 'Good' and 'God' we get from the German word 'Goth' as
in 'Gothic'. Now we see God is Good, and Devil is Evil.
14. It was only a short step to see "The Light of God's Sun" equated with the
light of truth - and evil equated with darkness. From then on, it was simple
to understand ... "LIGHT was GOOD - DARK was BAD."
15. That being true, then the Great Orb of Day (God's Sun) could rightly say
of itself, "I AM THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD, and no man comes to the Father except
through me," or one comes to God Only by the Light of Truth.
16. We should all "give thanks" to the Father for sending us His "Sun". For
the peace and tranquillity he brings to our life is even called 'Solace' -
from "Solar" = Sun.
17. We now have before us two (2) cosmic brothers - one very good, and one
very evil. One brings the "truth to light" with the "light of truth". The
other is the opposite, or in opposition to the light - "The Opposer" ...
Prince of this World of Darkness - The "Devil".
18. It is at this point that we come to Egypt. More than 3,000 years before
Christianity began, the early morning "Sun/ Saviour" was pictured in Egypt as
the "New Born Babe". The infant saviour's name was "HORUS".
19. The early morning Sun or "New Born Babe", was pictured in two ways.
A) The Dove - Bringer of Peace
B) The Hawk - God of War (who punishes the enemies of God!).
20. At daybreak. this wonderful, newborn child, God's 'Sun', is ... 'Born
Again' Horus is Risen. Even today, when the Sun comes up, we see it on the
"Horus-Risen", or "Horizon". His life was also divided into 12 parts or steps
across Heaven each day: 12 HO<i>RU</i>S = 12 HO<i>UR</i>S. This is the origin
of the modern " 12 Step Program". Horus is the (new-born) Sun, or the Bringer
of the Light. In Latin, Light Bringer is Lucis, or Lucifer, or Luke.
21. But now, what about the evil brother of God's Sun, that old rascally
"Prince of Darkness" himself? In the Egyptian, he was called "SET". We are
told in the Bible that when God's Sun died, He left the world in the hands of
the Evil Prince of Darkness. This evil prince took over the world at
"SON-SET".
22. It was generally observed that 'God's Sun' could be depended upon to
return in the same manner that he left, namely, "On a Cloud""..and that "Every
eye will see Him"" ... Every evening, go out and watch the Sun leave this
world "on a cloud". And next morning, watch to see Him return on a cloud. And
every eye will see him come again! ... Unless you're blind!
23. Keep in mind 'God's Sun' symbolically represented the light of truth, but
was condemned by His enemies who could not endure the light of truth in their
life. The ancients taught that the very act of opposing or denying the light
of truth to the point of killing it, happened in one's own mind! When we are
confronted with the harsh realities of life, the light of truth, which we do
not wish to face, and which runs counter to our views, such truth is judged in
your mind, or judged "in the temple area" of your brain, and put to death in
your head ! Therefore, 'God's Sun - The Truth and The Light - is put to death
at "GOLGOTHA" , or "PLACE OF THE SKULL ", located somewhere between your ears!
This putting to death of the light of truth in your mind is always accompanied
by two thieves: Regret for the past and Fear of the future.
24. And of course God's 'Sun' goes to His death wearing a "corona" - Latin for
"Crown of Thorns" . Remember the Statue of Liberty? To this day, Kings still
wear a round crown of thorns, symbolising the rays of the Sun!
25. God's 'Sun' brought His wonderful light to the world, and distributed it
over 12 months. So it was said, God's 'Sun' had 12 companions, or helpers,
that assisted His life-saving work. So it was, God's 'Sun' had 12 apostles (or
months) that followed Him religiously through His life. Incidentally, now you
know why the American jury system has 12 jurors who help bring the truth to
light, with the "Light of Truth".
26. As far back as we can go into the ancient world, we find that all known
cultures had a "Three-in-one" Triune God. The very first trinity was simply
the three stages of the life of the Sun.
A) New Born Savior at dawn.
B) Mature, full-grown (The Most High) at 12 (High) noon.
C) Old and dying, at the end of day (going back to The Father).
All three were of course One Divinity - The Sun. Three different phases, but
one God! The Trinity is truly a mystery ... like electricity, radio, TV, and
jumbo-jets are all a mystery to the unenlightened mind!
27. The Egyptians knew that the Sun was at its highest point in the sky (at
high noon). At that point, one offered prayers to the "Most High" God! To the
ancients, the sky was the abode, or heavenly temple, of the "Most High".
Therefore, God's 'Sun' was doing His heavenly Father's work of enlightening
all in the temple at 12 ...not 12 years old, but 12 noon!
28. The world of ancient man kept track of times and seasons by the movement
of the Sun daily, monthly, and yearly. For this, the sundial and sun calendars
were devised. Not only the daily movement of the Sun was tracked on the round
dial, but also the whole year was charted on a round Sun calendar dial.
Examples: Ancient Mexican, Mayan, Inca, Aztec, Sumerian, Babylonian, Assyrian,
Egyptian, Celtic, Aryan, etc. With this method, certain new concepts emerged
in the mind of ancient man.
29. Since the Earth experienced 4 different seasons, all the same and equal
(in time) each year, the round Sun calendar was divided into 4 equal parts.
This is also why we have, in the Bible, only 4 Gospels. Of this point, there
can be no doubt. The 4 Gospels represent the four 4 seasons which collectively
tell the entire story of the life of God's 'Sun'. Matthew, Mark, Luke, John
are Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter. This is why the famous painting of "The
Last Supper" pictures the 12 followers of the Sun in four groups (of three)
...
the seasons!
30. On the round surface of the yearly calendar, you can draw a straight line
directly across the middle, cutting the circle in half... one end being the
point of the winter solstice; the other end being the point of the summer
solstice. Then you can draw another straight line (crossing the first one);
one end of the new line being the spring equinox; the other end being the
autumn equinox. You now have the starting points for each of the 4 seasons.
This is referred to by all major encyclopedias and reference works, both
ancient and modern, as "The Cross of the Zodiac". Thus, the life of God's
'Sun' is on "the Cross". This is why we see the round circle of the Sun on the
crosses of Christian churches. The next time you pass a Christian church, look
for the circle (God's Sun) on the cross.
The Sun, since the first day of summer, has each day been moving southward,
and stops when it reaches its lowest point in the Northern Hemispheric sky
(December 22nd - our winter solstice). At this lowest point, the Sun stops its
journey southward. For three days, December 22nd, 23rd , and 24th, the Sun
rises on the exact same latitudinal (declination) degree.
This is the only time in the year that the Sun actually stops its movement
Northward or Southward in our sky. On the morning of December 25th the Sun
moves one degree northward beginning its annual journey back to us in the
Northern Hemisphere, ultimately bringing our spring. Anything steadily moving
all year long that suddenly stops moving for three days was considered to have
died. Therefore, God's Sun who was dead for three days, moves one-degree
Northward on December 25th beginning its annual journey back to the Northern
Hemisphere. The Sun is symbolically ... BORN AGAIN. And to this day, His
worshippers still celebrate His BIRTHDAY!.... Merry Christmas.
31. Today we use expressions when someone dies. We say things like, "They
Passed", or "They Passed On", or "They Passed Away". The ancients said "They
Passed Over" (from one life to another), And so it was with the coming of
spring, as God's Sun is "Resurrected" from the Death of Winter to His New Life
(in spring). In the ancient world, long before the Hebrews ever existed, the
celebration of spring was called "The Pass Over"; The Sun, which was dead in
winter, has passed over to His new life in spring. This is the origin of the
modern Passover celebration. This is why Christians also celebrate "The
Resurrection", or His return, in spring with a "Sunrise service" ... He kept
His Promise, and has returned to us with the Promise of New Life... "HAPPY
EASTER-PASSOVER!"
- Jordan Maxwell, http://www.bbcoa.com/astro.html
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