ANNIVERSARIES OF SOLAR WORSHIP.
The Nativity.
Applying the anniversaries inculcated in the worship of God Sol to his
imaginary incarnations, the founders of the ancient Astrolatry made them
refer to the several stages of human existence from infancy to mature age.
Hence, comparing the first day of infantile life to the shortest day of
the year, it would naturally be expected that they would have placed the
anniversary of the Nativity exactly at the Winter solstice; but, having
conceived the idea that the sun stood still for the space of three days at
each of the cardinal points, and making it represent the figurative death
of the genius of that luminary, they fixed the date for its observance
three days later, or on the 25th of December. The Gnostic adherents to the
ancient solar worship, or those who were conversant with the teachings of
the Esoteric philosophy, knowing that the dramatis personae of the fable
of incarnation were pictured with stars upon the azure vault, recognized
the woman “clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her
head a crown of twelve stars,” referred to in Revelations xii. 1, as the
Virgo of the Zodiac; they also knew that she was the true queen of heaven
and mother of God; and that the infant, anciently represented in her arms,
and with whom, in their day, she arose on the Eastern horizon at midnight
on the 24th of December, was the same of whom the people were taught to
sing at Christmas “Unto us a child is born this day.”
With the knowledge of these facts we can readily see that this is the
Virgin and child which constituted the originals of those exquisite
paintings, by the old masters, known as the Madonna and Child.
Epiphany or Twelfth Day.
In reference to the twelve signs through which the sun makes his
apparent annual revolution, the twelfth day after Christmas, answering to
the 6th of January, was observed by the votaries of the ancient Astrolatry
as the anniversary of the Epiphany or Twelfth Day. In the solar fables, it
was taught that a star appeared in the heavens on that day to manifest the
birthplace of the infant Saviour to the Magi or Wise Men of the East, who
came to pay him homage, and to present him with the gifts of gold,
frankincense and myrrh, as related in Matthew ii. 11.
The reason for presenting these gifts is explained by the facts that of
the seven metals dedicated to the genii of the planets, gold was the one
consecrated to God Sol; and frankincense and myrrh were the gums burned in
censers in his worship.
In reading the account of the Magi's visit to the infant Saviour, we
have but to exercise our thinking faculties to realize that it is allegory
instead of literal history.
Lent or Lenten Season.
In the ancient solar fables it was taught that the persecutions to
which the incarnate Saviours were subjected while passing through the
dominion of God Sol as Lord of Evil, raged with greatest fury during the
forty days preceding the festival of Easter, which period, beginning when
the days were perceptibly lengthening, was called Lent, or the Lenten
season. It was during this season that the votaries of the ancient
religion were taught to manifest their sympathy for the Saviour in his
imaginary conflict with the Devil by abstaining from all festivities, and
by fasting and prayer; and, as that was the season in which the flocks and
herds were poor in flesh, while the seas and rivers abounded with fish in
good condition, the ancient priests, making a virtue of necessity,
enjoined a diet principally of fish, and for that reason placed the
constellation Pisces at the point in the Zodiac in which the Lenten season
anciently began; which, without regard to the day of the week, was always
observed on the 15th day of February, the name of that month having been
derived from the Februa, or feast of purification and expiation of the old
Roman calendar.
At the council of Nice the Lenten season was made to begin on the
fourth day of the week, and in reference to the ancient custom of the more
devout sprinkling ashes upon their heads at the feast of the Februa, it is
called Ash Wednesday.
Hence we see that all years in which Ash Wednesday does not come on the
15th of February, the Lenten season must necessarily contain a greater or
lesser number than the original assignment of forty days.
Passion Week.
The last seven days of Lent is called Passion Week, in reference to the
apparent passage of the sun across the Celestial equator at the Vernal
Equinox or 21st of March; the ancient astrologers having conceived the
idea that the sun stood still for the space of three days at each of the
cardinal points, and making it represent the figurative death of the
genius of that luminary, it was observed as the anniversary of the Vernal
crucifixion or passion of the incarnate Saviours; and in commemoration of
their imaginary sufferings and death it was the custom to expose in the
temples during the last three days of Passion Week figures representing
their dead bodies, over which the votaries of solar worship, especially
the women, made great lamentation. It was in reference to one of these
images, laid out in the temple at Jerusalem, to which the jealous Jehovah,
considering it a great abomination in his own house, is made to direct the
attention of Ezekiel, the prophet, who, looking, beheld “Women weeping for
Tammuz" as recorded in the eighth chapter. This divinity was the
Phoenician prototype of the Grecian Adonis, to whom the women of Judea
preferred to pay homage.
It was during the last three days of Passion Week that the votaries of
solar worship performed their severest penance. Besides fasting and
prayer, the more devout flagellated and slashed themselves and others with
knives and thongs, and carried heavy crosses up steep acclivities. In all
ultra-Catholic countries the priests, in imitation of the ancient custom,
expose in the churches figures representing the dead Saviour, over which
the laity, especially the women, weep and mourn; and the more devout men
cut and slash themselves, and each other, with knives and thongs; and, in
imitation of the imaginary tramp of Jesus with his cross up Calvary's
rugged side, bear heavy crosses up steep acclivities.
Passion Plays.
Anciently dramas representing the passion of incarnate saviours, called
Passion plays, were enacted upon the stage. The most celebrated of these
divine tragedies, known as Prometheus Bound, and composed by the Greek
poet AEschylus, was played at Athens 500 years before the beginning of the
Christian era. To show that this sin-atoning saviour was not chained to a
rock, while vultures preyed upon his vitals, as popularly taught, but was
nailed to a tree; we quote front Potter's translation of the play, that
passage which, readily recognized as the original of a Christian song,
reads as follows:
“Lo, streaming from the fatal tree,
His all atoning blood:
Is this the infinite? 'Tis he—
Prometheus and a God.
Well might the sun in darkness hide,
And veil his glories in,
When God the great Prometheus died
For man, the creature's sin.”
The veiling of the sun, as represented in these plays, having reference
to the imaginary sympathy expressed by God Sol for the sufferings of his
incarnate son, was shown upon the stage by shading the lights. The monks
of the Middle Ages enacted plays representing the passion of the Christian
Saviour, and the Bavarian peasantry, perpetuating this custom, perform the
play every tenth year.
Resurrection and Easter Festival.
In conformity to the ancient teachings, the incarnate saviours,
considered as figuratively dead for the space of three days at the Vernal
Equinox, or 21st of March, were raised to newness of life after the
expiration of that time. Hence, the 25th of March, without regard to the
day of the week, was celebrated as the anniversary of the Vernal
resurrection. On the morning of this day it was the custom of the
astrologers to say to the mourners assembled in the temples, “Be of good
cheer, sacred band of initiates; your God has risen from the dead, his
pains and his sufferings shall be your salvation.” Another form of this
admonition, quoted from an ancient poem in reference to the Phoenician
Tammuz, reads as follows:
“Trust ye saints, your God restored,
Trust ye in your risen Lord,
For the pains which he endured,
Your salvation hath procured.”
Then would begin the festivities of Easter, which corrupted from Eostre,
and derived from the Teutonic mythology, was one of the many names given
to the goddess of Spring. In the observance of this festival the temples
were adorned with floral offerings; the Hilaries sang their joyful lays;
the fires upon the pyres, or the fire-altars, were extinguished and
rekindled with new fire, or sacred fire of the stars, which the
Astrologers taught was brought down from heaven by the winged genius
Perseus, the constellation which, anciently, was in conjunction with the
Vernal Equinox; Paschal candles, lit from the new fire, were distributed
to the faithful and the Paschal feast, Easter feast, or the feast of the
passover, was eaten in commemoration of the passion of the incarnate
saviours, or, in other words, of the passage of the sun across the
celestial equator. In ultra-Catholic countries the descent of the sacred
fire is represented by some secretly arranged pyrotechny, and the
credulous laity, believing they have witnessed a miraculous display,
eagerly solicit Paschal candles lit from it; and in imitation of the
ancient festivities in honor of the return of spring, all Catholic
churches, and most of Protestant ones, are adorned with flowers, the bells
ring out their merriest peals, and “Gloria in Excelsis” and other jubilant
songs, similar to the lays of the ancient Hilaries, are sung.
Annunciation.
The anniversary of the Nativity having been placed on the 25th of
December, according to the course of nature, the 25th of March was
anciently celebrated as the anniversary of the annunciation, and is still
observed on that day, and the duty of saluting the Virgin (Virgo) and
announcing her conception by the Holy Ghost or third person in the Trinity
was assigned to the genius of Spring. In the Chaldean version of the
Gospel story the name of Gabriel was given to this personification, and in
the Christian version of that story he is made to perform the same office;
see Luke i. 26-35.
Ascension.
Celebrating the anniversary of the ascension forty days after Easter,
it was anciently observed on the 4th of May, and it was taught that the
incarnate saviours ascended bodily into heaven, in a golden chariot drawn
by four horses caparisoned with gilded trappings, all glittering like fire
in the fervid sunlight. Hence when we read in II. Kings ii. 11, that
“There appeared a chariot of fire and horses of fire, . . . and Elijah
went up by a whirlwind into heaven,” we must accept this text as
descriptive of the imaginary ascension of one of the incarnate saviours of
ancient Judaism.
Assumption.
When the Summer solstice was in the sign of Cancer, the sun was in that
of Virgo in the month of August, and the anniversary of the Assumption was
observed on the 15th of that month, and is so observed at the present
time. The fact that the anniversary of the Ascension precedes that of the
Assumption explains why Jesus is made to say to his mother (Virgo) soon
after his resurrection, “Touch me not: for I am not yet ascended to my
Father.” John xx. 17.
The Lord's Supper.
In the ancient solar worship the so-called ordinance of the Lord's
Supper was observed just before the anniversary of the autumnal
crucifixion; and consisting of bread and wine, in reference to the
maturing of the crops and completion of the vintage, was, like the modern
festival of the hardest home, a season of thankfulness to the Lord (God
Sol) as the giver of all good gifts. Hence being observed but once a year,
it was in reality not an ordinance but an anniversary; and the fact that
Christians partake of these emblems so frequently during the year
indicates that the original signification of the Lord's Supper has been
lost.
Transubstantiation,
or the conversion of the bread and wine into the veritable blood and
body of Christ, is a doctrine of the Catholic church which was derived
from the ritual of the ancient solar worship.
In the 26th chapter of Matthew we have an account of the Lord
administering the last supper to his Disciples on the eve of the autumnal
crucifixion, and in verse 27 it reads that “he took the cup, and gave
thanks, and gave it to them, saying, Drink ye all of it.” The compilers of
the modern version of the Gospel story must surely have inadvertently
copied this text as it read in the ancient versions of that old, old
story, which, when observed in remembrance of “Our Lord and Saviour
Bacchus,” was called the Bacchanalia, or feast, of Bacchus. At these
orgies the participants give thanks for the wine by not only drinking all
of one cup, but many more; in fact they kept on drinking until they fell
under the table.
Autumnal Crucifixion.
The beneficent seasons of Spring and Summer coming to an end at the
Autumnal Equinox, the 22d of September was made the anniversary of the
Autumnal Crucifixion. The vernal resurrection and Autumnal Crucifixion,
representing the alternate triumph of the personified principles of Good
and Evil, as manifested in the diversity of the seasons; we find
appropriately expressed in two religious pictures. In the one, the
Saviour, appealing as a vigorous young man, surrounded by a brilliant
halo, representing the rays of the all-conquering Sun of Spring, is rising
triumphantly from the tomb, before whom the demon of Winter, or Devil, is
seen retreating in the background. In the other, the vanquished Saviour,
represented by the figure of a lean and haggard man, with a crown of
thorns upon his head, around which appears a faint halo of the Sun's
declining rays, and above which is placarded the letters I. N. R. I., the
initial letters of Latin words, signifying the life to come, or the
eternal life, is suspended upon the cross, at the foot of which his mother
Mary (Virgo) is represented as kneeling in a mourning attitude, and by her
side is seen a serpent and a skull, the emblems of Evil and of Death.
Michaelmas.
In the calendar of the ancient Astral Worship, the fourth day after the
Autumnal Equinox was dedicated to the genius of Autumn. In the Chaldean
allegories the name of Michael was given to this personification, and
called Michaelmas, or feast of Michael. In the Catholic calendar this
anniversary is placed an the 29th of September, instead of the 26th of
that month, while that of St. Matthew, the Christian genius of Autumn,
which should be placed on the 26th of that month, is observed on the 21st.
Thus we have shown that the anniversaries of the ancient Astral Worship
were all fixed, and from church history we learn that they were so
observed by the Christians until the Council of Nice in the year 325, when
the Bishops assembled at that celebrated convocation, desiring to have the
festival of Easter celebrated on Sunday, which had been made the Sabbath
by the edict of Constantine, in the year 321, ordered that it should be
observed on the Sunday of the full moon, which comes on or next after the
Vernal Equinox. Hence, converting it into a movable festival, its allied
feasts and fast days were also made movable. |