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Heaven has always been up. Hell has always been down. Heaven and Hell are not just theologically opposite, they are geometrically opposite. Heaven above; Hell below.
Go outside at night and look up. You are literally looking at heaven. And what do you see? You see all the stars, which make up all the constellations. The Jesus Story takes place not on earth, but in the starry night sky above.
And that is the solution to the conundrum. That is the secret to understanding the Jesus story. The entire story of Jesus’ travels during his one year ministry is an allegory for the yearly journey of the Sun through the twelve zodiac constellations and the passage of the seasons of the year.
I will now explain how this is so.
Sunset—Best Time To Observe The Stars
Just after sunset is a good time to note the position of the Sun relative to the stars. The stars become visible just after sunset. You know the Sun is just below the horizon, so you can get a good idea of where the Sun is relative to the celestial sphere of stars.
At right we see the Sun begins in Capricorn on December 22. (All dates are for
“Biblical Times”, around the first or second century AD, when the Jesus Story was
written. In our present age you have to wait until January 18 to see what they
saw on December 22, due to the earth’s precession. See
Lesson on Earth's Precession). Note how each day at sunset
Capricorn gets lower and lower until it is completely below the horizon. The Sun appears
to travel upwards along the ecliptic through Capricorn towards Aquarius. Aquarius is
where the Jesus Story begins. In January/February the Sun travels through Aquarius, the
water bearer, because it's the rainy season—and in the Jesus Story we have Jesus
visiting John the Baptist, who baptizes with water.
The Jesus Story Begins With John The Baptist (Aquarius)
January Sunset. The Sun is just below the horizon. The Sun is in Aquarius, currently halfway below the horizon. Pisces, the two fish, are above. As the month progresses Aquarius will appear lower and lower at sunset, until it is completely below the horizon, and Pisces will be on the horizon. |
Actually Aquarius doesn't look anything like a man holding a pitcher of water. The constellation has more to do with what time of year it is and the significance of what is happening at that time of year. The rest is just an imaginative connecting of the dots to draw a picture of what you've already decided should be there in that part of the sky. (See The Constellations Don't Look Like What They're Named)
In January it is traditional in church to start reading through one of the Gospels
depicting the life of Jesus. The Jesus story always begins with Jesus visiting John the
Baptist, who baptizes with water.
(Mark 1:1-13;
Matthew 3;
Luke 3)
And that is the beginning of the allegory. Jesus is a personification of the Sun; John
the Baptist is a personification of Aquarius. Jesus [the Sun],
visits John the Baptist [Aquarius].
February Sunset. One month later. The Sun is now in Pisces. Aquarius is now below the horizon. |
February is a good time to go fishing. After all, there's a lot of water around from Aquarius bringing all that rain. Hunting isn't very good and there's no harvest yet to eat, so it's a good time to go fishing and eat fish.
Thus after the month of Aquarius the Sun moves into Pisces, the two fish. Again the constellation really doesn't look much like two fish, the constellation has more to do with what time of year it is and the significance of what is happening at that time of year. The rest is just an imaginative connecting of the dots to draw a picture of what you've already decided should be there in that part of the sky.
In the Jesus story after Jesus [the Sun], visits John the Baptist [Aquarius] the Bible says, “After John was put in prison, Jesus went into Galilee,....” (Mark 1:14; Matthew 4:12; Luke 3:20; John 3:24). Suddenly John the Baptist is "put in prison", and Jesus just goes on his merry way! There is no further explanation in the Bible, which seems quite strange if John were a real person. We want to know why he was "put in prison." What crime was he accused of? Who threw him in prison? Was there a trial? Did Jesus attend the trial and speak on his behalf? No. Nothing more is said. Jesus just continues on his journey and appears unconcerned about John the Baptist.
This is all very strange and hard to understand if interpreted as a story of real life events, but it all makes perfect sense when understood as an astronomical allegory. John the Baptist being put in prison is merely an allegory for the constellation Aquarius at sunset moving lower and lower until it is below the horizon at the end of the month and can no longer be seen. It is a natural phenomenon that requires no further explanation, and that is why there is no further explanation in the Bible.
Jesus, the Sun, continues on his way into "Galilee". The word "Galilee" literally
means "circuit". The original Greek word is
γαλιλαις
So in February the Sun moves into Pisces, the two fish, and in the Jesus Story,
Jesus leaves John the Baptist, apparently unconcerned about his fate, and visits Simon
and his brother Andrew, who are two fishermen. Simon and Andrew are personifications of
the two fish of Pisces.
(Mark 1:16;
Matthew 4:18;
Luke 6:14;
John 1:41)
During this season faithful Catholics, Episcopalians, and Mahommedans observe Lent, when
they abstain from meat and live upon the fishes. Christians also use the fish as a symbol
of their religion.
Aries, the lamb of March, follows Pisces. |
In March some wonderful things happen. Baby animals are born in March. Baby lambs are born. And the Sun moves from Pisces into the constellation Aries — the Ram, or Lamb. Jesus is sometimes referred to as "the Lamb of God".
Again I'll mention if you actually look at these constellations in the starry night sky they don't look anything like what the astronomers tell you they do. Aquarius doesn't look anything like a man holding a pitcher of water; Pisces doesn't look anything like a couple of fish; Aries doesn't look anything like a Ram or Lamb. These constellations have more to do with what time of year it is and the significance of what is happening at that time of year. The rest is just an imaginative connecting of the dots to draw a picture of what you've already decided should be there in that part of the sky.
In March the days get longer and warmer, the Sun goes higher in the sky, and the crops begin to grow. The Sun, which had been rising south of due east, rises farther north each morning, until it reaches the point when the Sun rises directly due east. This day is the Vernal Equinox. 'Vernal' means spring. 'Equinox' is two words — 'equi' means equal, 'nox' means night. Because on this day, the Vernal Equinox, the day and night are of equal length.
At this time Christians celebrate Easter. East-er, because the Sun is rising due east. Easter is defined as the first Sunday after the first full moon after the Vernal Equinox, when the Sun rises directly in the east. Thus Easter day is technically defined to be:
It's customary for Christians to get up early on Easter morning to watch the Sun rise, then go to church and announce, “He has risen, He has risen indeed!”
Jews celebrate Passover at this time. Pass-over, because the Sun is passing over the
due east mark.
Tarus, the bull of April. After Tarus is the Milky Way. | After the Milky Way is Gemini, the twins Castor and Pollux. |
In April the Sun passes through Tarus. Then in May the Sun passes across the Milky Way — that starry band that lies like a lake across the night sky. At this point in the Jesus story Jesus crosses "the lake" and we have the allegorical story of Jesus walking on water. (Mark 4:35-41; Matthew 8:23-27; Luke 8:22-25; John 6:16-24)
After the Sun crosses the Milky Way it moves into the constellation Gemini—the twins Castor and Pollux. The two bright stars in Gemini are named Castor and Pollux. In the Jesus story, after crossing the lake (the Milky Way), Jesus heals two demon possessed men (I bet their names were Castor and Pollux) (Matthew 8:28-34) Castor and Pollux are also explicitly mentioned in Acts 28:11 — "After three months we put out to sea in a ship that had wintered in the island. It was an Alexandrian ship with the figurehead of the twin gods Castor and Pollux."
The allegorical Jesus story continues to parallel the passage of the seasons of the
year. I'll quickly skim through it.
Cancer, the crab that goes backwards—June. Followed by Leo, the Lion of Summer—July. |
In June the Sun passes through Cancer — the Crab that thought to go backwards (June 21 - July 22). The starting date is June 21, the Summer Solstice, the longest day of the year, when the Sun is at its highest ascension. After this day the Sun does go backwards, beginning it's descent southward, as the days get shorter and shorter.
In July the Sun passes through Leo the Lion (July 23 - Aug. 22), for the strong hot days of summer.
Around this point in the Jesus story an interesting thing happens — John the
Baptist reappears and is beheaded. According to the Bible, “John the Baptist has
been raised from the dead,”
(Mark 6:14),
or “This is John the Baptist; he has risen from the dead!”
(Matthew 14:2).
Recall at the beginning of the allegory how Aquarius moved below the western horizon at
sunset as the year went from January to February and the Sun traveled from Aquarius to
Pisces. Each Zodiac constellation in turn goes below the horizon at sunset as each month
passes. After six months the constellation of Aquarius begins to rise on the eastern
horizon at sunset, and it appears that the head of Aquarius is cut off by the horizon.
This is John the Baptist rising from the dead, the dead being those who are below the
earth. This is the beheading of John the Baptist by King Herod, a personification of
darkness, which reigns supreme at night
(See Matthew Chapter 2—The Birth of Jesus
for more on King Herod).
Afterwards comes the story of Jesus' transfiguration
(Mark 9:2-13;
Matthew 17:1-13;
Luke 9:28-36).
Jesus goes to a high mountain top and shines very brightly, just as the Sun is high in
the sky and shines warmly and brightly during these Summer months.
(For more on the Transfiguration see
commentary by Bishop John Shelby Spong.)
After Leo comes Virgo the virgin of the harvest season. |
Summer passes, the story of Jesus’ journeys continues. We eventually come to the end of Summer, the month of August, and it's harvest time! Harvest time is the best time of the year, the time we’ve all been waiting for. In August the Sun has moved out of Leo, the strong lion of summer, and into a new constellation that represents the harvest, that food which grows out of the virgin soil of the earth. Hence the constellation for harvest time is a female virgin holding a sheaf of wheat. The constellation the Sun enters in August is Virgo, the eternal celestial virgin, holding a sheaf of wheat representing harvest time. Farmers who till the fields are said to be wedded to this celestial virgin for which they wait for each year. Thus they are known as "husbandmen," and their tools such as tractors are known as implements of husbandry.
Harvest time comes about three quarters of the way through the year, and it’s the
happiest time of the year. And about three quarters of the way through the Jesus story is
his triumphant entry into Jerusalem, which is the happiest part of the story
(Mark 11:1-11;
Matthew 21:1-11;
Luke 19:28-44;
John 12:12-16)
Everyone knows him and is happy to see him. Jesus’ triumphant entry into Jerusalem
is an allegory for the Sun’s triumphant entry into Virgo, because that means it’s harvest
time, the best time of year. Harvest time is "The Kingdom of Heaven" time which Jesus
refers to in earnest as coming soon throughout the story up to here.
Libra, the “Scales of Justice” |
After the harvest the Sun moves from Virgo into Libra, the Scales. (September). These are the "Scales of Justice." The harvest has been gathered, it is now time to sell the harvest. Scales are used in buying and selling the harvest. At the end of harvest time, when there is nothing left to sell, the money changers pack up and leave. The Bible says, “Jesus entered the temple area and drove out all who were buying and selling there. He overturned the tables of the money changers.” (Mark 11:12-19; Matthew 21:12) Jesus, the Sun, representing the passage of time, moves out of Libra, the Scales of Justice, and the money changers pack up and leave, because the season has passed and they are finished selling the harvest.
As we enter the season of Autumn the leaves fall from the trees and the trees appear
to wither. It is at this point in the story that Jesus is said to curse the fig tree and
make it wither, a story which makes no sense if Jesus were a real person, but it makes
perfect sense when understood as an allegory. It is simply Autumn, and Jesus, the Sun,
who makes the seasons pass, causes the leaves to fall from the trees
(Mark 11:20-25;
Matthew 21:18-22)
In the Jesus story we then have the Last Supper, where Jesus and his twelve
disciples, a reference to the twelve zodiac months of the year, recline and eat the
harvest.
(Mark 14:12-26;
Matthew 26:17-30;
Luke 22:7-38)
This is the natural time of year to have a huge feast. In America we celebrate
Thanksgiving and have a huge feast of food. We eat the flesh of the
fruit—figuratively the flesh of Jesus, who personifies the Sun which make the fruit
grow; and we drink wine—the blood of the grapes, figuratively the blood of Jesus,
who personifies the Sun which made the grapes grow. Without this food we would perish.
In Autumn the Sun travels through Libra, Scorpio, and Sagittarius. |
The Jesus story goes tragically downhill from there, just like in the season of Autumn the year tragically winds down and comes to an end as the days become short and cold. In October the Sun enters Scorpio, the Scorpion, which figuratively stings the Sun to make it slowly die. The days begin to get shorter and colder as the Sun rises lower and lower each day.
In the Jesus story Jesus is betrayed by Judas, one of the twelve zodiac months of the year. Judas represents Scorpio, the month of October. Judas betrays Jesus for 30 pieces of silver, representing the 30 days of the month. The month being one cycle of the phases of the moon. The moon, a piece of silver in the sky.
Jesus is handed over to Herod — a personification of Night. Herod, or the darkness of Night, is taking over Jesus, the Sun, as the days get shorter and shorter in Autumn and darkness begins to reign. (See Matthew Chapter 2—The Birth of Jesus for more on King Herod).
Jesus is handed over to Pontius Pilate.
[Click here to see the verse in Greek].
"Pontius",
ποντιος
Jesus is crucified and placed in a cave. It is the end of the story. A sad ending. But have faith. Jesus, the Sun, will arise again — a new year will begin. Three days after Jesus is placed in the cave he will arise again. This is the prophecy.
On Christmas day, December 25, we celebrate the birth of Jesus. December 22 was the Winter Solstice, the shortest day of the year, when the Sun was at its lowest. Three days later, on December 25, the sun rises 1/10 of it's width farther north — just barely detectable by carefully observing the shadows cast at sunrise. Our savior, the Sun, has been reborn, to begin the cycle of the year and the cycle of life again.
Originally Jesus was said to have been born in a cave. The Catholic Encyclopedia (1910) article on "Bethlehem" says, “The tradition of the birth in a cave was widely accepted, as we see from Origen's words about a century later: — In Bethlehem the cave is pointed out where He was born, and the manger in the cave where He was wrapped in swaddling clothes, and the rumor is in those places and among foreigners of the Faith that indeed Jesus was born in this cave —. (Contra Celsum, I, li.) It is reproduced also in the apocryphal gospels (Pseudo-Matt., xiii, ap. Bonaccorsi, op. cit., 159-163; Protevang. of James, xvii sqq., Bonaccorsi, 155-159; Gospel of the Infancy, II-IV, Bonaccorsi, 163-164).” [See Eusebius's Life of Constantine, lib. 3, chs xl, xli, and xlii.] [Also see Matthew Chapter 2—The Birth of Jesus]
Hence the story is circular, just as the years are circular. A new year begins after the old year ends.
On New Years Eve we personify Father Time and Baby New Year,
but we know these two figures aren't real people, they are merely
personifications of the passage of time and the beginning of a new
year. The current year is old and finished with. A new year is
about to begin. The moment the Old Year ends a New Year begins. The
cycle of life is circular and never ending.
In the Gospel story of Jesus, after his resurrection the story ends. People have always asked what did he do after that? Why does the story end here? Why isn't the rest of his life chronicled? — The reason is, if you want to read the continuation of the story, turn back to page one. The story is circular. Three days after Jesus dies and is placed in the cave he is born again, and the story begins anew.
In church it is customary to begin reading through one of the
Gospels at the beginning of the year. Each Sunday we take the next
chunk of the story and read it and the pastor makes a sermon on
it, never realizing that the story is an allegory for the passage
of time, the seasons of the year, which we ourselves live and
experience, as we live our lives, dependent on the Sun for light
and for food.
THE CHRISTIAN CROSS
The cross Jesus is crucified on represents the division of the four seasons of the year:
Winter, Spring, Summer, Autumn. The four posts of the Cross divide the year into the four
seasons. The circle you often see in the center of the Cross, the symbol of Christianity,
represents the ecliptic, the circular path of the Sun. A planisphere is a map of the
starry night sky. A planisphere also doubles as a time of year calendar. On the
planisphere along with the stars is drawn the ecliptic — the apparent path the Sun
takes through the stars during the year. On the planisphere the ecliptic is close to a
circle. You can divide the planisphere into the four seasons of the year by drawing a
cross on it. Thus you end up with a cross with a circle in the middle. The Cross on top
of Goleta Presbyterian Church has the traditional circle in the middle of it.
The whole Bible is mostly astrological allegories. The reason the book of Revelation doesn't make any sense is because it's an astrological allegory. It makes sense when you start to interpret it in that manner. [See The Book of Revelation]. The Old Testament also originated as an astrological allegory. The story of Adam and Eve is the story of Virgo and Bootes, the constellation next to Virgo. The whole story of Moses is an astrological allegory. There is no evidence that any of it actually happened, and quite a lot of evidence that it didn't. So is the story of Joseph and his coat of many colors, the youngest and most favorite of twelve brothers. The number 12 again is a tip off that this is an astrological allegory of the 12 months of the year and the 12 signs of the Zodiac.
Not only that, solar mythology goes beyond the Bible and can be shown to be the basis of most of our oldest and most cherished folk tales and fables. Little Red Riding Hood, Jack and the Bean Stalk, Cinderella, Homer's Odyssey (Odysseus is the Sun who takes a long journey, yearning to return to his wife, Penelope, who represents Virgo. Odysseus then shoots an arrow through twelve axes, representing the twelve months of the year; a feat only the Sun can do) — they all trace their roots back to solar mythology as astrological allegories. They are creative personifications of natural phenomenon. (For more information see the rare book Fairy Tales: Their Origin and Meaning by John Thackray Bunce, 1878.)
It's not surprising in our present culture of digital watches and
wall calendars that we've lost the original astronomical meaning of
these stories. Today most people never look at the stars or
pay any attention to the position of the Sun in the sky.
There's a whole lot of answers to be found in this area of
research, and hardly anyone is looking in this direction.
CONCLUSION
I will close on a positive note that all of this study of the Jesus story which
has led to a study of the Seasons of the Year can actually lead us towards a more
spiritual understanding of life.
A Jewish scholar, Arthur I. Waskow, in 1985 concluded his book
Seasons of our Joy
about the Jewish holidays of the year, saying:
“In a world in which any moments of rest, celebration, meditation — the festivals of any religious tradition or spiritual orientation — are often seen as "a waste of time" because they detract from productive work, it is crucial to remind ourselves that work is not the only valuable behavior. Doing, making producing, must be part of a rhythm in which being also has its place. This is the ultimate message of the Seasons of our Joy: that there is joy in the seasons themselves, in our very decision to join in noting them, in celebrating them, in walking the spiritual path — the spiral — that they make.” |
LESSONS ON SOLAR MYTHOLOGY AND THE JESUS STORY |
JESUS NEVER EXISTED INDEX | ||
1. | David Deley (2003) Evidence that Jesus never existed | |
2. | Robert Taylor (1829) Demonstration That No Such Person As Jesus Christ Ever Existed | |
3. | Kersey Graves (1875) All History ignores Him | |
4. | T.W. Doane (1882) Jesus Not Historical (Appendix D) | |
5. | More Books, Web Sites, and Essays on the Non-Historical Jesus | |
THE STORY EXISTED PRIOR TO ALLEGED TIME OF JESUS | ||
1. | Comparative Religion | |
THE JESUS STORY PARALLELS SOLAR MYTHOLOGY | ||
1. | Solar Mythology and the Jesus Story | |
2. | Lessons on Solar Mythology and the Jesus Story |
Back to RELIGIOUS STUDIES index |