The Christ
John E. Remsberg
[HTML and editing by Cliff
Walker, 2000]
Excerpt
Internet Source Reference:
http://www.positiveatheism.org/hist/rmsbrg10.htm
Solar Worship
Scarcely less prevalent than
sex worship was the worship of the sun. While sex worship was confined
chiefly to the generation of human life, sun worship comprehended the
generation of all life. The sun was recognized as the generative power of
the universe. He overshadows the receptive earth from whom all life is
born. I quote from M. Soury: "Amid all these forces, the mightiest is,
without contradiction, the sun, the fire of heaven, father of earthly
fire, unique and supreme cause of motion and life on our planet. There is
no need or reason to understand that the very life, and as it were the
blood of our celestial father flows in the veins of the Earth, our mother.
In the time of love, when the luminous heaven embraces her, from her
fertilized womb springs forth a world. It is she who quivers on the plains
where the soft moist air waves gently on the grasses; it is she who climbs
in the bush, who soars in the oak, who fills the solitude with the joyous
twitter of birds beneath the cloudlet, or from the leaf-lined nests; it is
she who in seas and in running waters, or mountains and in woods, couples
the gorgeous male with the ardent female, throbs in every bosom, loves in
every life. But all this terrestrial life, all this warmth and all this
light are but effluents from the sun." (Religion of Israel, pp. 3,
4.)
Prof. Tyndall says: "We are no
longer in a poetical but in a purely mechanical sense, the children of the
sun." "The sun," said Napoleon Bonaparte, "gives all things life and
fertility. It is the true God of the earth."
John Newton, M.R.C.S., of
England, says: "The glorious sun, that 'god of this world' the source of
life and light to our earth, was early adored, and an effigy thereof used
as a symbol. Mankind watched with rapture its rays gain strength daily in
the Spring until the golden, glories of Midsummer had arrived, when the
earth was bathed during the longest days in his beams, which ripened the
fruits that his returning course had started into life. When the sun once
more began its course downwards to the winter solstice, his votaries
sorrowed, for he seemed to sicken and grow paler at the advent of
December, when his rays scarcely reached the earth, and all nature,
benumbed and cold, sunk into a death-like sleep. Hence feasts and fasts
were instituted to mark the commencement of the various phases of the
solar year, which have continued from the earliest known period, under
various names, to our own times" (The Assyrian Grove).
The most prominent deities in
the pantheons of the gods were solar deities. Among these were Osiris,
Vishnu, Mithra, Apollo, Hercules, Adonis, Bacchus, and Baal. In the
worship of some of these gods sex and solar worship were united.
The early Israelites were
mostly sun worshipers. And even in later times, the sun god, Baal. divided
with Jehovah the worship of the Jews. Saul, Jonathan, and David named
their children in honor of this god. "Saul begat Jonathan,...and Esh-baal.
And the son of Jonathan was Merib-baal" (1 Chron. viii, 33, 34). David
named his last son, save one, Beeliada, "Baal Knows" (1 Chron. xiv, 7).
Solomon's worship included not merely the worship of Jehovah, but that of
Baal and other gods. His temple was filled with Pagan ornaments and
emblems pertaining to solar worship. Regarding this the Rev. Dr. Oort of
Holland says: "Solomon's temple had much in common with heathen edifices,
and slight modifications might have made it a suitable temple for Baal.
This need not surprise us, for the ancient religion of the Israelitish
tribes was itself a form of Nature-worship just as much as the religions
of the Canaanites, Phoenicians, Philistines, and other surrounding peoples
were. Most of the Israelites certainly saw no harm in these
ornaments, since they were not aware of any very great difference between
the character of Yahweh [Jehovah] and that of Baal, Astarte, or Moloch" (Bible
for Learners, Vol. II, p. 88). Long after the time of Solomon the
horses and chariots of the Sun were kept in the temple (2 Kings xxiii,
11). Many of the stories concerning Moses, Joshua, Jonah, and other Bible
characters are solar myths. Samson was a sun god. Dr. Oort says:
"Sun-worship was by no means unknown to the Israelites.... The myths that
were circulated among these people show that they were zealous worshipers
of the sun. These myths are still preserved, but, as in all other cases,
they are so much altered as to be hardly recognizable. The writer who has
preserved them for us lived at a time when the worship of the sun had long
ago died out. He transforms the sun god into an Israelite hero [Samson]"
(ibid., I, p. 414). St. Augustine believed that Samson and the sun god
Hercules were one.
Charles Francois Dupuis, in
his Origin of Worship, one of the most elaborate and remarkable
works on mythology ever penned, shows that nearly all the religions of the
world, including Christianity, were derived largely from solar worship.
All the solar deities, he says, have a common history. This history,
summarized, is substantially as follows: "The god is born about December
25th, without sexual intercourse, for the sun, entering the winter
solstice, emerges in the sign of Virgo, the heavenly Virgin. His mother
remains ever-virgin, since the rays of the sun, passing through the
zodiacal sign, leave it intact. His infancy is begirt with dangers,
because the new-born Sun is feeble in the midst of the winter's fogs and
mists, which threaten to devour him; his life is one of toil and peril,
culminating at the spring equinox in a final struggle with the powers of
darkness. At that period the day and night are equal, and both fight for
the mastery. Though the night veil the urn and he seems dead; though he
has descended out of sight, below the earth, yet he rises again
triumphant, and he rises in the sign of the Lamb, and is thus the Lamb of
God, carrying away the darkness and death of the winter months. Henceforth
he triumphs, growing ever stronger and more brilliant. He ascends into the
zenith, and there he glows, on the right hand of God, himself God, the
very substance of the Father, the brightness of his glory, and the express
image of his person, upholding all things by his lifegiving power."
Dr G. W. Brown, author of
Researches in Oriental History, says: "Strange as it may seem whilst
Mithras and Osiris, Monysos and Bacchus, Apollo and Serapis, with many
others [including Christ] in name, all masculine sun gods, and all
interblended, a knowledge of one is generally a knowledge of the whole,
wherever located or worshiped."
If Christ was not originally a
solar god he wears today the livery of one. His mother, the Virgin, was
the mother of the solar gods; his birthday, Christmas, is the birthday of
all the gods of the sun; his Twelve Apostles correspond to the twelve
signs of the Zodiac; according to the Gospels, at his crucifixion the sun
was eclipsed, he expired toward sunset, and rose again with the sun; the
day appointed for his worship, the Lord's day, is the dies solis, Sunday,
of the sun worshipers; while the principal feasts observed in memory of
him were once observed in honor of their goals. "Every detail of the Sun
myth," says the noted astronomer, Richard A. Proctor, "is worked into the
record of the Galilean teacher."
The cross we have seen was a
symbol of Phallic worship. The cross, and especially the crucifix, was
also an emblem of solar worship. It was caned or painted on, or within, a
circle representing the horizon, the head and feet and the outstretched
arms of the sacrificial offering or crucified Redeemer pointing toward the
four quarters of the horizon. The Lord's Supper, observed in memory of
Christ, was observed in memory of Mithra, Bacchus, and other solar gods.
The nimbus, or aureola, surrounding the head of Jesus in his portraits
represents the rays of the sun. It was thus that the ancient adorers of
the sun adorned the effigies of their god. There still exists a pillar
erected by the sun worshipers of Carthage. On this pillar is caned the sun
god, Baal, with a nimbus encircling his head.
The Christian doctrine of the
resurrection had its origin in sun worship. As the sun, the Father, rose
from the dead, so it was believed that his earthly children would also
rise from the dead. "The daily disappearance and the subsequent rise of
the sun," says Newton, "appeared to many of the ancients as a true
resurrection; thus, while the east came to be regarded as the source of
light and warmth, happiness and glory, the west was associated with
darkness and chill, decay and death. This led to the custom of burying the
dead so as to face the east when they rose again, and of building temples
and shrines with an opening toward the east. To effect this, Vitruvius,
two thousand years ago, gave precise rules, which are still followed by
Christian architects."
Max Mueller in his Origin
of Religion (pp. 200, 201), says: "People wonder why so much of the
old mythology, the daily talk, of the Aryans was solar what else could it
have been? The names of the sun are endless and so are his stories; but
who he was, whence he came and whither he went, remained a mystery from
beginning to end.... Man looked up to the sun, yearning for the response
of a soul, and though that response never came, though his senses
recoiled, dazzled and blinded by an effulgence which he could not support,
yet he never doubted that the invisible was there, and that, where his
senses failed him, where he could neither grasp nor comprehend, he might
still shut his eyes and trust, fall down and worship."
This worship of old survives
in the worship of today. A knowledge of the location, the limits and the
nature of the sun has gradually convinced the world that this is not God's
dwelling place; but somewhere in the infinite expanse of the blue beyond
they fancy he has his throne. To this imaginary being is rendered the same
adoration that was rendered to him by primitive man -- the adoration of
childish ignorance.