Online Book Reader

Home Category

Christ Conspiracy_ The Greatest Story Ever Sold - Acharya S [127]

By Root 1148 0
of the autumnal equinox, however, takes place in the constellation of Virgo; hence, the Virgin Mary is present.

There are also two dates of crucifixion, likewise explainable only within the mythos: "The 14th of the month would be the lunar reckoning of Anup=John, and the 15th, that of Taht- Mati=Matthew in the two forms of the Egyptian Mythos.... Both cannot be historically correct, but they are both astronomically true. "81

The Three Marys at the Crucifixion

In the autumnal crucifixion story, not only the Virgin Mary but also the other two gospel Marys are present. In the Egyptian version of the mythos, the three Meris appear at Horus's crucifixion. Of the Jesus tale, Walker relates: "The three Marys at the crucifixion bore the same title as pagan death priestesses, myrrhophores, bearers of myrrh."82 The three Marys/Meris are the Moerae or fates:

Three incarnations of Mari, or Mary, stood at the foot of Jesus's cross, like the Moerae of Greece. One was his virgin mother. The second was his "dearly beloved" . . . The third Mary must have represented the Crone (the fatal Moera), so the tableau resembled that of the three Norns at the foot of Odin's sacrificial tree. The Fates were present at the sacrifices decreed by Heavenly Fathers, whose victims hung on trees or pillars "between heaven and earth."83

The Spear of Longinus

Longinus was the name of the Roman soldier who stuck Jesus in the side with a spear. Legend held that Longinus was blind and was subsequently cured by Jesus's blood. Again, this is not a historical event but part of the mythos and sacred king ritual, as Walker relates:

The true prototype of the legend seems to have been the blind god Hod, who slew the Norse savior Balder with the thrust of a spear of mistletoe.... March 15, the "Ides of March" when most pagan saviors died, was the day devoted to Hod by the heathens, and later Christianized as the feast day of the Blessed Longinus.84

Walker also states:

Up to Hadrian's time, victims offered to Zeus at Salamis were anointed with sacred ointments-thus becoming "Anointed Ones" or "Christs"-then hung up and stabbed through the side with a spear.85

In addition, the Scandinavian god Odin, and the god Marsyas of Mindanao in the Philippines were hung on a "fatal tree" and stabbed with a spear.86 The Hindu god Vishnu (Bal-ii) was crucified with spear in his side, bearing the epithet "side- wounded".87 The gods Wittoba and Adonis were also crucified and "side-wounded" saviors.88

Although a myth, many "authentic" "spears of Longinus" have been "found" in the Christian world. Indeed, Hitler purportedly spent a great deal of time, money and energy to track down the "true" spear, believing that it, like so many other "sacred" objects, held occultic powers.

As demonstrated earlier, the side-wounding in the mythos is due to the position of the sun near Sagittarius, the archer.89

My God, My God, Why Hast Thou Forsaken Me?

As noted, the pitiful and mournful words uttered by Jesus as he hung on the cross were another standard part of the mythos and ritual, found in older traditions such as in the sacrifice of Aleyin by his Virgin Mother Anath, "twin of the Goddess Mari as Lady of Birth and Death, worshipped by Canaanites, Amorites, Syrians, Egyptians, and Hebrews."90 As Walker further relates:

In the typical sacred-king style, Mot-Aleyin was the son of the Virgin Anath and also the bridegroom of his own mother. Like Jesus too, he was the Lamb of God. He said, "I am Aleyin, son of Baal (the Lord). Make ready, then, the sacrifice. I am the lamb which is made ready with pure wheat to be sacrificed in expiation."

After Aleyin's death, Anath resurrected him and sacrificed Mot in turn. She told Mot that he was forsaken by his heavenly father El, the same god who "forsook" Jesus on the cross. The words attributed to Jesus, "My El, my El, why hast thou forsaken me?" (Mark 15:34), apparently were copied from the ancient liturgical formula, which became part of the Passover ritual at Jerusalem.`'

The Rending of the Curtain of the Temple

When Jesus dies, he cries

Return Main Page Previous Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader