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Ghost in the Machine

(14,912 posts)
38. I posted this list a few years ago from the book "The Worlds Sixteen Crucified Saviors"
Wed Dec 11, 2013, 10:10 PM
Dec 2013
CHAPTER VIII.
THE TWENTY-FIFTH OF DECEMBER THE BIRTHDAY OF THE GODS.

DIVESTED of all explanation, the announcement of the fact that the time of the birth of many of the incarnated Gods and Saviors of antiquity was fixed at the same period, and this period the twenty-fifth of December, celebrated all over Christendom as the birthday of Jesus Christ, would sound marvelously strange, especially when it is noticed that this period formerly dated the birth of a new year—the birth of King Sol. And when we find that the ancient pagans were in the habit of celebrating this venerated twenty-fifth of December as the birthday of their Gods in the same manner Christians now celebrate it as the birthday of Christ, we are driven to admit that something more than mere fortuitous accident must be adduced to account for the coincidence.

According to Dr. Lightfoot, the temple of Jerusalem was employed in celebrating the birthday of a pagan God (Adonis) on the very night Christians assign for the birth of Christ. And Robert Taylor informs us that nearly all the nations of the East were once in the habit of rising at midnight to celebrate the birthday of their Gods, on the twenty-fifth of December. And to this statement Mr. Higgins adds that, "At the first moment after midnight of the twenty-fourth of December, the ancient nations celebrated the accouchement of the queen of heaven and celestial virgin, and the birth of the God Sol, the Infant Savior, and the God of Day.

Bacchus of Egypt, Bacchus of Greece, Adonis of Greece, Chrishna of India, Chang-ti of China, Chris of Chaldea, Mithra of Persia, Sakia of India, Jao Wapaul (a crucified Savior of ancient Britain), were all born on the twenty-fifth of December, according to their respective histories. Chrishna is represented to have been born at midnight on the twenty-fifth of the month Savarana, which answers to our December, and millions of his disciples celebrated his birthday by decorating their houses with garlands and gilt paper, and the bestowment of presents to friends. The Rev. Mr. Barret tells us, "It was once common for the women in Rome to perambulate the streets on the twenty-fifth of December, singing in a loud voice, "Unto us a child is born this day."

The twenty-fifth of December, then, it will be observed, was marked as the birthday of the incarnated Gods, Saviors, and Sons of God, of many of the religious systems of antiquity, long prior to the birth of Christ.

And why his birth was fixed at that date is not hard to account for. According to the celebrated Christian writer Mr. Goodrich, the Christian world had no chronology and recorded no dates for several centuries after the commencement of the Christian era. (See History of all Nations, p. 23.) No event of their history was marked by dates for nearly four hundred years. Hence, the time of Christ's birth is altogether a matter of conjecture, as is also every other event noticed in the Christian bible. This is proved by the fact that the ablest Christian writers and chronologists differ to the extent of thirty-five hundred years in fixing the time of every event in the bible. A Mr. Kennedy presents us with three hundred different chronological systems, by different Christian writers, all founded on the bible, and proving that the date of its various events are inextricably involved in a labyrinth of doubt, darkness and uncertainty.

http://www.sacred-texts.com/bib/cv/wscs/wscs13.htm


Link to the whole book: http://www.sacred-texts.com/bib/cv/wscs/

Peace,

Ghost



Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Gods born on December 25th: [View all] Playinghardball Dec 2013 OP
What about gods born in January? snooper2 Dec 2013 #1
Yeah, uh, about that. Liberal Veteran Dec 2013 #3
Hell no you didn't! snooper2 Dec 2013 #4
Oh, please. Gods and/or Goddesses of the municipal water supply are a dime a dozen. Liberal Veteran Dec 2013 #7
Works for me Boom Sound 416 Dec 2013 #2
Source please Sanity Claws Dec 2013 #5
I posted this list a few years ago from the book "The Worlds Sixteen Crucified Saviors" Ghost in the Machine Dec 2013 #38
That's the Kersey Graves book from 1875. We've discussed it extensively struggle4progress Dec 2013 #58
It's garbage Scootaloo Dec 2013 #51
Daaahammm! Just missed... N_E_1 for Tennis Dec 2013 #6
I thought he was the son of God? itsrobert Dec 2013 #8
Wasn't Zoroaster ... GeorgeGist Dec 2013 #9
That was Gozer. Vashta Nerada Dec 2013 #11
THERE IS NO GOZER. ONLY ZUUL. NuclearDem Dec 2013 #33
What did ZUUL do with GOZER? fadedrose Dec 2013 #61
One small suggestion - LibertyLover Dec 2013 #10
I used to get BA fadedrose Dec 2013 #23
Ummmm...Adonis wasn't a god. Behind the Aegis Dec 2013 #12
List ought to include Sol Invictus Deny and Shred Dec 2013 #13
jesus was`t a god..... madrchsod Dec 2013 #14
Then how is he part of the Trinity? edhopper Dec 2013 #16
"Man is the only animal to have discovered The One True God....several of them." Mark Twain Tierra_y_Libertad Dec 2013 #15
Message auto-removed Name removed Dec 2013 #17
Hello ~ FMalone In_The_Wind Dec 2013 #18
Message auto-removed Name removed Dec 2013 #20
Oh. I believe you. In_The_Wind Dec 2013 #21
Message auto-removed Name removed Dec 2013 #22
Zechariah Sitchin interprets Genesis fadedrose Dec 2013 #25
Message auto-removed Name removed Dec 2013 #28
Sitchin makes sense? For real? Alien astronauts Sitchin? MattBaggins Dec 2013 #32
You think Adam, Eve. the snake, apple and devil are more credible fadedrose Dec 2013 #44
I think neither are credible MattBaggins Dec 2013 #47
Longer than that, actually. Here's a book from 1875..... Ghost in the Machine Dec 2013 #42
Check out B. Thiering's RIDDLE OF THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS fadedrose Dec 2013 #24
Message auto-removed Name removed Dec 2013 #26
They weren't discovered till '47 or so fadedrose Dec 2013 #30
Message auto-removed Name removed Dec 2013 #31
A "light-year" is a measure of distance, not time. jazzimov Dec 2013 #43
yes, some shit like that, close enough . . fadedrose Dec 2013 #45
No evidence is provided that these Gods are said to have been born on December 25th Penicilino Dec 2013 #19
I've read that Dec 25 date elsewhere fadedrose Dec 2013 #27
And you've read much more often that the date is around the Winder solstice Penicilino Dec 2013 #50
A link could be found to say anything... fadedrose Dec 2013 #60
"Merry Hormas" just doesn't have the same ring. liberalmuse Dec 2013 #29
Wrong about Krishna Tanuki Dec 2013 #34
The goddess of DU: freshwest Dec 2013 #35
Very nice! In_The_Wind Dec 2013 #37
Well, I'm not really a goddess and my birthday is 12/26 REP Dec 2013 #39
hehehe freshwest Dec 2013 #41
Bow, heathens! LadyHawkAZ Dec 2013 #48
It's that time of year... freshwest Dec 2013 #49
I could celebrate Prometheus. Absolutely. Isn't he/she the God of Chocolate ? BlueJazz Dec 2013 #36
Fire, lighters REP Dec 2013 #40
melted Chocolate container BlueJazz Dec 2013 #46
The god of fondue! Bucky Dec 2013 #54
When I first read this I thought it said "I could celebrate permafrost." Borchkins Dec 2013 #52
Permafrost...huh...I think you've come up with something. Start an Air Conditioning plant. BlueJazz Dec 2013 #55
Probably not the god of chocolate, since it first came to Western civilization from Mexico, struggle4progress Dec 2013 #59
Oh,rats..I was just trying to find a God that was fairly inexpensive. Maybe I can find one on sale ? BlueJazz Dec 2013 #62
"BCE = Before Common Era (Sometimes written as CE)" ==> Sorry, but no. Bucky Dec 2013 #53
Jesus wasn't a god, just the son of a god rock Dec 2013 #56
December is a Roman month. Before the Julian reform, there was a political component struggle4progress Dec 2013 #57
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