Why Christmas Day is only Notional Birthday of Jesus?
[ This article was originally written for the Atheists United radio program that was broadcast on KPFK-FM in Los Angeles. Later it was adapted to an article that appeared in the Fall 1985 issue of Free Inquiry magazine.]
Christmas is a
celebration of the beginning of Christianity and that it all started on the
evening of December 24 There isn't a word of truth in any of this mythology. So
how did this winter celebration called "Christmas" actually come
about?
It goes all the
way back to the formation of our solar system. It just happens that our little
planet – the third one out from a minor star named Sol – spins on an axis
that's tilted at a slight angle to its orbital plane around the sun. This means
that for half of the orbit the upper half of the planet faces the sun, and
during the other half of the orbit the lower half faces the sun. This causes
our solar year to have four seasons. When the Northern Hemisphere tilts toward
the sun, we have summer here in America, while those in the Southern Hemisphere
are having winter, and so on. From our point of view, as summer approaches, the
sun comes up a little earlier each morning, moves a little farther north each
noon, and sets a little later each evening. Finally, at some point, the sun
stops its northward migration and turns around and begins heading south for the
winter. When the sun reaches the northernmost apogee, that is called the summer
solstice, and it is the longest day of the year. The word solstice comes from two
ancient words: Sol, which was the name of a sun god, and stice, which meant
"still." So it is the day when the sun stands still. The winter
solstice, therefore, is the shortest day of the year. It naturally follows that
midway between the summer and winter solstices, there comes a time when days
and nights are equal in length. And these are called the equinoxes.
"Equi" means "equal," and "nox" means
"nights." These celestial points give the year four corners. It takes
about six weeks for changes in the sun's position to have an effect on the
weather systems of the world. So, instead of the winter solstice marking the
middle of winter, it is used to designate the beginning of cold weather. The
vernal equinox marks the beginning of the spring thaw. The summer solstice
marks the beginning of hot weather, and the autumnal equinox marks the
beginning of harvest.
Ancient people were very dependent on the seasons. That
is why all cultures in all parts of the world have held their major religious
festivals on these four occasions.
In the days of the Roman republic, the calendar was
numbered from the founding of Rome – which, according to the present calendar,
would be 753 B.C.E. And March 15, called the Ides of March, was designated as
New Year's Day. However, this was a lunar calendar rather than a solar
calendar, so the months rotated throughout the year. One year March 15 might be
in the summer, and a few years later it would be in the winter.
Greece, and all of northern Europe, operated on a solar
calendar, with the New Year starting on the winter solstice. When the Romans
invaded Greece in the fifth century B.C.E., they realized the advantages of a
solar calendar. In 153 B.C.E., New Year's Day was moved to January first, since
Janus was the two-faced god of doorways and new beginnings.
Finally, in 46 B.C.E., Julius Caesar switched from a
lunar to a solar calendar. He divided the year into 365 and one-quarter days,
with twelve "moons," or months, all of which had either 30 or 31
days, except February, which had 28 – and 29 every fourth year. New Year's Day
was still on January first.
The major festival of the year in ancient Rome was called
the "Saturnalia," and it centered on the winter solstice. When the
Julian calendar was first devised, the solstice fell on December 25. But the
Julian calendar had an error of eleven minutes. The year is actually 365 days,
6 hours, 11 minutes and a few seconds. So by the third century C.E. the
solstice had crept backwards to approximately December 23.
At this time, the emperor Aurelian established an
official holiday called "Sol Invicti" – meaning unconquered sun, in
honor of the Syrian sun god "Sol," and also in honor of himself,
since the emperors were regarded as the divine incarnation of Apollo. This
holiday was held on December 24 and 25. And it more or less established
December 25 as the official solstice. All other religions that worshipped sun
gods also accepted December 25 as a fixed date for their celebrations. And the
major festivals of the Egyptian earth-mother Isis were held on December 25,
January 6, and March 5. The earliest Christians assumed that Christ was born
and was resurrected on the same day – March 25 – which was assumed to be the
vernal equinox. Later Christians celebrated the birth of Christ on January 6, along
with the festival of Isis. By the fourth century, many Christians were
referring to December 25 as the day of the "unconquered son" – in
defiance of the emperor, and January 6 was then called "Epiphany,"
when either the magi were supposed to have visited or Christ was baptized, or
maybe both.
In 325 C.E., which is when the Catholic Church was
officially organized, it decreed that the resurrection of Christ was determined
by the vernal equinox – which is still celebrated today as "Easter,"
named after the goddess of spring. In 350, Pope Julius I decreed that the
nativity should be celebrated on the same day as all other sun gods, namely
December 25. But many churches did not want to be associated with the pagan
religions, and to this day the Eastern Orthodox Church celebrates the birth of
Christ on January 7 – the day after Epiphany.
New Year's has been celebrated at every time of the year
by various cultures. Months have varied in number and length. And weeks have
varied from four days to ten days in different cultures.
In the fourth century, Emperor Constantine established
our seven-day week – based on Jewish tradition. In the sixth century, Pope John
counted backward to the presumed date of Christ's birth, calculated from the
reign of Pontius Pilate, and renumbered all the years in history as B.C. and
A.D. The year 753 A.U.C. (ab urbe condita, meaning after the founding of Rome)
was then called .A.D. 1. B.C. and A.D. are now being replaced, at least by
secularists, by B.C.E (before the common era) and C.E. (of the common
era).Throughout the early Middle Ages, most of Europe disregarded Roman
practices and continued to start the year with the equinox – March 25. England,
however, retained the practice of starting the year on the solstice – December
25.
By 1582, the eleven-minute error in the Julian calendar
had thrown the year ten days out of sync with the sun, which was very upsetting
to the Catholic Church, since the calendar determined all their feast days. At
that time, the pope was the most powerful person in the world. So Pope Gregory
had the authority to establish his "Gregorian" calendar. He deleted
ten days from that year, which pushed the solstice back to December 22, where
it had been when the Catholic Church was founded in 325. But by then, the connections
with Christmas had long since been forgotten, so it remained on December 25.
Then Gregory modified the rule about how often leap-year must occur so the
calendar wouldn't drift out of sync again. The Gregorian calendar also retained
the Italian tradition of January first as New Year's Day. England and America
finally accepted the Gregorian calendar in 1752.
The Christian calendar, however, is not the only one.
There is the Chinese calendar, dated from the founding of the Chin dynasty.
There is the Jewish calendar, dated from the creation of the earth according to
biblical accounts. There is the Muslim calendar, dated from the time Muhammad
left the city of Mecca. And future calendars may well be dated from the time we
first set foot on the moon. In view of the connection between the solstice and
the new solar year, it is obvious that the babe in the manger and the babe in
the diaper with a New Year's banner around his chest are really the same – a
symbol of the reborn sun god. The sun god was always the most important in any
polytheistic culture, and the winter solstice always marked his death and
resurrection, or rebirth. Some of the major gods who celebrated their birthdays
on December 25 were Marduk, Osiris, Horus, Isis, Mithras, Saturn, Sol, Apollo,
Serapis, and Huitzilopochli[NS1] .
In Mesopotamia, Marduk was the chief god. He was a sun
god who battled against the forces of cold and darkness. The world had to be
renewed each year. So a new king was supposed to assume the throne each year –
this new king being free from sin.
In theory, the old king was killed and sent to the
underworld to help Marduk in the battle. But, in practice, a good king was hard
to find. So a criminal was selected as a surrogate sacrifice.
During the end-of-year festivities, they recited their
creation myth, then held military exercises symbolizing the great battle that
was going on between the sun and the forces of darkness. Their surrogate king
was crowned and accorded all the honors of royalty.
But on the day of the solstice, both the surrogate king
and an effigy of the god of darkness were burned in a huge bonfire.
After the bonfire, the people exchanged gifts, held
feasts, and visited friends and relatives. This was called the
"Zagmuk" festival.
The Persians and Babylonians held a similar celebration,
which they called the "Sacaea." The main difference was that masters
and slaves all exchanged roles. For one day, the slaves were allowed to
command, and the masters obeyed. And in addition, they selected two criminals
who had already been condemned to death; then they flipped a coin and gave one
of them amnesty. The other was treated as the mock king, and then executed. He
was not tossed on the bonfire, however. He was crucified, hanged, or beheaded. In
Egypt, the death and the resurrection of Osiris was celebrated during the
solstice by leaving gifts in the tombs of the dead. They also brought
date-palms into their homes to symbolize the theme of life triumphant.
In Central America, the pre-Columbian Aztecs had an
interesting recipe for Christmas cookies: they were not made for children, but
of children! For their New Year celebration, they made up a huge fruitcake
mixed with the blood of children who had been sacrificed to the sun god. They
made this cake in the shape of a life-sized man representing the sun god, named
Huitzilopochli. On the solstice, the symbolic god-figure was then torn apart
and eaten, somewhat like the Christian "Eucharist" ceremony.
In northern Europe, the Druids and Vikings built huge
bonfires on hilltops. The purpose was to give additional strength to the sun
god in his nightly battle with the forces of cold and darkness. When the sun
finally did come up a little earlier on the day after the solstice, there was a
great celebration.
In Rome, the most popular religion among soldiers during
the time of Julius Caesar was called "Mithraism." According to their
holy books, Mithras killed the cosmic white bull. When he did so, the bull
became the moon, and Mithras' cloak became the night sky and stars. The blood of
the bull gave birth to all life on earth.
After the creation, Mithras withdrew to heaven until he
returned as a savior to mankind. The "Acts of Thomas," the
"Oracles of Hystaspes," and the "Chronicle of Zugnin" are
books that tell the story of Mithras. They tell how a star fell from the sky
when Mithras was born, how shepherds witnessed the birth, and how Zoroastrian
priests, called "Magi," followed the star to worship him. The priests
had prophesied the coming of a savior for many years, so they brought golden
crowns to the newborn "King of Kings."
The shepherds told them that a blinding beam of light
came down from the sky and cut into the side of a rocky cliff. This beam of
light carved out the figure of Mithras, who emerged full-grown and armed with a
knife and a torch – the god of war and light.
As a sun god, his birth naturally was celebrated on
December 25, which was called the Mithrakana. Mithraism was a "macho"
religion. Only men were admitted – and they had to prove their toughness. Their
initiation ceremonies were a cross between Marine boot-camp and a Hell's Angels
beer-bust. They met secretly in caves at night. Their regular ceremonies
consisted of baptism, whipping, bondage and obedience training, blindfolding,
escaping the bonds, finding their way out the cave, and a simulated death and
resurrection. They periodically held a communal holy meal. And on December 25
they held a drinking contest.
As you have already deduced, many of our modern myths are
descendants of these previous festivals. But our most immediate ancestor was
the Roman Saturnalia.
Saturn was an Italian fertility god, and therefore the
god of agriculture. But as the science of astronomy and calendar-making
gradually improved, people began to lose their fear of the approaching darkness.
So the bonfires gradually gave way to candles and decoration with evergreens.
The Saturnalia lasted from December 17 until the solstice, on December 25. This
was a time of feasting, drinking, gift-giving, family reunions, slaves and
masters exchanging roles, and general merriment.
The Saturnalia was the most important festival throughout
the Roman Empire, and it had been going on for thousands of years even before
the emperor Aurelian established December 25 as a state holiday. So, when you
hear someone say that "we ought to get back to the true meaning of
Christmas," just remember that the original meaning is a pagan celebration
of nature. And, when they go on to denounce the "creeping
commercialization of Christmas," remember that the week of feasting and
gift-giving, climaxed by Sol Invictus, naturally meant business for merchants –
so for more than four thousand years the winter solstice has always been
"commercialized."
"Santa Claus" is a contraction of "St.
Nicholas," who was archbishop of the sea-port of Myra, in Asia Minor,
during the time of the Nicene Council. He died on December 6, 326. Since he was
bishop of a seaport, he became the patron saint of sailors – and therefore of
all travelers, most of whom were merchants. Later he was adopted as the
favorite saint of the Russian Orthodox Church and, eventually, of fishermen as
far away as Lapland and the Arctic Ocean.
Legend says that he was the son of wealthy parents who
had left him a fortune, but his Christian beliefs dictated that he should give
it all to the needy. His most famous story is about a poor father who had three
daughters, but he had no dowry for them and was going to have to sell them into
slavery. St. Nicholas heard of their plight and one night he tossed a bag of
gold into the window of the first daughter. With this money she was able
to buy a husband. But nobody knew where the money came
from. The next night he did the same thing for the second daughter. On the
third night, the father hid in the bushes to see who was leaving the gifts.
Sure enough, St. Nicholas tossed the last of the bags in the window and, when
the father tried to thank him, he made the father promise never to tell where
the money came from. But he did.
St. Nicholas was frequently depicted as carrying these three
bags of gold. And, as the patron saint of merchants, this symbol of three
golden spheres eventually became the symbol of the pawnbroker – a merchant who
would give you assistance and protection when you needed help.
Another famous story tells of a man who sent his two sons
to get the bishop's blessing. But, while they were sleeping in a hotel, the
innkeeper crept into their room, killed them, and stole their money. God had
communicated these events to the bishop in a vision. So the saint resurrected the
two boys, whereupon the innkeeper confessed his sin and begged forgiveness.
In the Middle Ages, the church had complete control over
the government, and all drama was forbidden, except for three types of plays:
(1) miracle plays – about the lives of the saints and their miracles, (2)
mystery plays – acting out stories from the Bible and the "mysterious ways
of God," (3) morality plays – contemporary stories illustrating some
principles of Christian doctrine. Children loved to perform miracle plays about
their favorite: St. Nicholas. They would march through the streets in a parade,
led by St. Nicholas on his horse, wearing his red bishop's robes and his miter,
as he dispensed coins, candy, and trinkets to children in the crowds. This
pageant still takes place in Austria. But in America the bishop's red robes
have been redesigned into a kind of pants-suit, the miter has been replaced by
an alpine stocking-cap, and we call it the Santa Claus parade.
In northern Europe there was a god named Odin, Woden, or
Wotan. He was a warrior god at first, but later became a god of wisdom and the
creator of man. In order to learn the secrets of the universe, Odin had to
suffer, die, and be resurrected. So he had himself crucified on a tree, where
he hung for nine days. At the end of that time, he had someone finish him off
by sticking a spear in his side. After this sacrificial death, he was
resurrected. And he came back from the Great Beyond with the runic alphabet and
the ability to read and write.
Odin wore a large floppy hat and rode a white horse. He
was accompanied by a band of robbers, demons, and cut-throats. And during a
thunderstorm you can still hear them galloping past. Odin and his army arrive
every year around the end of October in what is called the "Raging Rout."
If November arrives during good weather, the next year will be a good one. But
if the weather is "raging" the year will be bad. During the Raging
Rout the army of Odin plays many dirty tricks – and this is one origin of our
Halloween tradition of pranksters.
December 6 commemorated the death of St. Nicholas. And on
that day, the Norse goddess Perchta inspected all the households to see that
everything was shipshape for the long winter. The housewives cleaned their
houses and set a meal for Perchta. If she approved, it would bring good luck
for the year. If the wife failed inspection, it brought bad luck. Odin always
accompanied Perchta on these tours of inspection, and since he arrived on St.
Nicholas Day, Odin gradually became identified with St. Nicholas. In northern
Europe, then, St. Nicholas wears a broad-brimmed hat and rides a white horse.
He arrives on the evening of December 6; he is accompanied by the Christ child,
St. Peter, and one small angel. When he enters the house he gives all the
children an examination. If they have been good, they are rewarded with gifts;
if not, they get a bundle of switches.
In Holland, children still put their shoes outside the
door on December 6, stuffed with hay for St. Nicholas' horse. If they have been
good, the horse eats the hay and St. Nicholas fills their shoes with presents.
In the Scandinavian countries, children believe that
elves and gnomes leave the gifts. And these are distributed on December 13, the
feast day of St. Lucia. She was a Sicilian maiden who was noted for her
kindness to the poor. So in the morning, a girl dresses in a white gown and
wears a crown of candles. She is called "Lucia Bride." She wakes each
member of the family by singing them a carol and presenting a gift.
The American version of Santa Claus dates back to 1822.
Dr. Clement Moore was a professor at a theological seminary in New York. He had
heard stories about the visits from St. Nicholas as practiced in northern
Europe. These stories had been told to him by a Dutch friend, who was chubby
and jolly, had a white beard, and smoked a long Dutch pipe. Inspired by his
friend and his stories of Nordic elves and flying reindeer, Dr. Moore wrote a
poem, as a Christmas present for his children. It was called "A Visit from
St. Nicholas." A friend got his permission to publish it in an upstate New
York newspaper. It was then picked up by other publications and widely
circulated. In 1863,
Thomas Nast, a famous political cartoonist, drew an
illustration for the poem in Harper's Illustrated Weekly. Dr. Moore had
described him as "dressed in fur from his head to his foot." But Nast
remembered that a bishop was supposed to be dressed in red. So he drew him in a
red suit that was only trimmed in fur.
Epiphany, January 6, is still the most important festival
day in some countries. It was originally one of the feast days for the Egyptian
earth mother, Isis. On that day, in Greece, the bishop tosses a cross into the
harbor, and boys dive for it. Whoever retrieves it is assured of good luck
throughout the year.
In Spain, children put their shoes outside, stuffed with
hay and carrots for the camels of the three kings on their way to Bethlehem. In
the morning, the fodder would be gone and they would find gifts in their shoes.
In Italy, children put out their shoes on Epiphany Eve,
hoping that "Befana," their female Santa Claus, would leave presents.
Mexican children also receive their present on Epiphany.
In France, children receive gifts on Christmas Day, but
adults exchange presents on New Year's.
In Germany, when a baby was born, it was customary to
give any older children a present to keep them from being jealous of the
attention paid to the new baby. This present was called a "child's
foot." The Christ child was considered to be a new baby brother to all children
– so all children received presents. A figure called "Father
Christmas" sometimes distributed these gifts. Or sometimes it was a child
dressed as an angel who represented the Christ child.
Russia avoids endorsing anything related to Christianity;
so January 1 is their day for feasting, family reunions, and gifts from
"Grandfather Frost."
December 26 is St. Stephen's Day, and on this day in
England, the village priest would open the "poor box" of the church
and distribute money to the needy. This was called "Boxing Day," and
it gradually became customary to give Christmas boxes to servants, tradesmen,
and others.
Decorating houses with evergreens was universal
throughout the world – for obvious reasons. During the apparent death and
resurrection of the sun, evergreens are a symbol of eternal life.
In northern Europe, it was thought that evergreens were a
potent talisman for warding off the witches and demons of the Raging Rout. So
wreaths and boughs of evergreens were placed everywhere. Even the smoke from
burning evergreens chased away evil spirits. So farmers would carry a brazier
of smoking branches around the house, making sure that all their livestock were
blessed with "holy smoke."
In addition to greenery, incense, and lights, another
good method of scaring away evil spirits was with noise – horns, bells,
gunfire, and – eventually – firecrackers. This was particularly important on
New Year's Day, to be sure the New Year started out with good luck.
Certain evergreens, like holly and mistletoe, were considered
to have all sorts of magical properties, and many legends are connected with
them. The wreath of holly was supposed to represent the crown of thorns worn by
Christ and the red berries represented the drops of blood.
According to Norse legend, the son of Odin and Frigga was
named Balder. He was the god of sunshine and light. He had a premonition of
death, so his mother asked every element of nature to promise not to harm him.
But she forgot the mistletoe. The evil god Loki made an arrow and tipped it
with mistletoe and gave it to Hodar, the blind god of winter, who accidentally
shot Balder. Immediately the sun ceased to shine, and all the gods tried to
revive him. After three days, he was resurrected from the dead and the sun
shone once again. Frigga's tears of happiness became mistletoe berries, and she
kissed each person who walked under it. She decreed that the mistletoe would
never again harm anyone, and that anyone who walked under it should get a kiss.
The Druids took mistletoe even more seriously. There was
an elaborate ritual for gathering it that sometimes included human sacrifice.
They also considered it to have magical properties; it was worn as a good luck
charm and placed over doorways to ward off evil spirits. Again, those who entered
through the doorway received a kiss as a seal of friendship.
In some European countries, families made a
pyramid-shaped framework and covered that with various types of greenery and
decorations. Then they placed their presents under the pyramid.
The Christmas tree itself has no definite origin. Trees
have been decorated and venerated since prehistoric times. Throughout the
ancient world it was noticed that wherever a sacrificial victim had been
buried, trees and shrubbery flourished. So, where sacrificial blood was
spilled, sacred groves grew. It was felt that these sacred trees contained the
spirits of the victims. So when someone wanted a favor from the gods, they
offered presents to the tree.
In the Mediterranean area, the Cybelene cultists had a
procession through the city during which they carried the sacred pine tree on
which the god Attis had been crucified. This tree was then taken to the
Cybelene temple, where it was decorated. Attis was another sun god who was born
of a virgin, crucified, and then resurrected each spring.
During the Saturnalia, Romans trimmed trees with trinkets
and small masks of Bacchus, also known as Jesus Dionysus. Sometimes they placed
twelve candles on a tree, representing the signs of the zodiac, with an image
of the sun god at the top. The Roman poet Virgil once wrote a description of
how these trees were decorated and hung with toys.
The Druids and Vikings also decorated trees, by hanging
gilded apples and animal-shaped cookies on it in honor of Odin and his son
Balder.
During the Middle Ages, December 24 was called Adam and
Eve Day. And the "tree of life" was carried through the town,
decorated with apples.
So that's the true story, boys and girls, and it's much more interesting than the commercial Christian version, isn't it? Happy Solstice to one and all!
JESUS IS SANATKUMARA, SANATKUMARA IS JESUS
Science and religion conflate that Venus is the most advanced planet and far superior to all other planets. Venus is the second brightest natural object in the sky. Venus is sometimes referred to as the “morning star” and “evening star”. One day on Venus is longer than one year. Venus is named after the Roman goddess of love and beauty. Venus is sometimes called Earth's sister planet. According to the Vedic Astrology Venus have many roles, reaching from being an adviser in guiding them towards making contact with their lost souls and also a spiritual teacher of the highest order.
Sun as spindle pulls all the planets. The planets also equally pull the Sun. If the energy of the planets is less than the energy of the Sun, the planets will collapse on the Sun. The planets with their energy are moving around the huge Sun. Since the planets have different masses, they move with different speeds from different distances from the Sun. Eight of them are moving around the Sun in one direction, while the planet Venus is moving in the opposite direction. The kinetic and rotational energies of Venus is balanced by the energies of the other eight planets. In this way equilibrium is maintained in space by the nine planets around the Sun. Different masses, distances, and speeds are involved to maintain the equilibrium in space which can be fully explained only by Sriman Naarayana or the Supreme. That is why everyone loves Venus as Goddess of Love. She is advanced spiritually and scientifically, much superior than every other planet. If she does not move in the opposite direction to other 8 planets, we will not have our solar system. We will not have galaxies. We will not have the universe. We are blessed by Sriman Naarayana to live in His consort's planet.
Sukra means "lucid, clear, bright" in Sanskrit. It also refers to the ancient sage who counseled Rakshasas in Vedic mythology. In medieval mythology and Hindu astrology, the term refers to the planet Venus one of the Navagrahas. The day Sukravara of the week in Hindu calendar, or Friday, has roots in Sukra (Venus). Sukara Graha is driven by the planet Venus in Hindu astrology. The word "Friday" in the Greco-Roman and other Indo-European calendars is also based on planet Venus.
Ritam Sathyam Parabrahma—Supreme Being is called Orderliness (Ritam), Sathyam (sat+thi+yam) that which regulates (yam) both immortals (sat) and mortals (thi) and Supreme Spirit (Parabrahma). Supreme Being is responsible for the orderliness of the Universe and it is not different from the Universe--It is Universe alone as it pervades all.
Sanat Kumara Son of Supreme Spirit is Jesus & Star of Bethlehem is Venus dancing with Jupiter. The virgin birth of Jesus is the belief that Jesus was conceived in the womb of his mother Mary through the Holy Spirit without the agency of a human father need elsewhere in the Christian scriptures, and "the modern scholarly consensus is that the doctrine of the virgin birth rests on a very slim historical foundation. Even Muslims accept the virgin birth of Jesus.
When his mother Mary had been betrothed to Joseph, before they came together she was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit. And her husband Joseph, being a just man and unwilling to put her to shame, resolved to divorce her quietly. But as he considered these things, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream, saying, "Joseph, son of David, do not fear to take Mary as your wife, for that which is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins." When Joseph woke from sleep, he did as the angel of the Lord commanded him: he took his wife, but knew her not until she had given birth to a son. And he called his name Jesus (Mathew 1:18-25)
Parvati was denied to give birth to any child of her own by Siva by Devas. She thus remained Virgin like Virgin Mary though married. But Siva wanted Sanat Kumara to be His son. Sanat Kumara agreed to be his exclusive son but not Parvati. This was an intriguing situation. Parvati immediately argued that since the wife was entitled to half of her husband's fortunes and misfortunes, she also was entitled to being his mother. Sanatkumara consented. When Bhasmasura had sought the boon to turn anyone to ashes, and tried it on Siva, he had disappeared, hearing about which Parvati had become aggrieved and turned into a forest of reeds. Sanat Kumara incarnated into that body of hers; hence she was mother to Sanat Kumara. Siva released his Rethus (semon) to forest reeds flooded by Ganga where he was born and then nurtured by Karttikas. He was therefore called as Sarvana or the one born out of reeds.
A dramatic event occurred on June 30th, 2016 when Venus and Jupiter appeared so close together - just 1/3 of a degree apart - that they looked like a tight, brilliant double star in the evening sky. A small backyard telescope will show both planets in the same field of view.
The two planets have a history of dancing together - and will do so in the future.
In Hinduism Jupiter called Brihaspati, the Guru of Divines is born from great light and he is the one who drives away Darkness. Among Navagrahas he is considered to be auspicious and benevolent. Planet Venus is called Sukra in Sanskrit. It means lucid, clear and bright. When these two bright planets come together intensity of light will be multiplied appearing as single star of much greater brightness.
Sky & Telescope Contributing Editor Fred Sheaf points out that this current string of Venus-Jupiter conjunctions closely resembles a similar series between the years 3 and 2 B.C. It has been suggested that their joint appearance might have been what came to be known as the Star of Bethlehem.
The three wise men witnessed a bright star and followed the same. The star led them to Jesus' home in the town, where they worshiped him and gave him gifts. The wise men were then given a divine warning not to return to Herod and they returned home by a different route. They had the prophesy that the child was King of Jews. Probably you all know what INRI Means written over the statue of Jesus in churches: Iesus=Jesus; Nazarenus=Nazareth; Rex= king of the; Iudaeorum= Jews.
Using astronomy software, and an article written by astronomer Craig Chester based on the work of Ernest Martin, Larson thinks all nine characteristics of the Star of Bethlehem are found in events that took place in the skies of 3-2 BC. Highlights include a triple conjunction of Jupiter called the king planet, with the fixed star Regales, called the king star, starting in September 3 BC. Larson believes that may be the time of Jesus' conception.
By June of 2 BC, nine months later, the human conception period Jupiter had continued moving in its orbit around the sun and appeared in close conjunction with Venus with Venus in June of 2 BC. In Hebrew Jupiter is called "Sedef", meaning "righteousness", a term also used for the Messiah, and suggested that because the planet Venus represents love and fertility, so Chester had suggested astrologers would have viewed the close conjunction of Jupiter and Venus as indicating a coming new king of Israel, and Herod would have taken them seriously. Astronomer Dave Ren eke independently found the June 2 BC planetary conjunction, and noted it would have appeared as a "bright beacon of light".
Jupiter next continued to move and then it stopped in its apparent retrograde motion on December 25 of 2 BC over the town of Bethlehem. Since planets in their orbits have a "stationary point" a planet moves eastward through the stars but "After it passes the opposite point in the sky from the sun, it appears to slow, come to a full stop, and move backward (westward) for some weeks. Again it slows, stops, and resumes its eastward course," said Chester. The date of December 25 that Jupiter appeared to stop while in retrograde took place in the season of Hanukkah, and is the date later chosen to celebrate Christmas
Other more improbable but entertaining theories have been proposed over the years, says Hughes. One he describes as particularly far-fetched was suggested in a 1979 academic paper by the Greek astronomer George Banos. He proposed that the Christmas star was actually the planet Uranus. Banos suggested that the Magi discovered the planet 1,800 years before the astronomer William Herschel formally recorded the discovery in 1781. "His idea was that the Magi discovered Uranus, that this was the star of Bethlehem and they then tried to hush up the discovery," Hughes explains.
Uranus, Neptune and Pluto are Varuna, Indra and Prajaapati mentioned in Rigveda. Prominence for these planets has not been given in Hindu astrology (Jyotisha sastra) as their effects on human beings are believed to be negligible. Probably this had a great significance on divine Incarnations like that of Jesus and especially when both Venus and Jupiter two spiritually significant planets came together. Varuna with Mitra was a very popular Vedic God.
Theosophy school of Annie Besant and others maintain that Venus, The 'Planet of Love', is the most spiritually advanced planet of our solar system. The beings living on the etheric plane of Venus are said to be hundreds of millions of years ahead of us in their spiritual evolution. It is said that the governing council of Venus – the Seven Holy Kumars – sent one of the sons, Sanat Kumara, here to guide us. Sanat Kumara is worshiped as Skanda who is worshiped as Venkateswara in Tirupati. Sanat Kumara is the Son of God and so is Jesus as there is only One God that is Supreme Spirit or Brahman or Holy Spirit or Jehovah or Al Kadar.
Sanat Kumara, the Son of Holy Spirit
Did Paru* came as Mary that Night?
And delivered Kumara on X’mas Night
She laid Sanat on the manger bed
This Eternal Youth of life and light.
He sang the glory the Supreme spirit;
He proclaimed He was Son of Jaganntha
It made jealous leaders plot His death,
But a sinless Yogi can never be killed!
He came to give us wisdom and peace
To lead us from death to Immortality
He brings hope to young and old
And ushers Dharma everywhere.
What makes the Lamb love Paru so
And all the world beside?
By grace alone He chose His abode
And settled in Kailash with Her!
Kailash no one has ever climbed.
We must love the Lamb you know;
His Preaching will make us wise;
Our words must show that we are Its;
That we live our lives for others.
One day that Lamb will come again
More Lion than the Lamb Paru brought
Defeat all foes and save us again.
Let lights flood our homes this Night !
Let’s Praise the Day He made Bright!
(*Paru is the pet name for Parvati, The consort of Siva)
Lord Subrahmanya, called Murugan in Tamil Nadu is Skanda in the Vedas
Lord Subrahmanya
Skanda worship was popular during the Vedic Times and Murugan in Tamil.
Murugan’s oldest Temple dating to 300 BC has been found in Tamil Nadu and Murugan worship is spread throughout the world including Malaysia.
Now there is evidence that Murugan was worshipped in Iraq, then called Mesopotamia.
Tawsi Melek God of the Yezdi people Iraq.
There is tribe Yezdis, which scholars believe to have descended from the Tribe of Murugan. The God is worshipped in the form of a Peacock, which is the vehicle of Lord Murugan.
The Yezidis are a very ancient people from Iraq with their calendar being 6764 years old. About 5000 years ago Yezidis migrated from India to Afganistan, Iran, Iraq and Middle East. At that time they were called children of Melek Taus same as Murugan, a God found in south of India. The religion of Yezidis share much in common with Vedic Hindus. Yezidis believe in reincarnation. Peacock finds a special place, which is worshiped as Melek taus/Murugan. No peacock is found in Iraq or the Middle East but is native to India. The language in which the Yezidi holy books are written is Avesta which is thought to be same language of Sanskrit. Lord Rama is also one of the Yezidi Gods. The temple tops of the Yezidis look much like the Hindu temples. The serpent is the totem of Melek Taus/Murugan and symbolizes the Kundalini released.”
Since their founding many thousands of years ago in India, these people have always been known as the Yezidis or Yazidis. According to Eszter Spat in The Yezidis, the name is derived from ez Xwede dam, meaning “I was created by God.” Some Yezidis maintain that it translates as “Followers of the true path.” The term Yezidi or Yazidi is also very close to the Persian/Zoroastrian word Yazdan, meaning “God“, and Yazata, meaning “divine” or “angelic being“.
For this reason scholars have theorized a Persian origin for the Yezidis. Other scholars have associated the name Yazidi with Yazid bin Muawiyah, a Moslem Caliph of the early Umayyad Dynasty. According to the current Yezidi belief, however, the Caliph Yazid was a Moslem ruler who eventually became disenchanted with his religion and converted to Yezidism.
Even with all of their ostensible connections to other faiths, the Yezidis have for hundreds of years been under constant attack from Moslems who promulgate the idea that the Yezidi’s principle diety, Tawsy Melek, the “Peacock Angel”, is Satan. Moslems also contend that the Yezidis are not “People of the Book”, i.e., that they don’t have a sacred revealed scripture like the Holy Bible or the Koran at the center of their religion, so they claim justification in their massacre of them.
Or even worse, some Moslems have pronounced the Yezidis as heretics who were once orthodox Moslems – an allegation that puts them in the lowest rung of humanity. Over the course of 700 years, nearly 23 million Yezidi people have been murdered, thus bringing their civilization to the brink of extinction.
The Peacock God Tawsi Melek.
Tawsi Melek, the “Peacock Angel” and “Peacock King,” is the most import deity of the Yezidis. But he is not just the possession of the Yezidis, he belongs to the entire world. The Yezidis believe that they possess the oldest religion on Earth, the primeval faith that features Tawsi Melek, and that all other traditions are related to them through the Peacock Angel. They contend that Tawsi Melek is the true creator and ruler of the universe, and therefore a part of all religious traditions. He does not, however, always manifest within these diverse traditions as a peacock. Tawsi Melek has taken on many other forms throughout time.
The Yezidis do not believe that the Peacock Angel is the Supreme God. The Supreme God created him as an emanation at the beginning of time. He was brought into manifestation in order to give the invisible, transcendental Supreme God a vehicle with which to create and administer the universe. Tawsi Melek is thus a tangible, denser form of the infinite Supreme God. In order to assist Tawsi Melek in this important role, the Supreme Creator also created six other Great Angels, who were, like the Peacock Angel, emanations of the Supreme God and not separate from him. When recounting the creation of all Seven Great Angels, the Yezidis often summarize the emanation process as follows:
Tawsi Melek was the first to emerge from the Light of God in the form of a seven-rayed rainbow, which is a form he still today continues to manifest within to them (usually as a rainbow around the Sun). But the Yezidis also claim that Tawsi Melek and the six Great Angels are collectively the seven colors of the rainbow. Therefore, the six Great Angels were originally part of Tawsi Melek, the primal rainbow emanation, who bifurcated to become the rainbow’s seven colors, which are collectively the Seven Great Angels. Of the seven colors produced from the primal rainbow, Tawsi Melek became associated with the color blue, because this is the color of the sky and the heavens, which is the source of all colors.
---Ramani’s Blog
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