T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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98.1 | Osirian Sources. | SCORPI::MORGAN | MIKIE_MOUSE | Sat Mar 22 1986 18:28 | 65 |
| Some have asked for sources for the topic. So here they are.
The bit about Solomon comes from the Book of Solomom.
All the rest of the ideas come from Dr. Martin A. Larsons book
"The Story of Christian Origins",
pages 1-23, copyrighted 1977, ISBN 0-88331-090-2 and Library of Congress
Card Catalog Number 76-40842.
Paragraphs 1-5 are basic Egyptian history. The Pre- Osirian Theogony comes
from the Papyrus of Nesi Amsu, reproduced by Sir E. A. Wallis Budge and you
can compare that against "Egyptian Ideas of the Future Life" Ch. 1.
That Osiris was venerated by all of the Egyptian world and was at least
as well know as Jesus in the Christian world comes from Hymn of Osiris Un-neffer
that's included in the Papyrus of Ani.
The Osirian Myth is fully told in Plutarch and reinforced by Diodorus Siculus
that is written in Isis and Osiris 12-20 and Diodorus I 73 respectively.
The Horus-Set conflict where Horus bruses his heal and Sets head gets crushed
is from Hymn to Ra in the Papyrus of Nekht.
The Isis, Thoth and Horus resurection of Osiris is probably in any
Encyclipedia.
That the hope of every Egyptian was to achieve immortality by being
transformed into an Osiris (by sacrament and ethics) and to obtain "a
homestead forever in Sekhet-Aru" (the Elysian fields) "with wheat and barley
therefor" is written in Hymn to Osiris Un-nefer.
That Osiris sets in judgement over the soul aspiring to enter the Elysian
Fields (Heaven to the Egyptian) is presented in the Papyrus of Ani written
during the 18th Dynasty, about 1550 BC. This is also supported by the
celebrated chapter CXXV of "The Book of The Dead" as written in the Papyri
of Ani, Nu and Nebseni, all circa 1550 BC.
In Osirian myth there is no waiting around to be "punished". If the aspirant
didn't make it through the Judgement, his heart was condemed and eaten by
the great monster Apep, aka, Amemet and his body was thrown into the "Lake
of Fire" as supported by The Book of the Dead, LXXI, XVII and XIX.
The concept of sacramental food which directly relates to the eating the
body and drinking the blood of the sacrifice is very old and comes from
at least the Pyramid Text of Teta, circa 2600 BC. This is also presented by
the Osiris Teta, Text of Pepi I and Text of Pepi II which I think are also
listed in the Book of the Dead somewhere around XCIX lines 300-390.
My purpose wasn't to make anyone "guilty by association" at all. It was to
show that major portions of the Judistic and Christian faiths were absorbed
from other religions in that part of the world. Just looking at all the
venerated dieties from those times and places it is easy for anyone to see
that as a particular cult, faith or religion migrated around it was changed
to meet the needs of the people of that location. This proves my point that
any belief system tries to meet the needs of it followers. Consequently the
belief system will adopt sacrament and history as the Priests or leaders
of that religion see fit. This also shows that people, not gods, write and
rewrite the accepted base text to meet needs (I won't get into the argument
that these needs are good or bad, or are needs of the people or of the priests).
Ps. This note and title topic were origional listed in the Bible Notesfile.
(*)
|
98.2 | I'm Not Sure This Belongs In DEJAVU... | PEN::KALLIS | | Mon Mar 24 1986 08:40 | 24 |
| A point of note:
Ositis (Asar), Isis (Ast) and Horus (Heru) were among the most popular
of the Khemite pantheon, and lasted well after the Romanization
of Khem (which sort of lost its integrity at that point and became
close to the Egypt of today). The tradition maintained, and Osiris
became associated with God, the Father, Isis with Mary, and Horus
(as the Greek-named "Harpokrates," or "the child Horus," alwaus
shown in statuary and hieroglyphics as sucking his thumb) as the
baby Jesus.
When the Council of Nicea was formed to settle some religious
ambiguities (I still consider this the singlemost arrogant act in
the history of my religion), there were many Egyptian converts to
Christianity as members. Since the Egyptians were used to composite
gods, the idea of the Trinity seemed natural to them.
There are other aspects of the Khemite creation mythos that are
at wide divergence to this, and the Isis/Osiris storey has several
variants, including _two_ resurrections. Not quite the same as
Our Savior.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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98.3 | Ressurections everywhere! | GALACH::MORGAN | MIKIE_MOUSE | Mon Mar 24 1986 14:11 | 6 |
| Steve, I believe that the first ressurection was when Thoth taught
Isis the "magic" to raise Horus and the second one was when Thoth,
Isis and Horus ressurected Osiris. Please correct me if I am
wrong.
(*)
|
98.4 | Another Angle... | PEN::KALLIS | | Mon Mar 24 1986 14:38 | 29 |
| Re .3:
As I recall (without checking references), the first resurrection
was after Isis got the Secret Name of Re (after getting a serpent
[_not_ Aapep/Apophis] to bite him); the Name she used to resurrect
him the first time; then, when Set had tricked Osiris and after
killing him, chopped the corpse to pieces, Isis, with help put him
back together (she had to carve one piece out of wood to replace
what the fishes had eaten) and resurrected him _again_; but this
time, he became king of the Underworld (Anubis was guardian, not
ruler), and oversaw the judgemewnt of the dead (actually carried
out by Thoth, when he wasn't busy elsewhere). It was after Osiris
was safely, er, tucked away in Tuat (the afterworld, which was
virtually identical to regular Egypt) that the Horus-Set set-to
took place. By current standards of mythology, that story has some
rather racy elements.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
P.S.: There are several, partially contradictory, sets of
Isis/Ositis/Horus legends; the innate conservatism of the Khemites
prevented them from throwing out any of the variants of a tale.
If only the Great Library at Alexandria hadn't burned! (It was
burned once by the Pagan Romans, once by the Christians, and finally
by the Moslems -- so no one group or sect can be blamed, as it
happens.) The greatest amount of sacred writings were there.
-S
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98.5 | When Osiris died. | GALACH::MORGAN | MIKIE_MOUSE | Tue Mar 25 1986 01:48 | 22 |
|
The Osiris worship continued with little modification on the
island of Philae in the upper Nile for several centuries into
our era and sacraments were performed there as late as the sixth
century AD. The edic of Theodosius (a christian) that all pagan
temples be destroyed and their worshipers forced to accept
christianity about 380 AD was there ignored. About 550, however,
Justinian dispatched to Philae General Narses, who destroyed
the great Osirian temples and sanctuaries, threw the priests
into prison, and carried away the sacred images to Constantinople.
Here officialy died the cult of Osiris. But the soteriology
which was its central feature had already assumed various forms
which had long since proliferated far and wide in the ancient
world. I personaly have meet a person who was involved in Osiris
worship. He may have been the last lone voice in the vast forest
of the New World.
Just goes to show what great things can be done when there is
a "State Religion".
(*)
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98.6 | I'm _Still_ Not Sure This Should Be In DEJAVU | PEN::KALLIS | | Tue Mar 25 1986 08:27 | 12 |
| Re .5:
Contrary to the sentiments expressed above, Osiris worship, as well
as worship of other members of the Egyptian pantheon is being carried
on in the New World by more than a single person. The Church of
the Eternal Source, with branches in California and New Hampshire,
is active today.
It is one of a number of Neopagan churches currently active.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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98.7 | doubt it belongs but the air is clearer over here | USACSB::OPERATOR_CB | | Wed Jul 20 1988 03:12 | 15 |
|
What was the time period between Osirus/Set and Marduk/Tiamut
of Babaylon? and is it probable that these two are also connected?
I think I remember from my foolish youth that Tiamut was primal
chaos and was portrayed as a sepent also. (as well as levithan)
Not to get too involved...but...The book of JOB (thats right
folks were using the BIBLE as a ref here) seems to coencide with
Babylonian Mythology (end chapters KJV) and also mentions Rahab?
Are all three wound together? Christian/Jewish, Egyptian,
and Babalonian?? were they borrowed from each other or were the
societies so similar in there begining that they also took a similar
path in mythology.??
Craig
|
98.8 | Tomong off on Job | ERASER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Wed Jul 20 1988 08:49 | 13 |
| re .7 (Craig):
> Not to get too involved...but...The book of JOB (thats right
>folks were using the BIBLE as a ref here) seems to coencide with
>Babylonian Mythology (end chapters KJV) and also mentions Rahab?
Actually, The Book of Job was more likely written around the time
of the Hellenes. The Babylonian mythology was far older than that.
I'm certain there was a bit of cross-fertilization in mythologies,
though. One of the Egyptian gods, Bes, is clearly an "outsider."
Steve Kallis, Jr,
|
98.9 | sources | ULTRA::LARU | Byzantine dancing astronaut | Wed Jul 20 1988 11:15 | 10 |
| Joseph Campbell has written extensively about the simlarities
and evelution of the mythologies of the world's religions...
One interesting book is _Myths to Live By_
His major effort, _The Masks of God_ (4 volumes) exhaustively
covers the subject.
bruce
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98.10 | | FSLENG::JOLLIMORE | For the greatest good... | Wed Jul 20 1988 12:05 | 10 |
| .9 (bruce)
I caught an interview the other nite on channel 44 (Boston) with Joseph
Campbell. It was hosted by Bill Moyers. I was fascinated by Campbell.
Unfortunately, right in the middle they switched to coverage of the State
House proceedings 8'(
Thanks for the book pointers.
Jay
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98.11 | A Dimly Remembered Link | CIMNET::PIERSON | on vacation 23/7-6/9 | Wed Jul 20 1988 13:13 | 13 |
| re .7
The version I heard, resonably reliably, was that most of
collection of angles/demons etc shows up in the (then)
Jewish tradition _after_ the return from the captivity
in Babylon. The implication was that substantial portions
of the Babylonian beliefs had been picked up.
I _am_not_ a scholar (amatuer or otherwise) so can cite no
sources. I toss it in FWIW and on case any one can provide
further comment.
thanks
dave pierson
|
98.12 | Where you can get it. | USAT05::KASPER | Life is like a beanstalk, isn't it... | Wed Jul 20 1988 13:27 | 8 |
| RE: .10 (Jay)
That was probably from the 'Power of Myth' series (6 episodes). If it
is over, you can get the book by the same name. It's the dialog plus
some pictures and photographs. It also explains how you can get copies
of the video. A terrific series!
Terry
|
98.13 | Thanks Terry! | FSLENG::JOLLIMORE | For the greatest good... | Wed Jul 20 1988 14:17 | 0 |
98.14 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | doing my Gemini north node... | Wed Jul 20 1988 14:35 | 11 |
|
RE: .10 Jay
The Power of Myth series is currently being aired on PBS/Boston.
The 4th episode will be on this Friday evening at 9:00 PM, though
I think you can catch #3 this Thursday evening, as well as over
the weekend.
Carole
|
98.15 | interface of myth/reality | SMURF::BREAU | | Tue Jan 10 1989 08:53 | 39 |
| Readers of this note would probably be interested in a magazine
called Free Inquiry, which regards religious phenomena from a
strictly rationalist point of view. It is quite easy reading
considering that it consists of scholarly articles written by
ivory-tower intellectuals who tend to be pointy-headed. Past
issues can be ordered separately. These essays are very thought
provoking. Here are some sample titles:
"Woody Allen Interviews the Reverend Billy Graham"
"Is Belief in the Supernatural Inevitable?"
"The 'Escape Goat' of Christianity"
"The Winter Solstice and the Origins of Christmas"
"Jesus in Time and Space"
"Was Jesus a Magician?"
"The Nativity Legends"
Here's the address:
Free Inquiry
Box 5
Buffalo, New York 14215-0005
I must warn you that the magazine is, of course, of an agnostic
bent. It presupposes that modern man is less susceptible to
superstitious beliefs...but, don't let the facts confuse you! 8^).
- Jim
< Note 98.9 by ULTRA::LARU "Byzantine dancing astronaut" >
-< sources >-
Joseph Campbell has written extensively about the simlarities
and evelution of the mythologies of the world's religions...
One interesting book is _Myths to Live By_
His major effort, _The Masks of God_ (4 volumes) exhaustively
covers the subject.
bruce
|
98.16 | _Free Inquiry_ athestic... | HYDRA::LARU | Surfin' the Zuvuya | Tue Jan 10 1989 10:49 | 8 |
| re: _Free Inquiry_
It is my understanding that the guiding principle of the magazine
(published by the Humanists) is _Atheistic_ rather than agnostic.
I recall that they recognize no validity of anything "spiritual."
They struck me as fairly narrow-minded.
/bruce
|