The Two Babylons Chapter III Section I
Festivals
Christmas and Lady-day
If Rome be indeed the Babylon of the
Apocalypse, and the Madonna enshrined in her sanctuaries be the very queen of
heaven, for the worshipping of whom the fierce anger of God was provoked against
the Jews in the days of Jeremiah, it is of the last consequence that the fact
should be established beyond all possibility of doubt; for that being once
established, every one who trembles at the Word of God must shudder at the very
thought of giving such a system, either individually or nationally, the least
countenance or support. Something has been said already that goes far to prove
the identity of the Roman and Babylonian systems; but at every step the evidence
becomes still more overwhelming. That which arises from comparing the different
festivals is peculiarly so.
The festivals of Rome are innumerable;
but five of the most important may be singled out for elucidation--viz.,
Christmas-day, Lady-day, Easter, the Nativity of St. John, and the Feast of the
Assumption. Each and all of these can be proved to be Babylonian. And first, as
to the festival in honour of the birth of Christ, or Christmas. How comes it
that that festival was connected with the 25th of December? There is not a word
in the Scriptures about the precise day of His birth, or the time of the year
when He was born. What is recorded there, implies that at what time soever His
birth took place, it could not have been on the 25th of December. At the
time that the angel announced His birth to the shepherds of Bethlehem, they were
feeding their flocks by night in the open fields. Now, no doubt, the climate of
Palestine is not so severe as the climate of this country; but even there,
though the heat of the day be considerable, the cold of the night, from December
to February, is very piercing, and it was not the custom for the
shepherds of Judea to watch their flocks in the open fields later than
about the end of October. *
* GILL, in his Commentary on
Luke 2:8, has the following: "There are two sorts of cattle with the
Jews...there are the cattle of the house that lie in the city; the cattle of
the wilderness are they that lie in the pastures. On which one of the
commentators (MAIMONIDES, in Misn. Betza), observes, 'These lie in the
pastures, which are in the villages, all the days of the cold and heat, and do
not go into the cities until the rains descend.' The first rain falls in the
month Marchesvan, which answers to the latter part of our October and the
former part of November...From whence it appears that Christ must be born
before the middle of October, since the first rain was not yet come." KITTO,
on Deuteronomy 11:14 (Illustrated Commentary), says that the "first
rain," is in "autumn," "that is, in September or October." This would make the
time of the removal of the flocks from the fields somewhat earlier than I have
stated in the text; but there is no doubt that it could not be later than
there stated, according to the testimony of Maimonides, whose acquaintance
with all that concerns Jewish customs is well known.
It is in the last degree incredible,
then, that the birth of Christ could have taken place at the end of December.
There is great unanimity among commentators on this point. Besides Barnes,
Doddridge, Lightfoot, Joseph Scaliger, and Jennings, in his "Jewish
Antiquities," who are all of opinion that December 25th could not be the right
time of our Lord's nativity, the celebrated Joseph Mede pronounces a very
decisive opinion to the same effect. After a long and careful disquisition on
the subject, among other arguments he adduces the following;--"At the birth of
Christ every woman and child was to go to be taxed at the city whereto they
belonged, whither some had long journeys; but the middle of winter was not
fitting for such a business, especially for women with child, and children to
travel in. Therefore, Christ could not be born in the depth of winter. Again, at
the time of Christ's birth, the shepherds lay abroad watching with their flocks
in the night time; but this was not likely to be in the middle of winter. And if
any shall think the winter wind was not so extreme in these parts, let him
remember the words of Christ in the gospel, 'Pray that your flight be not in the
winter.' If the winter was so bad a time to flee in, it seems no fit time for
shepherds to lie in the fields in, and women and children to travel in." Indeed,
it is admitted by the most learned and candid writers of all parties * that the
day of our Lord's birth cannot be determined, ** and that within the
Christian Church no such festival as Christmas was ever heard of till the
third century, and that not till the fourth century was far advanced
did it gain much observance.
* Archdeacon WOOD, in Christian
Annotator, LORIMER's Manual of Presbytery. Lorimer quotes Sir Peter
King, who, in his Enquiry into the Worship of the Primitive Church,
&c., infers that no such festival was observed in that Church, and adds--"It
seems improbably that they should celebrate Christ's nativity when they
disagreed about the month and the day when Christ was born." See also Rev. J.
RYLE, in his Commentary on Luke, who admits that the time of Christ's
birth is uncertain, although he opposes the idea that the flocks could not
have been in the open fields in December, by an appeal to Jacob's complaint to
Laban, "By day the drought consumed me, and the frost by night." Now the whole
force of Jacob's complaint against his churlish kinsman lay in this, that
Laban made him do what no other man would have done, and, therefore, if he
refers to the cold nights of winter (which, however, is not the common
understanding of the expression), it proves just the opposite of what it is
brought by Mr. Ryle to prove--viz., that it was not the custom for
shepherds to tend their flocks in the fields by night in winter.
** GIESELER, CHRYSOSTOM (Monitum
in Hom. de Natal. Christi), writing in Antioch about AD 380, says: "It is
not yet ten years since this day was made known to us". "What follows,"
adds Gieseler, "furnishes a remarkable illustration of the ease with which
customs of recent date could assume the character of apostolic institutions."
Thus proceeds Chrysostom: "Among those inhabiting the west, it was known
before from ancient and primitive times, and to the dwellers from Thrace to
Gadeira [Cadiz] it was previously familiar and well-known," that is, the
birth-day of our Lord, which was unknown at Antioch in the east, on the very
borders of the Holy Land, where He was born, was perfectly well-known in all
the European region of the west, from Thrace even to Spain!
How, then, did the Romish Church fix on
December the 25th as Christmas-day? Why, thus: Long before the fourth century,
and long before the Christian era itself, a festival was celebrated among the
heathen, at that precise time of the year, in honour of the birth of the son
of the Babylonian queen of heaven; and it may fairly be presumed that, in order
to conciliate the heathen, and to swell the number of the nominal adherents of
Christianity, the same festival was adopted by the Roman Church, giving it only
the name of Christ. This tendency on the part of Christians to meet Paganism
half-way was very early developed; and we find Tertullian, even in his day,
about the year 230, bitterly lamenting the inconsistency of the disciples of
Christ in this respect, and contrasting it with the strict fidelity of the
Pagans to their own superstition. "By us," says he, "who are strangers to
Sabbaths, and new moons, and festivals, once acceptable to God, the Saturnalia,
the feasts of January, the Brumalia, and Matronalia, are now frequented;
gifts are carried to and fro, new year's day presents are made with din, and
sports and banquets are celebrated with uproar; oh, how much more faithful are
the heathen to their religion, who take special care to adopt no
solemnity from the Christians." Upright men strive to stem the tide, but in
spite of all their efforts, the apostacy went on, till the Church, with the
exception of a small remnant, was submerged under Pagan superstition. That
Christmas was originally a Pagan festival, is beyond all doubt. The time of the
year, and the ceremonies with which it is still celebrated, prove its origin. In
Egypt, the son of Isis, the Egyptian title for the queen of heaven, was born at
this very time, "about the time of the winter solstice." The very name by which
Christmas is popularly known among ourselves--Yule-day --proves at once its
Pagan and Babylonian origin. "Yule" is the Chaldee name for an "infant" or
"little child"; * and as the 25th of December was called by our Pagan
Anglo-Saxon ancestors, "Yule-day," or the "Child's day," and the night that
preceded it, "Mother-night," long before they came in contact with Christianity,
that sufficiently proves its real character.
* From Eol, an "infant." In Scotland,
at least in the Lowlands, the Yule-cakes are also called Nur-cakes. Now in
Chaldee Nour signifies "birth." Therefore, Nur-cakes are "birth-cakes." The
Scandinavian goddesses, called "norns," who appointed children their destinies
at their birth, evidently derived their name from the cognate Chaldee
word "Nor," a child.
Far and wide, in the realms of
Paganism, was this birth-day observed. This festival has been commonly believed
to have had only an astronomical character, referring simply to the completion
of the sun's yearly course, and the commencement of a new cycle. But there is
indubitably evidence that the festival in question had a much higher reference
than this--that it commemorated not merely the figurative birth-day of the sun
in the renewal of its course, but the birth-day of the grand Deliverer. Among
the Sabeans of Arabia, who regarded the moon, and not the sun, as the visible
symbol of the favourite object of their idolatry, the same period was observed
as the birth festival. Thus we read in Stanley's Sabean Philosophy: "On
the 24th of the tenth month," that is December, according to our reckoning, "the
Arabians celebrated the BIRTHDAY OF THE LORD--that is the Moon." The Lord Moon
was the great object of Arabian worship, and that Lord Moon, according to them,
was born on the 24th of December, which clearly shows that the birth
which they celebrated had no necessary connection with the course of the sun. It
is worthy of special note, too, that if Christmas-day among the ancient Saxons
of this island, was observed to celebrate the birth of any Lord of the host of
heaven, the case must have been precisely the same here as it was in Arabia. The
Saxons, as is well known, regarded the Sun as a female divinity,
and the Moon as a male. *
* SHARON TURNER. Turner cites an
Arabic poem which proves that a female sun and a masculine moon were
recognised in Arabia as well as by the Anglo-Saxons.
It must have been the birth-day of the
Lord Moon, therefore, and not of the Sun, that was celebrated by them on the
25th of December, even as the birth-day of the same Lord Moon was observed by
the Arabians on the 24th of December. The name of the Lord Moon in the East
seems to have been Meni, for this appears the most natural interpretation of the
Divine statement in Isaiah lxv. 11, "But ye are they that forsake my holy
mountain, that prepare a temple for Gad, and that furnish the drink-offering
unto Meni." There is reason to believe that Gad refers to the sun-god, and that
Meni in like manner designates the moon-divinity. *
*See KITTO, vol. iv. p. 66, end of
Note. The name Gad evidently refers, in the first instance, to the war-god,
for it signifies to assault; but it also signifies "the assembler"; and
under both ideas it is applicable to Nimrod, whose general character was that
of the sun-god, for he was the first grand warrior; and, under the name
Phoroneus, he was celebrated for having first gathered mankind into social
communities. The name Meni, "the numberer," on the other hand, seems just a
synonym for the name of Cush or Chus, which, while it signifies "to cover" or
"hide," signifies also "to count or number." The true proper meaning of the
name Cush is, I have no doubt, "The numberer" or "Arithmetician"; for while
Nimrod his son, as the "mighty" one, was the grand propagator of the
Babylonian system of idolatry, by force and power, he, as Hermes, was the real
concocter of that system, for he is said to have "taught men the proper mode
of approaching the Deity with prayers and sacrifice" (WILKINSON); and seeing
idolatry and astronomy were intimately combined, to enable him to do so with
effect, it was indispensable that he should be pre-eminently skilled in the
science of numbers. Now, Hermes (that is Cush) is said to have "first
discovered numbers, and the art of reckoning, geometry, and astronomy, the
games of chess and hazard" (Ibid.); and it is in all probability from
reference to the meaning of the name of Cush, that some called "NUMBER the
father of gods and men" (Ibid.). The name Meni is just the Chaldee form of the
Hebrew "Mene," the "numberer" for in Chaldee i often takes the place of
the final e. As we have seen reason to conclude with Gesenius, that
Nebo, the great prophetic god of Babylon, was just the same god as Hermes,
this shows the peculiar emphasis of the first words in the Divine sentence
that sealed the doom of Belshazzar, as representing the primeval god--"MENE,
MENE, Tekel, Upharsin," which is as much as covertly to say, "The numberer is
numbered." As the cup was peculiarly the symbol of Cush, hence the
pouring out of the drink-offering to him as the god of the cup;
and as he was the great Diviner, hence the divinations as to the future year,
which Jerome connects with the divinity referred to by Isaiah. Now Hermes, in
Egypt as the "numberer," was identified with the moon that numbers the months.
He was called "Lord of the moon" (BUNSEN); and as the "dispenser of time"
(WILKINSON), he held a "palm branch, emblematic of a year" (Ibid.). Thus,
then, if Gad was the "sun-divinity," Meni was very naturally regarded as "The
Lord Moon."
Meni, or Manai, signifies "The Numberer."
And it is by the changes of the moon that the months are numbered: Psalm civ.
19, "He appointed the moon for seasons: the sun knoweth the time of its
going down." The name of the "Man of the Moon," or the god who presided over
that luminary among the Saxons, was Mane, as given in the "Edda," and Mani, in
the "Voluspa." That it was the birth of the "Lord Moon" that was celebrated
among our ancestors at Christmas, we have remarkable evidence in the name that
is still given in the lowlands of Scotland to the feast on the last day of the
year, which seems to be a remnant of the old birth festival for the cakes then
made are called Nur-Cakes, or Birth-cakes. That name is Hogmanay. Now,
"Hog-Manai" in Chaldee signifies "The feast of the Numberer"; in other words,
the festival of Deus Lunus, or of the Man of the Moon. To show the connection
between country and country, and the inveterate endurance of old customs, it is
worthy of remark, that Jerome, commenting on the very words of Isaiah already
quoted, about spreading "a table for Gad," and "pouring out a drink-offering to
Meni," observes that it "was the custom so late as his time [in the fourth
century], in all cities especially in Egypt and at Alexandria, to set tables,
and furnish them with various luxurious articles of food, and with goblets
containing a mixture of new wine, on the last day of the month and the year,
and that the people drew omens from them in respect of the fruitfulness of the
year." The Egyptian year began at a different time from ours; but this is a near
as possible (only substituting whisky for wine), the way in which Hogmanay is
still observed on the last day of the last month of our year in
Scotland. I do not know that any omens are drawn from anything that takes place
at that time, but everybody in the south of Scotland is personally cognisant of
the fact, that, on Hogmanay, or the evening before New Year's day, among those
who observe old customs, a table is spread, and that while buns and other
dainties are provided by those who can afford them, oat cakes and cheese are
brought forth among those who never see oat cakes but on this occasion, and that
strong drink forms an essential article of the provision.
Even where the sun was the favourite
object of worship, as in Babylon itself and elsewhere, at this festival he was
worshipped not merely as the orb of day, but as God incarnate. It was an
essential principle of the Babylonian system, that the Sun or Baal was the one
only God. When, therefore, Tammuz was worshipped as God incarnate, that implied
also that he was an incarnation of the Sun. In the Hindoo Mythology, which is
admitted to be essentially Babylonian, this comes out very distinctly. There,
Surya, or the sun, is represented as being incarnate, and born for the
purpose of subduing the enemies of the gods, who, without such a birth, could
not have been subdued. *
* See the Sanscrit Researches
of Col. VANS KENNEDY. Col. K., a most distinguished Sanscrit scholar, brings
the Brahmins from Babylon (Ibid.). Be it observed the very name Surya, given
to the sun over all India, is connected with this birth. Though the word had
originally a different meaning, it was evidently identified by the priests
with the Chaldee "Zero," and made to countenance the idea of the birth
of the "Sun-god." The Pracrit name is still nearer the Scriptural name of the
promised "seed." It is "Suro." It has been seen, in a previous chapter, that
in Egypt also the Sun was represented as born of a goddess.
It was no mere astronomic festival,
then, that the Pagans celebrated at the winter solstice. That festival at Rome
was called the feast of Saturn, and the mode in which it was celebrated there,
showed whence it had been derived. The feast, as regulated by Caligula, lasted
five days; * loose reins were given to drunkenness and revelry, slaves
had a temporary emancipation, ** and used all manner of freedoms with their
masters.
* Subsequently the number of the days
of the Saturnalia was increased to seven.
** If Saturn, or Kronos, was, as we
have seen reason to believe, Phoroneus, "The emancipator," the
"temporary emancipation" of the slaves at his festival was exactly in keeping
with his supposed character.
This was precisely the way in which,
according to Berosus, the drunken festival of the month Thebeth, answering to
our December, in other words, the festival of Bacchus, was celebrated in
Babylon. "It was the custom," says he, "during the five days it lasted, for
masters to be in subjection to their servants, and one of them ruled the house,
clothed in a purple garment like a king." This "purple-robed" servant was called
"Zoganes," the "Man of sport and wantonness," and answered exactly to the "Lord
of Misrule," that in the dark ages, was chosen in all Popish countries to head
the revels of Christmas. The wassailling bowl of Christmas had its precise
counterpart in the "Drunken festival" of Babylon; and many of the other
observances still kept up among ourselves at Christmas came from the very same
quarter. The candles, in some parts of England, lighted on Christmas-eve, and
used so long as the festive season lasts, were equally lighted by the Pagans on
the eve of the festival of the Babylonian god, to do honour to him: for it was
one of the distinguishing peculiarities of his worship to have lighted
wax-candles on his altars. The Christmas tree, now so common among us, was
equally common in Pagan Rome and Pagan Egypt. In Egypt that tree was the
palm-tree; in Rome it was the fir; the palm-tree denoting the Pagan Messiah, as
Baal-Tamar, the fir referring to him as Baal-Berith. The mother of Adonis, the
Sun-God and great mediatorial divinity, was mystically said to have been changed
into a tree, and when in that state to have brought forth her divine son. If the
mother was a tree, the son must have been recognised as the "Man the branch."
And this entirely accounts for the putting of the Yule Log into the fire on
Christmas-eve, and the appearance of the Christmas-tree the next morning. As
Zero-Ashta, "The seed of the woman," which name also signified Ignigena,
or "born of the fire," he has to enter the fire on "Mother-night," that he may
be born the next day out of it, as the "Branch of God," or the Tree that brings
all divine gifts to men. But why, it may be asked, does he enter the fire under
the symbol of a Log? To understand this, it must be remembered that the divine
child born at the winter solstice was born as a new incarnation of the great god
(after that god had been cut in pieces), on purpose to revenge his death upon
his murderers. Now the great god, cut off in the midst of his power and glory,
was symbolised as a huge tree, stripped of all its branches, and cut down almost
to the ground. But the great serpent, the symbol of the life restoring
Aesculapius, twists itself around the dead stock (see
Fig. 27), and lo, at its side up sprouts a young tree--a tree of an
entirely different kind, that is destined never to be cut down by hostile
power--even the palm-tree, the well-known symbol of victory. The Christmas-tree,
as has been stated, was generally at Rome a different tree, even the fir; but
the very same idea as was implied in the palm-tree was implied in the
Christmas-fir; for that covertly symbolised the new-born God as Baal-berith, *
"Lord of the Covenant," and thus shadowed forth the perpetuity and everlasting
nature of his power, not that after having fallen before his enemies, he had
risen triumphant over them all.
* Baal-bereth, which differs
only in one letter from Baal-berith, "Lord of the Covenant," signifies
"Lord of the fir-tree."
Therefore, the 25th of December, the
day that was observed at Rome as the day when the victorious god reappeared on
earth, was held at the Natalis invicti solis, "The birth-day of the
unconquered Sun." Now the Yule Log is the dead stock of Nimrod, deified as the
sun-god, but cut down by his enemies; the Christmas-tree is Nimrod redivivus--the
slain god come to life again. In the light reflected by the above statement on
customs that still linger among us, the origin of which has been lost in the
midst of hoar antiquity, let the reader look at the singular practice still kept
up in the South on Christmas-eve, of kissing under the mistletoe bough. That
mistletoe bough in the Druidic superstition, which, as we have seen, was derived
from Babylon, was a representation of the Messiah, "The man the branch." The
mistletoe was regarded as a divine branch *--a branch that came from heaven, and
grew upon a tree that sprung out of the earth.
* In the Scandinavian story of
Balder, the mistletoe branch is distinguished from the lamented god.
The Druidic and Scandinavian myths somewhat differed; but yet, even in the
Scandinavian story, it is evident that some marvellous power was attributed to
the mistletoe branch; for it was able to do what nothing else in the compass
of creation could accomplish; it slew the divinity on whom the Anglo-Saxons
regarded "the empire" of their "heaven" as "depending." Now, all that is
neceesary to unravel this apparent inconsistency, is just to understand "the
branch" that had such power, as a symbolical expression for the true
Messiah. The Bacchus of the Greeks came evidently to be recognised as the "seed
of the serpent"; for he is said to have been brought forth by his mother
in consequence of intercourse with Jupiter, when that god had appeared in the
form of a serpent. If the character of Balder was the same, the story of his
death just amounted to this, that the "seed of the serpent" had been slain by
the "seed of the woman." This story, of course, must have originated with his
enemies. But the idolators took up what they could not altogether deny,
evidently with the view of explaining it away.
Thus by the engrafting of the celestial
branch into the earthly tree, heaven and earth, that sin had severed, were
joined together, and thus the mistletoe bough became the token of Divine
reconciliation to man, the kiss being the well-known token of pardon and
reconciliation. Whence could such an idea have come? May it not have come from
the eighty-fifth Psalm, ver. 10,11, "Mercy and truth are met together;
righteousness and peace have KISSED each other. Truth shall spring out of the
earth [in consequence of the coming of the promised Saviour], and righteousness
shall look down from heaven"? Certain it is that that Psalm was written soon
after the Babylonish captivity; and as multitudes of the Jews, after that event,
still remained in Babylon under the guidance of inspired men, such as Daniel, as
a part of the Divine word it must have been communicated to them, as well as to
their kinsmen in Palestine. Babylon was, at that time, the centre of the
civilised world; and thus Paganism, corrupting the Divine symbol as it ever has
done, had opportunities of sending forth its debased counterfeit of the truth to
all the ends of the earth, through the Mysteries that were affiliated with the
great central system in Babylon. Thus the very customs of Christmas still
existent cast surprising light at once on the revelations of grace made to all
the earth, and the efforts made by Satan and his emissaries to materialise,
carnalise, and degrade them.
In many countries the boar was
sacrificed to the god, for the injury a boar was fabled to have done him.
According to one version of the story of the death of Adonis, or Tammuz, it was,
as we have seen, in consequence of a wound from the tusk of a boar that he died.
The Phrygian Attes, the beloved of Cybele, whose story was identified with that
of Adonis, was fabled to have perished in like manner, by the tusk of a boar.
Therefore, Diana, who though commonly represented in popular myths only as the
huntress Diana, was in reality the great mother of the gods, has frequently the
boar's head as her accompaniment, in token not of any mere success in the chase,
but of her triumph over the grand enemy of the idolatrous system, in which she
occupied so conspicuous a place. According to Theocritus, Venus was reconciled
to the boar that killed Adonis, because when brought in chains before her, it
pleaded so pathetically that it had not killed her husband of malice prepense,
but only through accident. But yet, in memory of the deed that the mystic boar
had done, many a boar lost its head or was offered in sacrifice to the offended
goddess. In Smith, Diana is represented with a boar's head lying beside her, on
the top of a heap of stones, * and in the accompanying woodcut (Fig.
28), in which the Roman Emperor Trajan is represented burning
incense to the same goddess, the boar's head forms a very prominent figure. On
Christmas-day the Continental Saxons offered a boar in sacrifice to the Sun, to
propitiate her ** for the loss of her beloved Adonis.
* SMITH's Class. Dict., p.
112.
** The reader will remember the Sun
was a goddess. Mallet says, "They offered the largest hog they could
get to Frigga"--i.e., the mother of Balder the lamented one. In Egypt swine
were offered once a year, at the feast of the Moon, to the Moon, and
Bacchus or Osiris; and to them only it was lawful to make such an offering. (AELIAN)
In Rome a similar observance had
evidently existed; for a boar formed the great article at the feast of Saturn,
as appears from the following words of Martial:--
"That boar will make you
a good Saturnalia."
Hence the boar's head is still a
standing dish in England at the Christmas dinner, when the reason of it is long
since forgotten. Yea, the "Christmas goose" and "Yule cakes" were essential
articles in the worship of the Babylonian Messiah, as that worship was practised
both in Egypt and at Rome (Fig.
29). Wilkinson, in reference to Egypt, shows that "the favourite
offering" of Osiris was "a goose," and moreover, that the "goose could not be
eaten except in the depth of winter." As to Rome, Juvenal says, "that Osiris, if
offended, could be pacified only by a large goose and a thin cake." In many
countries we have evidence of a sacred character attached to the goose. It is
well known that the capitol of Rome was on one occasion saved when on the point
of being surprised by the Gauls in the dead of night, by the cackling of the
geese sacred to Juno, kept in the temple of Jupiter. The accompanying woodcut (Fig.
30) proves that the goose in Asia Minor was the symbol of Cupid,
just as it was the symbol of Seb in Egypt. In India, the goose occupied a
similar position; for in that land we read of the sacred "Brahmany goose," or
goose sacred to Brahma. Finally, the monuments of Babylon show that the goose
possessed a like mystic character in Chaldea, and that it was offered in
sacrifice there, as well as in Rome or Egypt, for there the priest is seen with
the goose in the one hand, and his sacrificing knife in the other. *
* The symbolic meaning of the
offering of the goose is worthy of notice. "The goose," says Wilkinson,
"signified in hieroglyphics a child or son"; and Horapolo says,
"It was chosen to denote a son, from its love to its young, being
always ready to give itself up to the chasseur, in order that they might be
preserved; for which reason the Egyptians thought it right to revere this
animal." (WILKINSON's Egyptians) Here, then, the true meaning of the
symbol is a son, who voluntarily gives himself up as a sacrifice for
those whom he loves--viz., the Pagan Messiah.
There can be no doubt, then, that the
Pagan festival at the winter solstice--in other words, Christmas--was held in
honour of the birth of the Babylonian Messiah.
The consideration of the next great
festival in the Popish calendar gives the very strongest confirmation to what
has now been said. That festival, called Lady-day, is celebrated at Rome on the
25th of March, in alleged commemoration of the miraculous conception of our Lord
in the womb of the Virgin, on the day when the angel was sent to announce to her
the distinguished honour that was to be bestowed upon her as the mother of the
Messiah. But who could tell when this annunciation was made? The Scripture gives
no clue at all in regard to the time. But it mattered not. But our Lord was
either conceived or born, that very day now set down in the Popish calendar for
the "Annunciation of the Virgin" was observed in Pagan Rome in honour of
Cybele, the Mother of the Babylonian Messiah. *
* AMMIANUS MARCELLINUS, and MACROB.,
Sat. The fact stated in the paragraph above casts light on a festival
held in Egypt, of which no satisfactory account has yet been given. That
festival was held in commemoration of "the entrance of Osiris into the moon."
Now, Osiris, like Surya in India, was just the Sun. (PLUTARCH, De Iside et
Osiride) The moon, on the other hand, though most frequently the symbol of
the god Hermes or Thoth, was also the symbol of the goddess Isis, the queen of
heaven. The learned Bunsen seems to dispute this; but his own admissions show
that he does so without reason. And Jeremiah 44:17 seems decisive on the
subject. The entrance of Osiris into the moon, then, was just the sun's
being conceived by Isis, the queen of heaven, that, like the Indian
Surya, he might in due time be born as the grand deliverer. Hence the very
name Osiris; for, as Isis is the Greek form of H'isha, "the woman," so Osiris,
as read at this day on the Egyptian monuments, is He-siri, "the seed." It is
no objection to this to say that Osiris is commonly represented as the husband
of Isis; for, as we have seen already, Osiris is at once the son and
husband of his mother. Now, this festival took place in Egypt generally in
March, just as Lady-day, or the first great festival of Cybele, was held in
the same month in Pagan Rome. We have seen that the common title of Cybele at
Rome was Domina, or "the lady" (OVID, Fasti), as in Babylon it was
Beltis (EUSEB. Praep. Evang.), and from this, no doubt, comes the name
"Lady-day" as it has descended to us.
Now, it is manifest that Lady-day and
Christmas-day stand in intimate relation to one another. Between the 25th of
March and the 25th of December there are exactly nine months. If, then, the
false Messiah was conceived in March and born in December, can any one for a
moment believe that the conception and birth of the true Messiah can have so
exactly synchronised, not only to the month, but to the day? The thing is
incredible. Lady-day and Christmas-day, then, are purely Babylonian.