>From Sex to Superconsciousness - http://www.truthbeknown.com

The following is an excellent encapsulation of "Pagan"
myths and rituals that preceded Christianity,
representing doctrines utilized in its creation.  The
author is Charles Waite, from his book "History of the
Christian Religion to the Year Two Hundred," which was
published in 1900 and remains an outstanding resource
for scholars and aficionados.  Of course, much of this
information and quite a bit more can be found in my
book "The Christ Conspiracy:  The Greatest Story Ever
Sold" ( http://www.truthbeknown.com/christ.htm ).

Antiquity of the Christian Doctrines

Many of the more prominent doctrines of the Christian
religion prevailed among nations of antiquity,
hundreds, and in some instances, thousands of years
before Christ.

The doctrine of the miraculous conception was common
in ancient times.  The story of Chrishna has already
been given.  Zoroaster also was believed to have been
immaculately conceived by a ray from the Divine
Reason.  Mars was conceived by Juno touching a flower,
and she conceived Vulcan by being overshadowed by the
wind.  An ancient work entitled Codex Vaticanus, gives
an account of the immaculate conception of Quexalcote
[Quetzalcoatl], the Mexican Savior.  One of the sects
in China worshiped a savior named Xaca, who was
conceived by his mother, in her sleep, seeing a white
elephant.  Ya, the first Chinese monarch, was
conceived by his mother being struck with a star while
traveling.  Another legend is that Yu, (probably the
same as Ya), was conceived from a water-lily.  Many
cases might be mentioned of mortals who had an
immaculate conception.  Plato, Pythagoras, Tamerlane,
Gengis Khan, Apollonius of Tyana and Augustus Caesar,
were all supposed to have been the product of
immaculate conceptions.

Stars also presaged the birth of several of them.

At the birth of Confucius, five wise men from a
distance came to the house, celestial music filled the
air, and angels attended the scene.

The title of Son of God was very common among the
ancients, and at the commencement of the Christian
era.  St. Basil says, "Every uncommonly good man was
called the Son of God."  When Apollonius, standing
before Domitian, was asked, why men called him a god,
his reply was, "Every good man [chrestos] is entitled
to that appellation."  An answer which Dr. Albert
Reville, a theologian of Rotterdam, thought might
throw a bright light upon the divinity of Christ.

Miracles – The belief in miracles has been common in
all ages of the world.  From the time of Uranus,
father of the gods, down through all the ages, the
world has been filled with wonders.  Esculapius
[Aesclepius] raised Hippolytus from the dead –
Hercules rescued Alcestis from the very hand of death
– Actaeon was changed to a stag – the walls of Thebes
builded themselves to the music of the flute, while
those of Jericho fell before the blasts of the priests
of Israel.  The daughters of Anius the high priest,
changed everything they chose into corn, oil and wine,
and the hair of Berenice was changed to a
constellation of the stars.  Meanwhile, Prometheus lay
bound on Mt. Caucasus, the vulture devouring his
vitals, which grew as fast as eaten.

The heavens were full of gods, and earth, air and sea
swarmed with myriads of angels, spirits and demons.

Resurrection – Many cases of resurrection from the
dead, are handed down in the ancient mythologies.
Mithras, the "Mediator" of Persia, is said to have
risen after three days.  So also, Quexalcote, of
Mexico, Osiris of Egypt, and others.

Some of these, after their resurrection, ascended into
heaven.  Chrishna, after rising from the dead, and
appearing to his disciples, ascended to Brahma, in
heaven.  [Brahma=Abraham, cf. Lk 16:22: "The poor man
[Lazarus] died and was carried by the angels to the
Bosom of Abraham."]

The Atonement – This doctrine has in some form
pervaded the religion of all countries.  Offerings of
propitiation, to appease the wrath of an offended God,
or to satisfy the demands of justice, have been common
in every period of the world.  Sometimes they have
consisted of fruits of the earth; at other times, of
animals and men.  As nations have advanced in
civilization, the offerings have become less bloody in
their character.  In the Sandwich Islands, anciently,
human beings were thrown as a sacrifice into the
crater of Kileaua, the great volcano.  Afterwards
animals were substituted, and finally products of the
earth.  The propitiatory system of the Jews is well
known.  This is considered by Paul as a type of the
higher Christian system.

The Trinity was an essential feature in the religion
of many oriental nations.  The Holy Ghost was the
third member under various appellations.  In the Hindu
trinity, it was Siva; the other members of the trinity
being Brahma and Vishnu.

Mr. Maurice says, this notion of a third person in the
deity, was diffused among all the nations of the
earth.  Mr. Worsley considers the doctrine one "of
very great antiquity, and generally received by the
Gothic and Celtic Nations."  In the Hindu system, this
third person was the Holy Breath, by which living
creatures were made.  The Holy Ghost became visible in
the form of a dove, a tongue of fire, etc.

The Holy Ghost was sometimes the agent in immaculate
conceptions.  In the Mexican trinity, Y Zona was the
Father, Bascal the Word, and Echvah the Holy Ghost, by
the last of whom Chimalman conceived and brought forth
Quexalcote.  When Sesostris invoked the oracle, to
know who, before him, could subjugate all things, the
answer was, "First God, then the Word, and with them
the Spirit."  Plutarch, in his "Life of Numa," shows
that the incarnation of the Holy Spirit was known to
the ancient Egyptians.

The doctrine of the Word, as the creative power, is
also very ancient.  The Chinese Bible states that "God
pronounced the primeval Word, and his own eternal and
glorious abode sprang into existence."  According to
the Zend-Avesta, it was the Word, more ancient than
the world, that Ormuzd created the universe.  The
ancient Greek writer Amelias, speaking of the god
Mercury [Hermes], says "And this plainly was the
Logos, by whom all things were made."

Plato taught a trinity of the soul, in which it is
easy to see analogies, pointing to a higher form of
the doctrine.

It is said there was an ancient Greek inscription on
the great obelisk at Rome; thus: 1. The Mighty God; 2.
The Begotten of God; and 3. Apollo the Spirit.

Confession and Remission of Sins – These doctrines
prevailed anciently in India; also among the ancient
Persians, and Parsees.  In China, the invocation of
Omito was held to remit the punishment of the greatest
crimes.

The doctrines of Original Sin, Fall of Man, and
Endless Punishment are all found in the religious
systems of several ancient nations.

Sprinkling with water was a religious ceremony of much
antiquity.  This may in some degree account for the
changes of the form of Christian baptism from
immersion to sprinkling.  The practice prevailed among
the ancient Romans.

The Sacrament or Eucharist has also an ancient
original.  It was practiced by the Brahmins of India,
and was introduced into the mysteries of Mithras.  It
prevailed, also, among the ancient Mexicans.

The Golden Rule was taught hundreds of years before
Christ, by Confucius, Aristotle, and many others.

http://www.truthbeknown.com/waite.htm




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