<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE RISING SON. </h2>
<p>You are requested to read the above title carefully. Notice the spelling
of the last word. It is <i>son</i>, not <i>sun</i>. The difference to the
eye is only in one letter. The substantial difference is very great. Yet
in the end the distinction between the Son and the Sun vanishes.
Originally they were one and the same thing, and they will be so again
when Christianity is properly understood.</p>
<p>Supposing that Jesus of Nazareth ever lived, it is impossible to know,
with any approach to accuracy, what he really was. With the exception of
four epistles by Saint Paul—in which we find a highly mystical
Christ, and not a portrait or even a sketch of an actual man—we have
no materials for a biography of Jesus written within a hundred years of
his death. Undoubtedly <i>some</i> documents existed before the Canonical
and Apocryphal Gospels, but they were lost through neglect or suppression,
and what we have is simply the concoction of older materials by an
unscrupulous Church.</p>
<p>During the interval between the real or supposed death of Jesus and the
date of the gospels, there was plenty of time for the accumulation of any
quantity of mythology. The east was full of such material, only waiting,
after the destruction of the old national religions under the sway of
Rome, to be woven into the texture of a non-national system as wide as the
limits of the Empire.</p>
<p>Protestants are able to recognise a vast deal of Paganism in the teaching
and ritual of the Roman Catholic Church. On that side they keep an open
eye. On the other side their eye is shut. If they opened it they would see
plenty of Paganism in the gospels.</p>
<p>The only fixed date in the career of Jesus is his birthday. This is known
by every scholar to be fictitious. The primitive Church was ignorant of
the day on which Jesus was born. But what was unknown to the apostles, one
of whom is said to have been his very brother, was opportunely discovered
by the Church three hundred years afterwards. For some time the nativity
of Jesus had been celebrated on all sorts of days, but the Church brought
about uniformity by establishing the twenty-fifth of December. This was
the Pagan festival of the nativity of the Sun. The Church simply
appropriated it, in order to bring over the Pagan population by a change
of doctrine without a change or rites and customs.</p>
<p>It may be objected that the primitive Church did not inquire as to the
birthday of Jesus until it was too late to ascertain it. But this
objection cannot possibly apply to the resurrection, the date of which is
involved in equal uncertainty, although one would expect it to be
precisely known and regularly commemorated. For many ages the celebration
was irregular. Different Sundays were kept, and sometimes other days, in
various weeks of March and April. Finally, after fierce disputes and
excommunications, the present system was imposed upon the whole Catholic
world.</p>
<p>Easter is, in fact, decided astronomically, by a process in which
sun-worship and moon-worship are both conciliated. The starting point is
the vernal equinox, which was the time of a common Pagan festival. The
very name of Easter is of heathen origin. All its customs are bequeathed
to us from far-off Pagan ancestors. Easter eggs, symbolising the life of
the universe, have been traced back to the Romans, Greeks, Persians, and
Egyptians.</p>
<p>When the Christians celebrate the resurrection of Christ they are
imitating the ancient "heathen," who at the same time of the year
commemorated the resurrection of the Sun, and his manifest triumph over
the powers of darkness. And when the moderns prepare to celebrate the
ascension of Christ, they are really welcoming the ascension of the Sun.
The great luminary—father of light and lord of life—is then
(apparently) rising higher and higher in heaven, shedding his warmer beams
on the earth, and gladdening the hearts of men.</p>
<p>Churches and altars are decked with vegetation, which is another relic of
nature-worship. Life is once more bursting forth under the kindling rays
of the sun. Hope springs afresh in the heart of man. His fancy sees the
pastures covered with flocks and herds, the corn waving in the breeze, and
the grapes plumping in the golden sunshine, big with the blood of earth
and the fire of heaven.</p>
<p>According to the Apostles' Creed, Jesus descended into hell between his
death and resurrection. That is also a relic of sun-worship. During the
dark, cold winter the sun descended into the underworld, which is the real
meaning of Hades. Misunderstanding this circumstance, or deliberately
perverting it, the early Church fabricated the monstrous fable that Jesus
"preached unto the spirits in prison," as we read in the first epistle of
Peter. One of the apocryphal gospels gives a lively account of how he
harried the realm of Old Harry, emptying the place wholesale, and robbing
the poor Devil of all his illustrious subjects, from Adam to John the
Baptist.</p>
<p>A volume might be filled with illustrations of the mythology of the
Resurrection. Our present space is limited, and we must let the above
suffice. Anyone who reads the gospel story of the resurrection and
ascension of Jesus Christ, with a careful eye and a critical mind, will
see that it is not historical. Such witnesses, so loose in statement and
so contradictory of each other, would collapse in a few minutes in any
court of law. They do not write as spectators, and they were not
spectators. What they give us is the legendary and mythical story that had
taken possession of the Christian mind long after all the contemporaries
of Jesus were dead.</p>
<p>Our belief, in conclusion, is that the Rising Sun will outlast the Rising
Son. The latter is gradually, but very surely, perishing. Even professed
Christians are giving up the miraculous elements of the gospels. But who
would give up the Sun, which has warmed, lighted, and fertilised the earth
for millions of years, and will do so for millions of years after the
death of Christianity?</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />