SUNRISES: THE GIFT OF THE EAST - Onyeji Nnaji
The
secret of the unique feature which the east, everywhere around the globe, has
maintained lies deeply on the contribution of the sun as the first born among
everything created. The existence and presence of the sun directly defines and
mark for inspirational cartographers the pointer to the direction where life
began in the time of creation. Because of the presence of the sun in the east,
creation had to begin in the east since that was the only place life could
survive. For these reasons, the sun became the highest mystic source for man.
Among all the nations of antiquity, altars, mounds, and temples were dedicated
to the worship of the orb of day. The ruins of these sacred places yet remain,
notable among them being the pyramids of Yucatan and Egypt, the snake mounds of
the American Indians, the Zikkurats of Babylon and Chaldea, the round towers of
Ireland, and the massive rings of uncut stone in Britain and Normandy. The
Tower of Babel, which, according to the Scriptures, was built so that man might
reach up to God, was probably an astronomical observatory. The adoration of the
sun formed one of the earliest and most natural forms of religious expression.
The primitive mind, recognizing the beneficent power of the solar orb, adored
it as the replica of the Supreme Deity, God.
The
sun, as supreme among the celestial bodies visible to the astronomers of
antiquity, was assigned to the highest of the gods and became symbolic of the
supreme authority of the Creator Himself. From a deep philosophic consideration
of the powers and principles of the sun has come the concept of the Trinity as
it is understood in the world today. The tenet of a Triune Divinity is not
peculiar to Christian or Mosaic theology, but forms a conspicuous part of the
dogma of the greatest religions of both ancient and modern times. The Persians,
Hindus, Babylonians, and Egyptians had their Trinities. In every instance these
represented the threefold form of one Supreme Intelligence. In modern Masonry,
the Deity is symbolized by an equilateral triangle, its three sides
representing the primary manifestations of the Eternal One who is Himself
represented as a tiny flame, called by the Hebrews Yod (י). The same is
seen in the Igbo mystic knowledge as Mbu;
symbolizing the omniscient power in the person form who only is one. mbu is
the beginning of all things, the being before whom no other existed. Nnaji
explicated this idea in chapter seven of Aspects
of the Ancient African Metaphysics.
The
origin of the orb’s Trinity as opined by traditional philosophers is obvious to
anyone who will observe the daily manifestations of the sun. This orb, being
the symbol of all Light, has three distinct stages: rising, midday, and
setting. The philosophers therefore divided the life of all things into three
distinct parts: growth, maturity, and decay. Between the twilight of dawn and
the twilight of evening is the high noon of resplendent glory. God the Father,
the Creator of the world, is symbolized by the dawn. His colour is blue,
because the sun rising in the morning is veiled in blue mist. God the Son he
Illuminating One sent to bear witness of His Father before all the worlds, is
the celestial globe at noonday, radiant and magnificent, the maned Lion of
Judah, the Golden-haired Saviour of the World. Yellow is His color and His
power is without end. God the Holy Ghost is the sunset stage, when the orb of
day, robed in flaming red, rests for a moment upon the horizon line and then
vanishes into the darkness of the night to wander in the lower worlds and later
rise again triumphant from the embrace of darkness.
To
the Egyptians, the sun was the symbol of immortality. To them, while the sun disappears
each night, it rises again with each ensuing dawn. Not only has the sun this
diurnal activity, but it also has its annual pilgrimage, during which time it
passes successively through the twelve celestial houses of the heavens,
remaining in each for thirty days. Added to these it has a third path of
travel, which is called the precession
of the equinoxes, in which it retrogrades around the zodiac through the
twelve signs at the rate of one degree every seventy-two years. Robert Hewitt
Brown, represents this movement as in the following statement:
The Sun,
as he pursued his way among these living creatures of the zodiac, was said, in
allegorical language, either to assume the nature of or to triumph over the
sign he entered. The sun thus became a Bull in Taurus, and was worshipped as
such by the Egyptians under the name of Apis, and by the Assyrians as Bel,
Baal, or Bul. In Leo the sun became a Lion-slayer, Hercules, and an Archer in
Sagittarius. In Pisces, the Fishes, he was a fish--Dagon, or Vishnu, the
fish-god of the Philistines and Hindoos. (P.32).
In
Masonry, the sun has many symbols. One expression of the solar energy is
Solomon, whose name SOL-OM-ON is the name for the Supreme Light in three
different languages. Hiram Abiff, the CHiram (Hiram) of the Chaldens, is also a
solar deity, and the story of his attack and murder by the Ruffians, with its
solar interpretation, will be found in the chapter The Hiramic Legend. A
striking example of the important part which the sun plays in the symbols and
rituals of Freemasonry is given by George Oliver, D.D., in his Dictionary of
Symbolical Masonry, as follows:
The sun
rises in the east, and in the east is the place for the Worshipful Master. As
the sun is the source of all light and warmth, so should the Worshipful Master
enliven and warm the brethren to their work. Among the ancient Egyptians the
sun was the symbol of divine providence.
The
hierophants of the Mysteries were adorned with many insignia emblematic of
solar power. The sunbursts of gilt embroidery on the back of the vestments of
the Catholic priesthood signify that the priest is also an emissary and
representative of Sol Invictus.
-
The Birth of the Sun.
Concerning
the origin of sun worship, Albert Pike, in his book Morals and Dogma,
remarks as follow,
To them
[aboriginal peoples] he [the sun] was the innate fire of bodies, the fire of
Nature. Author of Life, heat, and ignition, he was to them the efficient cause
of all generation, for without him there was no movement, no existence, no
form. He was to them immense, indivisible, imperishable, and everywhere
present. It was their need of light, and of his creative energy, that was felt
by all men; and nothing was more fearful to them than his absence. His
beneficent influences caused his identification with the Principle of Good; and
the BRAHMA of the Hindus, and MITHRAS of the Persians, and ATHOM, AMUN, PHTHA,
and OSIRIS, of the Egyptians, the BEL of the Chaldeans, the ADONAI of the
Phœnicians, the ADONIS and APOLLO of the Greeks, became but personifications of
the Sun, the regenerating Principle, image of that fecundity which perpetuates
and rejuvenates the world's existence.
Rome
set 25th of December as the birthday of the Solar Man. They rejoiced, feasted,
gathered in processions, and made offerings in the temples. The darkness of
winter was over and the glorious son of light was returning to the Northern
Hemisphere. With his last effort the old Sun God had torn down the house of the
Philistines (the Spirits of Darkness) and had cleared the way for the new sun
who was born that day from the depths of the earth amidst the symbolic beasts
of the lower world. Speaking on the season of the celebration, Balliol College,
Oxford, in his scholarly treatise, Mankind Their Origin and Destiny,
says: “The Romans also had their solar festival, and their games of the circus
in honour of the birth of the god of day. It took place the eighth day before
the kalends of January--that is, on December 25”. Servius, in his commentary on
verse 720 of the seventh book of the Æneid, in which Virgil speaks of the new
sun, says that, properly speaking, the sun is new on the 8th of the Kalends of
January-that is, December 25. In the time of Leo I. (Leo, Serm. xxi., De Nativ.
Dom. p. 148), some of the Fathers of the Church said that 'what rendered the
festival (of Christmas) venerable was less the birth of Jesus Christ than the
return, and, as they expressed it, the new birth of the sun.' It was on the
same day that the birth of the Invincible Sun (Natalis solis invicti), was
celebrated at Rome, as can be seen in the Roman calendars, published in the
reign of Constantine and of Julian (Hymn to the Sun, p. 155). This epithet
'Invictus' is the same as the Persians gave to this same god, whom they
worshipped by the name of Mithra, and whom they caused to be born in a grotto
(Justin. Dial. cum Trips. p. 305), just as he is represented as being born in a
stable, under the name of Christ, by the Christians.”
Concerning
the Catholic Feast of the Assumption and its parallel in astronomy, the same
author adds:
At
the end of eight months, when the sun-god, having increased, traverses the eighth
sign, he absorbs the celestial Virgin in his fiery course, and she disappears
in the midst of the luminous rays and the glory of her son. This phenomenon,
which takes place every year about the middle of August, gave rise to a
festival which still exists, and in which it is supposed that the mother of
Christ, laying aside her earthly life, is associated with the glory of her son,
and is placed at his side in the heavens. The
Roman calendar of Columella (Col. 1. II. cap. ii. p. 429).
marks the death or disappearance of Virgo at
this period. The sun, he says, passes into Virgo on the thirteenth day before
the kalends of September. This is where the Catholics place the Feast of the
Assumption, or the reunion of the Virgin to her Son. This feast
The
following description of this phenomenon appears in a letter written by
Jeremiah Shakerley in Lancashire, March 4th, 1648:--”On Monday the 28th of
February last, there arose with the Sun two Parelii, on either side one; their
distance from him was by estimation, about ten degrees; they continued still of
the same distance from the Zenith, or height above the Horizon, that the Sun
did; and from the parts averse to the Sun, there seemed to issue out certain
bright rays, not unlike those which the Sun sends from behind a cloud, but
brighter. The parts of these Parelii which were toward the Sun, were of a mixt
colour, wherein green and red were most predominant. A little above them was a
thin rainbow, scarcely discernible, of a bright colour, with the concave
towards the Sun, and the ends thereof seeming to touch the Parelii: Above that,
in a clear diaphanous ayr, [air], appeared another conspicuous Rainbow,
beautified with divers colours; it was as near as I could discern to the
Zenith; it seemed of something a lesser radius than the other, they being back
to back, yet a pretty way between. At or near the apparent time of the full
Moon, they vanished, leaving abundance of terror and amazement in those that
saw them. (See William Lilly.) was
formerly called the feast of the Passage of the Virgin (Beausobre, tome i. p.
350); and in the Library of the Fathers (Bibl. Part. vol. II. part ii. p. 212)
we have an account of the Passage of the Blessed Virgin. The ancient Greeks and
Romans fix the assumption of Astraea, who is also this same Virgin, on that
day.”
This
Virgin mother, giving birth to the Sun God which Christianity has so faithfully
preserved, is a reminder of the inscription concerning her Egyptian prototype,
Isis, which appeared on the Temple of Sais: “The fruit which I have brought
forth is the Sun.” While the Virgin was associated with the moon by the
early pagans, there is no doubt that they also understood her position as a
constellation in the heavens, for nearly all the peoples of antiquity credit
her as being the mother of the sun, and they realized that although the moon
could not occupy that position, the sign of Virgo could, and did, give birth to
the sun out of her side on the 25th day of December. Albertus Magnus states,
“We know that the sign of the Celestial Virgin rose over the Horizon at the
moment at which we fix the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Among
certain of the Arabian and Persian astronomers the three stars forming the
sword belt of Orion were called the Magi who came to pay homage to the young
Sun God. The author of Mankind--Their Origin and Destiny contributes the
following additional information: “In Cancer, which had risen to the meridian
at midnight, is the constellation of the Stable and of the Ass. The ancients
called it Præsepe Jovis. In the north the stars of the Bear are seen, called by
the Arabians Martha and Mary, and also the coffin of Lazarus. “Thus the
esotericism of pagandom was embodied in Christianity, although its keys are
lost. The Christian church blindly follows ancient customs, and when asked for
a reason gives superficial and unsatisfactory explanations, either forgetting
or ignoring the indisputable fact that each religion is based upon the secret
doctrines of its predecessor.
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