Before 1,000 B.C. we have the following gods or demigods born on December 25: Horus, Osiris, and Attis. Before 200 B.C. we have Mithra, Heracles, Dionysus, Tammuz, Adonis, and others (see All About Adam and Eve, by Richard Gillooly). Some of these characters, you will see below, were also born to virgins.

Osiris

Interestingly, in ancient mythology, many gods are born to women with names derived from “Ma,” meaning mother: Myrrha in Syrian myth, Maia in Greek myth, Maya in Hindu, Mary in Hebrew.

A god or demigod’s birth was often accompanied by incredible sights and came about through the actions of another god.
John D. Keyser writes,
We learn, from classical authors, that the notion of the gods visiting mortal women and becoming fathers of their children was commonly entertained throughout the near East in Greek and Roman times…

‘The gods have lived on earth in the likeness of men’ was a common saying among ancient pagans, and supernatural events were believed in as explanations of the god’s arrival upon earth in human guise.
Stars, meteors, and heavenly lights allegedly signaled the birth of many man-gods, including Christ, Yu, Lao-tzu, various Roman Caesars, and Buddha (see Gillooly). This parallels the strange and fantastic events that surround the births of purely mythological figures, such as Osiris in Syria, Trinity in Egypt, and Mithra in Persia.
But nothing was more spectacular than virgin birth.

Mithras

Virgin birth, and a reverence and obsession with virginity, was a common theme in ancient religions before the time of Christ and near where Christianity originated (see “The Ancient Beginnings of the Virgin Birth Myth,” by Keyser). It marked the child as special, often divine.

Two thousand years before Christ, the virgin Egyptian queen Mut-em-ua gave birth to Pharaoh Amenkept III. Mut-em-ua had been told she was with child by the god Taht, and the god Kneph impregnated her by holding a cross, the symbol of life, to her mouth. Amenkept’s birth was celebrated by the gods and by three kings, who offered him gifts*_
_*Ra, the Egyptian sun god, was supposedly born of a virgin, Net. Horus was the son of the virgin mother Isis*_.

In Egypt, and in other places such as Assyria, Greece, Cyprus, and Carthage, a mythological virgin mother and her child was often a popular subject of art and sculpture.

Attis, a Phrygian-Greek vegetation god, was born of the virgin Nana. By one tradition, Dionysus, a Greek character half god and half human, was the son of Zeus, born to the virgin Persephone.

Persephone also supposedly birthed Jason, a character with no father, human or divine. Perseus was born to a mortal woman named Danae, and fathered by Zeus. Zeus also slept with a mortal woman (though daughter of a nymph) named Io, and they had a son and a daughter. He slept with the mortal Leda, who gave birth (hatched, actually) Helen of Troy and other offspring.

Even Plato in Greece was said by some to have been born to a virgin, Perictione, and fathered by the god Apollo, who gave warning to Ariston, Perictione’s husband-to-be.
*Some followers of Buddha Gautama decided he was born to the virgin Maya by divine decree*. Genghis Khan was supposedly born to a virgin seeded by a great miraculous light. The founder of the Chinese Empire, Fo-Hi, was born after a woman (not necessarily a virgin) ate a flower or red fruit. The river Ho (Korea) gave birth to a son when seeded by the sun. Krishna was born to the virgin Devaka. In Rome, Mercury was born to the virgin Maia, Romulus to the virgin Rhea Sylvia (see “An Old Story,” Chapman Cohen).

The Persian god Mithra was made the “Protector of the Empire” by the Romans in 307 AD, right before Christianity was declared the official religion. Some versions of Mithra’s story, predating Christianity, make him the son of a human virgin. His birth, on December 25, was seen by shepherds and Magi, who brought gifts to a cave, the place of his birth (see Godless, by former pastor Dan Barker).

Garrett S. Griffin is a political writer for Weekend Collective and the author of Racism in Kansas City: A Short History. A former religious conservative, he is now an atheist and a member of the Democratic Socialists of America. Follow him @garrettsgriffin.

2 responses to “Some education for those who think the bible is everything.”

  1. Interesting site. I’ve done some lurking and have this to say:

    The misapplication of divinity to Jesus’s name and image, if intentional, could appear to be a recognizable tactic of counter-intelligence. The priesthood of the time and place enforced an illusion that they were the bridge that connected the common man to the divine, and as such man must submit to the rabbinicy’s authority if he wishes to reach out to God. Christ upset that indoctrination of the masses. He spoke out against organized religion and revealed the church as the cash cow it was. He discouraged people from seeking wealth or status. He told the people that they were endowed with just as much divinity as the rabbi, and were just as capable of communicating with God. He sought to destroy the corrupt institution of organized religion and remove the veil of dogma that shrouded the spirit of man. Now Christ is the godhead of several organized religious sects.

    Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated for preaching a message of non-prejudice and a rejection of racial differentiation. Now, in his death, he is applied as a godhead to the enforcement of “Black History Month” in public schools throughout the U.S. His image is used to defile the very message for which he fought and died. Such is the fate of martyrs.

    I see no difference between the degree of faith required to accept the big bang theory or the current “scientific” theories for the formation of life than the models of creation or intelligent design. To produce evidence that a design can exist independent of a designer is the expectation atheism has of science. Until such a time, if ever it comes, that science can produce a NON-REPEATABLE observation of the creation of matter and/or life, the reality is that we do not know. Why must it be observable but not repeatable? Because if it is through our own action that matter or life comes to fruition, we will have only proven that these things may come to be THROUGH an act of creation, not independent of one. When man creates life or matter from nothing, we may find ourselves with more questions than answers…

    There is a pandemic of egotism sweeping through humanity, and as such, an inability among many intellectuals to admit when and where one has no answer to a question. How is it that you have so much faith in GODLESSNESS?

    Atheism is truly the least interesting religion.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Awesome comment

    Like

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