And Abraham lifted up his eyes . . .

And Abraham lifted up his eyes . . .

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

My recent article entitled "The Bible, the Myths, & The Zodiac Wheel," which appears in the most-recent issue of New Dawn magazine, is illustrated with a diagram of the zodiac wheel (the one found in many previous blog posts, such as this one), an image of the beautiful statue of the goddess Selket from the tomb of Tutankhamun (the same image seen at the end of this previous post), and the image of the Pythia at the Oracle of Delphi showing her connection to the important zodiac constellation of Virgo (the image seen in previous posts discussing the importance of the Pythia, such as this one and this one, and most especially the image found at the  very end of this post). 

The most dramatic illustration to accompany my article, is undoubtedly the image reproduced above, depicting the famous episode from Genesis sometimes referred to as "the temptation and blessing of Abraham." Interestingly enough, this is not actually an image which I sent along with the article, but was added by the editors of New Dawn on their own, to accompany the discussion of this crucial episode in Genesis. 

Perhaps the most interesting thing about the image that they selected, in addition to its vivid depiction of the horrifying scene, shown at the awful moment when the knife is raised in Abraham's hand and the Angel is swooping in to stay his hand at the last possible instant, is the fact that the artist who composed this 1860 print has depicted all the characters in the scene 

in postures which suggest their celestial counterparts in the sky!

I have actually discussed this particular image before, and used it as an illustration when explaining the celestial foundations of the episode of Abraham and Isaac on Mount Moriah (see this previous post). In order to make those connections perfectly clear, let's take a look at the portion of the night sky which I believe forms the basis for this ancient story. 

Below is the image of the night sky containing the zodiac constellation of Aries, the Ram. In the episode of Abraham and Isaac in Genesis 22, we are told that when his had was stayed by the Angel, Abraham lifted up his eyes and looked and beheld "a ram caught in a thicket by his horns: and Abraham went and took the ram, and offered him up for a burnt offering in the stead of his son" (Genesis 22:13). The presence of a Ram as the substitute in the Bible story is a strong clue that, if we suspect that this story has a celestial foundation, we should investigate the possibility that it involves  the constellation Aries the Ram. 

In this first image the constellations are presented unmarked, so that you can see the stars that will be connected and labeled in the following image, and verify that those stars are actually there and there is no "funny business" going on:

image generated using Stellarium.org Once again, this is a good opportunity to point out the inadequacy of some of the conventional constellation-outlining systems (such as the system employed in the image above), and the superiority of the system suggested by H. A. Rey in his classic text The Stars: A New Way to See Them

Below, I have drawn in the outlines of the constellations involved in the Genesis 22 episode, using the  H. A. Rey outlines for those constellations. First, study once more the 1860 drawing above of the dramatic moment from Genesis 22, which the editors of New Dawn added to my discussion of that Genesis story: we see Abraham with his arm outstretched, wielding the knife. We see the Angel, flying in from the right, arm outstretched to touch Abraham and urge him to stay his hand. We see the Ram, directly underneath the Angel -- held, in fact, by the Angel's other hand, in this illustration. And, we see the smoke of the fire for the burnt offering, floating up in a vertical column very close to Abraham and the Ram.

Now look down at the sky chart below:

According to my interpretation of the celestial players, the constellation Perseus corresponds to Abraham. Both arms of the constellation are stretched out, and it does not take much imagination to envision a knife or a short sword in either of the two hands (the illustrator of the 1860 drawing above has chosen to place the knife in the "easternmost" of his two hands -- east is to the left as we look at the chart above, and west is to the right).

Flying in from the upper right is the Angel, played by the stars of the constellation Andromeda. Note how close the stars of Andromeda come to the westernmost arm of Perseus: close enough to be seen as "staying his hand," if we use our imagination. In the outline of Andromeda as envisioned by H. A. Rey, she is actually lying with her feet towards Perseus, but if you look at the image of the Angel as envisioned by the illustrator of the 1860 print, you can re-imagine the stars as outlining an Angel flying towards Perseus, with wings arching above the body and arm reaching out to stay Perseus' hand.

Directly below the Angel in the night sky is the Ram of Aries, just as the Ram in the illustration is directly below the Angel. 

Finally, the column of the Milky Way rises up like smoke from the horizon and passes right beside Perseus (he is actually partly in it). This column of smoke corresponds to the smoke of the "burnt offering" described in Genesis 22.

The Genesis 22 episode of Abraham and Isaac and the Angel and the Ram is, of course, one of the most formative and sacred stories in the entire Old Testament scripture. But understanding that it, like the other sacred stories of humanity, is founded upon a celestial metaphor does not take away its profound message: quite the contrary. For, as Alvin Boyd Kuhn has asserted, "the sacred scriptures of the world are a thousand times more precious as myths than as alleged history" (Lost Light, 24: emphasis in the original). 

The meaning of these sacred Star Myths is profound, and operates on many levels, each deeper than the one before. The full import of what I believe them to be teaching is explored in The Undying Stars, and even with hundreds of pages of examination, it can be said that we only scratch the surface of the depths of ancient wisdom contained in these esoteric stories. 

On the most general level, we can see that the act of encoding the motions of the majestic stars themselves in stories about men and women on earth is a form of "bringing the heavens down to earth," of "clothing" the stars in human flesh, so to speak . . . and this is exactly what the ancient scriptures were trying to teach about the nature of human existence: that we ourselves are in one sense "spirit beings" which have been "clothed" in human skins for a time, and that at the end of this earthly incarnation we will reascend into the spirit realm. 

The sign of Aries is located at the spring equinox, where the sun crosses back up from the "lower realm" of darkness and winter (and incarnation, in this realm below the realm of the stars), and thus was associated with transcending the physical and the material and with bringing forth the spiritual or the divine which is hidden away within the physical and the material. For the metaphorical depiction of the stars as human beings does not just bring the heavens down to earth: it then promises to bring the earthly back up with it when it rises again to the heavens.

The fact that Abraham is described in Genesis as not just a father but a father of "a multitude of nations" (see Genesis 17:4) indicates that -- like the story of Adam and Eve, who can also be shown to be celestial -- these sacred stories are trying to convey truths about the common human condition, truths that apply to all incarnate men and women, and not just to a select few. If we only take them literally, then it stands to reason that some people might be descended from Abraham through Isaac while others are not -- a message which divides humanity. 

But if -- like Adam and Eve and like Shem, Ham, and Japheth -- Abraham is a celestial figure, then the assertion that he is a "father of many nations" can be interpreted as teaching that all human beings are in a sense "descended from the stars," in that we are spiritual beings who have descended temporarily into this material realm.

There is also a profoundly shamanic aspect to the world's ancient scriptures, when they are understood to embody celestial metaphors which are designed to convey a teaching about the realm of spirit and the realm of incarnate matter. This shamanic aspect has been explained in numerous previous posts, but at its heart it involves the teaching that access to the spirit world is not only something that is important at the end of our journey through incarnation, but that such access is in fact essential throughout our life in this material realm. 

The scriptures of the Bible are filled with stories meant to teach us that "seeing into" the reality of the Other Realm which surrounds and interpenetrates the material realm is vitally important for gaining knowledge which cannot be obtained any other way, or for solving real problems in the material realm which cannot be solved any other way. Think for example of the episode of 2 Kings 6, in which Elisha and his servant are surrounded by the horsemen and chariots and a great host of warriors from the king of Syria, and Elisha prays that his servant's eyes might be opened, "that he may see" -- and we are told that when the servant's eyes were opened, "behold, the mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha" (2 Kings 6:17). In other words, the servant was enabled to see into the spirit world, which Elisha could apparently always perceive. 

This ability to suddenly see beyond the material world which we perceive with our five senses, and to gain access to a "second sight" or spiritual vision is very similar to the description given in the Norse Eddas of Odin's ascent up the World-Tree, in which he hangs for nine days and nine nights upon the Tree until his eyes are suddenly opened and he can perceive what he could not see before. Odin's ascent up the Tree can be demonstrated to be distinctly shamanic (and it has clear parallels to the New Testament description of Christ on the Cross). For further discussion of the shamanic vision at the heart of the world's sacred myths, see for instance previous posts herehere and here.

The details of the Genesis 22 episode discussed above and in the New Dawn article should be sufficient to demonstrate that the stories of the Bible, like the sacred stories of many other cultures, are built on a system of celestial allegory. Beyond the correspondences in that single episode, there are many more which can be demonstrated in other stories from both the Old and New Testaments.

The understanding that the world's myths are built upon a common celestial foundation has tremendous ramifications. One of these is that this understanding should unite humanity, and not divide us. Another is that these sacred traditions do not lose their message even if they are interpreted other than as literal history. It should be a very positive message, and one that is uplifting and empowering to all men and women from all around the globe, and one that connects us not only to one another but also to nature, to all of nature, all the way out to the stars in the infinite universe. 

Welcome to new visitors from New Dawn magazine! (and to returning friends)

Welcome to new visitors from New Dawn magazine! (and to returning friends)

I'm very excited to be part of the latest installment of New Dawn magazineissue number 147 (November-December 2014). Thanks to editor David Jones and the rest of the staff at New Dawnfor including my article "The Bible, the Myths & the Zodiac Wheel" in this issue.

Special welcome to any new visitors to this site who learned about my research and writing for the first time through this issue of New Dawn. Please feel free to send feedback, ask questions, or otherwise contact me through Twitter or Facebook, and to explore this site using the site-specific search window found in the upper-left corner of the screen on most full-sized browsers.

To learn more about the evidence which supports some of the arguments made in "The Bible, the Myths & the Zodiac Wheel," you may wish to start with the "Star Myth index" that I have put together here, as well as any of the interviews which can be accessed at the "Interview Archive" here. I hope that you will enjoy exploring these topics and hope to see you back here soon!

For readers of this blog who may not be familiar with New Dawn magazine, below is the complete description of the publication and its purpose, found in the "Mission Statement" at the very beginning of the latest issue:

The first issue of New Dawn magazine appeared in May 1991 in Melbourne, Australia. From humble beginnings, New Dawn has grown into a unique 80 page bi-monthly publication distributed nationwide throughout Australia and New Zealand, with a growing international readership.
New Dawn magazine explores ancient wisdom and new thinking while encouraging greater awareness and open-mindedness. Each issue examines the hidden dimensions of society, culture, history, religion and current events in a non-dogmatic manner.
From lost civilisations and ancient knowledge, to secret societies and higher states of consciousness, New Dawn is a fascinating blend of cutting-edge articles on unexplained and behind-the-scenes events.
New Dawn is not about telling you what to believe, but is a forum where diverse ideas and creative thought is presented for our reader's consideration, inspiration and empowerment.
Today all mainstream media outlets propagate the consensus reality. Every child is born into a crowd that is already conditioned, the teachers are conditioned, the neighbours are conditioned, and the whole community is conditioned. Born into such an environment the child cannot envisage any other alternative. Awareness is sacrificed to conformity. Existence becomes a trap, a cog in the wheel of the great machine of modern society. William Blake described that machine as a 'Dark Satanic Mill.' Philip K. Dick identified it as the Empire's 'Black Iron Prison.' "It is possible to get out of a trap," wrote Dr. Wilhelm Reich. "However, in order to break out of prison, one must first confess to living in a prison."
It has been observed that there are two ways of looking at the world. You can take the morning newspaper or nightly news at face value and believe everything you're told by the establishment media and those in 'positions-of-authority.' Or you can begin to question this mass hypnosis and awake to new perspectives and possibilities. New Dawn is a doorway to this new way of thinking and seeing the world.
Since 2004 New Dawn has also published Special Issues devoted to ancient mysteries and the unexplained. These Special Issues, now published every two moths, are a thought-provoking and highly readable examination of the greatest mysteries of the past, the present, and the future.
Thank you for reading New Dawn. We're sure you will find this magazine insightful, enlightening and absolutely unique. 
Enjoy the journey of discovery.

"Art is individualism, and individualism is a disturbing and disintegrating force.

There lies its immense value. For what it seeks to disturb is monotony

of type, slavery of custom, tyranny of habit, and the

reduction of man to the level of a machine."

-- Oscar Wilde (1854 - 1900), Irish writer & poet

Those who find that mission statement, and the existence of a major publication which devotes itself to such ends, to be commendable might consider supporting New Dawn through the purchase of individual issues in electronic or print format, or through a subscription to either the electronic or print edition. 

They did not ask me to say any such thing, but I personally believe that the existence of forums such as New Dawn in which writers and researchers and readers can explore perspectives which challenge the conditioning of the "Black Iron Prison" are absolutely essential, all the more so because many of the conventional media platforms are now completely dedicated to the "conditioning" described above, rather than to challenging that conditioning. 

As an example of the degree to which challenges to that conditioning are generally deemed unacceptable, even in forums which paint themselves as "a community of curious souls to engage with ideas and each other," see my post from this past September entitled "Graham Hancock identifies war on consciousness: TED confirms that he's right." Many other such examples could be piled up, one atop another. There truly is a "war on consciousness" in the words of Graham Hancock, and indeed it is a war of ideas and a war of information and a war of language (and, quite often, a war of dogma). 

Publications such as New Dawn which are dedicated to examining "society, culture, history, religion and current events in a non-dogmatic manner" and to "encouraging greater awareness and open-mindedness" with the end result of the individual's "inspiration and empowerment" can almost certainly be counted on the side of "consciousness" in the war that Graham Hancock has identified.

You can purchase electronic editions of past issues going all the way back to 2005 in their back-issue archive here (at a very reasonable price), as well as read some of the articles from those back-issues for free online in the same archive. 

This particular issue revolves around the subject of "mind control" -- an extremely important subject, and one that has been discussed in the pages of this blog many times before. Below is a collection of some of those. I hope that regular readers who may not have heard of New Dawn previously will check it out, and that first-time visitors from New Dawn will enjoy exploring the deep archive of previous posts that are available here, and will come back regularly to check out future posts as they appear!

Mind Control discussions, from the archives:

All-Soul's Day

All-Soul's Day

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

An engine, no matter how big, how beautiful, or how powerful, is nothing but a useless pile of metal without the vital spark which ignites the fuel to create the explosions which drive the cylinders and turn the crankshaft. 

In a similar manner, our bodies are lifeless clay without the invisible spark which animates them. According to Alvin Boyd Kuhn, in his treatise on Halloween discussed in this earlier posting, the annual celebration of Halloween ranks as high in importance and in spiritual symbolism as the other celebrations at the great solar stations of the year such as Easter-type celebrations at spring equinox and Christmas-type celebrations at winter solstice, and like those two just-mentioned holidays the Halloween celebration contains a "night-time" element and a "day-time" element, in its conjoined holiday of "All-Soul's Day" or "All-Saints' Day." 

Halloween celebrates and commemorates the descent of the soul into the body, with all the attendant symbolism, and All-Soul's Day celebrates and commemorates the fact that every body has a soul which will outlast and ultimately transcend that body and which in fact lasts forever, according to the ancient teachings of the world's collective mythologies.

And so All-Hallow's Even or Hallowe'en must have its conjoined All-Hallow's Day, just as Good Friday must have its Easter morning, and Christmas Eve's midnight observance must have its Christmas morning. To focus only on one aspect without the other could thus be said to be akin to focusing only on the engine as a lump of metal without recognizing the importance of the inner fire which drives it.

In the ancient metaphorical categorization of the four elements (fire, air, water and earth), the first two are the elements of spirit, and the latter two are the elements of material incarnation. In Greek mythology, Prometheus is described as forming mankind out of clay (earth and water), and then bringing them divine fire. In the Old Testament, Genesis 2 tells us that "the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul" (verse 7).

Interestingly, real engine enthusiasts and muscle-car owners know that to increase an engine's performance, it needs to be given more air and fire -- the elements that form the "spiritual side" of the engine, so to speak. In fact, many people refer to the ignition side of the engine's operation simply as "fire" (as in, "it's not getting fire").

In another publication, Lost Light (published in 1940), Alvin Boyd Kuhn devotes an entire chapter to exploring the conceptual "elements" of the ancient system, and then goes even deeper into fire and water in additional chapters. There are actually two entire chapters on fire. The first of these, entitled "Fire on Heaven's Hearth" (Chapter XIV), says of fire:

It rises above the other elements in grandeur and impressiveness. The full implication of its meaning lifts the mind into reaches of luminous suggestiveness as to the splendor of the experience awaiting us in future arcs of our unfoldment. Fire is the emblem of our highest nobility, and even as a mere figure it has a certain power to stir dim intimations of the magnificence of that reality which it hints at. There is in nature hardly a phenomenon more wonderful than the eating away of a stick of wood by a flame. The mystery of all life is back of that energetic display. And the mystery becomes awesome when we realize that our own life is more than analogous to fire; it is of kindred nature with it. The soul within us is a spark of divine flame. 303.

In ancient Greek myth, Prometheus brings fire to humanity in a hollow reed, often specifically identified as a thyrsus-reed (Dionysus, the god of wine and hence of "spirits," was also the bearer of a thyrsus-reed staff). The symbol of the thyrsus reed wand or staff was prevalent in all the ancient mysteria ("Mystery cults" or "Mystery religions," as they are often somewhat inaccurately termed), for as Alvin Boyd Kuhn explains: "The whole design of the Mysteries, according to the great Plato himself, was 'to lead us back to the perfection from which, as our beginning, we first made our descent'" (Lost Light, 106).

The ancient myths of humanity all portray the descent of our fiery souls into incarnate matter by pointing to the glorious display of the fiery bodies of the heavenly sphere, the sun and the stars, and the turning of the heavens which causes them to plunge from the celestial realm of fire and air down into the horizon (where they enter the realm of earth and of water). For some discussion of the specific celestial  foundations of the Prometheus story, see this previous post entitled "Prometheus, Bringer of Fire."

In Hamlet's Mill, published in 1969, authors Giorgio de Santillana and Hertha von Dechend present extensive evidence linking the name of Prometheus bringer of fire with the ancient Hindu and Vedic pramantha, the great churn-stick or fire-stick which is the vertical component of the two fire-sticks, both in the terrestrial realm of starting common fires and in the heavenly realm. By extension, then, the pramantha was seen as the motive force which it turns the very sky on its axis (see Hamlet's Mill  139-140).

De Santillana and von Dechend devote an entire appendix (Appendix 14) to exploring this connection, and note that Sanskrit pra-mantha and its root - manth are related to the words Amritamanthana (the churning of the milky sea, which is associated with the turning of heaven as well as the ages-long motion of precession), Mount Mandara (the mountain around which the churning of the ocean of milk takes place, and which is thus associated with the central axis of heaven), and even the word mandala (the great circular symbol which represents our universe in its physical and its spiritual completeness). 

The association of Prometheus bringer of fire with the vertical fire-stick par-mantha connects all this symbology with the ancient Egyptian symbolism surrounding the "raising of the Djed column," which must follow the action of the Djed being "cast-down" -- the action of casting down being representative of the soul's plunge into gross matter, and the action of raising up being representative of our life-long mission of recognizing and calling forth the spiritual spark that is hidden within this material world, disguised behind a mask (to use the imagery of Halloween). 

This is the esoteric meaning of All-Soul's Day, according to Alvin Boyd Kuhn: the message that we all contain this spiritual and eternal divine component, hidden as it is behind the gross mask of material incarnation, and the teaching that our purpose here in this incarnate life is to recognize it and to elevate it again, in ourselves as well as in everyone else we meet, and in the natural world which is also infused with hidden spirit. It is also a day on which traditionally the souls of those who have gone before are remembered, in light of the knowledge that they continue on forever.

Now that we have celebrated Halloween, reveling in all the symbology of the "physical engine" (so to speak), it is appropriate to spend some time focusing on the "spiritual side of the engine," which actually makes it go.

A Ghostly Trio of Haunted Posts for Halloween

A Ghostly Trio of Haunted Posts for Halloween

image: West Point magazine Fall 2011 (link), with added specter from Wikimedia commons (link).

The important annual holiday of Halloween is upon us, and if you have not already done so, you may wish to go back to the post from a few days prior which discusses the spiritual meaning and symbolism of this annual autumnal festival.

Newer visitors to this blog may not know it, but there have been several ghostly posts from the past which explored the phenomenon of phantoms. Here are some links to a few of them for your All-Hallow's Eve enjoyment!

1. "Scary Ghost Story (West Point)" October 31, 2011.

Perhaps the spookiest of them all, especially because I can well remember some of the first-hand or second-hand stories I heard from other cadets while at West Point of the eerie experiences that would sometimes take place at night in "the Divisions" -- specifically the 47th Division (pictured above). Some of these included awakening in the middle of the night to the feeling of someone or something pressing down on their chest with enough force to make it difficult to breathe.

2. "The Cheltenham Ghost" December 03, 2012.

Account of the apparition seen by numerous witnesses over a period of several years during the 1880s at a house in Cheltenham, England. Guaranteed to send shivers up your spine.

3. "Is the Cavalier Hotel really haunted?" July 12, 2012.

I've been to this hotel myself (a couple of times), and it certainly feels haunted! There have been numerous accounts recorded over the years, which you can explore and evaluate for yourself.

Bonus selection: "Don't miss the intriguing interview with Sheldon Norberg on New Dimensions Radio" November 05, 2011.

This post features an amazing interview from 2011 with Sheldon Norberg, but unfortunately the public link to that interview is no longer free. However, you can still listen to it (and download it) for just $1.99 at the New Dimensions Radio website here, and if this is a subject that interests you, it is well worth the price! You can also check out a short TV feature from 2011 in which Sheldon Norberg discusses his work here.

Also, along with its discussion of the concept of houses which seem to have some supernatural presences attached to them, this same post discusses some of the other haunted locations on the old post of West Point, including an old house on "Colonels' Row" which I was told on very good authority has a very strong presence in the upper rooms of the house.

Enjoy! 

Find the Beehive Cluster in the pre-dawn sky!

Find the Beehive Cluster in the pre-dawn sky!

The constellations and celestial bodies visible before sunrise are truly spectacular at this time of year, and well worth rising early and heading directly outside to marvel at them, if at all possible.

The brilliant figure of Orion has been rising a bit earlier each morning (see this long-ago post which discusses this earlier-rising motion) and thus making his way just a bit further towards the west when viewed at the same time from one morning to the next. Because of this fact, he is now past the meridian line (or past "culmination") and further towards the west than the east by about 5:30 in the morning, but still close enough to the center of the sky to use him as your starting point for a tour of the dazzling "Winter Circle" of stars and constellations, which have been discussed previously in this post.

But now, viewers who can make it outside in the morning hours before sunrise have access to a special treat: the faint zodiac constellation of Cancer the Crab is almost directly overhead at around 5:30am or even 6:00am, affording an outstanding opportunity to locate the Crab's hidden jewel: the Beehive Cluster of stars. 

Not only does the Beehive play an extremely important role in many of the world's most famous Star Myths (including some very central episodes in the Old and New Testaments of the Bible), but it is an absolutely beautiful little cluster, just barely visible to the naked eye, and delightful and satisfying to locate and identify. The best opportunity to see the Beehive happens when Cancer is high in the sky, and having Cancer directly overhead at culmination or zenith is about as good of an opportunity as we get (of course, during early spring Cancer will be visible overhead during the hours before midnight, affording another opportunity to enjoy the Beehive, but then it will be "before bedtime" rather than "immediately upon waking up," for those on "conventional schedules" of waking and sleeping).

Below are a series of "night sky screenshots" from Stellarium.org, to help you feel confident in finding the Beehive for yourself. You will be glad that you did! 

Note: It really is best to use binoculars to identify the Beehive: while you can just barely perceive it with the naked eye, it will be just at the limits of perception (unless you are blessed with an extremely clear and dark and crisp location for observing the stars, such as a desert location).

Also, note that the images below are for the northern hemisphere, and are "taken" from a perspective of about 35N latitude (although that doesn't matter too much, as the constellations shown will simply be higher or lower in the sky but still mostly visible from almost everywhere between the Arctic and Antarctic circles). Viewers in the southern hemisphere will see the same stars along the zodiac band, but of course there everything will be upside down, so simply turn your computer screen 180 degrees on its head in order to view these images.

We begin with a wide-angle view of the sky, looking towards the southern horizon (for viewers in the northern hemisphere), at about 5:30am on the morning:

None of the constellations are labeled here, but don't worry: we will dial in until we arrive at the beautiful Beehive Cluster. Note that the Milky Way can be seen cutting across the center of the sky. The Milky Way on this "end" is not as noticeable as it is when rising between Sagittarius and Scorpio, but you may still be able to see it depending on the darkness of your viewing location. You can see that Orion is located just "to the right" (that is, west) of the Milky Way band, and if you know where Gemini are located, you will see that the Milky Way flows right beneath their feet (they are above and to the left of Orion).

Orion's distinctive belt points down and "to the left" in the above image, enabling you to draw an imaginary line down and to the left from the belt to the extremely bright star Sirius, the so-called "Dog Star," located in Canis Major ("the Big Dog").

Below, I have drawn a yellow rectangle around the stars of Orion, and a blue rectangle around the stars of the constellation Canis Major, so that you can see where they are. In order to find the Beehive, you will probably want to begin with Orion as your first "stepping stone," since he is so easy to find:

Note that if you have Stellarium.org downloaded onto your own computer, you can "follow along" on your screen in a bit higher resolution than my screenshots above (I intend to get some software to make better screenshots in the future, but these should be good enough to enable you to find the Beehive, so hang in there, we will get to it in just a moment).

Now, if you look at the upper left corner of the yellow box I've drawn around Orion, you will basically be pointing right to the Twins of Gemini, who are kind of like two stick-figures lying at an angle above and to the left (east) of Orion.

If you go to the upper right corner of the yellow box, you will be just up from the "V"-shaped stars of the Hyades, in the zodiac constellation of Taurus the Bull (the star Aldebaran is the forward lower-leftmost star of the Hyades, and it is labeled in the above screenshot).

Below, I have removed the rectangles around Orion and Canis Major, and added rectangles around the Twins of Gemini (blue) and the stars of Taurus the Bull (red), along with a smaller red square around the beautiful Pleiades, which are actually part of Taurus:

Can you still identify Orion? Good. When you go out to find the Beehive in the early morning, you will want to begin with Orion, identify Sirius and Canis Major if you want to, and then look upwards from Orion (in the northern hemisphere it is upwards) to find the "V" of the Hyades (and the silvery cluster of the Pleiades) on one side of Orion, and the long parallel sticks of Gemini on the other. Gemini will act as your next "stepping stone" to the Beehive in Cancer -- you're getting very close now!

Below is another screenshot of the same portion of the early-morning sky, this time with the front-end of Leo the Lion identified with another red rectangle. Note that this particular screen-shot cuts off the back-half of Leo at the left edge of the screen (he continues further left, and you will be able to see him in the actual sky). His leonine visage is clearly seen, arcing above yellow Jupiter (marked in the screenshot).

In the image below, we finally have an identifier for the region of the sky containing Cancer and the Beehive! It is marked with a green box. Unfortunately, you may not be able to see any stars in this region at first. That's because Cancer is so faint. However, Cancer can reliably be located directly between Gemini and Leo, which is why you need those "stepping stones." Basically, the mouth of the Lion points right towards the outstretched "arms" of the Crab:

In the screenshots below, we will begin to "zoom in" on the region of Cancer, so that you can see the Beehive on the screen. In the dark pre-dawn sky, you may be able to spot the Beehive as a faint silvery mist halfway between the stars of Gemini and the stars of Leo. You get an additional "help" from the benevolent planet Jupiter ("Jolly Jove") this year, since he is now traveling towards Leo, but Jupiter is not always there. Since he is, however, you can also use Jupiter as a "left-side handrail" to help you zero-in on the Beehive:

In the above image, we have zoomed-in quite a bit on Cancer. I have turned on the constellation outlines to help us identify everything. You can see Orion on the right, with the Milky Way flowing through. To the left of him as we look at the screen, you see the Twins of Gemini lying almost on their side, two parallel figures with Castor and Pollux as their heads. Down and to the left from the heads of the Twins is Jupiter (and to Jupiter's left, the stars of Leo) -- and directly below them you can also see the "Little Dog" (Canis Minor) consisting of just two stars, the lower of them being the very bright star Procyon, which is also marked in this screenshot.

Cancer is located between the Twins and Jupiter, or between Procyon and Jupiter. I like to think of Cancer the Crab as a trapezoidal body (the part to the right) with two "outstretched arms" (or claws) reaching to the left. However, in the above screenshot, the bottom line (or right-hand-side line) of the "trapezoid" is not drawn for us. I have drawn it in when discussing Cancer in previous posts, such as this one (that post also draws in the "muzzle" of the Lion, which is likewise not drawn-in on the above screenshots, even though it is helpful to envision it -- you can see the two stars that make up the muzzle, however, and draw in the connecting lines with your imagination, just as you will have to do in the morning sky outdoors).

In the screenshot above, you can actually make out the faint cluster of the Beehive, right in the heart of Cancer. Below is the same screenshot again, but this time I have drawn a green circle around the Beehive Cluster:

So, now you know where in the constellation Cancer to look for the Beehive, but since it is still a bit faint in these images, below are two more in which I've "zoomed" the screen even a little more. First, without the green circle:

Can you spot the Beehive now? It looks like a silver blur, between the outstretched arms of the Crab. Below I have reproduced the same screenshot, this time with a circle to identify the Beehive (green circle):

Frankly, unless you live in an exceptional area for viewing the stars, you probably will have a difficult time identifying the stars of Cancer itself (although you will be able to see the Beehive, especially if you have binoculars). Your best course of action is probably to use the much brighter constellations of Gemini and Leo (with the added help of Jupiter) and look about halfway between Gemini and Leo / Jupiter.

If you do that, you will probably exclaim "I think I see it!" Once you think you see it, pull up your binos and point them to the spot. You may need to find Jupiter with the binos, and then swing slowly towards Gemini until you identify the Beehive. With binoculars, it should be unmistakeable.

The Beehive is a bit of a challenge to find, but it is a rare treat, and well worth the effort. The cluster plays an outsized role in many ancient myths (and I have mentioned it in discussions in numerous interviews -- see the interview archive, here). You may also want to check out this earlier post about the Beehive, which contains a Sky & Telescope video with some discussion on finding the Beehive.

However, the "stepping stones" in the series of images above should help you locate the Beehive with confidence! I believe that if you keep a positive attitude and don't give up, and follow the instructions above to go from Orion to Gemini to Leo and then look halfway in-between, you should be able to perceive this beautiful treasure in the heavens -- which is also a treasure conveying ancient wisdom from the Old Ones, for our benefit and enlightenment today!

Get ready for Halloween! (And for All-Hallow's Day, with the teachings of Alvin Boyd Kuhn)

Get ready for Halloween! (And for All-Hallow's Day, with the teachings of Alvin Boyd Kuhn)

image: Wikimedia commons (link).

Halloween approaches in just a few days, but there is still time to get ready . . . by reading the enlightening meditation by Alvin Boyd Kuhn entitled Hallowe'en: A Festival of Lost Meanings.

The entire booklet is only 33 pages long (in its electronic format's electronic pagination -- 64 pages long in the original pagination, of which the "pages" are very short, only a paragraph or two each, with two or three of them appearing on every "page" of the electronic layout), and it is available for your enjoyment on the web here (click on the word "fullscreen" under the image of the book to read it in a book-like format online, selecting either single-page view or two-page view side-by-side).

Don't be fooled by its compact form, however: in this little volume Alvin Boyd Kuhn packs a virtual library's worth of elucidation of the ancient wisdom, as he explores the rich symbology and esoteric instruction available for our edification in the vital twin-holidays of Halloween and All-Saints' Day.

Kuhn begins by explaining that All-Hallow's Eve or the Hallowed Evening, together with All-Hallow's or All-Soul's or All-Saints' Day, is intimately connected with the message of the autumnal equinox, and that it thus stands as one of the four most important festival-days of the annual cycle, alongside the celebrations at the winter solstice, spring equinox, and summer solstice (pages 4 through 8 in Kuhn's original pagination, which are visible on the pages of the online edition linked above -- all subsequent page references will be to the original pagination).

Kuhn sadly predicts that in some future world "of more enlightened intelligence," men and women may look back upon our own age as "the epoch in which the people celebrated a series of religious festivals around the cycle of the year in nearly total ignorance of their true significance" (2). He also imagines that the ancients who have gone on long before us "must register uncomprehending dismay at the sight of our ghastly misconception and utterly travestied motives in our commemoration of the great annual festivals their dramatic genius instituted round the year" -- a melancholy thought (2).

The night revelry of Halloween on October 31, and the daylight commemoration of All Soul's or All Saints' Day, Kuhn argues, were originally intended to powerfully convey the soul's plunge into matter in the incarnation (symbolized by Halloween), and the subsequent glorification of the soul's return to spirit, "the dawn of a new life cycle" (10). 

Kuhn then proceeds to pile on exhibit after exhibit of evidence to support this understanding of the mysterious autumn festival.

The first remarkable insight he brings out is the fact that Halloween is in fact celebrated forty days after the actual date of the fall equinox, which takes place in the northern hemisphere on September 21 or 22 (there is some slippage on the date each year, due to the fact that the earth does not rotate on its axis an exactly even number of days before returning to the same point on its annual orbit around the sun). Forty days after September 21 would be October 31, the day of Halloween, and forty days after September 22 would be November 01, All-Hallow's Day. 

The number 40, Kuhn argues (backing his assertions up with more evidence from ancient scriptures and other sources) represents the time of the germination of a seed, and the time of gestation in the womb (he points out, for example, that the human period of gestation or pregnancy is forty weeks -- a fact which you can easily verify for yourself with a quick search on the internet, which indicates that doctors generally count forty weeks or 280 days, and not "nine months"). 

We have already seen that it is at the September equinox that the soul is "cast down" to incarnation, as discussed in numerous previous posts including this one. Thus, the forty-day period represents the "gestation" of the divine spark within matter (which takes place during this life) prior to bursting forth again to spirit -- which is celebrated on All-Saints' Day, when "All Souls" become "Saints" (11). Halloween represents the incarnation: it is a time of darkness in contrast to the light of spirit, a time of carnality, and a time of donning the form of the animal. Kuhn writes:

The "Holy Night" or "Hallowed Even" was therefore set for the fortieth day following the autumn equinox, with the signification that the soul entered incarnation (Latin carno means "flesh") on September 21, ran its cycle of evolution over its forty days of "incubation" or embodiment in the soil of human life and on October 31 culminated its progress at the end in its final glorification in the hallowed state of incipient godhood. It entered the cycle as the soul of a mortal human being and emerged at the end in the blessed ranks of the gods. 10 - 11.

In another of the absolute jewels of insight with which the book is strewn, Kuhn later describes this same concept by saying: "In body the soul sits or gropes in material darkness until the turn of the cycle brings the dawn of the spiritual day, when it is awakened out of its dreamy condition in the shadows of unreality into the bright day of its full vision of truth" (14). 

Here Kuhn is articulating a declaration which closely echoes the words of the Lakota holy man Black Elk, who said that this life is but a shadow of "the real world that is behind this one," the spirit world. This truth, that this material realm and our incarnate sojourn through it are actually but shadows of the real world of spirit, is embodied in the festival of Halloween, a celebration which revels in the night, in the shadows, and in all that is weird and surreal.

"Hallowe'en is par excellence the ritualization of the Incarnation," Kuhn says.

He then proceeds to go through the rich symbols of the celebration (showing that it has ancient origins, and connections to festivals such as Saturnalia and others), and to demonstrate the ways which they all illuminate aspects of the teaching that our incarnation in these material forms is a temporary plunging of a divine spiritual spark into matter. 

For instance, he notes that the traditional dress of "the Fool" is parti-coloured, that is to say half one color and half another (sometimes including the painting of the face half one color and half another), which visually expresses the mystery that in each one of us there are two natures combined together, both of which are integral to our human experience. It shows, Kuhn says, that our nature "is dually compounded and dually divided, soul and body, god and animal" (39).

The wearing of masks is another expression of the same truth, Kuhn explains, for it viscerally demonstrates the clothing of the inner divine spark with the animal or carnal physical body. "The god in us can only speak out through the lips of our animal selves," Kuhn says (31).

The symbology of the moon itself can be seen to illustrate this concept, for in the reflection upon the moon the sun's original light is only dimly reflected, just as in our incarnate selves the sun-rays of spirit are softened and dimmed by their marriage to matter (52).

On and on the symbols flow, powerfully reinforcing the understanding of Halloween as the celebration of our incarnation. Perhaps the most widely-recognized symbol of Halloween is the jack o'lantern, or pumpkin carved with grinning human features and illuminated with an inner candle. Again, the symbolism could not be more illustrative of our incarnate condition, Kuhn argues. We are an earthly organism with a divine spark inside (57). He notes that this same symbology, of a hidden flame inside of a temporary earthly vessel, is also found in the Old Testament passage of Gideon and the Midianites, in which Gideon instructs each member of his army to hide a lamp inside of a clay pot (Judges 7).

But Kuhn's intention is not merely to list all these symbols, but rather to get at the real question, the deeper question, the real tension that lies at the heart of the celebration of Halloween even to this day, which is this: "does all this animalistic or grotesque imagery mean that the incarnation is bad?" What is the reason that we have a celebration of the carnal and the dark? Why, when we get right down to it, would a divine spark incarnate in a physical body at all?

Kuhn does not shy away from this question, but rather meets it head-on, while declaring that the suppression of the physical side of our nature is as dangerous as the suppression of the spiritual side. He argues that, like the prodigal son in the New Testament parable who came to his realization through reflection on his actions (actions which eventually involved sinking to the level of the swine), it is through contemplation of and reflection upon the lessons of our actions here in the material body that we achieve the spiritual lessons which lead to our transformation.

Using the spiritual picture of Phaeton, the son of the sun-god who was not yet ready to drive the heavenly steeds across the sky, Kuhn explains that we too start out like that young god who cannot handle the powerful horses, but that our plunge will eventually lead to our upward transformation:

The Greek myth of Phaeton, son of Apollo, rashly essaying to drive the sun-chariot of his father across the sky and letting it get out of hand, so that the Sun-God had to strike him down to save the world, is a variant graph of the same conception. It is no derogation of the theological presupposition underlying this delineation of evolutionary process that the youthful god in man's nature had to indulge in a veritable revel of license in his use of the powers of the body which is the kingdom he is given to rule. Otherwise we must ask how he would ever learn their power and master the art of bringing the under his control for their true function in the upward movement which carries both him and the forward to grander being.
As he took the reins of directive rulership in his hands and whipped up the fiery steeds of the physical chariot he must learn to drive, he became familiar with their capabilities and their power, saw how they could be exploited for high service and at any rate took keen note of the outcome of his efforts. It was in this way that his rioting with them brought a return to invaluable benefit to himself. For it is out of reflection upon the consequences of our acts that mind is born. And only when mind assumes full direction of the soul's employment of the life forces will the still higher birth of spirit be brought to pass. Even the fool's folly becomes in the end, through the pain that follows it, life's appointed schoolmaster, our pedagogue in growth. Out of our wildest orgies eventually emerge the principles of wisdom. Our reason returns to us. 32-33.

And thus our being "cast down" into the physical body becomes the vehicle for our gaining of wisdom and our later transcendence and spiritual growth, according to the ancient teaching. As we have already seen, this "casting down" was illustrated in the yearly wheel at the point of the fall equinox -- a point that was associated with the zodiac sign of Virgo. 

And here we see one more brilliant metaphor in the mysterious and little-understood festival of Halloween: the image of the witch. Kuhn explains that the circling of witches around the cauldron perfectly illustrate the cycles of incarnation, and the boiling cauldron itself perfectly illustrates the seething passions and conflicts of this earthly existence (44). The action of the witches dancing around the fire and the cauldron typify the forces which cast us down into this incarnate material existence, personified in the goddess of magic and darkness Hecate herself, whose name Kuhn demonstrates (on pages 47 - 52) to be related to the word hex, which means both "a spell" and (in German) "a witch," but which also relates to the number six, which is the number of the cube and which (unfolded) creates the cross of material existence upon which we are "hexed" or "crossed" in this incarnate existence (for extended discussion of the cross-symbol as representative of our dual state in this incarnate life, see this blog post and follow some of the links within it to previous discussions on the topic, as desired).

Thus the goddess-power who is depicted as sending us into this incarnate life takes the form of Hecate at Halloween, as well as the form of the witches circling and circling around the cauldron. But remember that, as discussed above, the ancient teaching implied that we come down into the incarnation for our benefit, for our transformation, and for our gaining of wisdom, enlightenment, and consciousness. Thus, the very name witch, as Kuhn demonstrates, has at its root the word which gives us "wit" and "wisdom" and "wise" (and "wizard"), and is related to the German word wissen, "to know" (43).

And Halloween, the festival of darkness that was traditionally followed by All-Hallow's Day, remains as a signpost trying to point us to that wisdom: to teach us about this mystery of the incarnation, its purpose and its promise. It remains like an old, weather-beaten mile-marker along an ancient trail: erected in ages long past to convey information, which today we can barely make out. In its use of potent symbols, it continues to carry its ancient message, if we can only remember the key to translating that message.

In this way, it is very much like the message in the stars, and in the Star Myths which continue to carry a message that has somehow been obscured and nearly forgotten, but which can still be deciphered once we recover the key to the cipher. And in fact, the symbols of these annual festivals and the symbols of the stars themselves are very closely aligned -- as we would expect: for does not the celebration of earthly revelries upon important days that are determined by heavenly markers not indicate that the festivals themselves are a form of "bringing down" to earth the markers of the celestial sphere? (What follows is my own added "Star Myth" interpretation to the subjects we have been discussing).

To see what I mean when I say that these ancient festivals with their symbols are a sort of "earthly" form of the celestial markers in the heavens above, look again at the painting above, of the witch drawing her magic circle around a fiery cauldron as the crows gather to watch and participate (by John William Waterhouse, from 1886). Note the symbology which the artist employs: she has a long stick in one hand, and a golden sickle in the other (an instrument fraught with many layers of meaning, but one of them is simply the harvesting of grain or wheat). Nearby there is a cauldron, and watching her intently are the crows.

Now look below at the region of the night sky in which we find the constellation Virgo, the zodiac sign who presides over the autumnal equinox and the "casting down" of souls into incarnation (the point at which the sun's ecliptic drops back down below the celestial equator, and the days once again become shorter than the nights).

image: Stellarium.org

The above screen-shot does not have the outlines as suggested by H. A. Rey, and therefore Virgo is somewhat "incompletely drawn," but I include the "un-labeled" version above so that you can see where the stars are, before I draw in the lines. Virgo is the constellation in the center-left as we look at the image, with the star Spica on her hip, which is labeled. Spica was anciently associated with a sheaf of wheat, as you can see from this older image of the constellation Virgo. This is why the witch in the painting is holding a sickle in one hand. Looking at the outline of Virgo above, can you see why she is holding a long stick (or magic wand) in her other hand?

Below is the exact same portion of the sky, this time labeled to help illustrate the connection:

There is Virgo, casting souls down to incarnation: transforming them into "animal" form with her wand (clothing them in physical matter). Next to her is the brilliant little constellation of Corvus the Crow (here is a previous discussion of this delightful constellation -- easy to spot, during the months in which Virgo is high in the sky during the prime viewing hours of the night, but not right now). Next to Corvus, and composed of much fainter stars, is a constellation known as Crater the Cup, which no doubt functions as the witches' cauldron.

And so the ancient festivals, derived as they were from the motions of the heavens and the heavenly bodies, and the ancient myths, derived from the stars and the constellations, all worked together to convey to us a profound view of nature and of the nature of human existence. As Alvin Boyd Kuhn noted at the beginning of his booklet on Halloween and All-Saints' Day, these ancient signposts have now fallen into such a state of disrepair that few today give them much thought. And yet they are still there, patiently sending forth their message to us, night after night, and year after year.

What a thrill we get when we suddenly begin to understand what they are saying! And what strange and wonderful things they have to say to us!

Happy Birthday to Bootsy Collins!

Happy Birthday to Bootsy Collins!

Happy Birthday today to Bootsy Collins: singer, bassist, songwriter, and space traveler! (October 26)

You can hear his distinctive and pioneering bass on any Parliament song and almost any Funkadelic song, and he continues creating, receiving, and bringing out new music from the celestial spheres, such as Tha Funk Capitol of the World album, which can be played in its entirety at his

official website

The entire mythology of the Funk revolves around the message that all men and women are somehow descended from the stars, which also happens to be true (mythology being one of the most profound ways to convey truth, along with music).

Given the starry nature of Bootsy's music (and his sunglasses and Space Bass), one must wonder if his name is somehow related to the important and Funky celestial constellation of Bootes.

In any case, his influential bass-playing has inspired whole generations of musicians, who are all undoubtedly grateful for his creative genius and his decision to land on this planet when it was passing through this particular point on its orbit! Wishing him many happy returns of the day! 

video links: Mirrors Tell LiesStretchin' Out.