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God-Men Like Jesus
    It seems to me like there are an awful lot a Christians out there that seem absolutely positive that Jesus is, of course, unique and the first of his kind.  They are unaware that the myth of their Christ is similar to several other god-men myths.  Here are some of those other mythical god-men that Jesus, the Christian Messiah, apparently shares roots with.  While most Christians are unaware of these god-men, others will deny their existence and say that I (or anyone else who mentions them) is telling a lie.  If not that, the devil simply planted the story of Jesus into the minds of people long ago, to lead the astray from the true Christ. 
Select a God
Attis of Phrygia      Dionysus/Bacchus     Horus/Osiris of Egypt     Krishna of India

Mithra of Persia    Zoroaster/Zarathustra    
From The Christ Conspiracy: The Greatest Story Ever Sold by Acharya S (Adventures Unlimited, 1999) pp 107-123
If you know of more god-men like Jesus that should be on here, go to my contact page and let me know.  Thanks.
Attis of Phrygia

--Attis was born on December 25 of the Virgin Nana.
--He was considered the savior who was slain for the salvation of mankind.
--His body as bread was eaten by his worshippers
--His priests were “eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven.”
--He was both the Divine Son and the Father.
--On “Black Friday,” he was crucified on a tree, from which his holy blood ran down to redeem the earth.
--He descended into the underworld.
--After three days, Attis was resurrected on March 25 (as tradition held of Jesus) as the “Most High God.



Dionysus/Bacchus

     Dionysus or Bacchus is thought of as being Greek, but he is a remake of the Egyptian god Osiris, whose cult extended throughout a large part of the ancient world for thousands of years.  Dionysus’s religion was well-developed in Thrace, northeast of Greece, and Phrygia, which became Galatia, where Attis also later reigned.  Although a Dionysus is best remembered for the rowdy celebrations in his name, which was Latinized as Bacchus, he had many other functions and contributed several aspects to the Jesus character:

--Dionysus was born of a virgin on December 25 and, as the Holy Child, was placed in a manger.
--He was a traveling teacher who performed miracles.
--He “rode in a triumphal procession on an ass.”
--He was a sacred king killed and eaten in an eucharistic ritual for fecundity and purification.
--Dionysus rose from the dead on March 25.
--He was the God of the Vine, and turned water into wine.
--He was called “King of Kings” and “God of Gods.”
--He was considered the “Only Begotten Son,” Savior,” “Redeemer,” “Sin Bearer,” Anointed One,” and the “Alpha and Omega.”
--He was identified with the Ram or Lamb.
--His sacrificial title of “Dendrites” or “Young Man of the Tree” intimates he was hung on a tree or crucified. 

     As Walker says, Dionysus was “a prototype of Christ with a cult center at Jerusalem,” where during the 1st century BCE he was worshiped by Jews . . . Dionysus/Bacchus’s symbol was “IHS” or “IES,” which became “Iesus” or “Jesus.”  The “IHS” is used to this day in Catholic liturgy and iconography.
Horus/Osiris of Egypt


     In the Egyptian myth, Horus and his once-and-future Father, Osiris, are frequently interchangeable, as in “I and my Father are one.”  Concerning Osiris, Walker says:

          Of all savior-gods worshiped at the beginning of the Christian era, Osiris may have contributed
          more details to the evolving Christ figure than any other.  Already very old in Egypt, Osiris was
          identified with nearly every other Egyptian god and was on the way to absorbing them all.  He
          had well over 200 divine names.  He was called the Lord of Lords, King of Kings, God of Gods. 
         He was the Resurrection and the Life, the Good Shepherd, Eternity and Everlastingness, the god
         who “made men and women to be born again.”  Budge says, “From first to last, Osiris was to the
          Egyptians the god-man who suffered, an died, and rose again, and reigned eternally in heaven. 
          They believed that they would inherit eternal life, just as he had done . . .”
               Osiris’s coming was announced by Three Wise Men: the three stars Mintaka, Anilam, and
          Alnitak in the belt of Orion, which point directly to Osiris’s star in the east, Sirius (Sothis),
          significator of his birth . . .
               Certainly Osiris was a prototypical Messiah, as well as a devoured Host.  His flesh was eaten
          in the form of communion cakes of wheat, the “plant of Truth.” . . . The cult of Osiris contributed
          a  number of ideas and phrases to the Bible.  The 23rd Psalm copied an Egyptian text appealing
          to  Osiris the Good Shepherd to lead the deceased to the “green pastures” and “still waters” of the
          nefer-nefer land, to restore the soul to the body, and to give protection in the valley of the shadow
          of death (the Tuat).  The Lord’s Prayer was prefigured by an Egyptian hymn to Osiris-Amen
          beginning, “O Amen, O Amen, who are in heaven.”  Amen was also invoked at the end of every
         prayer.

     As Col. James Chruchward naively exclaims, “The teachings of Osiris and Jesus are wonderfully alike.  Many passages are identically the same, word for word.”
    
     Osiris was also the god of the vine and a great travelling teacher who civilized the world.  He was the ruler and judge of the dead.  In his passion, Osiris was plotted against and killed by Set and “the 72.”  Like that of Jesus, Osiris’s resurrection served to provide hope to all that they may do likewise and become eternal. 

     Osiris’s “son” or renewed incarnation, Horus, shares the following in common with Jesus:

--Horus was born of the virgin Isis-Merion December 25 in a cave/manger with his birth being announced by a star in the East and attended by three wise men.
--His earthly father was named “Seb” (“Joseph”).
--He was of royal descent.
--At at 12, he was a child teacher in the Temple, and at 30, he was baptized having disappeared for 18 years.
--Horus was baptized in the river Eridanus or Iarutana (Jordan) by “Anup the Baptizer” (“John the Baptist”), who was decapitated.
--He had 12 desciples, two of who were his “witnesses” and were named “Anup” and “Aan” (the two “Johns”).
--He performed miracles, exorcised demons and raised El-Azarus (“El-Osiris”), from the dead.
--Horus walked on water.
--His personal epithet was “Iusa,” the “ever-becoming son” of  “Ptah,” the “Father.”  He was thus called “Holy Child.”
--He delivered a “Sermon on the Mount” and his followers recounted the “Sayings of Iusa.”
--Horus was transfigured on the Mount.
--He was crucified between two thieves, buried for three days in a tomb, and resurrected.
--He was also the “Way, the Truth, the Light,” “Messiah,” “God’s Anointed Son,” “the “Son of Man,” the “Good Shepherd,” the “Lamb of God,” the “Word made flesh,” the “Word of Truth,” etc.
--He was “the Fisher” and was associated with the Fish (“Ichthys”), Lamb and Lion.
--He came to fulfill the Law.
--Horus was called “the KRST,” or “Anointed One.”
--Like Jesus, “Horus was supposed to reign one thousand years.”

     Furthermore, inscribed about 3,500 years ago [1500 years before Jesus’ alleged advent] on the walls of the Temple at Luxor were images of the Annunciation, Immaculate Conception, Birth and Adoration of Horus, with Thoth announcing to the Virgin Isis that she will conceive Horus; with Kneph the “Holy Ghost,” impregnating the virgin; and with the infant being attended bh three kings, or magi, bearing gifts.  In addition, in the catacombs at Rome are pictures of the baby Horus being held by the virgin mother Isis—the original “Madonna and Child.” As Massey says:
    
          It was the Gnostic art that reproduced the Hathor-Meri and Horus of Egypt as the Virgin
          and child-Christ of Rome . . . You poor idiotai, said the Gnostics [to the early Christians],
          you have mistaken the mysteries of old for modern history, and accepted literally all that
          was only meant mystically.
Krishna of India

   The similarities between the Christian character and the Indian messiah Krishna number in the hundreds, particularly when the early Christian texts now considered apocrypha are factored in.  It should be noted that a common earlier English spelling of Krishna was “Christna,” which reveals its relation to “Christ.”  Also, in Bengali, Krishna is reputedly “Christos,” which is the same as the Greek for “Christ” and which the soldiers of Alexander the Great called Krishna.  It should be further noted that, as with Jesus, Buddha and Osiris, many people have believed and continue to believe in a historical Krishna.  The following is a partial list of the correspondences between Jesus and Krishna:
--Krishna was born of  the Virgin Devaki (“Divine One”) on December 25.
--His earthly father was a carpenter, who was off in the city paying tax while Krishna was born.
--His birth was signaled by a star in the east and attended by angels and shepherds, at which time he was presented with spices.
--The heavenly hosts danced and sang at his birth.
--He was persecuted by a tyrant who ordered the slaughter of thousands of infants.
--Krishna was anointed on the head with oil by a woman whom he healed.
--He is depicted as having his foot on the head of a serpent.
--He worked miracles and wonders, raising the dead and healing lepers, the deaf and the blind.
--Krishna used parables to teach the people about charity and love, and he “lived poor and he loved the poor.”
--He castigated the clergy, charging them with “ambition and hypocrisy . . . Tradition says he fell victim to their vengeance.”
--Krishna’s “beloved disciple” was Arjuina or Ar-jouan (Jouhn).
--He was transfigured in front of his disciples.
--He gave his disciples the ability to work miracles.
--His path was “strewn with branches.”
--In some traditions he died on a tree or was crucified between two thieves.
--Krishna was killed around the age of 30, and the sun darkened at his death.
--He rose from the dead and ascended to heaven “in the sight of all men.”
--He was depicted on a cross with nail-holes in his feet, as well as having a heart emblem on his clothing.
--Krishna is the “lion of the tribe of Saki.”
--He was called the “Shepherd of God” and considered the “Redeemer,” “Firstborn,” “Sin-Bearer,” “Liberator,” “Universal Word.”
--He was deemed the “Son of God” and “our Lord and Savior,” who came to earth to die for man’s salvation.
--He was the second person of the Trinity.
--His disciples purportedly bestowed upon him the title “Jezeus,” or “Jeseus,” meaning “pure essence.”
--Krishna is to return to judge the dead, riding on a white horse, and to do battle with the “Prince of Evil,” who will desolate the earth.
Mithra of Persia

--Mithra was born of a virgin on December 25 in a cave, and his birth was attended by shepherds bearing gifts.
--He was considered a great traveling teacher and master.
--He had 12 companions or disciples.
--Mithra’s followers were promised immortality.
--He performed miracles.
--As the “great bull of the Sun,” Mithra sacrificed himself for world peace.
--He was buried in atomb and after three days rose again.
--His resurrection was celebrated every year.
--He was called “the Good Shepherd” and identified with both the Lamb and the Lion.
--He was considered the “Way, the Truth and the Light,” and the “Logos,” [Word] “Redeemer,” “Savior” and “Messiah.”
--His sacred day was Sunday, the “Lord’s Day,” hundreds of years before the appearance of Christ.
--Mithra had his principal festival on what was later to become Easter.
--His religion had a eucharist or “Lord’s Supper,” at which Mithra said, “He who shall nto eat of my body nor drink of my blood so that he may be one with me and I with him, shall not be saved.”
--“His annual sacrifice is the Passover of the Magi, a symbolical atonement of pledge of moral and physical regeneration.”

     Furthermore, the Vatican itself is built upon the papacy of Mithra, and the Christian hierarchy is nearly identical to the Mithraic version it replaced . . .
. . . Virtually all of the elements of the Catholic ritual, from miter to wafer to altar to doxology, are directly taken from earlier Pagan mystery religions.
Zoroaster/Zarathustra

--Zoroaster was born of a virgin and “immaculate conception by a ray of divine reason.”
--He was baptized in a river.
--In his youth he astounded wise men with his wisdom.
--He was tempted in the wilderness by the devil.
--He began his ministry at age 30.
--Zoroaster baptized with water, fire and “holy wind.”
--He cast out demons and restored the sight to a blind man.
--He taught about heaven and hell, and revealed mysteries, including resurrection, judgment, salvation and the apocalypse.
--He had a sacred cup or grail.
--He was slain.
--His religion had a eucharist.
--He was the “Word made flesh.”
--Zoroaster’s followers expected a “second coming” in the virgin-born Saoshynt or Savior, who is to come in 2341 CE and begin his ministry at age 30, ushering in a golden age.
Attis of Phrygia    Dionysus/Bacchus   Horus/Osiris   Krishna of India   Mithra of Persia   Zoroaster/Zarathustra
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Attis of Phrygia    Dionysus/Bacchus   Horus/Osiris   Krishna of India   Mithra of Persia   Zoroaster/Zarathustra
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Attis of Phrygia    Dionysus/Bacchus   Horus/Osiris   Krishna of India   Mithra of Persia   Zoroaster/Zarathustra
Attis of Phrygia    Dionysus/Bacchus   Horus/Osiris   Krishna of India   Mithra of Persia   Zoroaster/Zarathustra
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Attis of Phrygia    Dionysus/Bacchus   Horus/Osiris   Krishna of India   Mithra of Persia   Zoroaster/Zarathustra
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Attis of Phrygia   Dionysus/Bacchus   Horus/Osiris   Krishna of India   Mithra of Persia   Zoroaster/Zarathustra