|
Seach the Archives
Spiritual
Retreats 2008 |
See our incredible blog with lots of free stuff! Get it sent to your email here Receive our monthly email newsletter! What
information would you like?
|
|
Behind the Vernal EquinoxBy Robin DuMolinHalfway between the solstices in late March and in late September, there are two days when the northern and southern hemispheres receive the same amount of sunlight and the days and nights are of the same length. Then the tilt of the Earth's axis is not towards the Sun, but lies at a right angle to an imaginary Earth -Sun line. At the Equator, the Sun is directly overhead. These days are the equinoxes. Equinox means "equal night." Ancient people regarded the equinoxes, like the solstices, as significant moments of the year. Equinox Mythology
Aphrodite the goddess of love and fertility fell in love with the handsome Adonis. She hid him in a box so no one could see him. She then gave the box to Persephone, the queen of the underworld for safekeeping. She opened the box and also fell in love with Adonis and refused to return him to Aphrodite. Aphrodite mourned her loss, and as a result the land became barren. Zeus, her father tried to intervene, but neither goddess would give up Adonis. Zeus finally decreed that Adonis would spend a third of the year with each goddess and one third of the year alone. So each Spring Adonis returns to Aphrodite and each winter he spends with Persephone in the underworld. Dionysus, the god of wine was the son of Zeus and Semele, a mortal princess. Zeus promised Semele anything she asked of him. Semele was pregnant and asked only to see him in his splendor as the god of gods. Zeus knew no mortal could witness this sight and live. Despite this Semele insisted. She died and Zeus took their baby from her body and hid it within his own until the baby was born. Dionysus was raised by nymphs, and when he grew up he travelled to faraway lands, performing feats that proved his godhead. What he longed for was the mother he never knew, so he went to the underworld to find her. When he found her he defied death and escaped death with his mother. He brought her to Mt. Olympus where she was allowed to dwell with the gods. The worship of Dionysus took place not in temples or wild places, but in the theatres, the plays put on about him were acts of worship and the forerunners of today's "Passion Plays." Dionysus was killed, but because he had overcome death, he rose again. As the god of the vine he dies each year and then resurrects. His rites were held in spring, when the vines put forth new shoots. In all the numerous myths having to do with resurrection, the element that causes the resurrection is love. Seasonal Associations
Celebrations and Beliefs
In the Amazon, the equinoxes coincide with the start of the two rainy seasons- one in March, the other in September. The Desana and Barasana Indians see connections between everything that happens on Earth - and particularly, the availability of fish and game animals with what they see in the sky. They see the night sky as a great brain, with its two hemispheres divided by the Milky Way. According to their myths, on the First Day the Sun Father fertilized the world at its center by creating a perfectly vertical rod. It was from this spot that the first people emerged. This place is the equator. Each spring and fall equinox, when the Sun is directly overhead, and an upright staff casts no shadow, these Indians believe the Sun's rays are again directly penetrating the Earth, making the world fertile and new. Sources: Ancient Ways - Pauline Campanelli
|
Classes at the Academy for Psychic Studies are enrolling now!
"Freedom
is the Essence of Life"
Academy
for Psychic Studies | International
Spiritual Hypnotherapy Institute | Total
Prosperity Radio
American
Spirit Newspaper | Church
of Common Sense | Retreats
Page last updated February 8, 2008
Sterling Rose Press
PO Box 14341, Berkeley, CA 94712
800-642-WELL
publisher@americanspiritnews.com
© 2008 Sterling Rose Press