What Jesus has in common with Horus?

LIGHTBEING

Registered Senior Member
Check this out, I was just reading this on the net...seems very interesting. I never knew they had so much in common.

Horus of Egypt

The Egyptian sun god Horus, who predated the Christ character by thousands of years, shares the following in common with Jesus:

Horus was born of the virgin Isis-Meri on December 25th 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 age 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 disciples, two of whom 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."


Seems to me that Jesus was created from another Saviour type God that pre-dated him thousands of years!!!!!
 
Jesus was not of royal descent. Horus wasn't born in a manger...
Anyways, I always believed that Jesus was a fabrication composed of various Greek gods/heroes and figures from other minor religions/cults:

Contrary to popular belief, there was no single man at the genesis of Christianity but many characters rolled into one. The majority of these characters were personifications of the ubiquitous solar myth, whose adventures were well known, as reflected in the stories of such popular deities as Mithra, Hercules, Dionysus and many others throughout the Roman Empire and beyond. In reality, the story of Jesus portrayed in the Gospels is nearly identical to that of the earlier savior-gods Krishna and Horus. These redeemer tales are similar not because they reflect the actual exploits of a variety of men who did and said identical things, but because they represent the same extremely ancient Core of knowledge that revolved around the celestial bodies and natural forces.

At least this wasn't pulled off some random website - read "The Christ Conspiracy" by Acharya S, in stores now.

Oh hey - they actually do mention Horus in there. Not to mention Jesus is derived from the God of Wine/Alcohol... thoughts anyone, or is this just going to be another atheist circle jerk?
 
Jesus was not of royal descent. Horus wasn't born in a manger...
They're details :)

Anyway, very interesting stuff there Lightbeing

->EDIT<-

Why would someone of Royal Assent be born in a manger???
 
Okay, sorry if I was being a Royal Ass
but nobody can be expected to believe random readings pulled off the internet.

So I'd like sources, if it isn't too much trouble. And Lightbeing, what exactly does this information signify - to you, that is.
 
Lightbeing - where did you find it?

I know of some similarities betwen Jesus and Horus, but I'm not sure all of those listed are true. Still, they're all myths, different interpretations, versions etc. :)
 
And Lightbeing, what exactly does this information signify - to you, that is.

It signifies to me that Christianity and Jesus were created from earlier civilizations. Many passages in the Bible were taken from other stories and epics. This is but another thing Christians have convientently overlooked.

Also, here is a little background on me. I'm open to the idea of "God" but take a logical approach with everything in Life. Therefore, I am in no way Religious. You may call me Agnostic. However, my wife is a Born-again Christian....do I need to continue......... :D
 
There appears to be no evidencde that Horus was supposed to have done any of those things.
 
Thought this might be of interest ...

The name "Horus" is a general catchall for multiple deities, the
most famous of whom is Harseisis (Heru-sa-Aset) or Horus-son-of-
Isis (sometimes called Horus the Younger) who was conceived
after the death of his father, Osiris, and who later avenged him.
In all the Horus deities the traits of kingship, sky and solar
symbology, and victory reoccur. As the prototype of the earthly
king, there were as many Horus gods as there were rulers of
Egypt, if not more.

The oldest of the Horus gods is appropriately named Horus the
Elder (Heru-ur), and was especially venerated in pre-Dynastic
Upper Egypt along with Hathor. In this very ancient form, Horus is
also a creator god, the falcon who flew up at the beginning of
time. The pre-Pharaohnic rulers of Upper Egypt were
considered "shemsu-Heru" or "followers of Horus", and the
original Horus is himself considered in some myths to be the
brother of Seth and Osiris, second-born of the five children of Geb
and Nut (Osiris, Horus, Seth, Isis, Nephthys). Horus the Elder's
city was Letopolis, and his eyes were thought to be the sun and
moon. When these two heavenly bodies are invisible (as on the
night of the new moon) he goes blind and takes the name
Mekhenty-er-irty, "He who has no eyes". When he recovers them,
he becomes Khenty-irty, "He who has eyes". A warrior-god armed
with a sword, Horus could be especially dangerous to those
around him in his vision-deprived state, and during one battle in
particular he managed to not only knock off the heads of his
enemies but of the other deities fighting alongside him, thus
plunging the world into immediate confusion that was only
relieved when his eyes returned.

Other notable Horus gods are the previously mentioned
Harseisis, as well as Horus of Behdet (sometimes called simply
Behdety) who was represented as a winged sun disk, Anhur (a
form of Horus the Elder and Shu), Horakhety (Ra-Heru-akhety)
who was a syncretism of Ra and Horus, and Harpokrates (Heru-
pa-khered) or Horus the Child. In the form of Harpokrates, Horus
is the danger-beset son of Isis with one finger to his lips,
signifying his childish nature (also evident in his princely sidelock
and naked status). Harpokrates represented not only the royal
heir, but also the newborn sun.

Horus deities are frequently depicted as hawks or hawk-headed
men, though some are represented as fully human. The pharaoh
was considered to be the Living Horus, the temporal stand-in for
Horus in the earthly domain. As the opponent of Seth (who,
though initially an Upper Egyptian deity himself, later came to
represent not only Lower Egypt but the desert surrounding
Egypt), Horus is alternately a brother vying for the throne and
unification of Egypt (Horus the Elder), or a royal heir come to
reclaim his inheritance (Horus the Younger).

Horus can be seen at the top of the serekh of early kings, though
in very rare cases his place was usurped by Set (Peribsen,
Dynasty 2) or even shared with him (Khasekhemwy, Dynasty 2).
Horus is also depicted on the famous Narmer palette along with
Bat, an earlier form of Hathor.

A passage from the Coffin Texts (passage 148) sums up Horus in
his own words:

"I am Horus, the great Falcon upon the ramparts of the house of
him of the hidden name. My flight has reached the horizon. I have
passed by the gods of Nut. I have gone further than the gods of
old. Even the most ancient bird could not equal my very first
flight. I have removed my place beyond the powers of Set, the
foe of my father Osiris. No other god could do what I have done. I
have brought the ways of eternity to the twilight of the morning.
I am unique in my flight. My wrath will be turned against the
enemy of my father Osiris and I will put him beneath my feet in
my name of 'Red Cloak'."

"Myth and Symbol in Ancient Egypt" by R.T. Rundle Clark, p. 216

Source:
"Horus." Encyclopedia Mythica
 
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