The Jehovah Hoax
Part Three
With Archaya S.
Jay Weidner: We're all going to return to the sacred earth, hopefully, before this collapse of the economy and the world is over. I think sometimes that is really the only answer. I think the virtual reality of this world is disappearing in front of our eyes. A lot of people that are not preparing for what's about to happen are not going to make it. Maybe this is the way nature cleans out the place or something. I don't know. But if you're listening to this, you should be aware of what's something. Do you take care of yourself physically? Do you take care of yourself spiritually? You need to learn the truth. That's really all that's important.
I have a friend who's quite a well?known intellectual. He tells me that the Age of Aquarius is coming here within the next two years, around 2010. He assures me that Christianity will be completely disappeared off the planet in just a few years because he thinks that it was completely a Piscean cultural phenomena, I guess you would say.
Acharya: Yes. I believe that Jesus Christ is a mythical figure who was contrived by the priesthood in order to unify the Roman Empire under one state of religion.
Jay: Yes, some theory.
Acharya: Other than that, they differ with the details. Now, all this stuff, including what you brought up earlier about the old testament figures being mythical, this is only in my first published book which is called "The Christ Conspiracy: the Greatest Story Ever Sold." I delve into this notion that there is no historical evidence for Moses, the exodus, Abraham, Solomon.
Jay: Yes.
Acharya: Abraham and Sarah seemed to be the Indian god and goddess Brahma and Saraswati. I go into this kind of detail in "The Christ Conspiracy," as well as what you were just talking about, this whole Piscean, Aquarian timeline. That it appears, if you go and look at the meanings of these myths and you find out that they are astrotheological ? they have to with the sun, the moon, the stars and the constellations, and so forth ? that we are dealing with these ages, these procession of the equinoxes that's spelled every 2,150 years or so, the sun is back dropped by a new constellation at the horizon as it rises. That's called heliacally. That's where these age names come from. The ancients were pretty well aware, the more educated the priesthoods and so forth, they were pretty well of these various ages, both dated with the possession of the equinoxes and, in fact, of course they started to name them and chart them way back then.
There's a no man's land, so to speak, in between the different ages of a couple of hundred years or so. So I haven't really been able to get a straight answer from an astronomer as to when exactly these ages would change. Like they say, there's this, this comes in a sketchy period.
But around 2,100, 2,025, maybe more or less, years ago, we supposedly moved into a new age. The technology back then was different, obviously, than what we use today, this chart time and so forth. But there was this belief that we were moving in to the age of Pisces. That's why we have all of this discussion in the New Testament about fish.
These are the fishermen. There's the fish on the back of people's cars as actually an ancient symbol. There are the fishes, the communion food because when Christ is resurrected, He asked for fish. It's like, "Why would the resurrected God need some food?" This is a hint that we are dealing with this astrotheological development here.
Prior to that, we had Moses and he's destroying the bull worship, and kind of raising up a lamb. They're starting to slaughter fewer bulls in the Judaic practices and more lambs.
Jay: As we go from Taurus to Aries.
Acharya: Exactly. Then the calling of the shofar, the ram's horn, and so forth. There's this whole lamb stuff going on there. We find that in other cultures as well.
Jay: That's right.
Acharya: We find that other gods, they're associated with the lamb, with Krishna and Horace and so forth. All these motifs start to become very common and very obvious. They're much more interesting. The way they incorporated all these cosmic elements into the religious god and mythology of the day is much more interesting than the story of god coming to earth 2,000 years ago, and this little backwater is filling 90 miles, the area of where the gospel story supposedly took place. This tiny, little backwater in the desert region that does supposedly came to earth at that time. For a few years, he ministered for like two or three years and then was killed. And that's how God is going to fix the sins of the world. This story has really become corrupt and not very attractive or interesting at all. In fact, it's been a source of a lot of grief on this planet, to say the least.
Jay: That's for sure, yes.
Acharya: I don't want to see it replaced by anything worse either.
Jay: No, I don't either.
Acharya: The best way through all of this, as far as I'm concerned, is to know what this motifs stand for. That no culture has a lock on god. No culture is depicting accurately 100 percent. There also has to be room for this idea that we don't need to follow an organized religion. We do have innate morality. That will allow us not to destroy our neighbor in the name of religion, in the name of God. Not to try to enslave our neighbors and other human beings in the name of this God. As you say, if you studied the history and origins of religion, then you are free, really, of that belief because you start to realize there's a much bigger meaning to this stuff. And it doesn't have to do with one guy who's dictating rules, so we all have to follow or we're killed or whatever.
Jay: Yeah I agree. I think it's beginning. I think books like what you're doing, the books that you're writing and things like these are really the beginning of the serious reeducation about what religions are. I think you're right, religions, especially Christianity, was created by the Romans to control populations because it was too hard. The Roman Empire was too big. I'm Jay Weidner. You're listening to "Smoke and Mirrors." We'll be right back. Thanks for listening.