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Moon Myths

  Author:  50864  Category:(Ancient Beliefs) Created:(9/3/2002 5:40:00 PM)
This post has been Viewed (1604 times)

Bil and Hjuki A Norse legend tells of a man who named his children Sun and Moon. This angered the Gods and they took the children up to the heavens where the girl became the Sun's Coachman and the boy was made to guide the moon's waxing and waning. In time the boy carried off two more children, Bil and Hjuki who had been carrying water from a well. It is said that to this day the children can be seen on the Moon's Face... hence the rhyme :

Jack and Jill went up the hill to fetch a pail of water. Jack fell down and broke his crown and Jill came tumbling after. There is significance in the 'pail of water'. Old legends tell of the ability of the reflection of the moon to steal the soul. There are also many references in legend suggesting that the 'stolen soul' is what we see in the face of the moon. The 'Man in the Moon' face and the 'watery' nature of the moon has found it's way into most of the moon myths.

A Christian Myth In the Book of Numbers there is a myth about a man who gathered sticks on a Sunday, the day of the Sabbath. The children of Israel were so enraged by this that they stoned the man. The tale emerged that the man was then thrown up to the Moon for his punishment where he and his sticks can still be seen.

The man in the Moon was caught in a trap, For stealing the thorns from another man's gap, If he had gone by and let the thorns lie, He'd never been man in the Moon so high. The moon's mysteries have been immortalized, even by those who deny any earthly connection to it's affect. There is also the Moon's association with death. In an ancient belief the Moon was the home of death or a 'holding' place from which the dead could be reborn - in some legends the dead return as drops of rain. ("We all come from the Goddess and to Her we will return, like a drop of rain")

A South African Myth This myth delightfully combines the explanation for the marks on the moon, plus the connection between life and death: The Moon told a rabbit to go to Earth and tell everyone that they would be reborn after death. The rabbit, not know for it's intelligence, got the story wrong and told the people that there was no rebirth after death. The Moon was so upset when he heard what had been said that he hit the rabbit with a stick. To this day the rabbit still has a split lip. The rabbit was so upset that before leaving the moon he hit it with his claws, and to this day the moon wears the scars of the rabbits revenge.

Moon Quips Jeremiah gives a warning in the bible:

"Seest thou not what they do in the cities of Judah and Jerusalem? The children gather wood, the fathers kindle the fire, and the women kneed the dough for the moon cakes"

The moon cakes were most likely for the Goddess Astoreth. Such cakes were apparently also made in Greece, Egypt and Jericho (as told in bible stories, the city dedicated to the Moon Goddess, Herah.)

Even as late as the 19th century these cakes were being made in honor of the fertile Moon Goddess. It has been further suggested by historians that Easter's Hot Cross Buns are none other than these same pagan cakes associated with Moon worship and not Christianity at all.

fordi altid hen til mig elske JEG elske jer

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Replies:      
Date: 9/3/2002 5:46:00 PM  From Authorid: 51918    awesome atricle!! this was just great...thanks 4 posting  
Date: 9/3/2002 6:09:00 PM  From Authorid: 19482    COOL! Would you mind if I put this on a website I'm helping to create? You would be given full credit of course   
Date: 9/3/2002 7:03:00 PM  From Authorid: 13546    I just keep on learning the most intersting things.. I am going to book mark this.. I love anything to do with the sun and the moon.. thank you for sharing this! *HUGS*  
Date: 9/3/2002 7:17:00 PM  From Authorid: 56369    oh wow i found this so interesting! thankyou for sharinG!  
Date: 9/3/2002 8:22:00 PM  From Authorid: 52866    Wow, interesting story!  
Date: 9/3/2002 10:12:00 PM  From Authorid: 15070    Another one bookmarked! Excellent post!  
Date: 9/4/2002 7:58:00 AM  From Authorid: 57452    ~Those are pretty interesting..I have heard of a few of them..{:-> Thank you for sharing.

ºMs. H.L. Word of the Dayº

»»hinterland: backcountry
  
Date: 9/4/2002 10:18:00 PM  From Authorid: 26452    Oh wow, this was very intrested! I love learing myths and stories about the Moon, got anymore?  
Date: 9/5/2002 1:05:00 PM  From Authorid: 52187    kewl...I still dont know what you are doing with the last sentance...  
Date: 9/8/2002 8:54:00 AM  From Authorid: 8726    very very interesting! thanks for sharing  
Date: 9/8/2002 7:19:00 PM  From Authorid: 8214    this was certainly a neat post.  
Date: 9/25/2002 6:23:00 PM  From Authorid: 59132    Actually the Jack and Jill nursery rhyme was about 2 kings, who lived togather and were ridiculed by the towns people.

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