Scholars when they research the polytheistic gods of ancient civilizations and cultures start with the assumption that the gods are imaginary inventions of the fertile human mind and purely mythical beings. I start with the opposite assumption, that is that ancient peoples depicted real (extraterrestrial) beings which to them were so advanced as to be deities - the gods. These ‘ancient astronauts’ have an actual ongoing presence which has filtered down through the present day, achieving now an actual quasi-mythology of its own, not just fictional as in say “Stargate”, but as a basis for serious speculation such as Erich von Daniken’s or even my own minor musings.
Before embarking on my little fairy tale, I note that for such taken-for-granted imaginary beings, the polytheistic gods and their relationships and adventures are spelled out in exquisite detail. I mean this was way before multi-season TV shows and volumes of related paperback novels for mass consumption. I mean we know an awful lot about Captain Kirk and Sherlock Holmes and Harry Potter. But were there writers of polytheistic fiction back then who knew perfectly well they were fabricating the lives and times of the gods for consumption by and entertainment for the great unwashed and kept quiet about their literary fictions? Probably not! I don’t think the gods were literary characters invented out of whole cloth. Dare say a non-fictional biography of (fill in the blank - pick a god, any god) would be far more detailed than a similar tome devoted to God or Jesus Christ (J.C.).
The second point from the outset is that IMHO the polytheistic gods aren’t gods but ‘gods’. We think of them as the mythological gods but they weren’t actual gods but real alien beings. Now let’s get on with the tale.
1) Once upon a time, a long time ago, a group of boldly going extraterrestrials discovered Planet Earth and took dominion over it, like humans take dominion over national parks and reserves, but starting at a time before humans.
Discussion: If you assume advanced extraterrestrial civilizations exist; If you assume that some advanced civilizations arose way, way, way before human civilization did; if you assume that they (or some of them) will boldly go and explore their galaxy; if you assume that there are no laws of physics that prevent subluminal space travel (there aren’t); and if you go along with calculations that suggest that the time it takes to explore every nook and cranny of the galaxy is but a short fraction of the age of the galaxy; if you accept that Planet Earth isn’t cloaked/invisible; then it’s logical that one of more such extraterrestrial civilizations have noted and logged Planet Earth in their galactic databanks, and because Earth is such a bio-friendly place, took a liking to the place, perhaps as a nice vacation spot for R&R.
There are many references in creation times and myths to the concept of paradise, perhaps ultimately nice vacation spots for the extraterrestrials, who we’ve come to identify with as the ‘gods’. . For example, the ancient Sumerians had this paradise called Dilmun, but it was a resort of, and for, the ‘gods’, not for humans. Dilmun was something like Eden, though who’s to say Eden didn’t serve as ‘God’s’ paradise retreat – a summer vacation home away from His day-to-day abode in heaven? In this case, ‘heaven’ is God’s home base, or in the case of the Norse ‘gods’, Asgard is their heaven equivalent, or perhaps spaceship. In Star Trek terms, ‘heaven’ or Asgard is the NCC 1701 Enterprise . So perhaps we have Starship Heaven and Starship Asgard!
One could argue that you’d need a very long lifespan to get subluminally from there to here. While there are other ways around that chestnut, recall that the ‘gods’ are immortal, or as close to it (in the human mind at least) as makes no odds. Whether it’s natural or technologically enhanced immortality is of no consequence in this case.
2) Now I’ve no idea where they came from except from somewhere out there. Different myths and legends point to different points of origin, all of which could well be the case.
Discussion: In the case of the ancient Greek ‘gods’, there’s some association with the stars, or constellations – the Pleiades and Orion in particular. The Greek Andromeda is also associated with a constellation of stars. Now a constellation is just a random grouping of stars usually not in close association with each other, but when viewed from Earth against a ‘flat’ blackboard or background of space, tend to form a sort of picture and our minds are very good at finding patterns and connecting the dots when presented with random configurations. The Big Dipper and the Southern Cross are two well known examples. Of course the ancients, our remote ancestors, didn’t know that. It was probably just as logical to associate a ‘god’ or ‘gods’ with a constellation as with one specific star (which we of course would do today). It’s sufficient for the sake of this argument that there is an association between the ‘gods’ (or at least some ‘gods’) and outer space. It seems as if nearly every culture’s ‘gods’ has some affinity with various stars, constellations, etc.
3) In the time of humans, sometime later on down the line, these extraterrestrials would become, in the minds of the humans, the ‘gods’. But the so-called ‘gods’ (including ‘God’) were never real supernatural deities, but ‘flesh-and-blood’ extraterrestrials with advanced technology and powers.
Discussion: How would our ancient ancestors, with no knowledge of physics and chemistry and relatively little of what we’d call modern day astronomy, and who had only the rudiments of mechanical and construction engineering (though sufficient to build the pyramids, etc.) but certainly nothing in the way of being knowledgeable of electrical or nuclear engineering or abilities in same, view sky beings who had all this sort of advanced technology and powers. As equals? No, probably just as deities or ‘gods’.
What’s Zeus and Thor noted for? Lightning or thunderbolts, which is what ancient humans might have interpreted laser and particle bean weapons as, sort of like that envisioned as part of America’s Strategic Defence Initiative (SDI) – the ‘Star Wars’ program. ‘God’s’ been known to toss around a thunderbolt or two as well. That’s an example of advanced technology or powers.
4) The ‘gods’ reign over their dominion of mankind wasn’t always benign and just.
Discussion: Well any readers of the Bible are well aware that ‘God’ has a big temper and a short fuse. Our so called ‘loving God’ certainly has directly caused massive death and destruction, so much so that I’d rather find my ‘loving’ in the arms of someone else. The ‘gods’ on the other hand are very loving, but often treat us mortals as their sexual playthings. Zeus apparently fathered a considerable proportion of the ancient Greek populus via mortal women and not via Mrs. Zeus – Perseus for one; Herakles (Hercules) was another; ditto Helen of Troy, the list goes on and on. And Zeus wasn’t the only randy ‘god’. That the ‘gods’ were sex machines, well that has filtered down to us even via such means as Richard Wagner’s four-part mega-opera “Der Ring Des Nibelungen”. In the second instalment, “Die Walkure”, we find the head god Wotan (Odin in Norse mythology) has fathered twins via a mortal woman, Siegmund and Sieglinde (who would in turn have a role in the hay and produce the flawed hero, Siegfried). Needless to say, the ‘gods’ hardly offer up any alimony or child support!
To be continued…
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