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Astrotheology & Myth

Astrotheology & Myth

The Cosmic Story Written in Stars

There is a deeper current running beneath the stories we’ve been told.


Beneath the pages of scripture, beneath the epics of mythology, beneath the paintings of the masters — a hidden language pulses. It is the language of the cosmos. Of astrotheology — the sacred weaving of astrology, myth, and spiritual story into a symbolic map for the evolution of consciousness.

As a child, I was taught to take the Bible literally. But life and soul have opened me to another possibility:


What if these ancient texts and myths were never meant to be history, but rather, a mirror?


What if they are sacred allegories, encoded with symbols and cycles to help us remember who we are?


The Sun, The Son, and the Sacred Twelve

The story of Jesus, like the myth of Horus, begins with a miraculous birth — “born of a virgin.” But in ancient symbolism, virgin didn’t mean untouched or innocent. It meant whole unto herself — a self-possessed, actualized woman, sovereign and complete. She is the soul unclaimed by external authority, aligned with her inner divinity.


Across myths and time, we see a familiar pattern emerge:

  • A divine child is born at the Winter Solstice, the darkest night of the year — when the Sun begins its return.

  • He is surrounded by twelve — twelve disciples, twelve tribes, twelve labors, twelve zodiac signs.

  • He dies, descends, and resurrects — echoing the Sun’s yearly path through the heavens and the soul’s journey through transformation.

Even in Leonardo da Vinci’s Last Supper, many believe a secret is hidden in plain sight.


Jesus sits at the center — the radiant Sun. Flanking him, twelve figures in groups of three — some scholars suggest they mirror the twelve signs of the zodiac, each with postures and energies reflective of their archetype.

Could it be that the “Son of God” is also the “Sun in the sky”?


Not to diminish the sacred, but to expand it. To see the Divine story as cosmic and archetypal — not confined to one person or path.


Myth, Not as Fiction — But as Inner Truth

Every culture has its resurrection god. Its solar savior. Its virgin-born hero. These myths repeat not because they’re copies, but because they are archetypes — universal patterns that live in the psyche and soul.

  • Horus of Egypt

  • Mithras of Persia

  • Dionysus of Greece

  • Krishna of India

  • Jesus of Nazareth

The myth is not the thing itself — it is the bridge that brings us into relationship with the Mystery. It is the map that points inward.


Astrology: The Sacred Map Within

Astrology is more than personality traits and horoscopes. It is an ancient sacred system — a language of symbols that mirrors the rhythms of nature, the psyche, and the soul.


The zodiac is not a belief system — it is a symbolic mandala. The 12 signs are not just constellations — they are archetypal energies, part of an inner journey encoded in every human being.


To say the Bible, or any spiritual text, holds astrological symbols is not to lessen it — but to broaden its beauty. To see the sacred as cosmic. To imagine that we were given not just commandments, but clues — woven into story, art, and stars.


Believe Nothing, Entertain Possibility

- What if the stories we were told were never meant to be literal?


- What if they are sacred poetry — metaphors for the soul’s journey?


- What if Jesus, Horus, Dionysus, and the Sun are all telling the same story in different tongues?


Not to dismiss faith, but to deepen it.
Not to erase meaning, but to recover the hidden mysticism that has always been there — underneath the doctrine, beneath the dogma, waiting for us to remember.

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