The Lion
and Unicorn Testify of Christ, Part 1: The Cornerstone Constellations
by John P.
Pratt
The
four "cornerstone" constellations, which date back to the Prophet
Enoch, correspond to the four faces of the cherubim and the four
principal tribes of Israel. Their symbols of the lion, eagle/serpent,
man and wild ox (unicorn) are emblazoned on family coats of arms
and the banners of nations. But most importantly, each testifies
of a different aspect of the life of Jesus Christ.
Last month's
article, "The
Constellations Testify of Christ" was an introduction to understanding
how the constellation figures revealed to the Prophet Enoch over
5,000 years ago testify of antediluvian knowledge of the coming
of the Messiah, Jesus Christ. References to the constellations found
in the scriptures were reviewed, as well as how the same symbolic
imagery was employed by many prophets. Now let us focus on four
of the most important constellations, and their four bright "royal
stars."
The Four Royal
Stars
Several ancient cultures designated four bright stars in the zodiac
as the "four corners of the earth" or the "four royal stars." At the
time the constellations were drawn by Enoch, these four stars were
near the sun's location in the heavens on the first day of autumn,
winter, spring and summer, and were thus in four of the most important
locations in the sky. The identity of these four stars is well known
because there are, in fact, four bright stars which fit these requirements
admirably. First, the star Antares is a bright red star, which anciently
marked the autumnal equinox, that is, the place in the sky where the
sun appears on the first day of autumn. The next star in the sequence
is Fomalhaut, which is also a bright star, marking winter. The next
star is Aldebaran, another very bright red star located 180.0°
around the ecliptic (the apparent path of the sun through the stars)
from Antares. Thus, it precisely marked the spring equinox when Antares
marked the autumn. Finally, the bright star Regulus, located almost
exactly on the ecliptic, marked summer. Regulus, meaning "the Prince,"
was traditionally the leader of these four royal stars.[1]
Each of the
four royal stars is in one constellation of the zodiac, which is
the circle of twelve constellations around the ecliptic. Antares
is located at the heart of the Scorpion (Scorpius). Fomalhaut is
located at the end of the rivers of water being poured out by the
Water Bearer (Aquarius). Aldebaran is located at the eye of the
Bull (Taurus). Finally, Regulus is located at the heart of the Lion
(Leo), which is the king of the constellations, even as the lion
is called the king of beasts. These are called the four cornerstone
constellations in this article because they form the corners of
a great square in the sky and also provide a foundation for understanding
gospel symbolism.
Two of the
royal stars are listed by the ancients as being shared by two constellations.
Antares is not only the heart of the scorpion, it is also the heel
of the Serpent Bearer (Ophiuchus), [2] who was
encircled by a great serpent (Serpens) and who is stepping on the
body and head of the Scorpion. Fomalhaut is not only in the stream
of the Water Bearer, it is also in the Head of the Southern Fish
(Piscis Australis).[3]
In the case
of the Scorpion/Serpent pair, there is a third constellation which
is very closely associated with them. It is the Eagle (Aquila),
which is located near the tail of the Serpent. The Eagle has been
considered to typify the enemy of the serpent and is often shown
holding the Serpent in its claws, even as the Serpent Bearer is
crushing the Scorpion.
The Four Cornerstone
Constellations
Four
Faces of the Cherubim. Both Ezekiel and John the Revelator describe
creatures which correspond to the four cornerstone constellations.
Ezekiel describes creatures with four faces: the face of a lion, of
an ox, of a man and of an eagle, and later identifies them as cherubim
(Ezek. 1:10, 10:14, 20-22). The first three of those forms correspond
to the Lion, the Bull, and the Water Bearer constellations. The fourth
apparently corresponds to the Eagle, the constellation which is often
substituted for the serpent/scorpion when symbolizing the celestial
aspect of the fourth cornerstone.
John the Revelator
also describes four creatures, each of which is found on one side
of the throne of God. One was like a lion, one like a calf, one
like a man, and one like a flying eagle (Rev. 4:7). Here again we
find the same four creatures which correspond to those four constellations,
in this case given in the reverse order as they are found in the
zodiac, which puts the leader first. The fact that these four symbols
are found in a heavenly vision of the throne of God is strong corroboration
of the claim in the Book of Enoch that an angel revealed the figures
of the constellations to the Prophet Enoch.
Four Principal
Tribes of Israel. Jacob (Israel) had twelve sons, and each of
them is associated in Hebrew tradition with one of the twelve constellations
of the zodiac.[4] Hebrew scholars are not sure
of the correspondence of all twelve, but the identity of the four
which refer to the royal constellations are clear from the scriptures.
They are the four principal tribes: Reuben, Judah, Dan, and Joseph.
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The
Water Bearer pours out a river onto the Southern Fish.
Each of those four tribes is associated with one of the royal constellations
in the blessing given them by Jacob or by Moses. Reuben was told he
is "unstable as water," which alludes to the Water Bearer. The name
Reuben, meaning "Behold a son," also ties him to the Water Bearer,
which, of all the zodiac constellations, has the figure of a man.
He is also mentioned as being over the "excellency of power" (Gen.
49:3-4)
"Judah is a
lion's whelp" (Gen. 49:9) ties him to the Lion. Moreover, John refers
to Christ as "the lion of the tribe of Judah" (Rev. 5:5), again
linking Judah to the lion. The Lion represents the King, and Judah
began the royal lineage through which the Davidic line of kings
came. The name Judah means "praised," suggesting that the kings
who would come through him (especially Christ) would be praised.
"Dan shall
be a serpent...that biteth the horse heels" (Gen. 49:17), which
parallels the symbolism of the Scorpion/Serpent, depicted stinging
the Serpent Bearer in the heel. The name Dan means "judge" and the
serpent symbolizes the wisdom of a judge. The serpent is acknowledged
by the Lord as being one of the wisest of his creatures, probably
because of its having the wise judgment of knowing when to strike.
For example, the Lord has admonished his servants to be "wise as
serpents and yet without sin" (D.&C. 111:11). The kind of wisdom
referred to especially refers to that of being a good judge. Antares,
the bright star in the scorpion, is located at the heart, which
the Lord acknowledges as the seat of wisdom. For example, the Lord
put wisdom into the heart of King Solomon so that he could judge
his people wisely (2 Chron. 1:11-12, 1 Kings 10:24; compare Exodus
26:2, Ecc. 8:5, Job 38:36).
Finally, Joseph
is compared a wild ox, with the multitudes of Ephraim and Manasseh
compared to its two horns (Deut. 33:17). The King James version
of the Bible translates the Hebrew word for wild ox as "unicorn,"
as noted in the footnote of the L.D.S. edition. The Hebrew word
apparently refers to an extinct species of wild ox which has two
long forward pointing horns, which is exactly how Taurus is depicted.
The bright star in the Bull represents its eye, which is the symbol
of a seer (one who "sees"). Joseph was known as a great seer, so
the Bull was especially appropriate for his sign. The name Joseph
means "Jehovah has added," probably referring to his multitude of
descendants. Thus, each of the four principal tribes of Israel is
explicitly correlated in the blessings of Jacob to one of the four
cornerstone constellations.
Balaam's
Prophecy. This same imagery was repeated in the prophecy of
Balaam about the destiny of Israel. He mentions that Israel "shall
pour water out of his buckets" (Reuben/Water Bearer), "he lay down
as a lion" (Judah/Lion), and he has "the strength of an unicorn"
(Joseph/Bull), and shall "break their bones" as does either an eagle
or constrictor serpent (Dan; Num. 24:7-9). The fact that again all
four figures correspond to the cornerstone symbolism indicates that
this prophecy likely refers to the constellations associated with
these tribes.
Banners
and Directions. Each of the tribes of Israel had a flag or banner
with its sign. The Hebrew word for "sign" is translated "ensign"
in the King James Bible (Num. 2:2), but Hebrew commentators make
it clear that the signs also refer to zodiac constellations. According
to tradition, the figure of a man was found on Reuben's banner,
a lion on Judah's, a serpent on Dan's, and a bull on Joseph's (or
more precisely, on his son Ephraim's, who took his place). When
they camped, they did so with these four banners facing the four
directions: Judah facing East, Reuben facing South, Ephraim facing
West, and Dan facing North (Num 2:3,10,18,25).
Heart, Might,
Mind and Strength. The four cornerstone constellations are also
apparently symbolic of the four aspects of living souls: the emotional,
spiritual, mental and physical. One example where the Lord seems
to acknowledge these categories is when he tells us to serve him
with all our "heart, might, mind and strength" (D.&C. 4:2, 59:5).
The heart seems clearly to indicate emotions, the mind represents
mental capacities, and strength is physical. The word "might" apparently
refers to spiritual strength because the Lord sometimes says "soul"
instead of might (Mark 12:30). Thus "heart, might, mind and strength"
apparently refers to our emotional, spiritual, mental, and physical
aspects. Note that again these four are in the same order as the
four cornerstone constellations.
Elements.
The Lord also uses the symbols of fire, wind, water, and earth to
represent these four aspects of living creatures. For example, he
stated that "ye were born into the world by water, and blood,
and the spirit, and so became of dust a living soul..."
(Moses 6:59). As a related example, there are two baptismal ordinances,
each of which has a double significance. We are taught that the
baptism of water symbolizes burial after death (Rom. 6:4), when
we are immersed in the earth. Furthermore, the baptism that is associated
with the ordinance of confirmation is often referred to in the scriptures
as the "baptism of fire and of the Holy Ghost" (2 Nep. 31:13-17;
D.&C. 19:31, 20:41).
Colors.
These four elements are also represented by four colors. Red symbolizes
the fire, blood, and emotions. White represents the spiritual, just
as white clothing is used for baptisms and other sacred ordinances.
Black represents the earth, and physical things in opposition to
the spiritual. The water is blue (or sometimes blue-green). One
example of these colors from the scriptures is the colors of the
four horses in the Book of Revelation. The first four of the seven
seals each have a different colored horse and also one of the four
cherubim associated with them. The colors in order are white, red,
black, and yellow-green (chloros in Greek, translated "pale,"
Rev. 6:1-8). A further indication that this symbolism refers to
the constellations is that the rider of the black horse holds a
balance in his hand even as the Scorpion holds the Balance (Libra)
in its claws. And again, they are in the same order as the constellations,
but beginning with the Bull.
One of the
strong indications of these four aspects in the stars is the placement
of each of the royal stars in the constellation. Regulus is located
at the heart of the Lion and the color associated with Judah/East/Lion
is red. The heart is considered to be the center of the emotions
and red is the color of blood/fire, which was the element associated
with the emotions. Thus the red lion of Judah ties to the emotions.
The ancient
Greeks described Taurus as a snow-white bull. Aldebaran, the first
magnitude star is located at the eye of the Bull. The eye
is symbolic of a seer, as was Joseph of Egypt, who was associated
with the Bull. Thus, the Bull is apparently symbolic of spiritual
strength, and especially the gift of being a seer.
Fomalhaut is
located in the head of the Southern Fish. This is perfect
placement to represent mental powers. The color that is associated
with this direction varies: it can be blue, green or even yellow.
The blue and green probably represent the water, whereas the yellow
has been attributed to the sunlight coming from the south (the direction
associated with Reuben/Water Bearer).
Antares is
located at the heart of the scorpion, whose color is black. The
heart is the seat of wisdom, and the scorpion/serpent symbolizes
wisdom. The heart/chest can also symbolize physical strength.
Thus, the placement
of all four of the royal stars in the cornerstone constellations
is consistent with the symbolism of emotional, spiritual, mental
and physical aspects of all living souls. Note also that the spiritual
and physical are opposite each other in the circle (white opposite
black), as are the mental and emotional (blue opposite red).
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The
Royal Flag of Scotland with the Red Lion of Judah
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The
Griffin is half eagle and half lion
Heraldry
and National Flags. The four symbols with their traditional
colors are common in coats of arms used in heraldry, and also in
the symbolism of many national flags. For example, the royal flag
of Scotland is composed of the red lion on a gold background. The
symbolism here is apparently that their kings are from the royal
blood line of Judah. The arms of England reverse those colors, with
a gold lion on a red background. The coat of arms of Great Britain
combines these symbols (along with Ireland's harp), flanked by the
lion and unicorn. The unicorn is an excellent symbol for the British
people who are mostly descendants of Joseph, and the lion for their
kings, from the royal line of Judah.
Some nations
combine two different symbolic animals together, perhaps to represent
the combining of two families. One example is the griffin, which
has the head and wings of an eagle and the lower body of a lion.
It also said to have the ears of a horse (unicorn or wild ox?).
It is found on many coats of arms throughout the region of the Baltic
Sea and may represent the combining of Dan and Judah (and Joseph?).
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The
British Coat of Arms with the Lion and Unicorn
Four Hebrew
Tabernacle Colors. The Lord commanded Moses to use four colors
of cloth repeated throughout the tabernacle, especially for embroidering
images of the cherubim. They were blue, purple, scarlet, and linen
(white), nearly always mentioned in that order (Ex. 26:31, 36; 27:16;
28:5-15). Those are the same as the four colors of the cherubim,
with purple substituted for black. That substitution could well
be because purple was the color of Levi, and the tribe of Levi were
the temple workers. Moreover, black is the least appropriate of
the colors for a temple, which symbolizes spirituality (white).
In support of this interpretation, note that in the Book of Revelation,
the 144,000 temple workers include the tribe of Levi (purple), but
not the tribe of Dan (black) (Rev. 7:4-8).
The Four
Kinds of Flesh. The symbolism of the figures of the constellations
also explain the "four kinds of flesh" as described in the scriptures.
As already discussed, the Book of Revelation and Ezekiel both mention
creatures having the faces of the lion, bull, man, and eagle.
When the Prophet
Joseph Smith inquired to know their meaning, the Lord explained:
"They are figurative expressions, used by the Revelator, John, in
describing heaven, the paradise of God, the happiness of man, and
of beasts, and of creeping things, and of the fowls of the air;
that which is spiritual being in the likeness of that which is temporal;
and that which is temporal in the likeness of that which is spiritual;
the spirit of man in the likeness of his person, as also the spirit
of the beast, and every other creature which God has created."
--D.&C. 77:2
Here the Lord
mentions four kinds of creatures: man, beasts, creeping things,
and birds. The Hebrew word translated as "creeping things" in the
Old Testament includes reptiles, amphibians, fish,[5]
and all invertebrates.
Paul also mentions
four kinds of flesh: " All flesh is not the same flesh: but
there is one kind of flesh of men, another flesh of beasts, another
of fishes, and another of birds" (I Cor. 15:39). Here he used "fishes"
to represent the "creeping things" category. The Lord gives modern
day support to Paul's usage by repeating his same four categories
(D.&C. 29:24, 101:24).
The four cornerstone
constellations include representatives of each zoological category
of animal by making use of double and triple constellations. First,
the Scorpion, Serpent Bearer, and Eagle form a set represent invertebrates,
reptiles, and birds. Second, the Water Bearer and the Southern Fish
form a double constellation representing mankind and fish. The Bull
represents beasts (mammals). The lion is the king of all the beasts
and hence might well represent all creatures.[6]
Roles of
Christ
Each
of these four constellations also refers to a different role of
the Savior, who personifies all the best traits of mankind combined.
To understand them, let us consider each of these four constellations
in more detail.
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The
Scorpion, with his red heart Antares
The
Scorpion and Serpent Bearer. The Serpent Bearer has been wounded
in the heel by the Scorpion and is wrestling the Serpent, which
encircles him.[7] He appears, however, to have
the Serpent under control. His feet are firmly planted, and one
of them is crushing the body and head of the Scorpion.
There are at
least two important meanings which these constellations bring to
mind. First, they can be seen as a graphic portrayal of the great
promise that Adam and Eve heard in the Garden of Eden, when they
were being judged by the Lord for having partaken of the forbidden
fruit. The promise was given that someday her seed (her descendant)
would have power to crush the serpent's head, even though the serpent
would be able to bruise his heel (Gen. 3:15). There are several
heroes in the constellations with one foot on the head of a serpent
and the other foot having been wounded. For example, the Lion's
feet are on the head of the Fleeing Serpent (Hydra), and Hercules'
foot is firmly planted on the head of the Dragon (Draco).
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The
Serpent Bearer's Foot Crushes the Scorpion
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The
Caduceus
Second, it reminds
us of the serpent around the staff that healed the Israelites who
looked at it, after having been bitten by the fiery flying serpents
(Num. 21:8). The serpent on the staff has long been a symbol of
healing and medicine, generally believed to be the source of the
caduceus staff of Mercury still is used by our medical profession
today. If, however, the idea was already shown in the constellations,
then it dates much farther back than Moses. The Serpent Bearer apparently
symbolizes Christ as the great Healer who would crush the serpent's
head by overcoming death. Paul's imagery in asking "O death, where
is thy sting?" (1 Cor. 15:55) readily calls to mind the futility
of the scorpion stinging the Master Healer who could victoriously
crush death forever.
The symbolism
of the serpent is two fold. Sometimes the serpent represents Satan,
and sometimes it represents the Savior, as when Moses had the people
look to the serpent on the staff to be healed. Thus, it is not only
the Serpent Bearer who crushes the scorpion who represents Christ,
but also the serpent/scorpion itself. The Heart of the Scorpion
most likely symbolizes the Wise Judge, which again is best typified
by Christ, who is called the "Righteous Judge" (2 Tim 4:8, Moses
6:57). The red star Antares, which is noted for its reddish color,
is also in the foot of the Serpent Bearer, and Christ is described
as having "feet like unto fine brass," (Rev. 1:15).
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The
Water Bearer
The Water
Bearer. This constellation shows a man pouring a river of water
out of a small jar, which descends onto the head of a fish. The
water was said by the Greeks to be mixed with nectar, or to be "living
water." The living water seems to refer to the Savior's true teachings
and to temple blessings (John 4:14, 7:38; D.&C. 110:10), so the
Water Bearer apparently represents Christ as the Master Teacher
as well as he who endows with power. A very common name for the
Savior during his ministry was "Master," which is the translation
of the Greek word for teacher. This ties to the symbolism of the
Water Bearer as representing the mental aspect of mankind.
This is another
double constellation, and the royal star is also in the head of
the Southern Fish. The fish is one symbol of Christ's Church, and
one of the Savior's roles is to be the head of his church (Eph.
5:23).
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The
Bull with his red eye Aldebaran
The Bull.
Taurus, the Bull, is a wild ox described by the Greeks as having
a hide as white as snow and two long forward pointing horns like
polished bronze or gold. Only the front half of the bull is shown
in the constellation. Its front two legs are bent as if charging
ferociously.
The bright
red star in the Bull is found in its eye, representing a seer, and
the Savior was the greatest prophet and seer. Even as the bull is
described as being "snowy white"[8] and having
a red eye, so also the savior was described as having hair "white
as snow and his eyes were as a flame of fire" (Rev. 1:14).
The meaning
of the wild ox seems to have been capsulized perfectly by Moses
who declared that the thousands of Manasseh and the ten thousands
of Ephraim are the two horns of the wild ox of Joseph, and that
they would "push the people together from the ends of the earth"
(Deut. 33:17, D.&C. 58:45), referring to the gathering of the house
of Israel in the latter-days.[9] Note that the
Lord used this same imagery of the thousands and also ten thousands
as he introduced Moses on the day that Moses actually restored the
keys of gathering Israel (D.&C. 110:9).
Perhaps the
most interesting part for latter-day saints is that the Bull is
apparently symbolic of the latter-day Kingdom of God. The prophecy
of the history of the world in the Book of Enoch refers to kingdoms
as animals, with the great millennial kingdom represented by a white
bull:
Then I saw that a snow-white bull was born, with huge horns; all
the beasts of the field and all the birds of the sky feared him
and made petition to him all the time. I went on seeing until all
their kindred were transformed, and became snow white cattle; and
the first among them became a wild ox, and that wild ox became a
great beast with huge black horns on its head. The Lord of the sheep
rejoiced over it and over all the cattle. I myself [Enoch] was in
their midst.
1 Enoch 90:37-39[10] (89:45-49
in Laurence translation).
This symbolism
precisely matches that of the constellations. The white bull, the
Kingdom of God in the last days, breaks into pieces the other kingdoms
and grows to fill the whole earth (Dan. 2:35, 44; D.& C. 65:2, 105:32).
"All their kindred" being transformed into snow-white cattle matches
the symbolism of the twelve snow-white oxen which hold up the baptismal
font in L.D.S. temples, in which all the tribes of Israel are symbolized
by the bull, the symbol of the tribe of Joseph. Note also that it
prophesies that Enoch himself would be with the latter-day saints,
which agrees with modern revelation (Moses 7:63).
The Bull may
represent Zion, the Kingdom of God in the western hemisphere, from
which the law will go forth (Isa. 2:3, D.&C. 133:21). Moreover,
because the Bull apparently represents the Kingdom of God and its
great armies, another probable role of the Savior represented by
the Bull is "the Lord of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel"
(1 Samuel 17:45).
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The
Lion, with Regulus at his heart
The Lion.
The Lion is the symbol of the King, and the symbolism for the Savior's
mission is clearly as his role as King of Kings (Rev. 17:14, 19:16).
Thus, all of these constellations point to Christ.
The Lion may
also represent the eastern half of the Kingdom of God in Jerusalem
from which the word will go forth, even as the Bull represents the
Kingdom of God in the West (Isa. 2:3). It is depicted with its forepaws
near the head of the Fleeing Serpent.
The Gospel
Story
It was proposed a century and a half ago that the set of all 48
of the original constellations tell the entire gospel story from
the birth of Christ through his reign in the millennium.[11]
That appears to be true, but will require much more research to
be well understood. One feature of that story is that it appears
to be in chronological order, beginning with the Virgin (Virgo)
and ending with the Lion (Leo). The four cornerstone constellations
only tell a small part of that story, but nevertheless form key
points. The first two apparently refer to the first coming of Christ,
and the second two to the second coming.
The Serpent
Bearer crushing the Scorpion, clearly refers to the promise that
Adam and Eve heard in the Garden of Eden (Gen. 3:15). It apparently
refers to when Christ was wounded by the serpent (Lucifer) at his
Crucifixion, but the Serpent was crushed when Christ overcame death.
Next, the Water
Bearer pouring living water onto the head of the Fish was begun
during the Savior's mortal ministry, but more fully fulfilled after
the Resurrection when Christ spent forty days teaching deeper truths
to his apostles and giving them further blessings. He did likewise
with the Nephites and lost ten tribes.
The third sign,
the Bull, refers to the Kingdom of God in the last days which will
prepare for the second coming of Christ by gathering the tribes
of Israel from the four corners of the earth. It also refers to
the restoration of his teachings through a great seer. It probably
includes the symbolism of the Savior at his Second Coming at the
beginning of the Millennium, trampling enemies underfoot.
The fourth
sign, the Lion, most likely refers to the Kingdom of God in the
millennium, where all things are gathered into one, and Christ rules
as King of Kings. It also seems to include the final overcoming
of Satan at the end of the Millennium because the Lion is crushing
the head of the Fleeing Serpent. Thus, the Lion may represent the
Kingdom of God finally overcoming Satan forever at the end of the
Millennium in the great war at that time.
Next month
we will discuss the four royal stars in more depth. As we begin
to understand the depth of information contained in these constellations,
we might exclaim with Enoch,
"I blessed the Lord of glory, who had made those great and splendid
signs, that they might display the magnificence of his works to
angels and to the souls of men; and that these might glorify all
his works and operations; might see the effect of his power; might
glorify the great labor of his hands; and bless him forever."
Enoch 35:3
References
[1]. Allen, Richard, Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning, (New
York: Dover, 1963), p. 256.
[2]. Rolleston Frances, Mazzaroth; or the Constellations,
(London: Rivingtons, 1862), p. II:15 quotes Dupuis who quotes Zoroaster
in The Boundesh as stating that Antares is also in the heel of the
Serpent Bearer. Aratus also states that the Serpent BearerŐs foot
is firmly planted on the breast and eye of the scorpion.
[3].Today Fomalhaut is considered to be only in the Southern Fish,
but Ptolemy lists it as in both constellations.
[4]. For example, Josephus, when referring to the 12 stones on the
breastplate of the high priest on which are inscribed the names
of the 12 tribes of Israel (Ex. 28:21), states, "And as for the
twelve stones, whether we understand by them the months, or whether
we understand the like number of the signs of that circle which
the Greeks call the Zodiac, we shall not be mistaken in their meaning."
(Antiquities III.vii.7, Whiston translation).
[5]. The word is translated "moving creatures" in Gen. 1:20, which
describes the creation of life in the waters.
[6]. Another aspect of these scriptures is that D.&C. 77 mentions
symbolism of degrees of happiness and I Cor. 15:40 mentions the
three degrees of glory. There are indications that anciently the
ecliptic represented the earth, which would mean the four cornerstone
constellations were the four corners of the earth. The constellations
found above the ecliptic represented beings in heaven and those
below were in the underworld. If so, then the four vertical constellations
might represent the celestial kingdom (eagle), terrestial (man,
lion, bull, serpent), and telestial (scorpion). Or perhaps the scorpion
represents the sons of perdition (D.C. 88:102). More research is
required.
[7]. Most star maps do not show the encircling, which Aratus explicitly
mentions.
[8]. Allen, op. cit., p. 378.
[9].Bruce R. McConkie, The Millennial Messiah, p. 202.
[10]. Translation by E. Isaac in The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha,
ed. James H. Charlesworth, (New York, Doubleday, 1983), vol I.
[11]. Rolleston, op. cit.
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