Page 197 - Fingerprints of the Gods by Graham Hancock
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Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS



                      and all that it contains will be burnt up.
                                                            46
                   The Bible, therefore, envisages two ages of the world, our own being the
                   second and last. Elsewhere, in other cultures, different numbers of
                   creations and destructions  are recorded. In China,  for instance, the
                   perished ages are called kis, ten of which are said to have elapsed from
                   the beginning of time until Confucius. At the end of each  kis,  ‘in a
                   general convulsion of nature, the sea is carried out of its bed, mountains
                   spring up out of the ground, rivers change their course, human beings
                   and everything are ruined, and the ancient traces effaced ...’
                                                                                         47
                     Buddhist scriptures speak of ‘Seven Suns’, each brought to an end by
                   water, fire or wind.  At the end of the Seventh Sun, the current ‘world
                                          48
                   cycle’, it is expected that the ‘earth will break into flames’.  Aboriginal
                                                                                           49
                   traditions of Sarawak and Sabah recall that the sky was once ‘low’ and tell
                   us that ‘six Suns perished ... at present the world is  illuminated by the
                   seventh Sun’.  Similarly, the Sibylline Books speak of nine Suns that are
                                   50
                   nine ages’ and prophesy two ages yet to come—those of the eighth and
                   the ninth Sun.’
                                    51
                     On the other side of the Atlantic  Ocean, the Hopi Indians of Arizona
                   (who are distant relatives of the Aztecs ) record three previous Suns,
                                                                    52
                   each culminating in a great annihilation followed by the gradual re-
                   emergence of mankind. In Aztec cosmology, of course, there were four
                   Suns prior to our own.  Such minor differences concerning the precise
                   number of destructions and creations envisaged in this or that mythology
                   should not distract us from the remarkable convergence of ancient
                   traditions evident here. All over the world these traditions appear to
                   commemorate a widespread series of catastrophes. In many cases the
                   character of each successive cataclysm is obscured by the use of poetic
                   language and the piling up of metaphor and symbols. Quite frequently,
                   also, at least two different kinds of disaster may be portrayed as having
                   occurred simultaneously (most frequently floods and earthquakes, but
                   sometimes fire and a terrifying darkness).
                     All this contributes to the creation of a confused and jumbled picture.
                   The myths of the Hopi, however, stand out for their straightforwardness
                   and simplicity. What they tell us is this:
                      The first world was destroyed, as a punishment for human misdemeanours, by an
                      all-consuming  fire  that came from above  and below.  The second  world ended
                      when the terrestrial globe toppled from its axis and everything was covered with

                   46  2 Peter 3:3-10.
                   47  See H. Murray, J. Crawford et al., An Historical and Descriptive Account of China, 2nd
                   edition, 1836, volume I, p. 40. See  also  G.  Schlegel,  Uranographie chinoise,  1875, p.
                   740.
                   48  Warren, Buddhism in Translations, p. 322.
                   49  Ibid.
                     Dixon, Oceanic Mythology, p. 178.
                   50
                   51  Worlds in Collision, p. 35.
                   52  Encyclopaedia Britannica, 6:53.


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