Magi and the Magian Religion

Created Date: 30-Nov-2018

 

Last updated: 20-Feb-2021

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Sections

1 Summary 2 Wiki Source Information
3 Encylopaedia of Iranica (Persia is ancient Iran) 4 Comparison to Judaism
5 In the Book of Daniel    

Summary

The Magi religion is most commonly known as the State recognized and relied upon religious system in ancient Babylon and Persia.  This topic is a companion topic with the topic about the traditions concerning kings visiting the baby Jesus.

The Magians had several responsibilities and functions, such as:

  1. Dream cataloguers and interpreters.
  2. Selectors of a king's successor.
  3. Priests at the temples.
  4. Overseers of Governmental laws and actions.

Additionally, the Magi had a priestly presence during the Seleucid, Parthian and Sasanian ruling periods in the Middle East areas.  As time went by, they migrated and took on new roles with the Romans and possibly other areas in ancient China.

Note that the Magian Priests could be considered part of a modern-day Governmental Parliament or type-of Congress, which had power and prestige with military protection and authority.

From one source, the Magi first were recognized in history around the 7th Century BC as a tribe in Persia, and another source as 6th Century BC. The tribe selected specific men to start a priesthood that practiced what we call today as occult practices that involved necromancy, albeit worship of only one god.  The religion may have had a Scythian origin. 

The Magian Priests, when on duty along with potentially other times:

The proposed intention was to make them appear as those who were supposedly cleansed from all faults, sins and indignities. 

The predominate beliefs and practices of the Magians:

Wiki Source information

Some facts and theories about the Magi from wiki that is incomplete but a good starting list:

  1. According to wiki, the oldest reference known about the Magi is from a Greek reference in the 6th Century BC by Heraclitus of Ephesus who pronounces curses on the rites and rituals of the Magi.
  2. Another is from 5th Century BC, est. 520 BC, from the trilingual Behistun Inscription of Darius the Great , the Magi were rebels and were referred to as Magians.
  3. An additional Greek reference is from the Gentlemen-soldier Xenophon in the 4th Century BC. Xenophon s description of the Magians are the authorities of all religious matters in the Persian Achaemenid court. Note that Achaemenid Empire is also called the First Persian Empire.
  4. There is the theory that Magi were followers of Zoroaster. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica 7:69, it states they were not followers. At a later period: Philo of Alexandria, Cicero, Philo and other historical men recorded that the Magi were attached to Roman Senior Courts where they were esteemed to have special skills.

Encylopaedia of Iranica (Persia is ancient Iran)

Excerpts from the Encylopaedia of Iranica: http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/magi
  1. The word Magus is attested in Old Persian, Elamite, Akkadian, Aramaic, Parthian, and Sasanian documents as well as in texts of classical antiquity. Its earliest mention is in the Bisotun inscription of Darius I the Great (see DARIUS iii), according to which, in 522 BCE, a Magus (magu-) by the name Gaumāta claimed to be Bardiya, son of the predecessor king, Cyrus II the Great (see CYRUS iii), and usurped the royal power (DB I 35-70; Schmitt, p. 51, col. I, lines 35-43, etc.). In the Babylonian version of the same inscription, he is called a Mede the Magu (von Voigtlander, p. 14, line 15: ma-da-a-a ma-gu- u). In the Elamite version of the same text he is designated as ma-ku-i (see Grillot-Susini et al., col. I, line 38). Thus it seems that Elamite and Babylonian scribes could not find any equivalent in their own languages to render Gaumāta s title. Herodotus (3.61, etc.) also mentions this individual under the name Smerdis, calling him a magos. According to him, King Cambyses had installed him as steward of his household. Later, when Cambyses was in Egypt, this Smerdis impersonated Cyrus s son who bore the same name Smerdis but had already been murdered secretly by the order of his brother Cambyses. Thus he usurped the throne of the Persian kings.
  2. According to Herodotus (1.101), Magi were one of six Median tribes and formed the hereditary priestly clan. He adds that they occupied an influential position at the Median court as dream interpreters and soothsayers (1.107). Following Herodotus, many classical authors also considered the Magi to be a Median tribe, but no satisfactory Indo-European etymology of the word magu- has been suggested, and therefore some scholars suppose that it was an aboriginal addition to Median society (Frye, 1972, p. 87).
  3. Not only in Media, but also in Persia the Magi were the only groups of priests, although in the Elamite regions of Iran naturally priests of ancient local cults also functioned. It is possible that, during the supremacy of the Medes over Iranian domains, the Median Magi also exercised sacerdotal functions.

Comparison to Judaism

Analysis and theory concerning the Magi when compared to Judaism based on external and Biblical information:

  Characteristics (during the life-time of Daniel the Prophet) Magian Judaism
1 Monotheistic God Belief Yes Yes
2 God is good, the author of all good, but opposed by a malevolent evil spirit Yes Yes
3 A Hereditary Priesthood, based on tribe, which was the spokesperson and mediator to God Yes Yes
4 Government depended upon the Priesthood Yes Yes
5 A sense of clean and unclean forms of life Yes Yes
6 Served several religions Yes No
7 King makers, who selected government officials and crowned rulers Yes Yes/No **

** King Saul was selected by Judge Samuel in '1 Samuel 9'.  King David was selected by Judge Samuel after God rejected King Saul in '1 Samuel 16'.  King Solomon was selected by King David to be King because the Lord God told David to select him as detailed in '1 Chron 28:1-5'.

In the Book of Daniel

This is helpful information as it applies to King Darius

This is an excerpt from the "Three Kings visit the baby Jesus?" regarding the Magi in the Book of Daniel with the reference to Darius.

Note that there are some discussions and disagreements on who Darius was in history outside of the Biblical Scriptures.

  • In In and Around the Book of Daniel by Charles Boutflower, Darius may have been Cyrus s son who ruled Persia from 530-522 BC.
  • In Notes on some problems in the Book of Daniel , pp 12-14, It was common for ancient rulers to use different names in various parts of their realms. Thus Darius may have been a localize name for Cyrus.
  • In Darius the Mede by Nutley, N.J. Presbyterian; Reformed Publishing Co 1974, Darius was an alias for Ugbaru, governor of Guitium who was appointed by Cyrus to be ruler over Babylon. This is most likely the case an solves the problem with reconciling names in history sources. Darius is most likely a Title and a Rank in government.

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