Friday, June 28, 2024

ARCHAEOLOGY: Darkened Hearts led to Slaughtering of Sons

Because that, when they knew God,
they glorified Him not as God,
neither were thankful;
but became vain in their imaginations,
and their foolish heart was darkened.
Romans 1:21

"Archaeologists discovered the bodies of over 100 young children at Chichen Itza in 1967. All were in a chultun — a bottle-shaped underground storage chamber. 
For the new study, researchers analyzed the genomes of 64 of the skeletons. They were looking specifically for a genetic legacy of the Salmonella enterica pandemic that swept across Mexico in 1545.

To their surprise, all the victims were
boys. They re-ran the tests to be sure. Myths depicted young maidens as the main sacrifice to the gods. The Mayans believed that blood was their gods’ ultimate source of nourishment. The subterranean chambers acted as links to the underworld.

The 64
boys included two sets of twins. Over a quarter of the
children were closely related to another child. 
---The Mayans may have believed that offering the gods closely related individuals would bring good fortune. 
---Twins are particularly lucky in Mayan mythology, which is likely the reason for their ritual slaughter.

Twins occur spontaneously in only 0.4 percent of the general population,” the authors commented. “The presence of two sets of identical twins…is much higher than would be expected by chance.”

Twins are central to the “Popol Vuh,” a sacred Mayan text. The myth speaks of twins Hun and Vucub Hunahpu, sacrificed to the gods after defeat in a ball game. After the killing, Hun Hunahpu’s head hung from a tree and impregnated a woman who gave birth to another set of twins. These twins went to the underworld to avenge their father and uncle.

Researchers think the boys were sacrificed in pairs to mimic the story of the hero twins." 
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