The Secret Truth About Jesus
Author: Bill Darlison
REVIEW

Irish Unitarian minister Rev.Bill Darlison (Enlightenment and Ice Cream, 2007, etc.) elucidates the zodiac's significant place in the Gospels, most specifically in the Book of Mark.
Considered the "Cinderella Gospel"--briefest, least literal, colloquial, an abbreviated version of Matthew and Luke Mark is full of the kind of unintelligible metaphors that prove most knotty to scholars of the "historical" Jesus. However, Darlison argues cogently, Mark in fact contains a highly sophisticated series of parables and mysteries intended to lead the reader on the path to self-transformation based on the cycle of the zodiac. "Mark's Gospel is a textbook of the spiritual journey written in an astrological code," the author writes. Once deciphered, this code "completely transforms our understanding of the Gospel's original nature and purpose." Jesus's miracles and parables were not to be taken literally, the author demonstrates through a systematic reading of his life and teaching, but as "dramatizations of internal processes." The Gnostics believed that the Gospel story was not an eyewitness account, but an allegory in which the seeker's internal journey mirrored the sun's 12-month cycle. Mark's primary metaphor is the yearly journey of the sun through the signs of the zodiac, and Darlison reflects this structure in his own narrative, moving from Jesus's baptism and the beginning of his ministry in Aries, the time of the spring equinox and theme of newness, through his suffering, death and resurrection in Pisces. The author debunks New Age-y nebula surrounding today's zodiac reading and reminds us how fluent ancient writers were in the language of the constellations. Judaism is steeped in the tradition, and many mythical seekers (Gilgamesh, Hercules, Theseus, etc.) were "solar heroes" whose series of ordeals were patterned on the sun's annual cycle. Darlison's accessible literary reading of the Gospels is especially useful in isolating original Greek words misconstrued over the ages.
An intriguing leap into faith, and not at all the loony speculation the title might suggest.
Kirkus Reviews


Another Review

I must first declare an interest. I know and like Bill Darlison, and we even share a birthday, which could be significant given the theme of the book. On the other hand, I am an extreme sceptic, particularly about astrology. There is evidence, at least for northern hemisphere temperate zones, that the season of your birth can have an influence on your psychological profile, which sort of makes sense and which would explain most of the apparent successes of horoscope casting. But as for the stuff about "constellation X being governed by planet Y", I have just two words to say, and one of them is "jumbo".
But in a way this is irrelevant to Bill Darlison's main thesis, which is that Mark's gospel is packed with zodiacal references, albeit coded so that only the cognoscenti of the time would pick them up. What is important is that the wise men of the first century certainly did believe in astrology.
The book's presentation of the zodiacal structure of the gospel is pretty convincing, so we are forced to conclude that one of the (many) readings of Mark is as a sort of month-by-month "self help" manual for spiritual development. As we pass through the year we should learn to use the strengths associated with each sign, while trying to avoid the weaknesses. But of course this is good advice even if you don't believe in astrology. Or even if you wouldn't call yourself a Christian. Read it whoever you are!
David Birkett


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