Osiris: Death And Afterlife Of A God Review

The king was gone, and the river carried his spirit toward the sea. The Vigil of Isis

To the Egyptians, Osiris was more than a fallen king; he was the promise that death is merely a transformation. Just as the Nile floods and recedes, and just as the grain dies to be reborn in the spring, the soul of man could find eternal life through the mercy of the "Foremost of the Westerners." Osiris: Death and Afterlife of a God

Osiris’s wife, the Great Enchantress Isis, did not surrender to grief. She roamed the world in mourning rags until she recovered the chest from the shores of Byblos. Yet Set, discovering the body, tore his brother into fourteen pieces and scattered them across the length of Egypt, hoping to erase him from existence. The king was gone, and the river carried

In his stillness, he is the foundation of the world—the god who died so that no one else would have to die forever. She roamed the world in mourning rags until

Osiris did not return to the land of the living. Instead, he descended to the Duat—the Egyptian underworld—to become its eternal king. He traded the crown of the living for the Atef crown of the dead.

Osiris: Death and Afterlife of a God In the golden age of the First Time, Osiris reigned as the shepherd of Egypt. He was the "Lord of Perfect Justice," the one who taught humanity the arts of agriculture, the law of the land, and the secrets of the vine. But where there is light so pure, a shadow must fall. That shadow was his brother, Set—the god of storms, chaos, and the red desert. The Great Betrayal

Now, he sits upon a throne of lapis lazuli in the Hall of Two Truths. Every soul that passes from the world of the sun must stand before him. As Anubis weighs their heart against the Feather of Ma’at (Truth), Osiris watches with a green-skinned face—the color of rebirth and the sprouting grain. The Eternal Cycle