Human Sacrifice, Then and Now 

Guest Post by Jeffrey A. Tucker

 

I’ve spent the last three days in awe of the temples of Teotihuacan, Mexico, which are beyond description in size and scale, challenging even the pyramids of Egypt for inclusion in wonders of the world. They are all the more impressive because we can observe their geographic context as part of a large and once-thriving community, including the ruins of roads and housing complexes.

The age of the temples date from the 1st century and before, even long before, and the town itself was a massive cultural and commercial center until about the 8th century, when the population migrated elsewhere.

We like to find connections between our lives and theirs and we find it in the everyday ways of the people, who, like us, had families to feed, water to find and keep, and life struggles to overcome with the assistance of trading relationships, folkways, tools, community leaders, and traditions. It’s all very beautiful and remarkable, and also rather elusive at some level simply because the written history of these people and this period are sparse.

Of course, one terrible reality hangs over the entire apparatus: human sacrifice. That was the purpose of the temples, the very ones we admire and adore. It’s a truth we know and yet don’t like to think about it much and are not encouraged to do so. We would rather look at these pyramids as mighty achievements of a developed pre-modern civilization, which they are in many ways.

The grim horror of these religious rituals are impossible to deny as historical facts. It was 500 years ago. It’s long over. Surely today we can rescue the beautiful parts of a faith and history without obsessing constantly on the bad with unrelenting severity.

And yet the challenge is always there: Is it possible to celebrate these peoples and these monuments without reference to the overwhelming fact, the entire raison d’etre of the surviving monuments? Perhaps, and much depends on just how central the killing was in the life of the peoples, which my brief investigation did not illuminate enough for me to fully understand, if doing so is even possible.

Was human sacrifice periodic and bound up with confusion and crisis or was it daily, ongoing, and all-consuming for life in the Mayan and Aztec empires? We might seek, for example, to understand the religious basis of the whole practice. They believed that the gods had made great sacrifices for them to live in exchange for which sacrifices had to be made back to the gods. The high priests understood it, believed in it, and explained it to the people.

This is hardly a claim unique to these native religions. Some versions of the same can be found in every major religion in every part of the world. We give the best parts of what we have back to the gods to whom we give honor for preserving our lives and we seek some forms in which to appease them. Ideally it is not people or, at the very least, we find some way to port this longing for human sacrifice into more humane paths toward propitiation for our own failings, thus pleasing the gods in some other way.

One way to understand these systems is to look at them not as culture and religion – those are very often merely covers for a deeper motivation – but instead consider the dynamics of power. The system of human sacrifice was hierarchical in the extreme: it was the high priests and the political leaders, mostly one and the same, who themselves ordered and carried out the bloody practice. The victims were those with less power: members of captured tribes, for example, or others from the slave and working classes deemed less worthy of long lives.

Inevitably, of course, the ritualistic killings paraded before the masses took on a patina of valorization: those who gave their lives up for the gods so that others may live should be celebrated as heroes. Indeed, everyone should all be thrilled for the opportunity to do so. So yes, there was surely a popular appeal associated with these displays of despotic sadism.

Nonetheless, the dynamics of power here are impossible to ignore. Daily or at least periodically at some intervals, the people witnessed with their own eyes healthy human beings being slaughtered alive, their hearts held up as gifts to the gods as their heads tumbled down the stairs of the mighty temples and their bodies fed to the animals. This certainly reinforced the undeniable reality of who was in charge, should anyone dare to doubt or dispute it.

All governments in all times, ancient or modern, seek methods of maintaining control. Nothing works better than terror that is constructed to put on vivid display who or what rules. Democracy is a system that attempts to push this impulse to the background as much as possible, and yet there is always and everywhere the threat that whoever holds power now will deploy that power in a manner that terrifies the populace into compliance with the status quo, whatever it happens to be.

In the Victorian version of history which I’ve accepted and which is normal in Western historiography, the brutality of primitive cultural forms were ended once exposed to more enlightened ideals. Yes, with that came the introduction of new forms of brutality of the Spanish colonial powers, which required their own corrective about which I’ve previously written, and hundreds of years went by before we arrived at the Western consensus against slavery, for science and rationality, and for limits on power and constitutional government.

And yet a closer study of these ancient practices do shed a light on issues in the modern age. It should be obvious that the Victorian model of forever improvement in the human condition, under the guardianship of human-rights ideology and democratic control, is overly flattering to modernism in practice.

After all, in the 20th century, well more than 100 million people lost their lives due to governments and their overweening power. In the colonial and world wars of Western powers, which included the draft, those who killed, and were killed, are also valorized as having paid the ultimate price for the survival of the nation state as we know it.

A closer look at the practices of even “good” governments of our own time reveal vicious methods of eliciting compliance, including even dystopian schemes of human elimination in the service of the common good – with eugenics at the top of the list. And who invented that ultimate killing machine of the nuclear weapon, which is far more horrifying in practice than anything even imagined by the most bloodthirsty of the Aztec warlords?

Let us be careful in our judging of these ancient political cultures and their ways. Judging them harshly is surely the right thing to do and yet we should not put away the ethical scales when evaluating the practices of our times. Such contemporaneous flattery of our own systems of control is too easy. What’s hard is to look at the practices and institutions of our history with similar moral scrupulosity.

Only three years ago, most governments in the world, even those that proclaim fealty to democracy, divided their populations into groups deemed essential and nonessential, classified health needs based on political priorities, and channeled populational behaviors according to the whims of our own high priests, the sanctified Scientists and their findings and judgments. Their power to override our laws was awesome to behold, and the valorization of compliance was similarly on display. Those who masked up, isolated, and took their forced medicines were deemed virtuous while those who doubted and dissented were and are demonized as enemies of public well-being.

What did we sacrifice to the gods of our time so that we may survive? Freedom for sure. Human rights, absolutely. Democracy, it had to be put on hold while the administrators had their way, together with their propagandists and the builders of all necessary tools. Social media platforms, once seen as friendly and ennobling, became weapons of surveillance and cancellation, while states consisting of elected leaders were quietly overthrown in favor of the power and privileges of the permanent bureaucracy. And then there’s the children, many of whom lost two years of education along with social connection, all supposedly to keep the teachers and administrators safe.

The peoples of the Mayan and Aztec empires were surrounded by monuments to the greatness of their leaders and their faith, and they celebrated both. We too look back in awe at what they built despite what we know: their social systems were bloody and barbaric in ways we cannot imagine now. And yet when we study their histories in our own times, with the appropriate amount of humility, we face a similar problematic disorientation.

We live amidst the great achievements of humanity and yet increasingly know of the parallel barbarisms that accompany them. Human sacrifice, backed by violent servitude, is clearly not vanquished from the earth; it only takes a different form today than it did 500 years ago.

Where does this leave us in observing the grandeur of Teotihuacan, Mexico? We are both awed and repulsed. That contradiction, that sense of living with the antimonious coincidence of great achievement and great evil, should serve as inspiration to find our way to a future in which we maximize the place of human rights and minimize the role of violence. That is our task. It has always been our task. For all peoples, in all times.

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29 Comments
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
February 5, 2023 6:26 pm

65 million dead babies since 1973 and in every single case it was the mother that offered the child sacrifice.

The Aztecs were dabblers.

Unreconstructed
Unreconstructed
  hardscrabble farmer
February 5, 2023 7:37 pm

Amen HSF.
If Roe v Wade had been the law of the land in 1950 I might have wound up in a trash can instead of being put up for adoption. Back then if a young girl found herself in the motherly way she was usually hidden away to avoid the embarassment to her and her family until the crisis was over. Today they don’t even have to miss a day of school. Life is cheap.

AKJOHN
AKJOHN
  hardscrabble farmer
February 5, 2023 7:45 pm

How dare you call murder murder.
Signed: Left wing Psychos.

Captain_Obviuos
Captain_Obviuos
  hardscrabble farmer
February 5, 2023 8:17 pm

Of course, one terrible reality hangs over the entire apparatus: human sacrifice.

That quote got me to thinking (uh-oh)…

When it comes down to it, our spiritual selves are infinitely beyond the sack of flesh which encompasses us. Whatever spark it is that makes us live seems to be more powerful than our Earthly bodies are capable of controlling for long, like a muscle car.

Our bodies are from this Earth, and without spirit those same bodies return from whence they came. This is the way of things.

Whatever force it is which controls the Earth appears to require blood sacrifice to maintain it. I can think of no other explanation. It is like there is a deal made: the cost of existing here is, you have to leave your coat at the door on the way out.

I would hate to be the one having to collect Nancy Pelosi’s coat when the time comes.

Anyway, they are welcome to this meat sack after I am done with it, but not before. It is mine, and I can do with it what I wish (which was my excuse when they told me more than two shakes was playing with it).

HERE is the Coat You are lookin' For?
HERE is the Coat You are lookin' For?
  Captain_Obviuos
February 5, 2023 8:26 pm

“I would hate to be the one having to collect Nancy Pelosi’s coat when the time comes.”

2 Kings 2:11 Context

8And Elijah took his mantle, and wrapped it together, and smote the waters, and they were divided hither and thither, so that they two went over on dry ground. 9And it came to pass, when they were gone over, that Elijah said unto Elisha, Ask what I shall do for thee, before I be taken away from thee. And Elisha said, I pray thee, let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me. 10And he said, Thou hast asked a hard thing: nevertheless, if thou see me when I am taken from thee, it shall be so unto thee; but if not, it shall not be so. 11And it came to pass, as they still went on, and talked, that, behold, there appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire, and parted them both asunder; and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven. 12And Elisha saw it, and he cried, My father, my father, the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof. And he saw him no more: and he took hold of his own clothes, and rent them in two pieces. 13He took up also the mantle of Elijah that fell from him, and went back, and stood by the bank of Jordan; 14And he took the mantle of Elijah that fell from him, and smote the waters, and said, Where is the LORD God of Elijah? and when he also had smitten the waters, they parted hither and thither: and Elisha went over.

Captain_Obviuos
Captain_Obviuos
  HERE is the Coat You are lookin' For?
February 5, 2023 9:13 pm

:’D

😣 * dunno?
😣 * dunno?
  Captain_Obviuos
February 5, 2023 10:00 pm

:’D ?

NOT obvious to me. Spelin’ not my thing . Either.
Were it NOT for the ability of my ‘puter to ‘Explain’ WHAT an Emoji ‘meant’ as i ‘hover’ over it?

Perish the potential for a ‘misunderstanding’.

Speaking of ‘Misunderstanding’? Well. Let’s just say that Ultimately? Ended up MARRIED! because of LMFAO. Think that’s kinda like an Acronym, or sumpin’?

(i was drinkin’ and i know NOT what i was ‘thinking’. AND, let’s just say, it left a Horrible! taste in my mouth)

Anywho, THINK what Ya presented is called an Emoticon?

Near as i 👁 could tell? “Tears of Joy” But it had 2(two) ‘ and i’m not smart enough ta reverse ’em.

Conceptually? ALL for utilizing the Resources of the Enemy…

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emoticons

Could You please tell me what Ya were sayin’?

Thanks in advance, Your time/inclination permitting. Of Course.

* “persevering Face”, according to algore.

P.S.
P.S.
  Captain_Obviuos
February 5, 2023 8:34 pm

“(which was my excuse when they told me more than two shakes was playing with it).” 🤣

When You can switch hands and Gain a stroke?

A master You will be

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  Captain_Obviuos
February 6, 2023 3:51 pm

1 Corinthians 6:19-20 KJB… “What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s.”

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Walt
February 6, 2023 1:27 pm

Satanic Temple Launches New Clinic to Provide “Religious Abortions”

flash
flash
  hardscrabble farmer
February 6, 2023 3:42 am

Pfizer says, hold my beer.

Ginger
Ginger
  flash
February 6, 2023 7:45 am

The whole thing is a gigantic satanic ritual, they have no intention of hiding it. One could say it and adding all the viewers world wide made it the largest ritual ever.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  hardscrabble farmer
February 6, 2023 7:17 am

At least half of those fathers gave their blessing to the evil act. They are equally guilty, nay, MORE guilty in GOD’s eyes, for they ARE the head of the family, vested with authority in such matters.

bucknp
bucknp
  hardscrabble farmer
February 7, 2023 8:38 am

“The Greatest Nation on Earth”,US.

Keep a stiff upper lip, ol' Chap!
Keep a stiff upper lip, ol' Chap!
February 5, 2023 7:26 pm

” those who gave their lives up for the gods so that others may live should be celebrated as heroes.”

AKJOHN
AKJOHN
February 5, 2023 7:55 pm

I got to see Teotihuacan, and many other ruins in Mexico. A wonderful experience. Palenque is more awesome, and my favorite is Tikal in Guatamala. Palenque and Tikal are both right in the middle of the jungle and their are howler monkees, and I guy I met snuck in and slept on the pyramid in Tikal. He saw a jaguar. That was back in the 80’s. I was able to revisit Palenque with my daughter just a few years back and it was much more excavated. We went to a beautiful four star restaurant right in the middle of the jungle, and had an awesome dinner.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  AKJOHN
February 5, 2023 10:07 pm

Sounds like the trip of a lifetime, you ought to write something in depth about the experience.

AKJOHN
AKJOHN
  hardscrabble farmer
February 5, 2023 10:36 pm

That is just one of many. I dabble every now and then. But, I like living more than writing.

fujigm
fujigm
  Administrator
February 6, 2023 2:06 am

He refers to intimate contact. Sex, kissing, nursing.
There appears to be no issue with non-physical contact.
Similar to viral shedding; I no touch your herpes, I no get your herpes.
Tough call for the youngsters out there on the random hookup, but c’est la vie.

bucknp
bucknp
  fujigm
February 7, 2023 8:29 am

Can unvaccinated get this from toilet seats?

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
February 5, 2023 10:28 pm

Face it: the B3RG* are a death (human sacrifice) cult, and love it. Especially children.

Madelyn Albright said so:

The wicked have always had a Baal or Moloch to offer to.
And offering up human sacrifices of their own blood not that of captives tribes or slaves. Immense difference in the quality of the burnt offering, eh?

(One of those Aztec temples was reserved for politicians; another one for medical professionals; a tall one for lawyers…)

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
February 5, 2023 10:57 pm

comment image
comment image

Soup
Soup
February 6, 2023 2:06 am

Does Jesus Christ’s sacrifice count?

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
February 6, 2023 5:26 am

Death is only the beginning.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
February 6, 2023 7:13 am

Murdering babies is a sacrifice.

Killing the corrupt is a sacrament.

Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed, for God made man in his own image” (Genesis 9:5-6, ESV).

…and then The Judgment.

James Applefaus
James Applefaus
  The Central Scrutinizer
February 6, 2023 10:41 am

Killing the corrupt is a sacrament.

Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed, for God made man in his own image” 

Wait, what?

bucknp
bucknp
February 7, 2023 8:37 am

2006, Mel Gibson’s Apocalypto.