...Is not entirely like the Devoted Lover Sunday and it is the Sunday I chose for my marriage to the Divine One. Tammuz is Adonis, is Adonay, is in some ways Christ. He is, in his own way Krishna and perhaps the Kriophoros. He is Balder the beautiful, the slain one and originally, surely he was Osiris. He is the Lord. He is the King. He is the Shepherd King prefigured in David and the prophets, fulfilled, some would say, for Christians, in Jesus.
To be wed to him is to be wed not simply to the King or the Good Shepherd but, alas, the the Lover who Goes Away. To be wed to him is to be the widow of the world. We have become accustomed to Greek Gods, but the Norse have made a comeback, when I firsr read Norse myth I was surprised by the idea that the Gods die, that Balder is slain, but then, why shouldn't gods die? Or rather, why should we alone die? Greece made Gods who could not die, but also were not holy, and the ones who did taste death were relegated to eastern side stories, like Adonis, the very one whose name means Lord, who is Lord of the Above and Lord of the Below. The Greek stories ignore this, calling the Lord of the Underworld Hades, confusing the place with his proper name which they rarely use: Aidoneus.
Aidoneus King of the Underworld seizes, while still in life, Persephone, a more bearable tale for Greeks who hated Gods who died and hated males who were not powerful. But it cannot be a coincidence, this story of Persephone seizing Adonis to be her lover in the below lands part of the year.. Surely Aidoneus and Adonis are the same. Surely, in some wise, Persephone and Demeter are the same as well.
The mystery of Tammuz is related to the mystery of Babalon. As the month began I wondered how would I celebrate Tammus and then life taught me. A lover of mine was gone, seemed like he might have been more than gone. I began to lament him and then suddenly learned he was alive and well and there were only complications. The love we made the next day was the mystery of Tammuz. Nor was he here to stay but going away again. That is the mystery of the one who is coming and going, who passes and we lament and then he returns again.
Later that same day, As an Ashtoroth offering, I had the very different experience of sex with a total stranger where I was not myself and he was not my lover. We were offerings to each other. This was sex without any end except the pleasure happening and sex without ego, the organ and the mouth. This is the offering of Babalon. Tammuz and Babalon are not husband and wife, or even lovers necessarily, but they are a pair and I do not think one is without the other. The sex is them is sacramental, two sides of the alchemical wedding.
But why in the world Tammuz Sunday? And again, how is it different from say, something generally devoted to the alchymical wedding, or the marriage of Robin and Marion, or Radhakrishna Sunday? And maybe it isn't terribly different, but is a difference in emphasis.
In Aramaic calendars including the Hebrew one which we use, this moon is the moon of Tammuz, and this is because of the ancient festival of Tammuz which was celebrated well into the eleventh century AD. Tammuz, Adonis, Damuzi.... Adonay. Christ has died Christ had risen, Christ will come again. According to popular belief Tammuz was mourned three days, but curiously in Christianity such lamentation was moved into spring with Easter which was never a full three days and in Judaism there may be a simlar thing, for they have and we celebrate, not three days, but Three Weeks, of fasting and mourning which begin today and culminate, like Easter, outside of the month of Tammuz, on the ninth day of Av. We are told in the Old Testament that the women of Gilead would annually go into the hils to weep for Jepthah's daughter, and this may also be a retelling, or erasure of the Tammuz story.
Tisha B'av, which is soon upon us gives a strange insight which Christian mourning often does not. In Christianity, like Yom Kippur, there is mourning for sin and longing for repentance, but the Three Weels of Tisha Bav, taking place at the height of summer mourn, the destruction of the temple--twice, the sin of the Golden Calf, the departure of Shekinah and generally every bad thing that ever happened to Israel. It is a curious insight, that at the height of summer, when we are told to celebrate and be happy, there is not only room for, but a necessity for, mourning, for crying out to God. Tammuz and his glorious birth from the tree, his glorious body, wondrous marriage, beauty, lordship of the above and the below, are intimately died to compassion, sorrow, and the need to acknowledge that which mourns in all of us. As we enter into the Three Weeks, may we not be afraid... of our fears, and our sorrow and our weakness. May we acknowledge in our search for strength our weakness and seek comfort in each other. In out courageous choice to be joyful, may we ignore our sorrow, and we may we earnest work and pray for the union of that which is had been broken, the union with is the restoration of Shekinah and return and kingdship of Adonay the Great Shepherd of our souls.