Religion Dispatches
 
December 28, 2011
 
Cronus, Chronos, and Christ 
Post by _Louis A.  Ruprecht_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/contributors/louisaruprecht/)  
 
Time would not rob them of their power, but would add  wisdom to their 
strength; the Fathers would be subject to the people, and the  consul to the 
Fathers. – Livy, History of Rome,  2.56.16 
On _my recent post_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/guest_bloggers/5514/for_saturn’s_sake%2C_remember_the_dead/)
  on the Roman Saturnalia 
commentator  ‘shebardigan’ noted that I had inadvertently confused (or 
rather,  conflated) two very different divinities: Cronus and Chronos. What I 
said was  misleading, and I am grateful for the opportunity to say what I 
should have said  then, with a bit more care and clarity. 
Greek and Roman religions lacked canonical scriptures; their mythology is  
notoriously complex and, to modern eyes, often contradictory. This does not 
mean  that the ancient world was devoid of religious writing; just the 
opposite,  in fact. There was anexcess of religious writing. And of religious  
images, too. There is so much writing from the ancient world about the gods, 
in  fact, spanning so many centuries, that it is well-nigh impossible to make 
 systematic sense of it all.  
Add to that confusion the fact that Rome later adopted a great deal of 
Greek  mythology as her own, creatively adapting all that she borrowed, and you 
have  the recipe for some very creative confusion indeed. My original essay 
was thus a  brief foray into what the Puritans would have called a “
religious  mingle-mangle.” 
The Roman poet Horace famously quipped that “Captive Greece had conquered 
her  conqueror,” as a way to describe the newfound Roman fascination with 
Greek  mythology in the last century before the Common Era. But the conqueror 
was still  a conqueror, so the later Romans felt free to make Greek myths 
over in Latin  dress. As we will see, if we were to name a single religious 
trope that  fascinated the ancient world to the point of obsession, it was sons 
taking over  from their fathers, often wreaking havoc on what they took. 
Which brings me, in a roundabout way, to Saturn (Cronus) and his  
relationship to Time (Chronos). 
Perhaps the best known version of the story of Cronus comes from  Hesiod’s 
Theogony, his long poem about the coming to be of the old  gods. Hesiod 
tells us (126ff) that Mother Earth and Father Sky bore a large  number of 
children, among them Ocean, and Hyperion, and Memory, as well as the  goddesses 
Theia and Rhea (later on, Earth bore the Cyclopes and other Giants as  well, 
according to Hesiod, though later authors would disagree with almost every  
aspect of these divine genealogies).  
The youngest of the sons of Earth and Sky was also the most rebellious: 
this  was Cronus. And so begins a story that recurs throughout the early 
portions of  the Theogony: a father is jealous of his offspring and tries to  
erase them; the sons supplant the father and take his place. 
In this case, Sky has taken to burying each of his offspring in the Earth  
until she groans under the pressure of it all. She shows her son Cronus a  
vicious weapon in the form of a  sickle, and together they lay a trap for  
the Sky. When he returns to Earth, bringing Night with him in train, Cronus  
castrates him; the drops of blood give rise to the Furies and more Giants,  
whereas the severed genitalia Cronus tosses into the Sea gave birth to 
Aphrodite  out of the bloody foam. As I have said, other Greek and Roman 
literary 
figures  remembered these events very differently; Hesiod was never 
canonical in the  ancient world.  
Still later in the Theogony (435ff), Cronus impregnates  his sister Rhea, 
and she bears Hestia, Demeter, Hera and Zeus. But, in strange  imitation of 
his own father, Cronus devoured each of these children in turn,  until Rhea 
substituted a stone for the infant Zeus, then bore him off to Crete  where he 
was hidden away in a cave and cared for by some mysterious figures  called 
the Couretes. This story is related by the Roman poet Lucretius  in De rerum 
natura2.633ff, and according to another second-century  Roman writer, 
Pausanias, one of the major mythic events commemorated at Olympia  was this 
saving of the infant Zeus (Guide to Greece,  5.7.6ff).  
After a year, Zeus had grown to manhood and supplanted his father, Cronus,  
who vomited up the other children he had devoured, initiating the reign of 
the  Olympians. It is hard to imagine a more inauspicious start to an 
alleged reign  of peace. 
Yet that it precisely what the Romans did with the myths of Cronus; they  
re-fashioned him into a symbol of what they called “the Golden Age.” As is 
often  the case with myths, this happened in a fairly scattershot and 
unsystematic way.  That’s how religious poetry usually works.   
In the later Roman period, the figure of Saturn was associated with Cronus, 
 but a Cronus very different from the one Hesiod described. “
Crooked-counseled  and terrible,” Hesiod had called him (138-139).  Not so the 
Romans. 
The Augustan poet, Virgil, identified himself explicitly with the old  
Hesiodic (and Arcadian) tradition of Muse-inspired poetry (in  hisEclogues 
6.64ff). But when he claimed to be singing a Hesiodic  song himself, he 
referred 
to Italy proudly as “the land of Saturn”  (Georgics 2.173). No Greek had 
ever referred to the Greek mainland  as “the land of Cronus”; such a boast 
would have seemed bizarre.  
What Virgil meant by that name is complicated. He essentially re-invented  
this Saturnus/Cronus figure as a mythic, and subsequently deified, king of  
Latium who reigned during the Italic Golden Age (Georgics 1.336;  2.406, 
539; 3.93; and Aeneid6.794; 7.49; 8.319; 12.830). He also  regularly referred 
to the Olympian gods as “Saturnian”... and meant it as a  compliment. 
But it was Ovid who did the most to popularize a new Roman way of looking 
at  the myths of Saturn/Cronus, in his Metamorphoses. This marvelous  book is 
far more than an encyclopedia of Greek and Roman mythology; it is a book  
devoted to the fundamental tropes of flux and change, themes uniquely suited 
to  the solstice, and the trope of becoming something other than you were, a 
theme  uniquely well-suited to a party like the Saturnalia.  
Ovid takes this image of the sons supplanting their fathers to new poetic  
heights. But what we soon discover is that Ovid’s entire epic is an extended 
 meditation on time. Ovid begins (1.89ff) with an account of  Saturn’s 
overthrow. But he remembers Saturn as presiding over the world’s one  and only 
Golden Age; the Olympian gods who overthrew him presided over an Age of  
Silver, not Gold. The third Age Ovid calls an Age of Iron, and he sees it as  
fundamentally inferior to Saturn’s Golden Age in every way, with rebellion  
against the heavens breaking out continually. There is no belief in progress 
in  Ovid’s topsy-turvy poetic world, the world of continuous-change-in-time. 
Saturn  reigned at the very beginning of all these changes, and thus he was 
fast  becoming the god for whom the word-play between Cronus (Saturn) and 
Chronos  (Time) began to make sense, in a Latin world that did not speak much 
Greek. 
This is all important poetic evidence of what Saturn was becoming in the  
Roman mind after the conquests in Greece: the symbol of a nostalgized, purer  
past, one lost in the fluidity of time and the frenetic repetition of 
conquest.  It’s a hell of a poetic message for the newly emerging empire of 
Augustus that  was already bragging about its “eternity” (and so it’s small 
wonder that the  emperor eventually exiled Ovid from Rome to the Black Sea, 
though there are  debates still today about what actually prompted this).  
According to Livy, the Saturnalia was established very soon after a temple 
to  Saturn was built in Rome (History of Rome 2.21.1). Still more  
interesting, he claimed that the public feasts later associated with the  
Saturnalia 
came quite a bit later (History of Rome 22.1.1). It was  during the time 
when Hannibal’s forces were ravaging the Italian peninsula,  Rome’s darkest 
days. The divine signs were uniformly bad: javelins spontaneously  combusting; 
shields sweating blood; soldiers struck dead by lightning; glowing  stones 
falling from the sky; even the most sacred statues along the Appian Way  and 
in Rome herself had broken into a sweat. These were very disturbing  
developments for a people notoriously superstitious by nature.  
So the Roman Senate ordered the Sybilline Books to be consulted, then made  
gold offerings to Jupiter, silver offerings to Juno and Minerva, called for 
 public feasts (called lechisternium) with images of the gods  reclining on 
couches, then ordered an enormous series of blood sacrifices for  Saturn. 
The irony of these symbolic religious inversions could not have been  
clearer: blood sacrifice for the alleged king of the Golden Age, gold for the  
son 
who supplanted him, silver for his wife and daughter, iron to slay the  
sacrificial victims, food and drink for all the gods. That was the topsy-turvy  
reality the Saturnalia was designed to create, and it was all born of blood. 
With the advent of Christianity in the empire, another son supplanted the  
religion of the fathers--but only up to a point. The trope of fathers, sons 
and  sacrifice would receive yet another reinterpretation as Christians 
began to the  develop their language of the divine Trinity and salvific 
sacrifice. In this  sense, the feast for the Second Person of that Trinity, the 
Son--a son very  unlike the Greek Cronus, and yet very much like the Latin 
Saturnus–would be held  at the same time that the Roman Saturn had his. 
Cronus... Chronos... Christ. That was the mythic connection I was trying to 
 suggest when I concluded that “Saturnalia is a profound mythic meditation 
on  death and rebirth, the refreshing cycles of natural time that make it 
seem  obvious to celebrate life in the deadest season of the year, and to 
remember our  losses at the high-point of the party.”

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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