M E R I D I A N M A G A Z I N E
The
Birthdate of Quetzalcoatl (Christ)
By Bruce W. Warren Research with Extract Notes from Step by Step Through
the Book of Mormon by Alan C. Miner (unpublished)
Editor's Note: We celebrate Christ's birth at Christmas
and consider his actual birthdate on April 6th, according to revelation to the
Prophet Joseph Smith (D&C 20:1). Mesoamerican research by Bruce Warren adds
significant documentation to the April 6th date and adds a powerful witness
of the Savior's divinity.
D&C 20:1 says the following: “The rise
of the Church of Christ in these last days, being one thousand, eight hundred
and thirty years since the coming of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ in the
flesh ... in the fourth month, and on the sixth day of the month which is called
April, “
Bruce Warren notes that in 1987, Dennis O. Clawson was examining the Olmec-Maya
Long Count calendar of Mesoamerica to see how the proposed birthdate of Christ
(Thursday, 6 April 1 B.C.) would be recorded. To his delight, the date was 7.17.17.17.13
1 Ben 6 Mak.
The 6 Mak portion of this date is the New Year's Day of a Mixtec calendar. The 1 Ben portion is associated with the birth of Quetzalcoatl, and the long-count date represents the beginning of a major calendar round. This amazing parallel to the Book of Mormon account of the Messiah in Ancient America and the unique but detailed correlation with both the Olmec-Maya Long count calendar and the Mesoamerican Calendar round is startling to say the least. (Minerva Teichert's painting of the resurrected Christ in America with a Quetxzalcoatl bird illustrates this connection.)

An indirect proof of this birthdate
for Quetzalcoatl (Christ) is the temple at Chichen Itza. On the doorway of the
El Castillo temple at Chichen Itza, Yucatan, Mexico, there is a carved and bearded
figure representing Quetzalcoatl.
At the spring equinox, the sun casts a shadow across the corner of the stepped
pyramid, creating a serpent body of light along the stairway balastrad to the
carved feathered serpent head at the base. (See photo by Garth Norman.) This
illuminated serpent takes on the appearance of a serpent representing Quetzalcoatl
slowly descending from the top of the pyramid and the sun in the heavens. Researchers
from Merida discovered that the serpent of light reaches its maximum perfection
on April 6.

Although this temple was built in the tenth century in celebration of their ruler Ce Acatl Quetzalcoatl, it already has been noted that because of the circumstances of his birth, this ruler took upon himself the name of the legendary god Quetzalcoatl. Thus, the type and shadow of this temple perhaps extends back beyond the tenth century to the other Mesoamerican god of rebirth, resurrection, and life.
As a further type and shadow pointing to this ancient
god, if one were to extend the serpent forward in the same direction it has
moved down the steps, the serpent path would lead to their sacred cenote, a
well of sacrifice and "living waters" to the feathered serpent rain-life
god. .
At the beginning of each calendar round, Mesoamerican priests had the people
begin life anew. At times, temples were torn down and new ones constructed on
top of the old ones. Interestingly, the Aztecs rebuilt their temple to Quetzalcoatl
(their god of rebirth and resurrection) in A.D.1507.
That means that if: (1) the temple to Quetzalcoatl
was built to commemorate his birthday; and (2) the temple of Quetzalcoatl was
built to commemorate a new major calendar round; then Quetzalcoatl was born
in the year 1 B.C.” [Bruce Warren, Ancient America Foundation Newsletter,
No. 3 December 1994, pp. 5-7]
Ammon O’Brien adds this insight pertaining to the day and the night and
the day as one sign of the birth of the Savior as observed in Mesoamerica:
One prolific source of information on the ancient culture of Mexico is the work of Fray Bernadino de Sahagun. Looking at Book 7 Chapter 2 in his Historia General de las Cosas de Nueva Espana (Florentine Codex) which deals with the cosmology of the Nahuas, we find the legend of a night when the moon appeared in glory. The following words are recorded: “Like the sun he shone, and it was like daytime. It was said, 'It is almost like day; everywhere it is bright. Light is spread everywhere." [Ammon O'Brien,Seeing beyond Today with Ancient America, pp. 271, 263-264, 25]
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