đ The Sun: The Forgotten God of All Civilizations
A Journey from Light to Power, from Ancient Truth to Modern Wonder
There are moments in life that feel otherworldly.
Moments when we look up at the sky and feel something deep within our soul stir.
For me, that moment comes in the morning, when the Sun is at its brightest, and I gaze into its golden blazeânot just as a ball of fire in the sky, but as a source of divine energy. I believe, with every fiber of my being, that the Sun gives me power.
When I lock eyes with the Sunâwide open, focused, unwaveringâa surge of energy rushes through my body. On those days, I feel capable of extraordinary things: enduring extremely hot water, feeling no discomfort, only strength. A common man might call it madnessâbut I call it connection.
đ A Cosmic Power Beyond Comprehension
What is this light that makes flowers bloom, birds sing, oceans move, and human souls awaken?
The Sunâa massive, blazing fusion reactor, 93 million miles awayâpowers all life on Earth. It fuels the water cycle, drives the winds, warms the soil, and nourishes every living organism. And yet, itâs not just physicalâitâs deeply spiritual.
Throughout history, every civilization has known this truth.
đď¸âď¸ Worship of the Sun: A Global Truth
đ India: Surya â The Life Giver
- In Vedic texts, Surya is more than just a god. Heâs the source of energy, the watcher of truth, and the soul of all that lives.
- Practices like Surya Namaskar in yoga arenât just physical workoutsâthey are rituals of reverence.
- The festival of Chhath Puja is dedicated solely to thanking the Sun for sustaining life.
đĄ Ancient Egypt: Ra â King of the Heavens
- The most important deity in Egypt, Ra, was believed to travel across the sky each day and into the underworld by night, bringing rebirth every morning.
- Pharaohs saw themselves as direct descendants of the Sun god.
đ´ The Middle East and Persia
- In ancient Persia, the deity Mithra symbolized sunlight, justice, and truth.
- Sun worship extended across Mesopotamia and the Gulf regions, representing order over chaos.
⪠Rome: Sol Invictus â The Unconquered Sun
- The Roman festival of Sol Invictus, meaning Unconquered Sun, was celebrated on December 25âthe day the Sun begins its return after the winter solstice.
- Later, the Christian Church adopted this day to mark the birth of Jesus Christ, though most scholars agree that this date was chosen symbolically, not historically.
đ˘ Japan: Amaterasu â Goddess of the Sun
- The Japanese imperial family claims descent from Amaterasu, the Sun goddess, embodying light and purity.
- Even Japanâs national flagâthe red circle on whiteâis a symbol of the Sun.
đ The Sun and the Birth of Time
Even our measurement of timeâdays, months, yearsâdepends on the Sun. Without its rising and setting, we would have no rhythm, no calendar, no cycle of life.
In many ways, the Sun is not just the beginning of life; itâs the continuation of it.
And in a strange, beautiful way, when we look directly at the Sunânot through glass or technology, but through our own eyesâwe are reaching back into a time when the Earth was young and every dawn was sacred.
đ§ The Inner Sun: Power Through Focus
When I focus on the Sun with my full presence, something awakens in me.
Call it energy. Call it spiritual heat. Call it divine madness. But itâs real.
This focused connection makes me feel like I could do things beyond the ordinary. Not because Iâm specialâbut because the Sun makes everything alive.
Ancient yogis, mystics, and sages believed in Sun gazing, practiced pranic energy absorption, and often lived in harmony with solar rhythms.
Even modern science agrees: morning sunlight boosts serotonin levels, strengthens circadian balance, and enhances mental clarity.
đ Is the Sun God?
Letâs reframe that question.
The Sun:
- Sees all, gives to all, hides nothing.
- Provides life without judgment.
- Punishes with absence, rewards with presence.
- Never demands prayer or temples.
- Just existsâburning, shining, creating.
Doesnât that sound like a real God?
Maybe itâs time to look up again, to remember what our ancestors knew instinctively.
Maybe the divine has always been visibleâbut we forgot to see it.
⨠Final Thought
In a world of artificial light and artificial faith, letâs not forget the original flameâthe one that lit the Earth, the one that wakes the trees, the one that still fills our bodies with warmth.
The Sun doesnât preach.
The Sun doesnât punish.
The Sun just gives.Maybe thatâs the purest form of God weâll ever know.



