O.K. so I am not a religious scholar, but I am inclined to believe that Judaism itself is likely based on Egyptian religion. A lot of Judaism and therefore for Christianity and Islam is borrowed directly out of the religion of the Egyptian Sun God.
We even say Amen in prayers, which is Amun or Amun-Ra. Jesus birth by a Virgin is the same as Horus Virgin birth. So the mythology is all out of Egypt, which is where the Jews were enslaved.
The thing to take away from any religion is that God is a Spirit and when we die we rejoin the Spirit.
Amun - Wikipedia
![]()
![]()
One of the things I was really into as a child was Egyptology. I can’t remember how I fell into the subject but it became something more than just a passing familiarity. It became to the point where a relative got me a hieroglyphics book and I studied to the point that I was able to start translating heiroglyphics texts (I was a real nerd, not like these gaming and comic book reading wannabes).
I say all this to say, as someone who knows a bit more than the average person about Egyptian mythology, I can tell you that there were some aspects of the mythology that had a “touch” of similarity to Judeo-Christian ideas, such as the concept of life - death - life after death, and some similarities with the New Kingdom cult of the god Aton (compared with the Jewish “Adonai”) but that’s where it stops.
There were no similarities between Jesus and Horus.
Looking at the graphs that you posted I can go down one by one and point out the falsehood in most of the claims.
1) “Isis with Sun-God Horus” - Horus wasn’t the Sun God. Ra was the Sun God. Egyptian mythology had this weird thing where gods would merge. So Ra-Horakhty became this synergized version of the two. However, as a stand-alone god, Horus was not associated with the sun.
2) Horus was not born of a Virgin. Isis, his mother, was a Goddess. And he was born out of necrophilia. Osiris was killed and his body chopped up into pieces. Isis recovered the pieces of his body back together with the exception of his penis which was eaten by a fish. She made a replacement erect penis, then had sex with the body, and gave birth to Horus by the Nile in a marsh. He was not born in a manger.
3) Egyptian mythology didn’t go into details about the individual lives of each of their Gods. I can tell you with 99% certainty that none of the points under Horus happened. Birthday isn’t on the 25th, he’s not associated with a star, there is no text supporting any claims of his life as child, he never baptized anyone, all the way down the line, none of that happened.
For the most part, Egyptian gods did not die, with two exceptions. Ra, the Sun, who is born every morning and dies every evening. And Osiris, the god of the dead. Those are the only two Gods that die and needed to die because the Egyptians needed to explain away 1) the regenerative power of the sun and by extent creation and 2) human life and death and its eventual resurrection. If humans died and went to the underworld, they needed a god to lord over them in the underworld, which is why Osiris had to die.
Horus never dies, was never crucified. The Egyptian pharaohs were believed to be the sons of Horus. When Horus went away to merge with Ra, the pharaohs were left in his place to rule the Earth. Which is why pharaohs were referred to as the living Gods.
No correlation to the Jesus story whatsoever even though numerous people online have tried to draw up false similarities.