Spanner wrote:It is a pity we can never know what the original picture was. I can only imagine what the Book of Abraham would read like had the picture been similar to this:

If I recall correctly, at least one Egyptologist thought that the portion of Fac 1 recreated as Osiris' upper hand is actually the tip of a bird wing, while Osiris' hand would actually be holding his golden replacement body part, something like this:

Or maybe Joseph wasn't trying to draw a knife after all

Joseph was brilliant, without even knowing it. And, regrettably, semigenius was right. The priest (Anubis) IS actually holding a knife!
http://www.academia.edu/300384/IN_SEARC ... IS_TO_MATE"IN SEARCH OF THE LOST PHALLUS: ON THE NEED FOR ISIS TO MATE
«With my lap filled with flowers and my hair full of perfumes
I will be like a lady of Two Lands close to you, my beloved!»
PAULO MENDES PINTO
Universidade Lusófona, Lisboa
0. A literary (pre)text
Papyrus Harris 500 1
Let us start far from Egypt. It is said that D. João V, king of Portugal, had some problems in having a legitimate son. To overcome that problem he was told he should make a promise: to build a great convent. The result was a majestic construction in Mafra. José Saramago, in Memorial do Convento, writes about the night in which the monarch, aroused by the information that the promise would solve everything, went to the Queen’s chambers to fulfil his marital duties. The next transcription is the brief text which corresponds already to the writer’s commentary after the royal sexual act.
«Different smells hover in the heavy atmosphere, one of which we easily identify, once without what smells there are no possible miracles, as the one expected at this time, for the other so talked about and incorporeal fecundation happened once and without equal, only to be known that God, when he so desires, does not need men although He cannot do without women.»
Leaving Saramago resting in our memories, let us look now to the myth around Osiris death.
1 Love poem published by SOUSA, Rogério Ferreira de in Os Doces Versos. Os poemas de Amor no Antigo Egipto, [Fafe], Labirinto, 2001, p.115.
466
. The source: the myth of Osiris death
Osiris, the first born child of Geb and Nut, was the undisputed, civilizing and loved monarch of Egypt. His brother Seth, with envy, intended to occupy his place and he set a strategy to reach it: after making him go away from Egypt, on his way back Seth invited him to a banquet. In the banquet Seth presented him a beautiful box, made exactly with Osiris measures, which would be given as an award to the person who would fit in it exactly. To the resemblance of Cinderella’s slipper, everybody tried it but it only fit Osiris to perfection. At that exact moment the box is closed, sealed and thrown to the river so that it would go to the sea and disappear. This sailing sarcophagus ran ashore to Biblos. Isis, the dedicated wife, sets a search to find the box sent ashore and manages to bring the sarcophagus back. Once Seth finds out the return of Osiris body, he cuts it: he quarters it in 14 pieces and throws them to the Nile.
Several cities claimed to have parts of Osiris body, some times even the same parts, in an attempt to overcome each other, which reminds us the phenomena of the relics in medieval Europe.
In the search set by Isis and her sister Neftis, they will manage to recover all body parts except one: the penis which had been eaten by a fish, oxirinc.
In possession of a powerful magic, Isis with the mummified body of her deceased husband through the art of Anubis, will substitute the missing penis by some green stalks or by clay; and represented many times in this act as a hawk, she will copulate with the deceased husband through this missing penis, giving birth to their firstborn son who will become king of the world.
(The picturing of this copula, one with Íris flying over the phallus and another with the goddess perching on the penis is seen for example in the temple of Seti I in Abidos and in Filae – both reproduced by SALES, José das Candeias in his work As Divindades Egípcias: Uma chave para a compreensão do Egipto Antigo, Lisboa: Editorial Estampa 1999, pp.126 e 127.)"
The priest is holding a knife in order to operate on Osiris' newly replaced body part. This body part, fully erect, would, of course, been uncircumcised. The priest will make a few delicate slashes to "clean him up". Ouch
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_iRE1f7T37Zk/S ... abra_4.gif
And in the end, the love you take, is equal to the love...you make. PMcC