♃ יום צדקיאל

Day 4 of the week · The day of Jupiter

♃ יום צדקיאל — The Day of Jupiter

Thursday is the day of sovereignty. In every tradition that adopted the planetary week, the day of Jupiter belonged to the king of the gods — the thunderer, the law-giver, the great father whose authority ordered the world. Jupiter is the largest planet, bright and steady in the night sky, and it was natural that antiquity assigned it to the greatest deity.

Marduk — King of the Gods

In Babylon, Jupiter was Marduk, and his story is one of the most important in Mesopotamian religion. In the Enuma Elish — the Babylonian creation epic — the younger gods were threatened by Tiamat, the primordial mother of chaos, who had raised an army of monsters to destroy them. Of all the gods, only Marduk was willing to fight Tiamat, and he agreed on one condition: that if he won, he would be named king of all the gods. He fought and killed Tiamat, split her body in two to form the sky and the earth, created humanity from the blood of the rebel god Kingu, and was proclaimed supreme lord of the pantheon. From Tiamat's body came the world; from her death came order. Thursday is the day of this victory — the cosmic establishment of law over chaos.

Marduk's temple, the Esagila, rose in the center of Babylon, and its famous ziggurat — the Etemenanki, "house of the foundation of heaven and earth" — may be the origin of the biblical Tower of Babel. The entire city of Babylon was consecrated as Marduk's city, the navel of the world, the place where divine and human order met.

Zeus and Jupiter

In ancient Greece, Thursday was the day of Zeus — the Olympian sky-father, hurler of thunderbolts, lord of Olympus, upholder of oaths and hospitality. Zeus was a complex figure: supreme in power but often outwitted, sovereign but not omnipotent, morally ambiguous but ultimately the guarantor of cosmic justice. His sacred symbol was the oak, the tree most struck by lightning. His oracles at Dodona (where wind in the oak trees was interpreted as divine speech) and Delphi (inherited from Apollo but backed by Olympian authority) were consulted by kings and cities for centuries.

In Rome, Zeus became Jupiter — Iuppiter, from *Dyēus Patēr ("Sky Father"), the same root that gives us the Sanskrit Dyaus Pitar and the Old Norse Tyr (in his original sky-father aspect before Mars displaced him). Jupiter was the supreme deity of the Roman state: the legions marched under his protection, Roman law derived from his authority, and the Capitoline Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus ("Best and Greatest") was the symbolic center of Roman civic religion. All Roman triumphs — the victory parades of generals returning from war — ended at Jupiter's temple.

Thor — Protector of Humanity

In the Germanic translation of the planetary week, Jupiter became Thor — but this mapping reveals an interesting shift in emphasis. Thor was not the king of the Norse gods (that was Odin), but he was by far the most popular and beloved. Where Odin was the god of the elite — warriors, kings, poets, sorcerers — Thor was the protector of ordinary people: farmers, sailors, households. His hammer Mjölnir, always returning to his hand, was the weapon that slew the giants who threatened the world of humans. Thor's great adversary was the World Serpent Jörmungandr, destined to kill each other at Ragnarök.

In Norse and Germanic culture, Thursday was associated with communal assembly. The Thing — the democratic assembly of free men that made laws, resolved disputes, and elected leaders — was often held on Thursdays. This preserved the Jovian quality of law and authority in a Germanic context: not a king's decree but the voice of the gathered community, backed by the god of justice. The connection between Jupiter's thunder and Thor's hammer is direct: both are sky-gods whose weapon is lightning, both are guarantors of the covenant between the divine and the human world.

Bṛhaspati — Teacher of the Gods

In Hindu tradition, Thursday belongs to Bṛhaspati (also called Guru), the divine teacher and preceptor of the gods. Where other planets represent action and force, Bṛhaspati represents wisdom, learning, and spiritual guidance. The Hindi Guruvār — "Guru's day" — reflects this explicitly. In Hindu astrology, Thursday is particularly auspicious for beginning spiritual practices, seeking teachers, and matters of higher education. Bṛhaspati guides the gods with counsel as Šukra (Venus/Friday) guides the demons — the two great teachers of the cosmos, each on their own side.

Perun and Slavic Thunder

In Slavic mythology, the Jupiter-equivalent is Perun — the sky-father and thunder god, eternal opponent of Veles (Wednesday's deity). Perun and Veles represent the cosmic opposition of sky and earth, order and chaos, the living and the dead. Perun's weapon was the axe or thunderbolt. He drove a chariot across the sky, and lightning was the weapon he hurled at Veles when the underworld god encroached on the world of the living. The Russian Perunnik and Ukrainian Perunnik name Thursday after this ancient Slavic sky god, connecting it to the same Indo-European thunder-father tradition as Jupiter, Zeus, Thor, and Marduk.

Wood, Growth, and Expansion

The East Asian name for Thursday is the wood day (木曜, mokuyōbi). Wood in East Asian cosmology is the element of growth, expansion, and upward movement — the energy of spring, of living things reaching toward the light. This corresponds well to the Jovian quality: Jupiter represents expansion, abundance, generosity, the going-out of power into the world. Thursday is the day things grow.

Names Across Languages

LanguageNameRomanizedMeaning
Akkadianūmu MardukDay of Marduk (Jupiter)
Greekhēméra DiósDay of Zeus
Latindies IovisDay of Jove
EnglishThursdayThor's day
GermanDonnerstagThunder day
FrenchjeudiFrom Jove
SpanishjuevesFrom Jove
SanskritBṛhaspatīvāraDay of Bṛhaspati (Jupiter)
HindiगुरुवारGuruvārDay of the Guru
Japanese木曜日MokuyōbiWood day
Korean목요일MokyoilWood day
Chinese木曜Mù yàoWood day
Hebrewיום צדקיאלYom TzadkielDay of Tzadkiel
Arabicيوم صدقئيلYawm ṢadqāʾīlDay of Tzadkiel
RussianПерýнникPerunnikDay of Perun
UkrainianПеру́нникPerunnikDay of Perun
ויקי
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