Post by jerseyamma on Sept 17, 2020 16:44:41 GMT
The Star of David
One thing that has impressed upon my soul is how easily deceived we are when we do not know the meaning of names and structured developments behind the story of those names. One area that may surprise everyone is who was the woman David married that continued to the heralded kingly lineage.
David was married to many wives, yet one wife stands out more than them all because she became the heiress to the kingdom. It was her child Solomon that went on to become a great King.
David married the wife of Uriah the Hittite, he had seen her bathing and saw her beauty and decided he wanted her for himself. He then as King, sent Uriah to the forefront of battle to have him killed, thus leaving David free to take Uriah's wife.
This was a horrible thing David did, but it is mostly overlooked. The Bible has a tendency to glorify wicked acts under the cover of the end far outweighs the means. However, if we take the magnifying glass and begin to look closer something nefarious and eye-opening emerges.
What was the name of this Princess that David murdered for his wife. Well we all know she was named, Bathsheba. According to the Hebrew Language the name means, Daughter of an Oath. That is interesting, but what does it mean? Often times certain words came from other simultaneous languages of the time and were mixed or were changed in description so the language didn't appear to be from another people, tribe or culture.
We all know of the infamous description called, the Star of David. Most just throw this off as being some Jewish icon or description. As we break this down, we learn that the name Bathsheba means, Daughter of an Oath. Actually an older Egyptian meaning for Sheba or Seba/Saba is Star. You know, make a wish upon a star or an oath?
Therefore, Bathsheba could be, Daughter of the Star. And who was known as the Star, the one that the oath was made between God and David. He was the man of the Oath, or the star. Therefore, Bathsheba very well can mean, daughter of the Star or daughter of David.
It appears David may have married his own daughter who had already been married to another man. Now this is not odd since all the way back to the patriarchs, they married their own siblings or children quite often. It was a way to keep it all in the bloodline. The Kings and Queens even till this day follow this ritual. As Elizabeth, Queen of England is also in the Bloodline of David, so as they say.
Therefore, Bathsheba means, Daughter of David, however, once she married David, she became Queen of David, or Queen of the Star, or Queen of Sheba. Ah, where have we heard this name before? This was the biblical Egyptian woman who of all people Solomon was very close to. Who was she? Why did Solomon place her so high on a pedestal, yet the Bible hardly speaks of her at all as to her real identification.
Could it be, that this was Solomon's mother? Could it be she was also his sister or half sister? Yes indeed. In one area when speaking of the ancient Egyptian texts, Seti I, also married his own daughter and due to how this occurred he was cursed to lose the firstborn of that union, instead Ramases II was born into the Kingly/Pharaoh line.
One thing that has impressed upon my soul is how easily deceived we are when we do not know the meaning of names and structured developments behind the story of those names. One area that may surprise everyone is who was the woman David married that continued to the heralded kingly lineage.
David was married to many wives, yet one wife stands out more than them all because she became the heiress to the kingdom. It was her child Solomon that went on to become a great King.
David married the wife of Uriah the Hittite, he had seen her bathing and saw her beauty and decided he wanted her for himself. He then as King, sent Uriah to the forefront of battle to have him killed, thus leaving David free to take Uriah's wife.
This was a horrible thing David did, but it is mostly overlooked. The Bible has a tendency to glorify wicked acts under the cover of the end far outweighs the means. However, if we take the magnifying glass and begin to look closer something nefarious and eye-opening emerges.
What was the name of this Princess that David murdered for his wife. Well we all know she was named, Bathsheba. According to the Hebrew Language the name means, Daughter of an Oath. That is interesting, but what does it mean? Often times certain words came from other simultaneous languages of the time and were mixed or were changed in description so the language didn't appear to be from another people, tribe or culture.
We all know of the infamous description called, the Star of David. Most just throw this off as being some Jewish icon or description. As we break this down, we learn that the name Bathsheba means, Daughter of an Oath. Actually an older Egyptian meaning for Sheba or Seba/Saba is Star. You know, make a wish upon a star or an oath?
Therefore, Bathsheba could be, Daughter of the Star. And who was known as the Star, the one that the oath was made between God and David. He was the man of the Oath, or the star. Therefore, Bathsheba very well can mean, daughter of the Star or daughter of David.
It appears David may have married his own daughter who had already been married to another man. Now this is not odd since all the way back to the patriarchs, they married their own siblings or children quite often. It was a way to keep it all in the bloodline. The Kings and Queens even till this day follow this ritual. As Elizabeth, Queen of England is also in the Bloodline of David, so as they say.
Therefore, Bathsheba means, Daughter of David, however, once she married David, she became Queen of David, or Queen of the Star, or Queen of Sheba. Ah, where have we heard this name before? This was the biblical Egyptian woman who of all people Solomon was very close to. Who was she? Why did Solomon place her so high on a pedestal, yet the Bible hardly speaks of her at all as to her real identification.
Could it be, that this was Solomon's mother? Could it be she was also his sister or half sister? Yes indeed. In one area when speaking of the ancient Egyptian texts, Seti I, also married his own daughter and due to how this occurred he was cursed to lose the firstborn of that union, instead Ramases II was born into the Kingly/Pharaoh line.