Post by jerseyamma on Sept 17, 2020 17:14:52 GMT
The All-Seeing Eye
It has been staring at you for your entire life, why is this knowledge unknown? The all seeing eye is that orb you witness every day that looks upon the planet. - The Sun has often been associated with God. He looks upon the earth, and gives it power to increase. Without the sun nothing would live. Everything we have is given its power by the sun. And therefore the ancients used to worship and venerate the sun as God...
The Christian rite known as Easter comes from the veneration of the Sun, as it rises in the morning from he East it is then worshiped. Many try to parallel this with Christ, as the risen SUN/ SON. In truth it has nothing to do with Christ. Easter comes from the female deity from the land of the ancient Mesopotamia named, Ishtar. The Queen of Heaven or the universe.
Ishtar, (Akkadian), Sumerian Inanna, in Mesopotamian religion,
was the goddess of sexual love and war, very close to good and evil. Ishtar is the Akkadian counterpart of the West Semitic goddess Astarte. Inanna, an important goddess in the Sumerian pantheon, came to be identified with Ishtar, but it is uncertain whether Inanna is also of Semitic origin or whether, as is more likely, her similarity to Ishtar caused the two to be identified. In the figure of Inanna several traditions seem to have been combined: she is sometimes the daughter of the sky god An.
In other myths she is the daughter of Nanna, god of the moon. AN is the Sumerian Anu of the Annunaki. She was also known as the daughter of the wind god, Enlil Anu's Son. In her earliest manifestations she was associated with the storehouse and thus personified as the goddess of dates, wool, meat, and grain; the storehouse gates were her emblem. She was also the goddess of rain and thunderstorms—leading to her association with An, the sky god— and was often pictured with the lion, whose roar resembled thunder.
Ishtar’s primary legacy from the Sumerian tradition is the role of fertility figure; she evolved, however, into a more complex character, surrounded in myth by death and disaster, a goddess of contradictory connotations and forces (Good and Evil) —fire and fire-quenching, rejoicing and tears, fair play and enmity.
The Akkadian Ishtar is also, to a greater extent, an astral deity, falsely associated with the planet Venus. With Shamash, the sun god, and Sin, the moon god, she forms a secondary astral triad. In this manifestation her symbol is a star with 6, 8, or 16 rays within a circle.
As goddess of Venus, delighting in bodily love, Ishtar was the protectress of prostitutes and the patroness of the alehouse. Part of her cult worship probably included temple prostitution. Her popularity was universal in the ancient Middle East, and in many centers of worship she probably subsumed numerous local goddesses. In later myth she was known as Queen of the Universe, taking on the powers of An, Enlil, and Enki.
It has been staring at you for your entire life, why is this knowledge unknown? The all seeing eye is that orb you witness every day that looks upon the planet. - The Sun has often been associated with God. He looks upon the earth, and gives it power to increase. Without the sun nothing would live. Everything we have is given its power by the sun. And therefore the ancients used to worship and venerate the sun as God...
The Christian rite known as Easter comes from the veneration of the Sun, as it rises in the morning from he East it is then worshiped. Many try to parallel this with Christ, as the risen SUN/ SON. In truth it has nothing to do with Christ. Easter comes from the female deity from the land of the ancient Mesopotamia named, Ishtar. The Queen of Heaven or the universe.
Ishtar, (Akkadian), Sumerian Inanna, in Mesopotamian religion,
was the goddess of sexual love and war, very close to good and evil. Ishtar is the Akkadian counterpart of the West Semitic goddess Astarte. Inanna, an important goddess in the Sumerian pantheon, came to be identified with Ishtar, but it is uncertain whether Inanna is also of Semitic origin or whether, as is more likely, her similarity to Ishtar caused the two to be identified. In the figure of Inanna several traditions seem to have been combined: she is sometimes the daughter of the sky god An.
In other myths she is the daughter of Nanna, god of the moon. AN is the Sumerian Anu of the Annunaki. She was also known as the daughter of the wind god, Enlil Anu's Son. In her earliest manifestations she was associated with the storehouse and thus personified as the goddess of dates, wool, meat, and grain; the storehouse gates were her emblem. She was also the goddess of rain and thunderstorms—leading to her association with An, the sky god— and was often pictured with the lion, whose roar resembled thunder.
Ishtar’s primary legacy from the Sumerian tradition is the role of fertility figure; she evolved, however, into a more complex character, surrounded in myth by death and disaster, a goddess of contradictory connotations and forces (Good and Evil) —fire and fire-quenching, rejoicing and tears, fair play and enmity.
The Akkadian Ishtar is also, to a greater extent, an astral deity, falsely associated with the planet Venus. With Shamash, the sun god, and Sin, the moon god, she forms a secondary astral triad. In this manifestation her symbol is a star with 6, 8, or 16 rays within a circle.
As goddess of Venus, delighting in bodily love, Ishtar was the protectress of prostitutes and the patroness of the alehouse. Part of her cult worship probably included temple prostitution. Her popularity was universal in the ancient Middle East, and in many centers of worship she probably subsumed numerous local goddesses. In later myth she was known as Queen of the Universe, taking on the powers of An, Enlil, and Enki.