“‘How can you say, ‘We are wise, and the law of the Lord is with us’?
But, behold, the false pen of the scribes has made it into a
lie.’” ( Jeremiah 8:8)
In ancient mythology, the most popular goddesses “came to earth in a
ball of fire.” Meteorites were sacred and honored for their perceived
relationship to the arrival of the goddess. The ancient Nabataeans (who disappeared in
the first century BCE near Emesa (Syria)) and the ancient Emesans (who
suddenly appeared in the first century BCE near Emesa) revered
a "Sacred Black Stone" they called El Gabal (El=God;
Gabal=Mountain).
El was the
supreme god, father of humankind, and creator of all creatures on earth. The word El was
found in the ruins of the Royal Library of the Ebla civilization
in the archaeological site of Tell Mardikh (Syria) and dated to c.
2300 BCE. Tablets found in
excavations at Ugarit (written c. 1300-1200 BCE) named El’s wife; she was the
Goddess Asherah (Hebrew אשרה
- ASHRH). Asherah was a major Semitic mother goddess who was worshipped in
ancient Israel as
the consort of El and in Judah as the consort of Yahweh. Of course this was some time before
YHVH was transformed to a male-only deity.
The Hebrew word for “god” is eloah. Elohim and Elohei are
plural for eloah.
Exodus 3:13: “Then Moses said ‘el-ha·'e·lo·him. ‘If I come to the people of Israel and say
to them, ‘Elohei of your fathers sent me to you,’ and they ask me,
‘What is his name?’ what shall I say to them?”
Exodus 3:14: “E·lo·him (translated as “God,” but literally, “gods”)
said to Moses, “AHYH ASHR AHYH.” This important answer Moses
received “from the gods” has been translated as “I AM THAT I AM” or
“I AM WHO I AM,” or "I AM WHAT I AM."
For the name of God, Yahweh (YHWH) to become
"I AM" (AHYH) requires a very minor change of Hebrew
letters. For the name of the Semetic goddess Asherah (ASHRH) to
become "that/who/what" (ASHR) also requires
minor changes. (See enlarged images below.)
If the original text was AHYH ASHRH
YHWH, rather than AHYH ASHR AHYH, then the gods’ answer
to Moses question, "What is your name?" was: “I AM Mother (Goddess),
Father (God)." This thesis is supported by the excavations at Ugarit
that identified Yahweh and Asherah (YHVH ASHRH) as
Semetic Father-God and Mother-Goddess (masculine
and feminine principles). It seems possible, perhaps probable, that “The gods”
instructed Moses to tell his people that THEY were YHVH and
ASHRH,Father of all and Mother of all.
Jeremiah's warning may deserve careful
consideration. The powerful Patriarchal Priesthood had a great deal to lose if
Moses supported those who worshipped YHVH and ASHRH.
Did Moses' "two stone tablets" received from “the gods” on the
“mountain” originate with the "Sacred Black Stone" mythology built
around Yahweh and Asherah? Evidence to support
this conclusion can be found in a most unexpected place:
Revelation 22:16: “I Jesus have sent my angel to you with this
testimony for the churches. I am the root and the
offspring of David, the bright morning star.”
Revelation 22:17: “The Spirit and the Bride say,
‘Come.’ And let him who hears say, ‘Come.’ And let him who is thirsty come, let
him who desires take the water of life without price.”
"The Spirit" and "The Bride" are clearly two
entities; therefore, it can be assumed that the conjunction "and"
in Revelation 22:16 has been misplaced; 22:16 should read, "I AM the root,
the offspring of David, AND the Bright Morning Star."
The Greek word for star is aster. The
"Bright Morning Star" was Venus, mythological goddess of love, beauty
and sexuality (procreation). Asherah was also known as the
goddess of procreation - the Great Mother Goddess, consort of Yahweh.
Jesus said: "I AM..." He then described "I AM" as
"The Root" and "The Morning Star." Allegorically, Jesus
said "I AM" consisted of two parts: the masculine and feminine
principles from which all life emerges. With this understanding of his
words, and the understanding of Moses' interaction with The Gods on Mount
Sinai, religion and science begin to merge:
E = mc 2 can also be written: m = E divided
by c2. According to Einstein, mass/matter/life is created by the
interaction of Energy and Light. Energy can be equated
with Root and God to represent "masculine
potential." Light can be equated with Morning
Star and Goddess to represent "feminine
potential." Creation, according to Moses, Jesus, and Einstein
requires both.
Jeremiah 8:8
“‘How can you say, ‘We are wise, and the law of the Lord is with us’?
But, behold, the false pen of the scribes has made it into a lie.’”
YHWH יְהֹוָה Yahweh
AHYH הָיָה "I AM"
ASHRH אשרה Asherah
ASHRH אשרה Asherah
ASHR
אֲשֶׁר "That"
Articles on Asherah can be found at: http://www.northernway.org/hgoddess.html
and http://www.matrifocus.com/BEL04/spotlight.htm
---------------
Meaning
and origin
---------------
Yahweh
Meaning
and origin
There are several views of what YHWH means, and where the term
originated. The most commonly accepted is that the term comes from
"Y" (hebrew yodh י) meaning "he", and the Semitic root
"HWH", (Hebrew: he wa he היה ) which means either "to be"
or "to create" depending on context, mode and inflection, making YHWH
"He who is" or alternately "He who creates."
Without vowels, both scholars of the Bible as well as linguists
can only guess on the variation of the root HWH, and in context the raw word
"YHWH" could also mean "He who builds", "He who
lives" (the root "to be" has the variation of "to
live" "to breathe" and "to build or bring into
existence.") In Exodus 3:14, god states its name is "Ehyeh asher
ehyeh" "I am what I am".
A second theory is based on the linguistic evidence that the
Semitic tri-root "HWH" indicates things which fall, or a storm. This
argument suggests YHWH might be indicating at Storm god. This highly compelling
theory blends with the theory that YHWH was an Edomic Storm God who was adopted
into the Canaanite culture.
the Hebrew Bible contains no vowels, and partly because
Conservative and Orthodox Jews would not pronounce the name out of respect.[1] A
common rendering of the word is sometimes called the "tetragrammaton"
(which is Greek for "a word of four letters"). YHWH is written as it
is because Hebrew doesn't usually include vowels. Judaism teaches that saying that name frivolously is
blasphemy, even God is sometimes spellt G-d, terms like Ha'shem", lit.
"The Name" are used to describe god instead of what are considered
sacred names.
Since God never actually
tells us His name, a commandment telling
one not to take His name in vain is a little confusing.
"Yahweh", also spellt YHWH, is generally accepted as the name of God in Judaism and the Old Testament, though some claim it is actually the corruption "Jehovah". Yahweh is one of the Jewish names for God, transliterated from Hebrew to Latin. YHWH is written as it
is because Hebrew doesn't usually include vowels.Judaism teaches that saying that name frivolously is blasphemy,
even God is sometimes spellt G-d, terms like Ha'shem", lit. "The
Name" are used to describe god instead of what are considered sacred names.
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