In most early religions the name denoted the sun god, a deity the - TopicsExpress



          

In most early religions the name denoted the sun god, a deity the people called “Lord.” As part of the cycle of the sun, Ba’al was worshiped as a fertility deity whose rites of death and resurrection were celebrated seasonally by the Canaanites and Phoenicians in ceremonies that included human sacrifice and temple prostitution. The most popular graven image associated with Lord-Ba’al was a bull, a “golden calf,” because the sun is in the constellation of Taurus during the spring equinox. When it “crosses” the equator at noon, it was believed to have impregnated mother earth, represented by Ishtar, the goddess “Christians” celebrate as Easter during the first Sun-day of spring. The sun is then resurrected nine months later at the winter solstice, Ba’al’s birthday, the date Constantine designated Christmas. This was initially the birthday of Tammuz in Mesopotamia and became the birthday of Mithras in Rome; one was Ba’al’s predecessor, the other a derivative. Satanic sun gods like Lord-Ba’al were all known by the sign of the “cross,” a word which does not exist in Scripture. Stauros, the Greek word mistranslated “cross” actually means stake, post, or upright pole. Salvation is God’s way of reaching down to man to lift him up. It is a one way affair. When Constantine, the founder of the religion of Christianity, saw the sign of the cross before the sun and said, “Under this sign I will conquer,” he was revealing the nature of his inspiration. As a sun god, Ba’al was represented by circular halo disks. It’s the same halo the Roman Catholic Church has had its artisans place over the heads of their “saints”—turning the “Virgin Mary” and the “Lord Jesus Christ,” into Apostles of Ba’al. The other principle symbol of Constantine’s Christian religion, “church,” was also derived from Lord-Ba’al’s sun identity. The name/word “Church” has no basis in Scripture—there is nothing even close to its meaning or sound. While the “Christian New Testament” isn’t Scripture and was not inspired, it is instructive to know that the Greek word “ekklesia” means a calling out. Ekklesia was never used as a name and it does not denote an organization or a building. There is no linguistic root meaning of the word church in any language. But as a name, church has a history. It was derived from “Circe,” the name of Helios’ daughter, a fellow sun deity. It is from this word that we get circus and circle. Ba’al’s sun-god mantra is consistent with Yasha’yah’s / Isaiah’s introduction of Satan as Halal, the morning star—better known as the sun. And in keeping with Scriptural prognostications, as the Prince and Power of the Air, Ba’al was seen as a weather god, in control of wind, rain, thunder and lightning. Whether he is disguised in the ruse of Ba’al, Allah or man, Halal wants to be Lord. In all the popular religious books they even swap out Yahowahs name for Baals moniker Lord just to show you who is being worshiped He wants mankind to submit to him. He wants to be God. He wants to be worshiped. Yahowah does not even accept worship . So all things that are Yahowah’s he covets and counterfeits: bread for grain, liquor for wine, crosses for poles, Easter for Passover, Halloween for Reconciliations, Christmas for Tabernacles, Sunday for the Sabbath, conversion for choice, church—a calling into a circular circus of sun worship for ekklesia--a calling out of demonic fellowship by Yahowah.
Posted on: Sat, 03 Jan 2015 20:22:18 +0000

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