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PrefaceJanuary 8, 1998
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(1) It may be asked: What possible connection can there be between mythology and the Bible? Is
not a myth an untruth; whereas the Bible is the "Word of Truth"?
(2) It is important to notice, however, that many of the ancient mythical tales have a substratum
of historical fact; and much in them that appears fabulous and nonsensical on the surface, proves
on careful investigation to have a hidden meaning.
(3) That the ancient nations of Babylon, Egypt, Greece, etc., were highly civilized is
demonstrated by the remains of their wonderful architecture, the style of which cannot be
improved upon even by the advanced nations of our day. Such cultured people must have had
some reason, satisfactory to themselves, to induce them to worship their mythical gods. The Bible
throws light upon this question; and a little knowledge of mythology aids us to understand a
number of very obscure texts of the Scriptures.
Scriptural Recognition of Heathen Gods
(4) In giving the law to the Israelites, Yahweh commanded them to on no account worship the
gods of the other nations; but we read of many instances where they deliberately disregarded this
injunction, and were in consequence punished until they returned to Him, the only true God.
Jeremiah records a case in point in chapter 44, verses 15-19,25-- "As for the word that you have
spoken to us in the name of Yahweh, we will not listen to you, but we will certainly do whatever
goes forth from our own mouth, to burn incense to the queen of heaven, and to pour out drink
offerings to her, as we have done, we, and our fathers, our kings, and our princes, in the cities of
Judah, and in the streets of Jerusalem; for then we had plenty of victuals, and we were well, and
we saw nothing bad. But since we left off burning incense to the queen of heaven, and pouring
out drink offerings to her, we have been lacking all things, and have been consumed by the sword
and by the famine. And when we burned incense to the queen of heaven," etc. See also Jeremiah
7:17,19: "Do you not see what they are doing in the cities of Judah and in the streets of
Jerusalem? The children are gathering wood, and the fathers are kindling the fire, and women are
kneading their dough, to make cakes to the queen of heaven, and they are pouring drink offerings
to the other gods, that they may provoke me to anger."
(5) Who was this "Queen of heaven" in whom the erring Jews had such implicit confidence?
(6) In Judges 2:11-13 is recorded another falling away of the Israelites: "And they turned away
from Yahweh God of their fathers, who brought them out of the land of Egypt, and followed
other gods, of the gods of the people that were round about them, and bowed themselves to them,
and provoked Yahweh to anger. And they turned away from Yahweh, and served Baal and
Ashtaroth."
(7) Who was Baal? Who was Ashtaroth?
(8) As all are aware, the Bible contains many references to Baal; yet it does not disclose the
identity of this god, nor explain why the faithless Jews and other peoples so consistently rendered
him obeisance. It is here that we are aided by Mythology, the study of which reveals the fact that
the god Baal, and the goddess the Queen of heaven, were universally worshiped under various
names and titles. While this is recognized by students of Mythology, it is not so generally realized
that these same deities are even now worshiped in our very midst by the adherents of that great
idolatrous system which the Scriptures named "Babylon the Great"!
The Two Babylons
(9) History proves that Papacy's adoration of images, dead saints and relics, its holy candles, holy
water, etc., and all its vain ritual, are borrowed from heathen sources. Papacy's excuse, as voiced
by Cardinal Newman, is that although it is admitted that such things are "the very instruments and
appendages of demon-worship," they were, however, "sanctified by adoption into the church."
(Newman's Development, pp. 359,360) But it is now clearly apparent that the Romish Church has
not been justified in adopting heathen customs and practices. For this reason, Papacy is one of the
leading religious organizations that are associated with the covenant-woman denominated
"Babylon the Great"; the Babylon of old was full of these abominations, and therefore well
typified the fallen church of the Gospel Age.
(10) Babylon was the first nation are kingdom after the deluge, and by it idolatrous worship was
inaugurated.
(11) Comparing Jeremiah 51:6-8 with Revelation 17:4,5; 14:8, we notice that almost the same
expressions are used. In Jeremiah, ancient Babylon is said to have been a golden cup in Yahweh's
hands, by which all nations were made drunk -- drunken with the wine of false religion. In
Revelation "Babylon the Great" is called the "Mother of Harlots", the 'parent' woman-city, which
makes all nations drink of her golden cup full of abominations, the wine of false doctrine. As
typical Babylon fell, so will antitypical "Babylon the Great" fall never to rise again.
(12) That Babylon was the first nation after the flood is shown by Genesis 10:8-12. This
reference also furnishes a clue to the origin of the worship of false gods; and by comparing with
certain statements in mythological histories we get a further clue to the identity of these deities.
We read: "And Cush begat Nimrod; he began to be a mighty hunter before Yahweh. Therefore it
is said: `Even as Nimrod, the mighty hunter before Yahweh.' And the beginning of his kingdom
was Babylon, and Erech, and Accad, and Calneh, in the land of Shinar. Out of that land he went
forth into Assyria and built Nineveh," etc. (See margin of KJV.)
Nimrod the Mighty Hunter, and His Influence in the World
(13) Why should the Bible make special mention of Nimrod? Because he was the first to become
mighty; and even to this day the countries of Babylonia and Assyria are filled with the name of
Nimrod. When Moses wrote Genesis, although Nimrod had long since passed away, his name had
become a proverb, so that is was a popular saying: "Even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before
Yahweh." His might lay in the fact of his being a hunter; for we must reflect on the conditions
which would obtain in the earth in his day. Only four human pairs were preserved from the waters
of the deluge; but many kinds of animals came forth from the ark; and as these animals multiplies
one can see how the terror of the more ferocious among them would lay hold upon all men. He,
therefore, who brought destruction to the tiger, the leopard, the lion, the python, was regarded as
the great benefactor, the man above all others to be honored by his fellows and commemorated by
posterity.
(14) The universal popularity of an individual must be a force for good or for bad to the
community. Although the Scriptures do not directly allude to the nature of the influence exerted
by Nimrod, we may safely infer from the character of his parentage, and from other
circumstances, that it was bad. That his grandfather, Ham, had a depraved disposition is proved in
Genesis 9:18-25; while in the same connection Shem was given a special blessing because of his
purity (verse 26). Thus we gather that very shortly after the deluge the human race was divided
into two camps, one for Yahweh and righteousness among whom Shem took the leading part, the
other for unrighteousness with Ham as the principal apostate. Of the latter branch of the race
Nimrod was descended.
(15) It is improbable, therefore, that the declaration that Nimrod was a "mighty hunter before
Yahweh" signifies that he in any way sought thus to honor Yahweh. In such a connection the
phrase "before Yahweh" rather implies a belittling of Yahweh's power to protect His own.
Perceiving the menaced condition of the race, Nimrod, trusting to his own prowess, came forward
as the bold savior of the world, and becoming a mighty one in the earth attracted men's attention
away from Yahweh. The natural result of the admiration of a man of Nimrod's character must
necessarily have been to destroy reverence for Yahweh, and thus lead to the adoration and
worship of the creature instead of the Creator. That the world did fall into infidelity shortly after
the flood is proved from the first part of the eleventh chapter of Genesis. The great Jewish
historian Josephus says in confirmation: "The multitudes were very ready to follow the
determination of Nimrod, and to esteem it a piece of cowardice to submit to God." -- Antiquities 1:4:2.
(16) We cannot suppose, however, that the saintly few would permit this evil without exerting
some effort to stay the downward course, for Yahweh's people in all ages from the time of
righteous Abel have protested against sin. If the tradition of the Jews be true that Shem was
Melchizedec (and the claim seems reasonable and quite in accord with Scripture analogy), then, as
"Priest of the Most High God" he must have been a very strong influence in Yahweh's cause, and
a constant check to the evilly disposed.
(17) Thus far we may reasonably infer the brief references to Nimrod given in the Scriptures. To
gain further information about this mighty hunter we require to study the pages of Mythology.
Ninus and Semiramis
(18) In Genesis 10:11, already quoted, we read that Nimrod built the city of Nineveh. This little
item of Bible history enables us to identify Nimrod with the king Ninus of classical writings. The
name Nineveh literally means "the habitation of Ninus." The historian Apollodorus expressly
states that "Ninus is Nimrod." (Apollodori, Fragm. 68 in Müller, Vol. i, p. 440) In the ancient
records of Justin and Diodorus Siculus, Ninus is credited with similar kingly powers as are
attributed to Nimrod by the Scriptures (Justin, Hist. Rom. Script, Vol. ii., p. 615; Diodorus,
Bibliotheca, lib. ii, p. 63) Ninus was the sons, as well as the husband, of Semiramis. According to
Eusebius these two reigned as king and queen in the time of Abraham; but the great chronologist
Clinton, and the celebrated Excavator and Linguist Layard, both assign an earlier date to the reign
of Ninus and Semiramis.
(19) In one of the famous sculptures of ancient Babylon, Ninus and Semiramis are represented as
actively engaged in the pursuits of the chase, the "quiver-bearing Semiramis" being a fit
companion for the "mighty hunter before Yahweh." -- Diodorus, lib. ii, p. 69.
(20) Semiramis was a beautiful but very depraved woman, and it is to her that much of the
extravagant and licentious character of the heathen religions has been ascribed. In his work
Inferno, in the 5th Canto, Inferno pictures Semiramis as one of the damned in hell (not purgatory);
and he also mentions Ninus in the same connection. Although Dante's "visions" were figment of
his imagination, yet his consigning Semiramis to eternal punishing shows the bad esteem in which
she was held.
The "Mysteries" of the Heathen Religions
(21) The Chaldean "Mysteries" can be traced back to the days of Semiramis. It appears that her
husband's apostasy was quite open, and consisted mainly in leading men into sensuality, teaching
them that they might enjoy the "pleasures of sin" without fear of retribution from a holy God. In
his hunting expeditions he was accompanied by troops of women; and by music, games and
revelries, and everything that pleases the natural heart, he insinuated himself into the favor of the
world. It was after the death of Ninus or Nimrod that the secret "Mysteries" were set up by
Semiramis and her followers.
(22) Nimrod's death is not noticed in the Scriptures, but there was an ancient tradition that his
end was violent. Strange though it may seem, numerous lines of evidence (which we will
investigate as we proceed) prove that it was this very death of Nimrod that constituted the
foundational theme of the Mysteries. (See Hislop's The Two Babylons) Salverté informs us that all
who sought initiation into these systems were compelled to drink peculiar intoxicating beverages.
This is undoubtedly the origin of Jeremiah's allusion to the golden cup which made all the nations
drunk; for every nation received its idolatrous religion from Babylon.
(23) In all essentials the "Mysteries" of the different nations were the same, each being fashioned
after the pattern of the "Mother" nation, Babylon. Regarding this Layard says: "Of the great
antiquity of this primitive worship there is abundant evidence, and that it originated among the
inhabitants of the Assyrian plains, we have the united testimony of sacred and profane history. It
obtained the epithet of perfect, and was believed to be the most ancient religious system, having
preceded that of the Egyptians. The identity of many of the Assyrian doctrines with those of
Egypt is alluded to by Porphyry and Clemens." Birch, also, says: "The Zodiacal signs . . . show
unequivocally that the Greeks derived their notions and arrangements of the Zodiac [and
consequently their Mythology, which was intertwined with it] from the Chaldeans. The identity of
Nimrod with the constellation Orion is not to be rejected." -- Layard, Nineveh and its Remains,
Vol. ii, pp. 439,440.
(24) We see, therefore, that ancient Babylon was a fitting type of that wonderful "Mystery of
Iniquity" of the Gospel Age, one of the main components of "Babylon the Great." Just as that
great system had its small beginnings in the days of the Apostles, being alluded to by Paul in 2
Thessalonians 2:7: "The mystery of iniquity does already work," and afterwards attained so great
dimensions that it has deceived the whole world, so the typical Mystery in literal Babylon also
began in a small way, then grew and extended, and latterly became so universal that all nations
were made "mad," i.e., void of judgment. Only those who worship the true God had the spirit of a
sound mind. -- 2 Timothy 1:7.
"Mother and Son" Worship
(25) While in "Babylon the Great," the principal subjects of the devotion are the Madonna and
her child (said to be the virgin Mary and Jesus), so in typical Babylon the popular worship was
extended to a goddess mother and her son, who had their origin in Semiramis and her son Ninus
(the Hebrew word for "son" is nin). Remembering the religious influence which proceeded from
Babylon, we have here the explanation of the universal adoration of the "Mother and Son." In
Greece they were worshiped as Ceres the great mother, with the babe at her breast; or as Irene
the goddess of Peace, with the boy Plutus in her arms. In pagan Rome as Fortuna and
Jupiter-puer, or Jupiter the boy. In Asia as Cybele and Deius. In India as Isi and Iswara; and even
in Thibet, China, and Japan, missionaries were astonished to find the exact counterpart of the
Madonna and her child as devoutly reverenced as in Papal Rome itself!
The Egyptian God Osiris was Nimrod
(26) In Egypt the Mother was worshiped as Isis, and the Son as Osiris, though more often as
Horus. Regarding Osiris, Bunsen shows that he was represented as at once the Son and Husband
of his mother, and actually bore as one of his titles of honor the name "Husband of the Mother."
(Bunsen, Vol. i., pp. 438, 439) This serves to identify Osiris with Ninus who married his own
mother. There are many strong proofs that Osiris was Nimrod or Ninus. In some of his forms
Osiris was represented clothed in a leopard's skin; and as it is a principle in every religion that the
high priest wears the insignia of the god whom he serves, the Egyptian high priest wore a
leopard's skin when officiating on all important occasions. This article of apparel was intended to
commemorate some outstanding event in connection with the god Osiris; for all the strange
clothing and head gear of the heathen gods and priests were signs or symbols intended to convey
some meaning to those who were educated to understand them -- that is, to the "initiated." We
who are initiated into the mysteries of the God's glorious plan of the Ages (Mark 4:11), have an
understanding of the symbolisms of the garments of the Jewish high priests.
(27) The name Nimrod means literally "The subduer of the leopard," being derived from nimr "a
leopard," and rad "to subdue." In these ancient days such significance was attached to names, as
students of the Bible are aware. Nimrod's name, therefore, implied that his fame as a hunter rested
mainly on the fact that he had discovered the art of training the leopard to aid him in hunting the
other wild beasts. A particular kind of leopard, named the cheetah, is used for hunting in India
even at his day. When we find that Osiris and his priests are represented arrayed in leopard's skins,
we may be sure that the deep meaning was attached to this costume; we believe that it was
intended to convey to the initiates the understanding that their god Osiris was in reality Nimrod,
the renowned "Leopard-tamer." It is well known that Nimrod or Ninus, on becoming mighty,
extended his dominion, conquering Egypt, in addition to other countries.
(28) Plutarch says there was a tradition among the Egyptians that "Osiris was black." (De Isid, et
Os., Vol. ii, p. 359) As the Egyptians were dark people themselves, the blackness of Osiris must
have been more than ordinary to have called for special comment. In his book of Plates, Belzoni
shows a colored drawing of the recognized figure of Osiris, which he copied from the life-size
paintings on the walls in one of the tombs of the kings at Thebes. (Plate V) The face and hands of
this figure are jet black. Wilkinson, also, in his 6th volume, shows a figure of Osiris which has the
features of the negro; and it is significant that this negro figure of Osiris is clothed in a leopard's
skin. Professor C. Piazzi Smyth draws attention to the unmistakable negro features of the great
Sphinx near the Pyramids of Gizeh, which idol is pronounced to be a representation of Horus, the
son of Osiris and Isis. Horus, however, is only another form of Osiris. This, then, is further
identification of Osiris with Nimrod, for Nimrod was black, being the son of Cush, whose name
signifies "black." Ham, also, was black; he is the father of all the black races.
(29) The Ethiopians were very black, and this people were descendants of Cush. Eusebius says:
"Chs was he from whom came the Ethiopians." (Chronicon, Vol. ii, p. 109) Josephus says the
same. In the original of Jeremiah 13:23, the word "Ethiopian" reads "Cushite," -- "Can the
Cushite change his skin, or the leopard his spots?" -- See also Genesis 2:13, margin.
Nimrod's Death the Foundational Theme
(30) There are many more proofs of the identification of the Egyptian god Osiris with the
Babylonian Nimrod, but those we have mentioned will suffice for our present purpose, namely, to
gain information as to the manner of Nimrod's death; for the account of the death of Osiris is well
known. Osiris met with a violent death, and that violent death of Osiris was the central theme of
the whole idolatry of Egypt. If Osiris was Nimrod, as we have seen reason to believe, that violent
death of Osiris which the Egyptians so pathetically deplored in their annual festivals, was just the
death of Nimrod.
(31) The account of the death of Osiris as given in the Egyptian Book of the Dead (a copy of
which is frequently found entombed with mummies), is as follows: While Osiris was absent on a
certain occasion, his enemy, who was named Sem, entered into a conspiracy with 72 of the
leading men of Egypt to put Osiris to death. The plot succeeded. Osiris was slain, and his body
was torn into 14 pieces which were scattered throughout the country. Isis greatly lamented her
husband's death, and searched about for the pieces of his body. Whenever she discovered a piece,
she buried it and erected a shrine over it.
The Patriarch Shem, and his Godly Influence in the World
(32) Wilkinson shows (Vol. v, p. 17) that Sem was one of the names of the primitive Egyptian
Hercules, who was said to have, by the power of God, fought and overcome the giants who had
rebelled against heaven. In plain language, this mythical tale simply means that the Hercules Sem
or Shem (see Luke 3:36), the great opponent of idolatry, was enabled by the power or spirit of
God to so convince the tribunal of 72 supreme Judges of Egypt of the enormity of the offence of
Osiris or Nimrod, as to persuade them to condemn and put that "mighty one" or giant to death
and to send parts of his dismembered body to various cities as a solemn declaration in their name,
that "whosoever follows the example of Nimrod (Osiris) shall meet with a like penalty." In
following this course Shem was acting according to a recognized judicial custom, instances of
which are found in the Scriptures. -- See Judges 19:29; and 1 Samuel 11:7.
(33) Afterwards, the upholders of the idolatrous religious system of Egypt stigmatized the leader
of the "conspiracy" ad Typho, or the "Evil One." One of the most noted names by which Typho
was called, was Seth. (Epiphanius, Adv. Hoeres, lib. iii) The names Seth and Shem are
synonymous, both alike signifying "The appointed one."
(34) This persuasive power of Shem, by which he caused the great Nimrod to be condemned to
death, was symbolized by the tusks of a wild boar. We read in Mythology that the god Adonis
perished by the tusks of a wild boar. Now Adonis is identical with the god Tammuz, and Tammuz
with Osiris. (Kitto's Illustrated Commentary, Vol. iv., p. 141; Wilkinson's Egyptians, Vol. v, p. 3)
In Egypt, the pig was the symbol of evil; and as the horn is the ancient symbol of power, being so
recognized in Scriptures, the tusks in the mouth of the male pig signifies that it was by the "power
of his mouth" that the evil one, Seth, caused Adonis (Osiris) to be put to death. In memory of this
deed, the peoples of many countries have caused countless boars to lose their heads in sacrifice to
the outraged god. This explains why the boar's or pig's head is even to this day a recognized dish
at the Christmas dinner in Britain, though the reason for the custom has long been forgotten. In
India, a demon with a "boar's face" is said to have gained such power through his devotions, that
he oppressed the "devotees" of worshipers of the gods, who had to hide themselves. (Moor's
Pantheon, p. 19) Even in Japan there seems to be a similar myth.
(35) Thus the righteous Shem, blessed by Yahweh, has been stigmatized and misrepresented in all
the heathen religions of the world; while the idolatrous Nimrod who led men away from the true
God, and who was justly condemned to death because of his evil deeds, has been exalted to the
status of a god himself. This turning of things upside down, however, will not stand, for Yahweh
will soon vindicate himself on behalf of his righteous servants.
(36) We are reminded here of what the Egyptian historian Manetho wrote regarding the builders
of the Great Pyramid: "There came up from the East, in a strange manner, men of an ignoble race,
who had the confidence to invade our country, and easily subdued it by their power without a
battle. All this invading nation was styled Hyksos -- that is, Shepherd Kings." He adds that this
people afterwards departed for Judea and built there a city named Jerusalem. The head of these
Shepherd Kings has been recognized as the patriarch Shem, and Shem as Melchizedec, king of
Salem. (Hebrew 7:1,2) It is certainly quite in keeping with the exalted methods of this "king of
peace" that he subdued the Egyptians without a battle, persuading them only by the spirit or
power of God to close their idolatrous temples and do his bidding. (See Great Pyramid Passages,
Vol. i, pars. 4-6) It shows how wonderful was the godly influence which this venerable king and
"priest of the most high God" exercised in the early stages of the "present evil world." He was
indeed a fit type of Christ in the Millennial Age, whom God swore would be a "Priest forever
after the order of Melchizedec." (Psalm 110:4) In face of such great power for righteousness, one
can see how the iniquity instigated by Satan, the "god of this world," would require to be very
warily conducted. Hence the term "mystery" or "secret," of iniquity.
The False "Seed of the Woman"
(37) When the mighty Nimrod was violently put to death in the midst of his career, great indeed
must have been the lamentation among his followers. Semiramis would, naturally, experience the
greatest grief and loss. She had shared with him his kingdom and glory, but now all this honor had
suddenly come to an end. Semiramis, however, was a woman of unbounded ambition, and she by
no means intended to quietly step aside without a bid for fame on her own account. That she
succeeded in making a name for herself is fully attested by the pages of ancient history. A most
daring suggestion was advanced which she seized upon and resolutely carried out -- namely, that
she would claim that her dead son was none other than the promised "seed of the woman"
(Genesis 3:15) who had been destined to bruise the serpent's head, and who, in doing so, was to
have his own heel bruised! Formerly her son had been honored as the mighty hunter and
benefactor of the world; but though he was no dead she would declare that he had risen and had
been deified, and thus have him worshiped as a god!
(38) We say that this bold scheme was suggested to Semiramis, for who could have instigated
such an imposition except the 'father of lies'? (John 8:44) That "old serpent," Satan (Revelation
12:9), caused the fall of mankind through his lying suggestion to Eve (Genesis 3:1-6), and he now
attempted to frustrate Yahweh's glorious plan of redemption by introducing a false Messiah, a
lying counterfeit of the true. In consequence of this the whole world has been led astray, and few
indeed have had the privilege of knowing Yahweh and Jesus the Messiah whom He sent.
(Revelation 12:9; John 17:3,6,14,16) Only those who have been initiated into the mystery of God
by means of the enlightening action of the holy spirit, have been able to discern the true Messiah.
(Matthew 16:15-17; See our publication: Understanding Kingdom Mysteries) We are rejoiced to
know that the time is not now far distant when the poor deceived world will have its eyes opened
and recognize its true Redeemer, and when the people will shout: "Look! THIS is our God; we
have waited for him, and HE will save us." (Isaiah 25:9) Satan has taken advantage of the
religious element in man, and by his blinding lies has directed the word's worship to himself,
becoming in very deed the "god of this world." (2 Corinthians 4:4; Revelation 12:9) He had said in his heart:"I will
be like the Most High," and he sought to follow out this desire in every possible way. But he will
be "cut down to the ground" in Yahweh's due time (Isaiah 14:12-17); and Jesus Christ, who did
not seek to be equal to God, but made himself of no reputation and was obedient to death, will be
highly exalted and given a name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee
will bow in adoration and worship. (Philippians 2:6-11, Revised Standard Version) "Exalt him
that is low, and abase him that is high," is the principle on which God works. -- See Ezekiel
21:26.
(39) The patriarchs, and the ancient world in general, were acquainted with the story of the
temptation in Eden, and they knew that the seed of the woman was ultimately to destroy the
tempter. Because of this, and because of the innate wickedness of the hearts of men (Jeremiah
17:9), Satan was able to foist his counterfeit "Seed of the woman" upon the world. We know that
this is so, for there is hardly a people on earth whose mythological religion does not contain
reference to the "Seed" bruising the head of the serpent. Referring to this phrase of the religions
of the heathen countries, Wilkinson (Vol. his p. 395) says: "The evil genius of the adversaries of
the Egyptian god Horus [Osiris in another form] is frequently figured under the form of a snake,
whose head he is seen piercing with a spear. The same fable occurs in the religion of India, where
the malignant serpent Calyia is slain by Vishnu, in the avatar [incarnation] of Crishna. The
Scandinavian deity Thor was said to have bruised the head of the great serpent with his mace. The
origin of this may be readily traced to the Bible." The Greeks, also, represented their god Apollo
as slaying the serpent Pytho; and Humboldt shows that the Mexicans had the same belief
concerning their god Teotl: "The serpent crushed by the great spirit Teotl, when he takes the form
of one of the subaltern deities, is the genius of evil -- a real Kakodaemon." (Mexican Researches,
Vol. i, p. 228) When examination is made of these various myths, it is found that in almost every
case the serpent-destroying god dies as a result of injuries received in the combat, thus showing
that the pagans knew it was by dying that the promised Seed was to destroy the adversary.
(40) In the above quotation from Wilkinson, it will be noticed that he attributes to the Bible the
knowledge which the pagans had of destroying the serpent as the incarnation of evil; but he no
doubt means that this knowledge may be traced to the account of the temptation in Eden, which
afterwards appeared in the Bible. The Bible as we have it, of course, did not begin to be written
until after Exodus of the Israelites from Egypt. (The accounts in Genesis appear to have been
written by various ones involved, which accounts Moses later edited together into his book) Long
before the Exodus the false religions of Babylonia, Egypt, and the other countries were fully set
up, originating, as we have said, with Semiramis and her followers. In the midst of all this idolatry,
however, Yahweh always had his faithful few -- Noah, Shem, Abraham, and others being specially
mentioned. It was because the worship of the false Messiah was in full operation in Egypt and in
the other countries, that Yahweh repeatedly warned his people, the Jewish nation, against
following them. Bowing down or serving these idols was in reality worship of the dead, which
worship actually went to the demons, the prince of whom is Satan. (Deuteronomy 32:17; 1
Corinthians 10:20) These images enslaved the minds of those who served them, giving them a
seeming actuality to beings who did not exist; for the "gods" whom they represented were in their
graves, and are still waiting for the resurrection in the Millennial reign of Christ. (Psalm 146:3,4;
John 5:28,29; Revelation 20:12,13) Thus the ones actually receiving the worship were Satan and
his demons.
The "Image of Jealousy"
(41) We have already mentioned the fact that the popular subjects of worship in every nation
have been the "Mother and Son," images of whom were everywhere set up. Even the Jewish
nation was for a time guilty of worshiping the Babylonian goddess with the false Seed in her arms,
for one of her images is evidently referred to by Ezekiel (8:3) when he says: "He put forth the
form of a hand, and took me by a lock of my head; and the Spirit lifted me up between earth and
Heaven, and brought me in the visions of God to Jerusalem, to the door of the gate of the inner
[court] that looks toward the north; where was the seat of the image of jealousy, which provokes
to jealousy." This image of the "Mother and Son," erected as the result of the jealousy of Satan
against the coming true Seed of the woman, provoked God to jealousy because it misdirected the
devotion of His people, to whom He had said: "You shall have no other gods before me. You
shall not make for yourselves an idol, nor any image of anything that is in the heavens above, or
that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth: you shall not bow yourself
down to them, nor serve them, for I, Yahweh your God, am a jealous God." (Exodus 20:3-5) In
Egypt the "Mother and Son" were worshiped as Isis and Osiris, whose very names signify "the
woman" and "the Seed"; for Isis is the Greek form of H'isha -- the woman; and Osiris is read on
the Egyptian monuments He-siri -- the seed.
The "Deification" of Nimrod
(42) The mythical story in Egypt of the deification of Nimrod by Semiramis is to the effect that
Isis, who was a great enchantress and had much knowledge of "magical ceremonies," instructed
Horus and a number of his "followers" to perform a series of operations in connection with the
burial of his father, which had the effect of raising Osiris from the dead, and of establishing him as
king of Amenti, i.e., the "Hidden Place," or the other world (Fourth Sallier Papyrus in the British
Museum. -- Although Horus was the son of Osiris, he was merely another form of Osiris himself,
being a new incarnation of that god).
(43) Thus, by following Satan's lie, that the dead are not dead (Genesis 3:4), Semiramis and her
deluded followers caused others to believe that Nimrod was not now dead, but that he had been
resurrected, and had become a god and should be reverenced as such. But it is evident that if this
advanced form of idolatry was to be become established, it was indispensable that it should be
inaugurated in secret, and he operated with extreme caution; for the terror of execution, lately
inflicted on one so mighty as Nimrod, was too real to be ignored. This, then, was the beginning of
that iniquitous system of "Mystery" which has been so far-reaching in its desolating effects, and
which the Lord used as a type of that still greater "desolating abomination," the mystic "Babylon
the Great" spoken of in the book of Revelation.
(44) The very nature of the "Mysteries" gave great facilities for imposing on the senses of those
who were being "initiated." It is well known that magical arts were invented by the Chaldeans.
Epiphanius, after considering the evidences open in his day, pronounced it as his opinion that it
was "Nimrod that established the sciences of magic and astronomy." (Adv. Hoeres, lib. 1, tom. i,
Vol. i, p. 7 c) All the fertile resources of magic, therefore, were employed by Semiramis and her
intimate followers, to give color to the lying deceptions of those Mysteries of which she was the
originator. But notwithstanding all the care and precautions of the conductors of these
ceremonies, enough has leaked out to enable us to gain a clear insight into their character.
(45) Candidates for initiation were made to pass through the ordeal of the confessional, and were
required to swear by binding oaths to maintain the secrecy of the system they were desirous of
entering. After thus surrendering themselves implicitly to the priests, they were anointed with
"magical ointments" which introduced into their bodily systems such drugs as tended to excite
their imaginations and add to the power of the indispensable intoxicating drinks, that they might
be prepared for the visions and revelations that were about to be made known to them. Wilkinson,
describing the experiences of those undergoing the process of initiation, says: "Strange and
amazing objects presented themselves. Sometimes the place they were in seemed to shake around
them; sometimes it appeared bright and resplendent with light and radiant fire, and then again
covered with black darkness, sometimes thunder and lightning, sometimes fearful noises and
bellows, sometimes terrible apparitions astonished the trembling spectators." (Egyptians, Vol. v,
p. 326) Then, at last, the great hidden god was revealed to them in such a manner as to allay their
fears and call forth their admiration and blind affections. It was easy for those who controlled the
Mysteries, having discovered scientific secrets which they jealously preserved in their own
exclusive keeping, to give the ignorant initiates what might seem ocular demonstrations that
Nimrod who had been slain, and for whom such lamentations had been made, was again alive, and
now encompassed with heavenly glory. Thus the whole system of the secret "Mysteries" of
Babylon introduced by the help of magic (sham miracles), was intended to glorify a dead man; and
when once the worship of one dead man was established, the worship of many more was sure to
follow.
(46) In this way Nimrod became the "father of the gods," being said to be the first of the "deified
mortals." As such he was worshiped under the title of Kronos and Saturn. Saturn was the
god of the Mysteries, the name itself signifying "the Hidden one." He was revealed to the initiated,
but hidden to all others.
The Identity of the Greek God Bacchus
(47) Another of the names under which the deified Nimrod received honor was Bacchus. In
Greece, Bacchus was symbolically represented by a spotted fawn, which animal was intended in
the figurative language of the Mysteries to covertly identify Bacchus with Nimrod. The name of
the fawn in Greece was "Nebros," which signifies "the spotted one," while the name of Nimrod, as
known to the Greeks, was "Nebrod," and is so translated in the Greek translation of the Hebrew
Scriptures -- i.e., the Septuagint. It will be remembered that Nimrod gained much of his success
as a hunter by training the leopard to assist him in the chase. The skin of the fawn was intended to
suggest the spotted leopard. The custom of wearing the skin of fawn appears to have been
imported from Assyria direct, for some sculptures excavated in Nineveh show a god bearing a
spotted fawn in his arm, in such a way as to indicate that the animal is to be regarded as a symbol.
(Vaux's Nineveh and Persepolis, chap. viii, p. 233) Leopards were employed to draw the car of
Bacchus; and he himself was represented clothed with a leopard's skin as were also his priests,
although sometimes the skin of the fawn was substituted.
(48) The Greek Bacchus and his priesthood, therefore, were in this respect similar to the
Egyptian Osiris and priesthood. Herodotus, the father of history, always speaks of Osiris as being
Bacchus (lib.ii, cap. 42), and so does Diodorus, who says: "Orpheus introduced from Egypt the
greatest part of the mystical ceremonies, the orgies that celebrate the wanderings of Ceres, and
the whole fable of the shades below. The rites of Osiris and Bacchus are the same; those of Isis
and Ceres exactly resemble each other, except in name." (Bibliotheca, lib. i, b. 9) This is an
additional proof that Bacchus and Nimrod are the same, for we have already seen that Osiris was
Nimrod.
(49) The ivy, so conspicuous in all Bacchanalian celebrations, was an express symbol of Nimrod.
The Greek word for ivy is "Kissos"; and Kissos was one of the titles of Bacchus. (Pausanias,
Attica, cap. 31, p. 78) Now, the name of the descendants of Cush was pronounced in Greece
"Kissioi." (Strabo, lib. xv, p. 691) The ivy branch carried by the votaries of Bacchus, therefore,
signified to the initiated that Bacchus was the "branch of Cush" -- i.e., Nimrod, the son of Cush.
This also accounts for one of the titles of the Greek god Apollo -- "Kisseus Apollos." It serves to
identify Apollo with Nimrod (among other proofs), meaning literally "The Cushite Apollo."
(50) From Anacreaon (p. 296) we learn that another of the titles of Bacchus was "Aithiopais,"
which means "The son of Aethiops." We have already pointed out that the Ethiopians were
descendants of Cush, and therefore Aethiops must have been Cush himself. -- See Habakkuk 3:7,
KJV margin.
(51) The literal meaning of the name Bacchus is "the lamented one," being derived from Bakhah
"to weep" or "lament." Hesychius (p. 179) says that among the Phoenicians "Bacchos means
weeping." The Hebrew word used in the Bible for weeping and lamenting is Baca, or Bakah. (See
Psalm 84:6, where the word Baca appears untranslated in the King James-- "valley of Baca,"
should be read "valley of weeping."-- see Young's Literal Translation) On certain mystical
Bacchanalian festivals a spotted fawn was torn in pieces, and great lamentations were made.
Photius tells us the significance of this ceremony: "The tearing in pieces of the nebroi [or spotted
fawns] was an imitation of the suffering in the case of Dionysus" or Bacchus. (Photius, Lexcicon,
pars. i, p. 291) Thus the great lamentations which followed the violent death of Nimrod (Nebrod),
when his body was torn into 14 pieces by the judges of Egypt, was annually commemorated by
the various nations. The backsliding women of Israel wept for the death of the false messiah under
that name of Tammuz, in memory of the wailing of Semiramis for the death of Nimrod: Ezekiel
8:13,14, reads:" He said also to me, You shall again see yet other great abominations which they
do. Then he brought me to the door of the gate of Yahweh's house which was toward the north;
and see, there sat the women weeping for Tammuz." It is significant that these women sat at the
north gate, the same place as the seat of the "image of jealousy" mentioned in verse 3. Tammuz is
identified with Osiris, and is therefore the same as Bacchus. -- Wilkinson's Egyptians, Vol. v, b.
3,; c. xiii, p. 10
(52) When Jesus, the true Messiah and Savior of the world, was being lead to death, we read that
the women "bewailed and lamented him." But Jesus rebuked them and said: "Daughters of
Jerusalem, do not weep for me, but weep for yourselves, and for your children." -- Luke
23:27,28.
(53) The reason why Bacchus is commonly understood to be the god of wine, drunkenness and
revelry, is because of the effect which the mysterious beverages and ointments had upon his
devotees. The uninitiated merely saw the after effects, but did not understand the true import of
the Bacchanalian orgies, which were claimed to be for "the purification of souls." (Servius, in
Georg., lib. i, Vol. ii, p. 197) The "elevating" effect which the process of anointing, etc., had upon
the initiates of the false religions, is manifestly a miserable counterfeit of the godly joy experienced
by those who, on being anointed with the holy spirit, gain an understanding of the glorious truth
as it shines in the face of Jesus Christ. (1 Corinthians 2:9-16) The apostle says: "Don't be drunken
with wine, in which is an abandoned life, but be filled with the Spirit, speaking to one another in
psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, singing and making melody with your heart to Yahweh." To
the worldly, the exhilarating and joyful effect which the holy spirit has upon those who newly
come into the light of God's truth seems to be the result of drunkenness, or due to insanity. Many
of us have had the experience of being thus misjudged. So also were the members of the early
church at Pentecost misrepresented, some of the bystanders mockingly saying: "These men are
full of new wine." (Acts 2:1-18) But we care nothing for this, because we know that "the natural
man does not receive the things of the spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him. Neither can
he know them, because they are spiritually discerned." -- 1 Corinthians 2:14.
(54) Not only was the anointing of the holy spirit counterfeited by the false religions, but nearly
every virtue and exalted office was ascribed to the false savior of the world that belongs to Jesus
Christ. Without doubt this is the reason why Satan, the "god of this world," (2 Corinthians 4:4) by
counterfeiting the truth as nearly as possible, has had so great hold upon the hearts of mankind.
(Revelation 12:9) The apostle says: "The whole world lies in the wicked one." (1 John 5:19) We
know that the great Papal system, well named Satan's Masterpiece, has been a wonderful
counterfeit of the glorious Millennial reign of Messiah; and now we see why it is considered a
leading organ of "Babylon the Great," as this Greater Babylon is the antitype of the iniquitous
system which originated in Babylon of old. Just as Satan tried to frustrate Yahweh's plan of
redemption, by forestalling the Millennial reign of Christ with his false Papal Millennium, during
which Popes have successively reigned as king of kings, and lord of lords; so he also sought to
becloud the purpose of God by forestalling the advent of Jesus Christ, by bringing in his false
Messiah. It was claimed that the death of Osiris (that is, of Nimrod) was sacrificial, submitted to
for the benefit of the world.
Osiris the False Savior
(55) The monuments of Egypt show that the worship of Osiris dates from the earliest times, and
that he was regarded as the "god-man who suffered, died, rose again, and reigned eternally in
heaven." He was the "King of eternity, lord of the everlastingness, the prince of gods and men, the
god of gods, king of kings, lord or lords, prince of princes, the governor of the world, whose
existence is everlasting." (Papyrus of Ani, Plate I, in the British Museum) Osiris was the god who
made men and women to rise from the dead, and bestowed upon them everlasting life. He was the
resurrection itself. -- Guide to the Egyptian Collection in the British Museum, p. 139.
(56) We have already seen that, after the death and mutilation of the body of Osiris, the man-god
of Egypt, by Seth (Shem), Horus the son of Osiris, assisted by a number of beings who were
called the "followers of Horus," performed a series of magical rites whereby the rejoining of the
limbs of the god was effected, and he revived. The Egyptians argued: "Certain ceremonies were
performed by Horus on the body of Osiris, and he was mummified, and as a result he rose to
everlasting life; we therefore will have the same ceremonies performed over our dead bodies, that
we also may live again." This seemed to have been the reasoning which originated the practice of
mummification. The Egyptians firmly believed that if the body was not preserved after death
future life was impossible. They therefore endeavored above all things to insure that their
mummies would have perfect protection, spending large sums of money on intricate tombs, etc.,
so that it may truthfully be said that this people expended more upon the dead than upon the
living. It demonstrates how "void of judgment" they were, and how deceived by Satan; for how
could the preservation of their poor bodies secure for them a future life! We are reminded of the
apostle Paul's ridicule of some who were evidently arguing like the Egyptians: "You fool, you are
not sowing that body that is to be!"
(57) It is important to notice that in their elaborate religious system, the idea of repentance never
entered the minds of the Egyptians. With them the commission of sin was regarded merely as a
breach of the ritual law of the community, and could be atoned for by certain payments, after
which the law breaker considered himself free from all obligation, real or moral. In the Coptic,
which is the nearest to the ancient language of Egypt, there is no word for "repentance"; the
translators were obliged to transfer the Greek word itself into the Coptic version of the New
Testament. As all heathen religions are essentially the same, this manifests a vital difference
between them and the true religion; for repentance from sins is the first step in the work of
salvation, as declared by the apostle Peter when he addressed the assembled Israelites in the
temple: "Repent therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out." (Acts 3:19) The
Papal Church follows the lead of its ancient type in the annulling of the need of repentance from
sins, and atonement by the blood, by instituting "indulgences" and the "sacrifices of the mass."
Origin of the Yule Log and the Christmas Tree
(58) One of the titles of the false messiah was Baal-berith, which means "Lord of the Covenant,"
and as such he is referred to in Judges 8:33: "And it came to pass, as soon as Gideon was dead,
that the children of Israel turned again . . . and made Baal-berith their god." It is now recognized
that the 25th day of December, although called "Christmas-day," is not the true day of the birth of
our Lord Jesus. The beginning of October is more nearly correct for his birth as a man. But the
25th day of December was originally observed by heathen countries far and wide, in honor of the
supposed birth of their false messiah (Wilkinson's Egyptians, Vol. iv, p. 405); and it was in order
to conciliate them, and to swell the number of nominal adherents of Christianity (so called), that
the same festive day was adopted by the apostate church, giving it only the name of Christ. The
Christmas tree so common at this day, was equally common in pagan Rome and pagan Egypt.
This is the reason why Papal Rome adopted it, for there is no command in the scriptures requiring
the followers of Christ to observe the day of his birth by Christmas tree celebrations. Briefly -- the
putting of the "Yule Log" into the fire on Christmas eve, and the appearance next morning of the
Christmas tree laden with gifts, represented the consuming of the great god, who, like the log, had
been cut in pieces, and his after birth in newness of life as the "Branch of God," or the Tree that
brings gifts to men. The Egyptians used the palm for their Christmas tree, but the people of pagan
Roman used the fir, because the fir tree covertly symbolized the risen god as the Baal-berith of old
Babylon; for Baal-berith -- "Lord of the Covenant," differs only one letter from Baal-bereth--
"Lord of the Fir tree."
The God Saturn, and Bull Worship
(59) The mystical symbol of Osiris was the young Apis bull or calf, Apis being another name for
Saturn, the hidden one. The Apis bull was also known as Hap, which in the Egyptian language
means "to conceal." In the Chaldean language Hap means "to cover." (Guide to the Egyptian
Collection in the British Museum, p. 131) We now see why the Jewish nation made and
worshiped the image of a calf soon after leaving Egypt under Moses, claiming that this was the
god who had delivered them out of bondage, meaning, of course, that Osiris whom the calf
represented was the god. (However, Aaron promptly stated that there was to be a feast to
Yahweh -- thus giving the implication that they were to use the idol of Osiris to represent
Yahweh, which provoked Yahweh's anger. -- Exodus 32:1-10) A figure of the Apis bull in a
covering resembling the spotted skin of the leopard, is illustrated by Col. Hamilton Smith.
(Biblical Cyclopaedia, Vol. i, p. 368) Attention has already been drawn to the significance of the
leopard's skin, which identifies Osiris with Nimrod, the "subduer of the leopard." Isis was
represented by the cow, called the cow of Athor, which is well known to be a spotted cow. --
Wilkinson, Vol. iv, p. 387, and Vol. vi, Plate 36.
(61) As the horn is the ancient symbol of power, these Assyrian bulls, though human-headed,
nevertheless show horns curing around their headgear. The reason why the horn is used as a
symbol of kingly authority and power appears, from certain sculptures discovered by Layard when
excavating Babylon, to be directly owning to Nimrod's prowess as a great hunter. In a woodcut in
his Nineveh and Babylon, page 605, Layard shows the Assyrian Hercules (that is, "Nimrod the
Giant" as he is called in the Septuagint Version of Genesis) without weapons attacking the bull.
Having conquered the bull, he sets its horn on the head as a trophy of victory, an evidence of his
great power in being able to overcome so strong an animal. Thus crowned he is now represented
as encountering a lion, the king of the beasts. This accounts for the ancient custom among Eastern
nations of kings and chiefs wearing horns on their heads as evidence of their power and authority.
-- Smith's Bible Dictionary, Art. "Horn"
The Satyrs and the God Pan
(62) In the Armenian version of the Chronicle of Eusebius, Ninus stands first in the list of
Assyrian kings. This agrees with the scriptural notice of Nimrod, who is said to have been the first
to become mighty, and to have had the first kingdom. According to Pherecydes, Kronos or Saturn
was "the first before all others that ever wore a crown." (Tertullian, De Corona Militis, cap. 7,
Vol. ii, p. 85) Here is therefore an additional proof that Kronos or Saturn was Nimrod. It explains
why the Greek Bacchus was represented as wearing horns, and why he was frequently addressed
by the epithet of "Bull-horned." (Orphic Hymns: Hymn li, To Trietericus, Greek, p. 117) Apollo,
whom we have seen is likewise identified with Nimrod, is addressed in the Orphic Hymns, as the
"Two-horned god." (Hymn to Apollo) The companions of Bacchus were called Satyrs, and are
said to have "danced along with him." (Aelian Hist., p. 22) The Satyrs were horned gods; and
knowing the identity of Bacchus, it is easy to see that his companions the Satyrs were really the
"mighty ones" over whom Nimrod was lord. It is generally agreed that the god Pan was the head
of the Satyrs. Now, Satyr is just another form of the word Satur or Saturn -- "the Hidden one."
Pan was therefore the first of the Satyrs or hidden ones. When Nimrod or Osiris was put to a
violent death as the result of the judicial condemnation of the 72 leading men, it produced great
terror among his followers who immediately hid themselves, hence the derivation of the word
pan-ic - extreme or sudden fright. Referring to the effect which the slaying of Osiris by Typho
(Seth or Shem) had upon his followers, Plutarch says: "The first who knew the accident that
befallen their king, were the Pans or Sayrs who lived about Chemmis; and they, immediately
acquainting the people of the news, gave the first occasion to the name of Panic Terrors." -- de
Isid. s. 13
Devil Worship
(63) It is from the name Kronos that the English word "crown" is derived; and the familiar spiked
crown which adorns the heads of European monarchs still conveys the idea of the horns of the
ancient Eastern kings. Plutarch says that "the Romans looked upon Kronos as a subterranean and
infernal god." (Vol. ii., p. 266) In Ausonius, also, we read that Saturn is not among the celestial,
but the infernal gods." (Ecolog. i, p. 156) Pluto, also, is called the "god of hell"; and this name has
the same significance as Saturn, meaning "the Hidden one"; for Pluto is derived from Lut "to
hide," which with the Egyptian definite article prefixed becomes "P'Lut." Both Wilkinson (Vol. iv,
p. 63), and Bunsen (Vol. i, pp. 431, 432) show that Osiris in Egypt was the "king of hades," or
Pluto. Hades, as has been shown (See: Hope of Life After Death), is the "hidden state." Actually,
however, Pluto or Saturn was none other than the incarnation of the Devil, who hid himself under
the disguise of the serpent when he caused the fall of man in the garden of Eden, and who has
hidden himself from the world ever since under his refuge of lies. (Genesis 3:1-5; Revelation 12:9;
John 8:44; Isaiah 28:17) It is curious that the popular representation of the devil, with the horns,
hoofs and tail, is exactly the appearance of the black Nimrod when he is depicted in the sculpture
encountering the lion; for in that hieroglyph he wears not only the two horns of the bull over
which he had previously gained victory, but its hind legs and tail as well! "Auld Hornie" is the
popular name by which the Devil was known in Scotland in the older days. The Satyrs, also, were
half animals, having the hind legs and tail of the goat in addition to the horns. The connection of
the goat-like Satyrs with the Devil is borne out by the Hebrew word sa'yr. This Hebrew word is
translated in the King James Version as he-goat [sa'yr] for the sin-offering"; as devils in Leviticus
17:7 - "And they shall no more offer their sacrifices unto devils" [sa'yr]; and as satyrs in Isaiah
13:21: "Babylon . . . shall be as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah . . . and satyrs [sa'yr]
shall dance there."
(64) The system of the "mysteries" demanded that all its ritual, etc., should be kept carefully
secret. Everything in connection with them was symbolical and had a hidden meaning, and the
initiates were not allowed on pain of death to divulge their real nature. Herodotus, who was
initiated in the mysteries of Egypt, makes this apparent when he refers to the goat-like appearance
of the god Pan. He says: "It is not that they [the initiates] believe he [Pan] really had that form;
they think him like the other gods; but the reason [of his goat-like appearance] being connected
with religion, I am not at liberty to explain it." (Birch's Wilkinson, Vol. iii, p. 186) The "hidden
things of darkness," however, are now being made manifest in this enlightening day (the beginning
of the Millennium), and we know that the mystic reason for the goat part of the Satyrs is
connected with their panic and their sudden flight to hide themselves on hearing of the violent
death of their chief; for "Berkha," the word for "fugitive," signifies also "he goat." One of the
epithets of the god Pan, the head of the Satyrs, was Capricornus, which means "goat-horned."
Origin of Sun and Fire Worship
(65) The Chaldean name for Nimrod, the son of Semiramis, was Zero-ashta, from zero "the
seed," and ashta "the woman." But the word ashta also means "the fire," so that Zero-ashta, "the
seed of the woman," became Zeroastes or Zoroaster, the well known name of the head of the fire
worshipers. In general history the Zoroaster of Bactria is most frequently referred to; but the
voice of antiquity is clear and distinct to the effect that the first and great Zoroaster was an
Assyrian or Chaldean, and that he was the founder of the idolatrous system of Babylon, and
therefore Nimrod. (Suidas, Tom. i, p. 1133) After his death the deified Nimrod was fabled to have
been "born from the fire" -- Zero-ashta, the "seed of the fire" -- and as such he was revered as the
great sun-god Baal. Theophilus of Antioch informs us that Kronos, which as we have seen was
one of the titles of the deified Nimrod, was in the East worshiped under the names of Bel and Bal.
-- Clericus, De Philosophia Orientali, lib. i, sect. ii, cap. 37
(66) Nimrod was the first Babylonian king, and therefore the title Molech is applied to him, for
"Molech" means "king." We thus perceive why the Scriptures indicate Molech (or Moloch) to be
the terrible god of fire, the earthly representative of Baal the sun god. In Jeremiah 32:35, we read:
"And they built the high places of Baal, which are in the valley of the son of Hinnom, to cause
their sons and their daughters to pass through the fire to Molech; which I did not command them,
neither did it come into my mind, that they should do this abomination, to cause Judah to sin." It
was claimed that the act of passing through the fire was for the purpose of purifying, and this
probably reconciled the parents who sacrificed their children to Molech. They were under the
delusion that the fire that consumed little ones also perfected them, and made them meet for the
future life. The god Tammuz, who is identified with Nimrod, and for whom the children of Israel
lamented annually. (Ezekiel 8:14), is really connected with fire worship and with the thought of
purification therefrom, for the name Tammuz is derived from tam, "to perfect," and muz, "to
burn" -- to make perfect by burning. This, no doubt, is the origin of the imaginary place called
Purgatory, the fire of which is supposed by Papacy to be necessary to perfect men's souls, and to
purge away the sins they carry with them into the unseen world! The error, of course, naturally
arose through credulous belief in Satan's lie at the beginning, namely, that there is no real death,
but that the soul is independent and immortal, and continues to live in the spirit world after the
death of the body. (See Hope of Life After Death) Those who believe the truth of God are
shielded from so great an error, and know that the dead will remain in their graves until the
glorious resurrection day. How deceived the poor world has been!
(67) In Jeremiah 19:5,6, we read: "They have built also the high place of Baal, to burn their sons
with fire for burnt offering to Baal, which I have not commanded, nor spoke; neither has it come
into my mind. Therefore, behold, the days are coming, says Yahweh, that this place will no longer
be called 'Tophet,' nor 'The valley of the son of Hinnom,' but the 'The valley of slaughter.'" The
name "Tophet" given to the valley of Hinnom, or Gehenna as it is called in the New Testament, is
derived from toph, which in Isaiah 30:32 is translated in the King James Version as "tabrets,", that
is, drums. By the noise of drums the priests of Baal sought to drown the cries of the children who
were being offered in sacrifice to the terrible Molech. Because of this abomination Yahweh cursed
the valley of Hinnom, and in recognition of that curse Jesus spoke of the valley as figuratively
representing the symbolical "lake of fire and brimstone," the second death, into which Satan and
all who follow him will be cast at the end of the Millennial reign of Christ.
(68) This retribution upon Satan, the author of the cruel worship of Molech, seems to be foretold
in Isaiah 30:27-33 under cover of the Assyrian king Nimrod, whom we have seen was the direct
representative of the Devil. The passage reads: "Behold, the name of Yahweh comes from far,
burning with his anger, and the burden thereof is heavy; his lips are full of indignation, and his
tongue as a devouring fire . . . For through the voice of Yahweh the Assyrian will be beaten
down, who struck with a rod . . . for Tophet [the valley of Hinnom or Gehenna] is ordained of
old; yes, for the king it is prepared; he has made it deep and large: the pile thereof is fire and much
wood; the breath of Yahweh, like a stream of brimstone, does ignite it."
(69) Just as the valley of Gehenna, which runs along the south side of Jerusalem, is used in the
Scriptures as a symbol of the second death from which there will not be a resurrection, so the
valley of Jehoshaphat or Kedron, which runs along the east side of the city, is used as symbol of
the first or Adamic death, from which a resurrection is assured because of the ransom sacrifice of
Jesus Christ. The Jews, and also the Mohammedans, greatly desire to be buried in this valley, for
they believe that the resurrection and final judgment will take place there. (See Joel 3:1,2,12-14)
The valley of Jehoshaphat is probably the "valley of dry bones" referred to by Ezekiel. -- Chapter
37.
(70) The story of the trial of the prophets of Baal by Elijah (1 Kings 18:17-40) indicates how
firmly established the worship of Baal was at that time in Israel. Elijah came boldly forward and
cried: "How long will you limp upon two opinions? If Yahweh is God, follow him; but if Baal [the
Lord], then follow him." The test proposed by Elijah as to who was the true God, Yahweh, or
Baal [the Lord], was to be an answer by fire; and the people agreed that this would be a proper
test because Baal was the sun or fire god, and what could be more reasonable than to expect an
answer by fire from him? The test vindicated the name of Yahweh, and the 450 priests of Baal
were slain. Elijah's fearless action in thus ridding the land of Baal worshipers was one of
incalculable blessing to the people. The worship of Baal was an even more horrible religion than is
implied by presented children as burnt offerings to him; for just as it was required by the Mosaic
law that the priests should eat of part of (71) How rejoiced the poor groaning creation will
be when Christ, the true "Sun of Righteousness,"
will arise with healing in his wings! Malachi's
allusion to the "wings" of the sun is evidently
derived from the well known symbol of the sun god
in Egypt and Assyria. Above the doors of the
ancient temples and tombs in these countries, there is usually to be seen a representation of the
sun god, in the form of a round disc with wide spread wings.
(72) Along with the sun as the great fire god, the serpent was connected. Owen says: "In the
Mythology of the primitive world, the serpent is universally the symbol of the sun." (Own,
apud Davie's Druids, in note, p. 437) In Egypt the commonest sign for the sun, or sun god, is a
disc with a serpent around it. (Bunsen, Hieroglyphics, Vol. i, p. 497) The original reason for the
connection of the serpent with the sun appears to have been that, as the physical world receives
its light from the sun, so the serpent was held to have been the great enlightener of good and evil.
This, of course, like all idolatry, is an absolute perversion of the truth; but it serves to identify the
sun god with Satan. In Revelation 12:3, Satan is called a "great read dragon," or "fiery serpent."
(see Diaglott, and compare with verse 9) Pausanius informs us that "the dragon with the Greeks
was only a large snake." -- lib. ii, Corinthiaca, cap. 28, p. 175.
Semiramis Worshiped Under Various Names
(73) Just as Nimrod was regarded as the sun, and was given the title Baal, or "lord of heaven"
(for the word Baal means lord), so Semiramis, when she was likewise "deified," received worship
as the Moon, the "Queen of heaven." Now, according to Athenagoras and Lucian, Semiramis was
worshiped as Astarte, the Syrian goddess. (Legatio, Vol. ii, p. 179, De Dea Syria, Vol. iii, p. 382)
This Syrian goddess was also known as Ishtar from which the word Easter is derived. (See 1912 Watch
Tower, 144) Smith's Bible Dictionary, under the article "Ashtoreth," says: "From the connection
of this goddess with Baal or Bel we should naturally conclude that she would be found in the
Assyrian Pantheon, and in fact the name Ishtar appears to be clearly identified in the list of the
great gods of Assyria. There is no reason to doubt that this Assyrian goddess is the Ashtoreth [or
Ashtaroth] of the Old Testament and the Astarte of the Greeks and Romans . . . It is certain that
the worship of Astarte became identified with that of Venus (or Aphrodite)."
(74) Layard states that in the Syrian temple of Hierapolis, Astarte was represented standing on a
lion, crowned with towers." (Nineveh and its Remains, Vol. ii, p. 456) The name Astarte itself
means "the woman that made towers," being composed of two words: "Asht-tart." Asht is the
word for woman; and it is generally agreed that the last syllable "tart" comes from the Hebrew
verb "Tr," which means to go around," and "to be round." From this is derived the Greek word
"turit," and its English equivalent "turret," a round tower. Asht-turit, therefore, which is the same
as "Ashtoreth" of the Hebrew, is literally "the woman that made the tower" or encompassing wall.
Ovid mentions that Semiramis was currently believed to have "surrounded Babylon with a wall of
brick." (Ovid, Opera, Vol. iii; Fasti, iv, 219-221) But there is not need to give all the credit of
building the battlements of Babylon to Semiramis; the reason why she gained the honor of
fortifying the city was because she in the long run became foremost in esteem of the ancient
idolaters, and thus had attributed to her every virtue and characteristic that properly belonged, or
was imagined to have belonged , to her son Ninus. She was also worshiped as Rhea or Cybele, the
"Mother of the gods" (Paschal, Chronicle, Vol. i, p. 65), and as such is always represented as
wearing a mural or turreted crown on her head. In this respect the Ephesian Diana exactly
resembled Rhea, for Diana was likewise a tower-bearing goddess. Now, the Ephesian Diana is
expressly identified with Semiramis; for Semiramis is the same as the goddess Artemis, and it is
well known that Artemis was Diana. (Layard, Nineveh and its Remains, Vol. ii, p. 480, note) The
Roman Diana was a huntress bearing a quiver of arrows. In this character she was the
complement of Nimrod "the mighty hunter."
(75) The universal adoration of the "deified" Semiramis under various names and titles by the
Eastern nations, is prominently drawn to our attention in Acts 19:23-41. "Great is Diana of the
Ephesians" the multitude shouted, "whom all Asia and the world worships." It is a remarkable fact
that this great goddess is even now worshiped in our very midst in the person of the Papal "Queen
of heaven," the so-called "Virgin Mary," whose image is set up everywhere! A favorite image of
the Romish Virgin Marry shows her standing on a large sphere, which is colored blue, and
spangled with stars. On her head rests a heavy gold crown. The globe is intended to symbolize the
blue vault of heaven, while the crowned woman herself, apparently, represents the moon as the
Queen of heaven, that is, Astarte or Ashtoreth. By her side she holds the child who is also
crowned, and who stands on a smaller star spangled blue globe. In this connection he evidently
represents the sun, the king or lord of heaven, that is, Baal (remember that the word Baal means
Lord). Another familiar figure of the Papal "Mother of god" shows her standing on clouds
(sometimes a sphere), one foot treading on the serpent's head, and with the crescent of the moon
at her feet. The crescent of the moon is the well known sign of Astarte or Ashtoreth, the horns of
the moon's crescent covertly suggesting her power as Queen of heaven. Papacy maintains that it
was not the seed of the woman, but the woman herself, who was to bruise the head of the serpent.
Regardless of the laws of grammar the apostate church renders God's condemnation of the
serpent: "She shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise her heel." In this the goddess of
"Babylon the Great" is only fashioned after her type in ancient Babylon, for though it was
originally claimed that Nimrod had crushed the head of the serpent, this mother was latterly given
the glory of having done this great deed. (Diodorus, Bibliotheca, lib. ii, p. 70; Smith's Classical
Dictionary, p. 320) Although in the first instance Semiramis derived her exalted position from the
Divine character attributed to the child in her arms, she ultimately practically eclipsed her son. So
also in the Papal church it is the Madonna who receives all the adoration, and to whom petitions
are generally addressed. What a satire, to think that the poor world has been so blinded by Satan,
that it has been deceived into worshiping a woman who is nonexistent! Well did Yahweh forbid
his people to make and bow down to images, "which cannot see, nor hear, nor know." (Daniel
5:23; Psalm 115:4-8) It would be difficult to understand how so great a delusion could have
become universal, were it not that we are aware that Satan is the "god of this world," and that
along with him are legions of demons, who have sought to impersonate the dead in various ways,
bolstering up Satan's lie that there is no death. (Genesis 3:4) In Psalm 106:37 we are told that the
Jews, in serving Baal or Molech, had really "sacrificed their sons and their daughters to demons,"
and in Psalm 96:5 we read: "For all the gods of the nations are demons." (Septuagint version) The
apostle Paul, in 1 Corinthians 10:20, says: "But I say, that the things which the nations sacrifice,
they sacrifice to demons."
Origin of Star Worship
(76) The worship of the stars by the idolatrous nations was as prevalent as the worship of the sun
and moon. Mythology identifies Nimrod and Semiramis with certain constellations. From Persian
records we are expressly assured that Nimrod, after his death, was "deified" by the name of Orion,
the mighty hunter, and "placed among the stars." (Paschal Chronicle, tom. i, p. 64) The
constellation Virgo is admitted by the most learned astronomers to have been dedicated to Ceres,
who as we have seen was identical to the Egyptian Isis, and was therefore the same as Semiramis
the Babylonian goddess. (Dr. John Hill, in his Urania; and Mr. A. Jamieson, in his Celestial Atlas.
See Landseer's Sabean Researches, p. 201.) All the signs of the Zodiac, and the other
constellations and stars were associated with various gods and incidents in connection with them,
by Chaldean astrologers. Yahweh especially commanded the Israelites to on no account worship
images, the sun or moon, or the stars, because of the degrading influence it would have upon
them, even as it had upon the heathen nations. In Deuteronomy 4:15-19, we read (World English
Version): "{4:15} Take you therefore good heed to yourselves; for you saw no manner of form
on the day that Yahweh spoke to you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire. {4:16} Lest you
corrupt yourselves, and make yourself an engraved image in the form of any figure, the likeness of
male or female, {4:17} the likeness of any animal that is on the earth, the likeness of any winged
bird that flies in the sky, {4:18} the likeness of anything that creeps on the ground, the likeness of
any fish that is in the water under the earth; {4:19} and lest you lift up your eyes to Heaven, and
when you see the sun and the moon and the stars, even all the host of Heaven, you be drawn away
and worship them, and serve them." Yet the Jewish people frequently disregarded Yahweh's
command. In 2 Kings, chapters 22 and 23, we read how king Josiah, after having heard the words
of the newly discovered book of the law of Moses, cleared the land of idolatry: "He put down the
idolatrous priests . . . them also that burned incense to Baal, to the sun, and to the moon, and to
the twelve signs or constellations [i.e., the Zodiac, the invention of the Chaldeans], and to all the
host of heaven." (2 Kings 23:5, margin) This identification of their gods and goddesses with the
stars by the Babylonians is a counterfeit of the true "deified mortals," Jesus Christ and his
joint-heirs; for we read in 1 Corinthians 15:41,42: "There is one glory of the sun, and another
glory of moon, and another glory of the stars; for one star differs from another star in glory. So
also is the resurrection of the dead."
Origin of the Fish God Dagon
(77) Yahweh's warning to this people not to make an image of anything in the likeness of a fish,
would imply that such was possible. Professor Layard in his excavations at Nineveh discovered
sculptured figures of a fish god, which he identified with Dagon, the fish god of the Philistines,
who borrowed it from the Babylonians (Nineveh and Babylon, pp. 343, 350) In 1 Samuel 5:1-5,
we read that the Philistines placed the captured ark of God in the house of their god Dagon. The
next morning they found Dagon fallen upon his face to the earth before the ark of Yahweh. They
set Dagon up in his place again; but: "when they arose early on the next morning, behold, Dagon
was fallen upon his face to the ground before the ark of Yahweh, and the head of Dagon and both
the palms of his hands were cut off upon the threshold; only the fishy part of Dagon was left to
him. Therefore neither the priest of Dagon, nor any who came to Dagon's house, tread on the
threshold of Dagon in Ashod to this day." (See King James Version margin) In passing we draw
attention to Zephaniah 1:9: "In the same day also I will punish all those that leap over the
threshold." The Philistines leaped over the threshold on which their god Dagon had lost his head
and hands; and it appears from Zephaniah that some among the Jews who had forsaken Yahweh
were worshiping Dagon, and were leaping over the threshold in deference to him! Berosus,
describing this fish god, says that "its body was that of a fish, but under the head of the fish was
that of a man, and to its tail were joined a woman's feet. (Cory's frag., p. 30) From Layard's
sculptures we notice that the figure also had hands. Now, what could have suggested a peculiar
combination of man and fish? And what could have induced the Babylonians to set up so strange
and object in a temple to worship as a god? When we remember that the image is a hieroglyphic,
that every feature of it is intended to convey to the beholder some message, or suggest some
attribute concerning the god whom the image represents, we can perceive that this fish god
described a man who had been in some respects like a fish. It appears that not only were Nimrod
and Semiramis raised to the status of god and goddess in the Mysteries, but that as
Father (Kronos) and Mother (Rhea) of the gods, they were the forerunners of numerous other
"deified mortals."
(78) The fish god Dagon could not have represented anyone more perfectly than Ham (or
possibly Noah), for did not this man live through the waters of the flood which destroyed all "in
whose nostrils were the breath of life"? In this respect, then, he was like a fish, because we do not
read that fish were destroyed in the deluge. (Genesis 7:21,22) Without doubt this is the origin of
that mythical creature called the mermaid and the merman.
(79) The great apostate church of the Gospel Age, true to its Babylonish origin, has actually
adopted this fish god in its ritual; for the pope on certain occasions manifests by his head gear that
he is the direct representative of Dagon. As it was an indispensable rule in all idolatrous religions
that the high priest should wear the insignia of the god he worshiped, so the sculptures discovered
by Layard show that the priests of Dagon were arrayed in clothing resembling fish. This is
probably the "strange apparel" referred to in Zephaniah 1:8. Berosus tells us that in the image of
Dagon the head of the man appeared under the head of the fish, while Layard points out that in
the case of the priests "the head of the fish formed a mitre above that of the man, while its scaly,
fan-like tail fell as a cloak behind, leaving the human limbs and feet exposed." (Babylon and
Nineveh, p. 343) We have evidence that at a later period the pagan priests dispensed with the
body of the fish, and used the head alone like a cap. (Bryant, Vol. v, p. 384) The gaping jaws of
the fish's head, surmounting the head of the man, is the exact appearance of the two horned mitre
of the pope, or of a Papal bishop at this day! Mr. A. Trimen, a distinguished London architect and
author, found that on a certain occasion every year the Chinese Emperor, as Pontifex Maximus of
his nation, wears a mitre which is the very counterpart of the Papal mitre. (Hager, on Chinese
Hieroglyphics, B. xxxv, in the British Museum)
(80) Thus we see the far reaching influences of the idolatrous system set up in ancient Babylon.
That "Mystery of Iniquity" has indeed deceived all the world so that, as the Scriptures truly say,
the nations have been made drunken or mad. But it is possible for the followers of God and Christ
to escape this deception, as "he who is spiritual discerns all things, yet he himself is discerned of
no man." The "Mystery of Godliness" cannot be comprehended by any except those who are
initiated through the anointing of the holy spirit. "Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, neither have
entered into the heart of [the natural] man, the things which God has prepared for them that love
him. But God has revealed them to us by his spirit, for the spirit searches all things, yes, the deep
things of God." Let us be thankful if we dwell in the "secret place of the Most High." It is given to
very few to be allowed to know God and Jesus Christ whom he sent. We recall the words of Jesus,
related in Matthew 11:25,26: "I thank you, Of Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you
have hid these things from the wise and prudent, and have revealed them to babes. Even so,
Father, for so it seemed good in your sight." Can we be certain that we are those who are initiated
in the mysteries of God? Yes, for the apostle John says: "We know that we have passed from
death to life, because we love the brothers." (1 John 3:14) "Beloved, let us love one another, for
love is of God; and every one who loves is begotten of God, and knows God." -- 1 John 4:7
For Further Study: Idolatry Provokes Yahweh's Anger
PLEASE NOTE: The following links are given as sources of more information on the above topic. The opinions and conclusions given in these sites are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect our conclusions or beliefs.
Social Science Data Lab - Egyptian Gods Theme, University of Colorado at Boulder
http://sobek.colorado.edu/LAB/GODS/index.html
Egyptian Antiquity Information: The Ministry of Tourism, Egypt - The Egyptian Tourist
Authority: http://touregypt.net/Antiq.htm
Isis and Osiris painting by Raven Williamson with interesting comments, provided by: The African
American Homepage: http://www.lainet.com/~joejones/gallery8.htm
The Man of Sin - Antichrist The Truth About Antichrist
Babylon Before the Great Court of Her Confusion -- Ecclesiastical The Two Babylons Mystery Babylon the Great - The Babylonian Roots of Catholicism Related Books: Two Babylons or the Papal Worship
Alexander Hislop
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