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![]() Photo 9 |
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Notice the halo of stars above her head, just like in photo eight. Isn't it amazing how society's dress codes have changed over the centuries and millenniums? To the right we see the goddess Venus depicted with her angelic son, Cupid. |
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The prostituting of virgins in honour of Mylitta, was observed also in Cyprus in honor of Venus. But the positive testimony of Pausanias brings this presumption to a certainty. "Near this," says that historian, speaking of the temple of Vulcan at Athens, "is the temple of Celestial Venus, who was first worshipped by the Assyrians, and after these by the Paphians in Cyprus, and the Phoenicians who inhabited the city of Ascalon in Palestine. But the Cythereans venerated this goddess in consequence of learning her sacred rites from the Phoenicians." The Assyrian Venus, then--that is, the great goddess of Babylon--and the Cyprian Venus (See Mother of god Worship) were one and the same, and consequently the "bloodless" altars of the Paphian goddess show the character of the worship peculiar to the Babylonian goddess, from whom she was derived. In this "bloodless" respect the goddess-queen of Chaldea differed from her son, who was worshipped in her arms. He was, as we have seen, represented as delighting in blood. But she, as the mother of grace and mercy, as the celestial "Dove," as "the hope of the whole world," (BRYANT) was averse to blood, and was represented in a benign and gentle character. Accordingly, in Babylon she bore the name of Mylitta--that is, "The Mediatrix." *
Everyone, who reads the Bible and sees how expressly it declares that, as there is only "one Yahweh", so there is only "one Mediator between YHWH and men, the (flesh and blood, first to be born into the kingdom of YHWH) man, Yahshua Messiah," (1 Tim 2:5), must marvel . . . . "How it could ever have entered the mind of anyone to bestow on Mary, as is done by the pagan catholic-christian church of Rome, the character of the 'Mediatrix'." But the character ascribed to the Babylonian goddess as Mylitta sufficiently accounts for this. In accordance with this character of Mediatrix, she was called "Aphrodite". . . . that is, "the wrath-subduer" * . . . . who by her charms could soothe the breast of angry Jove (the god Jupiter), and soften the most rugged spirits of gods or mortal-men. In Athens she was called Amarusia (PAUSANIAS). . . . that is, "The Mother of gracious acceptance".
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