Post by yardstick on Jul 31, 2017 21:32:27 GMT -6
Many of you are likely familiar with the hypothesis that the constellations were put into the sky by the Creator to tell the story of Creation, including the death, burial and resurrection of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ; and that the names and meanings of the stars in the constellations were corrupted by mankind in Babylon (and other places). Yet there seems to be some grain of truth, or remnant left of the original meanings. When considering the historic and mythological references in light of the Scriptures, it is sometimes possible to get a hint of what the original uncorrupted message might have been.
For those who have read the thread about the 'confirming' 'conception comet', you may also know that I was curious what the comet did after November 18th of last year; so I tracked and plotted data points based upon its retrograde. Specifically, when did the comet stop and start its retrograde motion, where did it do so, and how long did it stop for. You can find the data and the initial hypotheses here:
unsealed.boards.net/thread/496/conception-comet-deux-2017
In summary, I noticed that the comet swept rather quickly through several constellations to settle in Orion. I also noticed that once in Orion, the comet tended to stop retrograde around the left arm, the right arm, the head, the lion carcass and the club. So I was curious if that was significant or not, and did a little digging on Orion. You can read that here:
unsealed.boards.net/thread/463/conception-comet-2017?page=4
Well, the more I dig, the more I am finding. In fact, I also kept seeing this 'al jauzah' show up and wondered what that was. So i dropped the term into a search engine and what I found was more descriptive information about Orion:
"...Orion boasted that he was the greatest of hunters (Do we know how Nimrod died?). He declared to Artemis, the goddess of hunting, and Leto, her mother, that he could kill any beast on Earth. The Earth shuddered indignantly (earthquake?) and from a crack in the ground emerged a scorpion which stung the presumptuous giant to death...."
"...Alpha Orionis is called Betelgeuse (pronounced BET-ell-juice), one of the most famous yet misunderstood star names. It comes from the Arabic yad al-jauza, often wrongly translated as ‘armpit of the central one’. In fact, it means ‘hand of al-jauza’. But who (or what) was al-jauza? It was the name given by the Arabs to the constellation figure that they saw in this area, seemingly a female figure encompassing the stars of both Orion and Gemini..."
"...The left shoulder of Orion is marked by Gamma Orionis, known as Bellatrix, a Latin name meaning ‘the female warrior’..."
"...Chinese astronomers knew Orion as Shen, a great hunter or warrior, one of the rare cases in which a constellation was visualized almost exactly the same way in China as in Europe..."
"...In its final form, Shen consisted of 10 stars: the four that make up the traditional outline of Orion (Alpha, Gamma, Beta, and Kappa), the three stars of the belt and three stars in the sword. The sword stars had a dual identity, for they also formed a sub-constellation, Fa. In keeping with Shen’s identity as a warrior chief, the 10 stars were also imagined as his various army generals..."
"... The arc of stars that we see today as Orion’s shield was interpreted in China as a banner, Shenqi, or sometimes a longbow..."
"...Being one of the oldest Chinese constellations, Shen gathered many different and conflicting identities down the ages. ... It was also somehow associated with judicial investigations and punishments..."
www.ianridpath.com/startales/orion2.htm
Then it really got juicy...
"...In ancient illustrations of the constellation, al-Jauza is clearly a woman. However, the name later changed to al-Jabar, a masculine form meaning “The Giant.” When the Greeks named the constellation, it became Orion the Hunter..."
"...However, echoes of the past remain in the star names, including Betelgeuse (“Bet-al-Jauza,” ..."
"...The ancient Arabic goddess called al-Uzza, meaning “The Mightiest One” or “The Strong,” was associated with both fertility and war. She was worshiped... at many important sites between Medina and Mecca, including the Kaaba, though all shrines, statues, and other evidence of their worship have been destroyed." {no doubt to obfuscate the trail - my comment inserted here}
"...The most powerful Sumerian goddess was Inanna [queen of heaven], who may have been borrowed from an even earlier mother goddess figure. But Inanna was no loving mother figure. Often pictured standing on the backs of two lionesses, she was associated with both sex and war. It was said she could stir up confusion and discord... Her planet was Venus, the Morning and Evening Star..."
"...Ishtar [queen of the night] was simply a later version of Inanna. She was an unpredictable goddess of love, fertility, sex, and war. She was incredibly powerful, capable of creating and destroying. While she was praised as the creator of the human race, provider of continuing sustenance, and giver of arts and culture, she also had quite a reputation as a cruel lover, often killing her partners. Like Inanna, she was associated with lions, often pictured standing on the backs of two lionesses. Venus, particularly as the Evening Star, was her planet..."
{this was before the greeks and romans!}
"Both Inanna and Ishtar were often portrayed with horns on their heads representing the crescent moon."
{Mohammed's clan's moon goddess origins, which were originally part of the initial muslim movement; and which have also now been obfuscated.}
"...Astarte is the Phoenician version of Ishtar...the Greeks made her into Aphrodite and the Romans made her into Venus..."
"...Astarte appears in Egypt as a warrior goddess, often conflated with the lion-headed goddess Sekmet and with Isis..."
"She appears in the Bible as Ashtoreth, combining Astarte with bosheth (abomination), who is condemned as a female demon of lust."
"...Depicted as a lioness or a woman with a lion’s head, Sekhmet (also Sekmet), daughter of the sun god Ra, was one of the oldest deities in the Egyptian pantheon..."
"Later on, Sekhmet’s image changed when she was merged with Hathor, particularly at the Temple to Sekhmet-Hathor at Kom-el-Hin. Hathor was the mother goddess, pictured as a sacred cow or a woman with cow’s horns on her head. Unlike the warlike Sekmet, Hathor was associated with joy, sex, music, dance, pregnancy, and birth."
{Talk about obfuscation!}
"Tanit was the Carthaginian version of Astarte, worshipped from Malta to Gades (Cadis) on the coast of Spain. She is usually pictured with a lion’s head."
"The first century AD statue of Ba’alat Gebal now housed in the Louvre, shows the transition. The Phoenician goddess stands in a classical Greek pose. Her symbol is no longer the lion but the dove, included in her headdress, which also includes a sun disk, a symbol of the Egyptian goddess Isis. She retains two feathers in her headdress, reminiscent of Astarte...."
"Hathor, the Celestial Cow...is shown early on as a full cow with a sun disk between her horns. Later, she appeared as a woman with a sun disk between cow horns..."
"In many ways, Isis absorbed the qualities of Hathor but added the dimension of loving wife and mother. As mother of the falcon-headed god Horus, she is often pictured holding or suckling the infant The fierce goddess, the lady of terror, has gradually disappeared."
"With the rise of the Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, the goddesses disappeared almost completely. The name Queen of Heaven was applied to Mary, the virginal mother of Jesus wearing a mantle of stars, often pictured holding or suckling the infant Jesus. In Mexico, Our Lady of Guadalupe continued the heritage of the Aztec Mother Earth goddess Tonantzin..."
misfitsandheroes.wordpress.com/tag/al-jauza/
Although it appears the adversary has obfuscated the original, there is a clear link between Orion and the ancient Female Hunter mother goddess/gaia worship. Why would she have been changed to male? To hide the original?
Don't a number of these descriptions bear striking similaries to 'a woman riding a beast'? Check out some of the photos in the link.
misfitsandheroes.wordpress.com/tag/al-jauza/
Moderators: if you want you, you can move the posts I made from the links above to here. If it makes sense?
For those who have read the thread about the 'confirming' 'conception comet', you may also know that I was curious what the comet did after November 18th of last year; so I tracked and plotted data points based upon its retrograde. Specifically, when did the comet stop and start its retrograde motion, where did it do so, and how long did it stop for. You can find the data and the initial hypotheses here:
unsealed.boards.net/thread/496/conception-comet-deux-2017
In summary, I noticed that the comet swept rather quickly through several constellations to settle in Orion. I also noticed that once in Orion, the comet tended to stop retrograde around the left arm, the right arm, the head, the lion carcass and the club. So I was curious if that was significant or not, and did a little digging on Orion. You can read that here:
unsealed.boards.net/thread/463/conception-comet-2017?page=4
Well, the more I dig, the more I am finding. In fact, I also kept seeing this 'al jauzah' show up and wondered what that was. So i dropped the term into a search engine and what I found was more descriptive information about Orion:
"...Orion boasted that he was the greatest of hunters (Do we know how Nimrod died?). He declared to Artemis, the goddess of hunting, and Leto, her mother, that he could kill any beast on Earth. The Earth shuddered indignantly (earthquake?) and from a crack in the ground emerged a scorpion which stung the presumptuous giant to death...."
"...Alpha Orionis is called Betelgeuse (pronounced BET-ell-juice), one of the most famous yet misunderstood star names. It comes from the Arabic yad al-jauza, often wrongly translated as ‘armpit of the central one’. In fact, it means ‘hand of al-jauza’. But who (or what) was al-jauza? It was the name given by the Arabs to the constellation figure that they saw in this area, seemingly a female figure encompassing the stars of both Orion and Gemini..."
"...The left shoulder of Orion is marked by Gamma Orionis, known as Bellatrix, a Latin name meaning ‘the female warrior’..."
"...Chinese astronomers knew Orion as Shen, a great hunter or warrior, one of the rare cases in which a constellation was visualized almost exactly the same way in China as in Europe..."
"...In its final form, Shen consisted of 10 stars: the four that make up the traditional outline of Orion (Alpha, Gamma, Beta, and Kappa), the three stars of the belt and three stars in the sword. The sword stars had a dual identity, for they also formed a sub-constellation, Fa. In keeping with Shen’s identity as a warrior chief, the 10 stars were also imagined as his various army generals..."
"... The arc of stars that we see today as Orion’s shield was interpreted in China as a banner, Shenqi, or sometimes a longbow..."
"...Being one of the oldest Chinese constellations, Shen gathered many different and conflicting identities down the ages. ... It was also somehow associated with judicial investigations and punishments..."
www.ianridpath.com/startales/orion2.htm
Then it really got juicy...
"...In ancient illustrations of the constellation, al-Jauza is clearly a woman. However, the name later changed to al-Jabar, a masculine form meaning “The Giant.” When the Greeks named the constellation, it became Orion the Hunter..."
"...However, echoes of the past remain in the star names, including Betelgeuse (“Bet-al-Jauza,” ..."
"...The ancient Arabic goddess called al-Uzza, meaning “The Mightiest One” or “The Strong,” was associated with both fertility and war. She was worshiped... at many important sites between Medina and Mecca, including the Kaaba, though all shrines, statues, and other evidence of their worship have been destroyed." {no doubt to obfuscate the trail - my comment inserted here}
"...The most powerful Sumerian goddess was Inanna [queen of heaven], who may have been borrowed from an even earlier mother goddess figure. But Inanna was no loving mother figure. Often pictured standing on the backs of two lionesses, she was associated with both sex and war. It was said she could stir up confusion and discord... Her planet was Venus, the Morning and Evening Star..."
"...Ishtar [queen of the night] was simply a later version of Inanna. She was an unpredictable goddess of love, fertility, sex, and war. She was incredibly powerful, capable of creating and destroying. While she was praised as the creator of the human race, provider of continuing sustenance, and giver of arts and culture, she also had quite a reputation as a cruel lover, often killing her partners. Like Inanna, she was associated with lions, often pictured standing on the backs of two lionesses. Venus, particularly as the Evening Star, was her planet..."
{this was before the greeks and romans!}
"Both Inanna and Ishtar were often portrayed with horns on their heads representing the crescent moon."
{Mohammed's clan's moon goddess origins, which were originally part of the initial muslim movement; and which have also now been obfuscated.}
"...Astarte is the Phoenician version of Ishtar...the Greeks made her into Aphrodite and the Romans made her into Venus..."
"...Astarte appears in Egypt as a warrior goddess, often conflated with the lion-headed goddess Sekmet and with Isis..."
"She appears in the Bible as Ashtoreth, combining Astarte with bosheth (abomination), who is condemned as a female demon of lust."
"...Depicted as a lioness or a woman with a lion’s head, Sekhmet (also Sekmet), daughter of the sun god Ra, was one of the oldest deities in the Egyptian pantheon..."
"Later on, Sekhmet’s image changed when she was merged with Hathor, particularly at the Temple to Sekhmet-Hathor at Kom-el-Hin. Hathor was the mother goddess, pictured as a sacred cow or a woman with cow’s horns on her head. Unlike the warlike Sekmet, Hathor was associated with joy, sex, music, dance, pregnancy, and birth."
{Talk about obfuscation!}
"Tanit was the Carthaginian version of Astarte, worshipped from Malta to Gades (Cadis) on the coast of Spain. She is usually pictured with a lion’s head."
"The first century AD statue of Ba’alat Gebal now housed in the Louvre, shows the transition. The Phoenician goddess stands in a classical Greek pose. Her symbol is no longer the lion but the dove, included in her headdress, which also includes a sun disk, a symbol of the Egyptian goddess Isis. She retains two feathers in her headdress, reminiscent of Astarte...."
"Hathor, the Celestial Cow...is shown early on as a full cow with a sun disk between her horns. Later, she appeared as a woman with a sun disk between cow horns..."
"In many ways, Isis absorbed the qualities of Hathor but added the dimension of loving wife and mother. As mother of the falcon-headed god Horus, she is often pictured holding or suckling the infant The fierce goddess, the lady of terror, has gradually disappeared."
"With the rise of the Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, the goddesses disappeared almost completely. The name Queen of Heaven was applied to Mary, the virginal mother of Jesus wearing a mantle of stars, often pictured holding or suckling the infant Jesus. In Mexico, Our Lady of Guadalupe continued the heritage of the Aztec Mother Earth goddess Tonantzin..."
misfitsandheroes.wordpress.com/tag/al-jauza/
Although it appears the adversary has obfuscated the original, there is a clear link between Orion and the ancient Female Hunter mother goddess/gaia worship. Why would she have been changed to male? To hide the original?
Don't a number of these descriptions bear striking similaries to 'a woman riding a beast'? Check out some of the photos in the link.
misfitsandheroes.wordpress.com/tag/al-jauza/
Moderators: if you want you, you can move the posts I made from the links above to here. If it makes sense?