The worship of the earth mother plays a vital role of its own in the fertility symbols and doctrines blended into every culture.
The trinity of Babel was imprinted on the Hindu, Persian, Egyptian, Greek, and Roman adopted Assyrian Babylonian cultures, along with the worship of the “host of heaven” in the original Nimrod / Santa Claus / birthday mythologies. The original Babylonian trinity is about fertility, and reincarnation.
Semiramis was Nimrod’s wife, and after his death she was pregnant with a child from him, who became known as Tammuz.
Tammuz was thought of as a reincarnation of Nimrod’s consciousness, thus Nimrod became known as being both the husband and the child of Semiramis.
This was also the beginning of Baal worship, as Nimrod’s name was babbled in every culture, becoming all the names thought to be Sun deities (Apollo, Sol Invictus, Ra, Zeus, Krishna, etc.).
By a process of blending together differing religious ideas, the earth mother became the Roman circus’ Venus, which later evolved into the worship of Yahushua’s mother.
The blending together of false worship is called “syncretism."
How the Catholic Circus / Kirche began to literally pray to this dead woman and worship (venerate) her is discovered by looking at the timeline of Roman Catholic Dogmas.
Praying to the dead is inherited from Hinduism, and is called necromancy, a form of divination. Islam developed from a blend of Hinduism and Catholicism, and Muhammad’s wife was a Catholic nun who prayed to Mary. Today Muslims can’t explain why they also pray to her, but they do. Both Catholics and Muslims inherited the Shiva beads for repetitive prayers from Hinduism.
Christianity: The Virgin Mary is a central figure of reverence for her role as the mother of Jesus, often celebrated for her purity and obedience.
According to some Christian denominations that pray to Mary, she is venerated (honored) because of her closeness to God (CC 971) . Mary holds a special place because she is the Mother of God, the woman who chose, by her own free will, to say the great yes that brought Jesus into our world. Being the mother, she is the only human being who has been ever so close to God and that asking her anything will be answered They believe that as a mother she has so much influence on him and is the one who has framed all his teachings and character so praying to her brings more fruitful results and they believe that Mary is considered the mother of the incarnation because she was chosen by God to carry and give birth to Jesus, the incarnate Son of God. Through her "yes" to the angel Gabriel, she allowed God to become human, making her role in the Incarnation central to Christian theology. This is summarized in the Apostles' Creed which states that the Son of God "was incarnate by the Holy Spirit of the Virgin Mary, and was made man".
Bridge between divine and human: Mary acts as a bridge between the divine and human, as a divine person entered the world through her human body.
Symbol of salvation: She is seen not just as the mother of Jesus, but as the mother of good health, peace, and salvation, and an encourager to share these gifts.
Mary, the “righteous one,” is spoken of in the Quran more instances in total than in the New Testament. She is the only woman referenced in the Quran by name. Others are mentioned according to their relationships with others — “wife of Abraham” and “wife of Noah,” for instance. Sura (chapter) 19 of the Quran, titled “Maryam,” is devoted to Mary, a significant designation since there are no chapters named for Adam, Moses, or Jesus.
The term "resurrection of Mary" is not a standard biblical or theological term, but it relates to the Catholic and Orthodox Christian beliefs about Mary's ascension into heaven. While the Bible is silent on her death, the Orthodox tradition holds that Mary died a natural death, was resurrected three days later, and then was taken bodily into heaven (called the Dormition). The Roman Catholic Church teaches that Mary was assumed into heaven, body and soul, an event that was either without death or immediately followed her death.
Mary, Queen of Heaven" is a title for the Virgin Mary, the mother of Jesus, based on the Catholic and Orthodox Christian belief that she was assumed bodily into heaven and crowned Queen of Heaven and Earth by her son. This title is derived from her role as the Mother of God and from Old Testament precedents where the mother of the king held a special status, analogous to the Queen Mother in the kingdom of David. She is also seen as a fulfillment of the prophecy in Revelation 12, which describes a "woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars
As the “righteous one,” Muslims recognize in Mary an exceptional degree of holiness. According to Islamic tradition, the touch of the devil did not affect Mary (a belief that some have likened to the Church’s understanding of the sinlessness of Mary or even as complementary to the Catholic doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, which teaches that Mary was sinless from the first moment of her life in the womb of St. Anne).
In Hinduism, the divine feminine (Shakti): A central concept is Shakti, the dynamic, creative power that is considered the energy sustaining the entire universe, including male deities.
Diverse goddesses: Hinduism has numerous goddesses who are worshipped for different aspects of life, such as: Saraswati: Goddess of knowledge and wisdom.
Lakshmi: Goddess of wealth and prosperity.
Durga/Kali: Warrior goddesses representing power and protection.
Parvati: A manifestation representing goodness, bravery, and auspiciousness.
Goddess-centric traditions: The Shakta tradition exclusively worships the divine feminine as the supreme deity. Other traditions, such as Shaivism and Vaishnavism, also worship goddesses, often as the consorts or the active energy of male gods.
ฤแบกo Mแบซu (Vietnam): This is a popular belief system that worships Mother Goddesses, with a strong connection to nature and agriculture, and was recognized by UNESCO in 2016.
Ancient Celtic Religion: This tradition included the worship of goddesses associated with nature, as well as various skills, like healing, warfare, and poetry.
Ancient Greco-Roman Religion: While their goddesses are no longer widely worshipped in the same way, classical figures like Juno, Venus, and Minerva were worshipped as important deities.
So worship of women which orginated in ancient Babylonian cultures is still a practice in many world religions.
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