The prophet's dictionary guide to the supernatural

the birth of children from the womb, they assigned a mysterious feminine power to it. Springing from the ancient Mideast religion, this mother earth was to be worshipped as a fertility deity. Eventually, when a solid connection was made between the women becoming pregnant and her relations with a man, mother earth was assigned a husband. Thus later a male deity joined the mother earth deity to form a sacred marriage wherein the fruit of the earth was conceived and produced through their union. Familiar names for the mother goddess figure are the Babylonian Ishtar, the Syrian Astarte, the Egyptian Isis, and the most popular Gaea (for earth). In addition to Diana of Ephesus, the Greeks also added Hera, Rhea, Aphrodite, and Demeter. The Roman’s changed their names to Maia/Maya, Tellus, Ceres, and Ops. All the same figure, this imposter female spirit (since there are no female angels or subsequent female spirits) merely travels down the ages conforming to the culture her stops through history take her. The names for the male companions she adopted along the way (the root source of spiritual homosexual relationships) are Dumuzi, Adonis, Attis, and Osiris. Theirs is the great seed deposited in mother earth to bring forth its annual abundance. Their competition with biblical Christianity stems from the fact that as nature gods they were seen as dying at the end of their seasons (winter) and returning to life when its springtime reappears, seen as renewal. Herein lies the pagan concept of being reborn or their born-again experience. Ignorantly, pagans align ancient religious beliefs with the one time only death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The adoption of the mother goddess figment into Christianity by venerating the virgin Mary as the mother of God further fuels this delusion, making it hard for the sinner to see any reason to abandon Gaea/Gaia and her consorts for salvation. For obvious reasons, strong witchcraft, magic, and sorcery are part of the rites that celebrate the reviving god and his spouse’s annual reunions to promote the earth’s produce. These reunions, celebrated when the god was to rise from the dead again every year or reappear from heaven, coincide with season changes and the movement of the planets and stars, what we would call solstices and equinoxes. Hence, the Halloween obsession of witches is explained and how and why it is a pagan worship rite are answered. When Galatians 5:19 says that witchcraft, sorcery, is the work of the flesh this is what it means. Worshippers of pagan religions adopt a host of antiquated rituals that are targeted at summoning their invisible spirits to appear and aid them in crises. To assure their favor with the spirit continues, ongoing rituals are observed to forge an unbreakable tie

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