http://www.thegoddessproject.org/the spirit and the bride goddess christian female holy spirit mary magdalene shekhina sophia holy mary holy spirt christian goddess holy spirit female christian sophia female holy spirit female holy spirit female
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What evidence is there of the reality of a
Hebrew and Christian Goddess?
The Old testament word for spirit is 'ruwach', (pronounced
roo'-akh) meaning wind, breath, inspiration, and the OT Hebrew noun is always
feminine.
The Septuagint is the ancient Greek edition of the Old
Testament. The Septuagint is the source of the Old Testament quotations found in
the New Testament. The 'Wisdom of Solomon' was included in the Septuagint. In
'The Wisdom of Solomon' the Holy Spirit is female.
The book of Proverbs declares 'God's Wisdom' is female.
The Greek 'feminine' term for wisdom', sophia; translates a Hebrew 'feminine'
term, hokhmah. In the book of 'Proverbs' contained in the Bible as well as 'The
Wisdom of Solomon' contained in the Apocrypha; It is clearly shown that the
early Hebrews saw God's Wisdom and Spirit as female.
The "Odes of Solomon" is the earliest known Christian
book of hymns or odes. It dates from before 100 A.D. In the 'Odes of Solomon';
the Holy Spirit is female.
Hermetic writings from the first century AD reveal that
the first century Christians used the symbols of both male and female to express
the 'light and the life' within God. In the Aramaic roots of The Lord's Prayer.
Jesus's original language, The words Jesus used to address God are "Aboon
Debashmaya.(Abwoon d'bwashmaya,)" It means, the birther, the bearer, the
breather/bringer of life and light. It means both Mother and Father. Also, Jesus
spoke of Wisdom as female; ( Matthew 11:19; Luke 7:35)
The Hagia Sophia is the largest church in
Constantinople (and in the ancient christian world). The historian Socrates
indicated that the church was named Sophia during the reign of Emperor
Constantius. The name given to the church symbolized the second divine attribute
of the Holy Trinity. Originally, Sophia, which means "Holy Wisdom".
The original tongue of the Hebrew or Aramaic would
translate 'Holy Spirit' as female. Also, Greek would translate 'Holy Spirit' as
either female or 'neuter in reference to the subject' and She only became 'He'
in Latin and English bibles. Yet, even Milton, in his writing of Paradise Lost,
refers to the Holy Spirit and Divine Reason as his Celestial Patroness!
Clearly, the ancient church traditions refer to the
Holy Spirit in feminine rather than masculine terms. It is important to speak of
the Holy Spirit, the Comforter and Reconciler, with a feminine pronoun. The
mother aspect of God is real and Holy.
"Isaiah 66:13 As a mother comforts her child, so will I comfort you . . ."
The functions of the Holy Spirit as characterized in
Biblical texts are often those which have been associated with women:
consolation, inspiration, emotional warmth, and birth of the spirit.
Is there proof that Holy Spirit is female? Does the holy name
of God, YHWH, imply a union between a masculine and a feminine deity? Because
the Bible speaks with authority to many millions of people the answers to this
question has great impact.
The following is devoted to restoring to
light the Goddess of the Hebrew Scriptures – the Goddess who is mentioned within
the Bible that is used by Jews and Christians. The Goddess who was known to the
Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The Goddess who is mentioned from Genesis
through Revelation. The Goddess of the ancient Israelites and of the earliest
Christians. The Goddess who has been hidden in plain view for many, many
centuries.
This is not about one of the goddesses of the ancient Egyptians or Romans, nor a
goddess revered by present-day Hindus, but a Christian Goddess Who was
repeatedly mentioned in the Scriptures. The Goddess of Israel Who has been
deliberately concealed by churchmen and scholars, century after century. Many
sympathetic scholars who have set out to find Goddess in the Scriptures have
failed, often confusing the true Goddess with goddesses whose worship the Bible
condemns. What follows is a restoration of knowledge that there is a Goddess in
the sacred Scriptures. It is a revelation that original Israelite and Christian
worship included and depended upon a Divine Female: the Covenant People of old
believed in God the Father and Goddess the Mother.
In the beginning was the question..
Is there a purpose to the created world? What is the origin of things’?
Where do I find my single, most personal, meaning within life?
Haven't you yourself asked these things?
Have you ever dreamed of Paradise? Paradise may be the most popular and
intensely meaningful idea ever to have gripped the human imagination. We
find it everywhere. It fills our dreams and inspires us all. We seem to
be born with it embedded in our unconscious mind. It is a theme of
legends; stories that have been told at the hearth fires of our
ancestors, going back to a time beyond human memory. The story of
Paradise occurs all over the world. The Garden of Eden, the Greek Golden
Age, The Australian Aborigines’ Dream time, and the Chinese Taoist Age
of Perfect Virtue, are just some of its manifestations. In every
tradition, the image of Paradise is derived from a story that dates back
to the beginnings of human culture. The Genesis account of Adam, Eve,
the Garden, and the Serpent, has inspired generations of theologians and
scholars; it is a fundamental part of the art and culture of Western
civilization. Eden is a place full of fruit bearing trees, gold and
precious stones; it was the source of the earth’s sweet waters. A
beautiful place is like a beautiful metaphor, both are full of wonder.
In order to understand the story of Eden, it is
necessary to think in metaphor. The people of the past thought this way.
Long before 'materialist science' arrived on the scene people did not
dissect everything, they did not try to break everything up into tiny
fragments. When they examined something, when they attempted to
understand the world around them they did through the act of
metaphorical thinking. They would approach a subject by finding it's
simile or attempt to understand it through the act of understanding
things that were similar to it. This way of thinking runs contrary to
the way that we think today. It also reveals a past that we may not be
able to comprehend in a fashion that makes sense to us. When one
realizes the power of this way of thinking it sheds an entirely new
light on the people of old times.
People love metaphor. Metaphor is poetry. Metaphor is song. Metaphor is
myth.
Ancient and tribal peoples shared a love for metaphor. Our modern
languages consist of thousand of words and expressions deriving form
ancient metaphors. Moreover, the further back you go in time, the more
metaphorical language becomes.
Now a metaphorical interpretation of a record does not necessarily rule
out a historical one, especially when one considers that supernatural
agency may be involved. However, it might also be said that, in some
cases, a metaphorical interpretation of a story liberates meanings, and
depths of understanding, that can not be seen in, or bound to, a
historical event. Another way of saying this may be, since the metaphor
is timeless, the history it is concerned with is always present. Some
early Christians like those who authored the Nag Hammadi scriptures did
not read Genesis as history with a moral, but as a myth with a meaning.
The Genesis text is the metaphorical combination of two separate
accounts. In the first, man and woman were created together at the
climax of creation. In the second, God make Adam first, and to relieve
his solitude creates the rest of the creatures, including the first
woman, Eve. Afterward the original couple lives naked and unashamed, in
harmony with each other and with the animals. This is the basic cast, or
form, of paradise accounts found in many cultures.
Beginning in Genesis the original Hebrew writings
described the oneness and equality of man an woman. The first creature
called ha'-adam was not strictly male at all. Ha'-adam is a generic term
for humankind and is used at the beginning of Genesis Only when God
takes a rib from ha'-adam are the sexes differentiated, and the change
is symbolized by new terminology. The creature from whom the rib is
taken is now referred to not as ha'-adam but as 'ish ("man"), and the
creature fashioned from the rib is called 'ishshah ("woman") The very
act of creating woman creates man. This is a love story; the rib is a
symbol of intimacy. "Bone of my bones, flesh of my flesh." This early
concept was that of a soul mate; and is referred to by Plato, who spoke
of man and woman as like a split creature always seeking to rejoin the
halves.
An originally binary, or sexually undifferentiated, adam
(“earthling”) is split down the “side” (a better translation of Hebrew
tsela than “rib”) to form two sexually differentiated persons. Marriage
is pictured as the reunion of the two constituent parts or “other
halves,” man and woman.
God created Adam before Eve? Does the
order of the creation make a difference as to one's favor with God? God
did not create Adam before all things. God also created birds before
Adam. Yet, Jesus spoke of us as being worth many sparrows. Eve is the
crown and culmination of creation. Does this mean she is of more worth
than Adam?
Did Eve force Adam to eat the forbidden fruit? If Adam was not deceived
and yet ate also, how is it that this is not a greater transgression?
Jesus spoke of the difference between the deceived and the undeceived
often; and said in one place, that the difference is to be received in
the Judgment, by, 'Few stripes...and Many stripes."
The Bible says, "in Adam all die" (I Corinthians 15:22), not "in Adam
and Eve all die". It says, "by one man sin entered into the world"
(Romans 5:12), not "by one man and one woman"! Paul never even mentions
Eve in any of the First Adam/Second Adam passages. Why not? Because
Eve's sin was not equal to that of Adam's sin.
"Wherefore as by one man sin entered the world"...Rom: 5; 12
If this statement (by one man sin entered) seems biased in favor of
woman to you, perhaps it also reveals to the gentleman reader how it
feels to be put in your place by the other sex and told that this is
God's will.
The point is not to make contention, rather, to show that love speaks to
no one as of less worth to God. And it is not by works that we are
saved, rather, by grace so that no person may boast. Further, the
Apostle Paul was a preacher of grace, yet, fundamentalism in an 'ink on
paper' reading of the Bible often contradicts the message of grace by
preaching that men are somehow in a preferred status with God. If God is
love, then Love is God; in this is the paradox resolved concerning works
and grace. Christ fulfilled the requirements of the law and released all
of us to love God with unconditional desire for Holy Communion. This
makes the daughters as well as the sons of the royal family of saints
and in equal standing before their Creator.
Adam and Eve are portrayed in images that are seen as
sacrificial toward each other, nature and God. They are cast out of the
Garden when they attempt to become Gods. The trouble lies in that the
transformation was not complete, They only ate from one tree and could
not eat of the tree of eternal life. And so it is, this story relates
how our spiritual birth is accompanied with pain. The Garden story
is a metaphor for this truth that is in all our lives. And our struggle
with our creativity, which is made in the image of God.
The most important aspects of the image which humanity bears
are the close relationship of love between themselves and God and the
responsibility given them as God's representatives to care for the rest of
creation as God's helpers. The word "dominion" does not imply that humankind is
to destroy or exploit nature, but man and woman are to be held responsible
before God for the way they serve God in taking care of the world. The Jerusalem
Reader's Edition Bible states in Genesis 2:15 Yahweh God took the man and
settled him in the garden of Eden to cultivate and to take care of it. If this
is what is usually translated as "giving dominion" then at least this
translation offers a more responsible perspective. God's characteristic as
servant is even more clear in the Gen., Ch. 2 description. Here, at the climax
of the creation story, Eve is created as the "helper
(ezer)" of Adam. Woman is created as help and succor to man’s loneliness.
Far from denoting the idea of service in a subordinated position, the word
"help" (ezer) is generally applied to God" who is par excellence the
succor of those in need and in despair.
This image of God as servant emerges clearly in the New
Testament in the figure of Jesus, who came "not to be served but to serve" (Mark
10:45). Jesus of Nazareth was identified with the prophecies of God's "suffering
servant" (Isa. 42:1-4). Above all, he became God's instrument of divine help in
his willingness to live among people in self-surrender to others in love (Phil.
2: 5_1 1)..
Women have always played a vital role in God's Plan. Consider
Hannah, mother of the great prophet Samuel. Or the widow who fed the prophet
Elijah. Shall we forget Mary, mother of Jesus or the women who ministered to
Jesus during His earthly ministry? Wasn't Miriam thought of as a prophetess in
her own right? Esther? What of Dorcas who ministered to the needs of others by
making coats for them… The list could stretch on and on. Godly women should be
held in high esteem as daughters of God, and sisters and co-laborers in the
Gospel.
From this brief analysis we can conclude that it is not necessary to think of
God primarily as having masculine characteristics of domination and lordship, a
practice that has served to legitimatize aggression and domination in androgen
cultures. It is also possible to think of God as having characteristics
frequently thought of as feminine. God extends divine help to those in need
through the chosen instruments. The example of the steadfast love and sacrifice
of God in the Old and New Testaments points to possibilities of a world where
the fullness of these characteristics could be displayed by both men and women.
God language should not be confused with the reality of God. It should
struggle to disclose that reality through careful investigation and
interpretation. It should discover the differences of what is ordinarily
acceptable to a Christian community and what is theologically possible.
Prominent among neglected passages are portrayals of deity as
female. A psalmist declares that God is midwife (Ps. 22:9-10):
Yet thou art the one who took me from the womb; thou didst keep me safe upon my
mother's breast.
In turn, God becomes mother, the one upon whom the child is cast from birth:
Upon thee was I cast from my birth, and since my mother bore me thou hast been
my God. Although this poem stops short of an exact equation, in it female
imagery mirrors divine activity. What the psalmist suggests, Deuteronomy 32:18
makes explicit: You were unmindful of the Rock that begot you and you forgot the
God who gave you birth. Though the RSV translates accurately "the God who gave
you birth," the rendering is tame. We need to accent the striking portrayal of
God as a woman in labor pains, for the Hebrew verb has exclusively this meaning.
(How scandalous, then, is the totally incorrect translation in the Jerusalem
Bible, "You forgot the God who fathered you."). Yet another instance of female
imagery is the metaphor of the womb as given in the Hebrew radicals rhm. In its
singular form the word denotes the physical organ unique to the female. In the
plural, it connotes the compassion of both human beings and God. God the
merciful (rahum) is God the mother. (See, e.g., Jer. 31:15-22.)
All translation is a form of interpretation. The best
translations straddle languages, conveying the meaning, rhythm, and style of the
original while achieving integrity and beauty in their own right. Translation
demands, necessarily, innumerable subjective decisions: How should "Adam be
translated? "Man" is a perfectly correct rendering of the Hebrew, so is
"humankind." Strictly literal translations from Hebrew to English are virtually
impossible due to differences in grammar; Hebrew nouns have gender, which
requires changes in verb forms. Also Hebrew and English deal with tenses
differently. One problem that presents itself in translating the New Testament
from Hebrew and Aramaic into English is that of the gender of the Ruach haKodesh
(Holy Spirit). English is very different from Hebrew and Aramaic. To begin with,
English has three genders: masculine, feminine and neuter (i.e. he, she and it).
Hebrew and Aramaic have no neuter gender. In Hebrew and Aramaic, everything is
either a "he" or a "she" and nothing is an "it". Also, gender plays a much more
important role in Hebrew and in Aramaic than in English. In English, gender is
usually only an issue when dealing with pronouns. But in Hebrew and Aramaic,
nouns and verbs are also maculine or feminine. And while there are no true
adjectives in Hebrew (nouns are also used as adjectives), noun modifiers must
agree in gender with the noun. Now, the Hebrew word RUACH (Aramaic RUCHA) is
gramatically feminine as is the phrase Ruach haKodesh. This is matched by the
rôle of the Ruach haKodesh as "comforter" (Jn.14-16) and the identifier of the
"comforter" with YHWH acting as a "mother" (Is.66:13).
The truth of the sacred feminine is easy enough to establish, not by searching
for hidden codes in medieval paintings but by taking
seriously Jewish and Christian scriptures and traditions. Is God masculine or
feminine? Even to pose the question is to realize
that God, as a spiritual being beyond our comprehension, is neither male nor
female. Or perhaps more accurately, considering that Genesis
1:27 indicates that woman and man were both created in God's image, God can be
described using feminine as well as masculine terms.
To be sure, the Bible uses not only masculine images to depict God, but feminine
images as well. Consider Isaiah 66:13: "As a mother
comforts her child, so will I comfort you" (NIV). Throughout the Psalms, God is
described as a mother hen protecting her children
under her wing.
The Holy Spirit in particular is an archetypal image that evokes the feminine
divine. She gives birth (John 3:6), life (2 Corinthians
3:6), inspiration (2 Peter 1:21), comfort (Acts 9:31), and groans as if in
childbirth (Romans 8:23). Furthermore, she is described as a
dove and as fire -- both feminine images of the divine in that culture.
There is another compelling feminine image in the Bible: That of Lady Wisdom. In
the Jewish Wisdom literature, beginning with Proverbs,
God's Wisdom is personified as a woman (see Proverbs 8:1-9:6). And as many
biblical scholars now recognize, some of the principal New
Testament passages about the incarnation (including John 1:1-18 and Colossians
1:15-20) are rooted in this Jewish Wisdom tradition,
depicting Jesus as the incarnation of divine Wisdom.
The passage in Ex., ch. 3, describing God's self-revelation to Moses points
toward an image of God that is sometimes overlooked in our view of Old Testament
tradition: the image of servant. In and through the actions of the liberator are
those of the servant or helper (ezer). The Ex. 34:6 interpretation of the name
Yahweh makes this more clear as it reminds us that "God is merciful and
gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness. Yahweh
is related to humankind in a covenant relationship of love and concern. This
same idea is reflected in the two Genesis versions of creation. Genesis 1:26
speaks of the creation of man and woman in the image of God. "Let us make ...
[humankind] in our image, after our likeness; and let them have dominion over
... all the earth." "Male and female ... [God] created them." Exactly what the
author means by the word "image" is not clear, but it is evident that the
Priestly writer wishes to point to an analogy between God and man-and-woman. The
analogy is not merely anthropomorphic because in Israel's view human beings are
theomorphic. They are an image of Elohim. The plural word for God (Elohim) and
the words "let us .." reflect not only the idea of God surrounded by a heavenly
court but also the notion of God as combining all the characteristics of the
male and female gods in the Canaanite pantheon which Yahweh transcends, yet
includes.
This is written in the Hebrew Talmud, the book where all of the sayings and
preaching of Rabbis are conserved over time.
It says: "Be very careful if you make a woman cry, because God counts her tears.
The woman came out of a man's rib. Not from his feet to be walked on. Not from
his head to be superior, but from the side to be equal. Under the arm to be
protected, and next to the heart to be loved."
In the east where the dawn brings the sun, the Creator planted a garden
paradise; in which was brought forth woman and man. In this way has their
Creator fashioned them. They were one of the same. Such was the union of the
two. And they were brought forth to the delight of the other... And the Creator
stood back and looked through the creation. And the Creator was well please with
the creation, for it was seen to be very good. And the Creator created life to
bring forth more life, after its kind, to be fruitful and multiple...
A true love story is a poem. This is because poetry speaks in ways larger than
mere words. Poetry speaks through metaphor and rhythm; ultimately becoming song.
The true love story is the eternal love story. This is the story of woman and
man as their Creator has brought them forth. With the exceeding capacity, for
the love of the other. The beginning record of man’s purpose is of necessity the
story of love. The love between a man and woman. The love that brings forth
children. It is from this foundation of life and living the Creator brings forth
those elements which are spiritual in nature. In the book of Genesis, beginning
at the opening of the book, we read of a man named Adam and his wife, his one
and only, Eve.
Among the many pearls of truth that, for centuries, have purposely been
concealed from those who attend churches and synagogues is the awareness that
Elohim [el-lo-HEEM], the God of the Bible, is really simultaneously both God and
Goddess. In the original Hebrew, the word Eloah [el-LO-ah], is the feminine form
of ‘God’. The word, Eloah, literally means “Goddess”.
For centuries, theologians, motivated by divers agendas and biases, deliberately
masked profound truths about Elohim, the God of the Bible. They deliberately
concealed from the common person’s view the existence of the Divine Feminine
within the Holy Scriptures. Even though some of the Hebrew words for God have a
distinct and clear-cut feminine gender, translators and commentators have almost
universally covered up this knowledge. They were unwilling to use the feminine
word “Goddess”. Therefore, they consistently used only masculine pronouns when
referring to God – even when feminine pronouns would have been more correct.
There has been a calculated conspiracy to purge the Goddess from synagogues and
churches.
Many plain and precious spiritual Scriptural teachings have been buried by the
scholars of mainstream churches. For example, the many names of God have been
deliberately kept from Christians and Jews. Scriptural teachings of the true
nature of God, and of the plan of redemption were obscured. These were no
accidents, but very conscious concealments by religious leaders. The truth “has
been falsified by the lying pen of the scribes.” [Jeremiah 8:8] One of the
mysteries3 of the ancient writ is that the Goddess has been ever-present within
the pages of the Bible.
The Scriptures were originally written in Hebrew, Aramaic4 , and other Semitic
languages. For that reason, the following includes a careful exposition of
Hebrew words. It also includes explanations of Scripture passages, as well as
comments by early church leaders. References are found in Bible, and in other
ancient Hebrew and Christian texts5.
Both Male and Female
Gen 1:1 In the beginning God ('elohiym) created the heaven and the earth. Gen
1:26 And God ('elohiym) said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness:
See also Genesis 3:22 and 11:17 where God is spoken of as "us." 'elohiym is used
of God as a plurality:
The Bible reflects that the first creation, as well as continuing creation, is
done in tandem by Eloh (God) and Eloah (Goddess) (also referred to as Hokhma and
Ruach). Together, Eloh and Eloah make up the Elohim. See Genesis 1:1-3, 1:26-27;
Proverbs 3:19-20, 8:22-31; Job 38:4-40:30; Ecclesiasticus 1:1-10, 24:1-6; Wisdom
of Solomon 7:22, 8:1-7, 8:21-9:4, 9:9-11.
Hebrew language scholars have noted that there has been a strange violation of
convention in the formation of the word "Elohiym", in that the female root
"Eoahh", meaning Goddess, is used and is then combined with the masculine suffix
"iym". So the word "Elohiym" not only means plural Gods, but Gods with male and
female attributes
'elohiym 430. 'elohiym, el-o-heem'; plur. of H433; gods in the ordinary sense;
but spec. used (in the plur. thus, esp. with the art.) of the supreme God; X
exceeding, God (gods) (-dess, -ly), X (very) great. Yehovah is used of God as
His being one God:
Yehovah 3068. Yehovah, yeh-ho-vaw'; from H1961; (the) self-Existent or Eternal;
Jeho-vah, Jewish national name of God:--Jehovah, the Lord. Comp. H3050, H3069.
Thus, in Deuteronomy 6, we see the One God spoken of as a plurality:
Deu 6:1 Now these are the commandments, the statutes, and the judgments, which
the LORD (Yehovah) your God ('elohiym) commanded to teach you, that ye might do
them in the land whither ye go to possess it: Deu 6:2 That thou mightest fear
the LORD (Yehovah) thy God ('elohiym), to keep all his statutes and his
commandments, which I command thee, thou, and thy son, and thy son's son, all
the days of thy life; and that thy days may be prolonged. Deu 6:3 Hear
therefore, O Israel, and observe to do it; that it may be well with thee, and
that ye may increase mightily, as the LORD (Yehovah) God ('elohiym) of thy
fathers hath promised thee, in the land that floweth with milk and honey. Deu
6:4 Hear, O Israel: The LORD (Yehovah) our God ('elohiym) is one (echad)[ Echad
speaks of God as being one as husband and wife are one: Gen 2:24 ] LORD
(Yehovah): Deu 6:5 And thou shalt love the LORD (Yehovah) thy God ('elohiym)
with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might.
The Monotheism here is combined with a compound unity of God being one. In other
words God is one, but not literally in number but in Substance. The Hebrew word
here is the word ('Echad') which means compound unity and an absolute. The
Scriptures have this Hebrew word 'one' which is (Echad) used in other Scriptures
which proves the unity of this word. For instance, in Genesis 1:5, the
combination of evening and morning comprise one (echad) day. In Genesis 2:24, a
man and a woman come together in marriage and the two "shall become one (echad)
flesh.
There are many scripture references implying God as God/dess:: Numbers 16:22 and
also 27:16 | Deuteronomy 32:both 15 & 17 | Job 3:4, 5:17, 9:13, 10:2, 11:5-7,
12:6, 38:7 | Ezra 4:24 to 6:18, throughout all the verses (27 references)
Nehemiah 9:17 | Psalms 82 , (Prov. 1:20-33; 2:2-4; 3:13-19; 4:7-9; 8:1-36;
9:1-5), (Greek name – Sophia) chapter 8 in particular describes her as an
eternal being with godly attributes, one that was with God from the beginning,
who participated in the creation and teaching Her children. In Proverbs 30:5 we
also can read, "Every word of (the) Goddess ( #433 Elowahh, Eloahh) is pure: he
(she) is a shield unto them that put their trust in him (her) [masculine is
English translation].
The Bible abounds in male imagery and
language. For centuries interpreters have explored and exploited
this male language to articulate theology; to shape the contours
and content of the church, synagogue and academy; and to
instinct human beings -- female and male -- in who they are,
what roles they should play, and how they should behave. So
harmonious has seemed this association of Scripture with sexism,
of faith with culture, that only a few have even questioned it.
However, some commentators observed the plight of the female in
Israel. Less desirable in the eyes of her parents than a male
child, a girl stayed close to her mother, but her father
controlled her life until he relinquished her to another man for
marriage. If either of these male authorities permitted her to
be mistreated, even abused, she had to submit without recourse.
Thus, Lot offered his daughters to the men of Sodom to protect a
male guest (Gen. 19:8); Jephthah sacrificed his daughter to
remain faithful to a foolish vow (Judg. 11:29-40); Amnon raped
his half-sister Tamar (II Sam. 13); and the Levite from the hill
country of Ephraim participated with other males to bring about
the betrayal, rape, murder and dismemberment of his own
concubine (Judg. 19). Although not every story involving female
and male is so terrifying, the narrative literature nevertheless
makes clear that from birth to death the Hebrew woman belonged
to men. What such narratives show, the legal corpus amplifies.
Defined as the property of men (Exod. 20:17; Deut. 5:21), women
did not control their own bodies. A man expected to marry a
virgin, though his own virginity need not be intact. A wife
guilty of earlier fornication violated the honor and power of
both her father and husband. Death by stoning was the penalty
(Deut. 22:13-21). Moreover, a woman had no right to divorce
(Deut. 24:1-4) and, most often, no right to own property.
Excluded from the priesthood, she was considered far more
unclean than the male (Lev. 15). Even her monetary value was
less (Lev. 27:1-7).
Even present-day Bible dictionaries and concordances are still
biased, and ignore basic Hebrew grammatical rules when it comes
to translating the various words for Deity. The result is that
most Christians and Jews have been hoodwinked into to believing
that the God of the Old Testament is exclusively male, and
Christians have been mislead into believing that the Holy Spirit
is genderless.
When one studies the Bible in English, only, and when an
individual is limited to what preachers and rabbis teach, it
seems that there is no ‘real’ goddess for the People of the
Covenant to worship. Those who study the Bible can easily
discover that other people worshipped goddesses, and that God’s
prophets condemned such practices. But it was not the worship of
the true Goddess of Israel that was condemned, but the worship
of other goddesses – just as the worship of other gods is
forbidden.
This has left people who have felt drawn to relate to Goddess in
quite a dilemma. If they have a Scripture-based spiritual
background, it would seem that their worship of the Goddess is
incompatible with the very Scripture on which they base their
faith. If they voice their feelings to a pastor, they are almost
universally discouraged. The reason is that most priests,
pastors, and rabbis are graduates of theological seminaries that
teach that there is no rightful Goddess in the Bible. The
doctrine of churches and synagogues is deeply influenced by
denominational dogma, by culture, and by the pressure of
committees within their congregations. Therefore, congregants
who inquire about a Divine Feminine are usually dismissed out of
hand, and are dissuaded from pursuing Her. As the result, the
majority of those who became seekers of the Divine Feminine feel
compelled to exit Judaism or Christianity in order to pursue
their quest. Many in the present are being drawn away from their
spiritual heritage and millennia of tradition, attracted to the
pantheon of gods and goddesses found in Wicca, or related
Neo-pagan religions2, because it seemed to them that the belief
in Goddess was contrary to Christianity or Judaism. Centuries of
androcentric cultural bias have resulted in a modern exodus of
those feeling the call of Goddess in their spiritual lives.
If traditional interpretations have neglected female imagery for
God, they have also neglected females, Similarly, the sacrifice
of the daughter of Jephthah documents the powerlessness and
abuse of a child in the days of the judges (Judg. 11). No
interpretation can save her from the holocaust or mitigate the
foolish vow of her father. But we can move through the
indictment of the father to claim sisterhood with the daughter.
Retelling her story, we emphasize the daughters of Israel to
whom she reaches out in the last days of her life (Judg. 11:37).
Thus, we underscore the postscript, discovering in the process
an alternative translation.Traditionally, the ending has read,
"She [the daughter] had never known man. And it became a custom
in Israel that the daughters of Israel went year by year to
lament the daughter of Jephthah the Gileadite four days in the
year" (11:40). Since the verb become, however, is a feminine
form (Hebrew has no neuter), another reading is likely:
"Although she had never known a man, nevertheless she became a
tradition [custom] in Israel. From year to year the
daughters of Israel went to mourn the daughter of Jephthah the
Gileadite, four days in the year." By virtue of this
translation, we
can understand the ancient story in a new way. The unnamed
virgin child becomes a tradition in Israel because the women
with whom she chooses to spend her last days do not let her pass
into oblivion; they establish a living memorial. Interpreting
such stories of terror on behalf of women is surely, then,
another way of challenging the patriarchy of Scripture
Among the many pearls of truth that have purposely been
concealed from churches and synagogues is the awareness that
Elohim is simultaneously God and Goddess. In the original Hebrew
of the Bible, Eloah [el-LO-ah], is the feminine form of 'God.'
This one specific word, Eloah, literally means “Goddess.”
Theologians, motivated by various agendas, deliberately masked
profound truths about Elohim [pronounced el-lo-HEEM], the God of
the Bible. They intentionally obscured the presence of the
Divine Feminine. Even though some of the Hebrew words for God
have a distinctly feminine gender, translators have almost
universally suppressed this, being unwilling to use the feminine
word “Goddess.” They have consistently used only masculine
pronouns when referring to God – even when feminine pronouns
would have been correct. Present-day Bible dictionaries and
concordances are still biased, and ignore basic Hebrew
grammatical rules in translating the various words for Deity.
The result is that most Christians and Jews have been mis-taught
that God is exclusively male. Elohim is a majestic, awesome
Being that is beyond comprehension. Elohim is translated into
English as 'God.' It is actually a gender-combined word,
simultaneously representing both unity and majestic plurality.
It is a compound of the feminine singular Eloah with the
masculine plural suffix -im. Eloah is the feminine singular
counterpart of El, which means God. Eloah is correctly
translated as “Goddess.” In Hebrew, the -oah, -oh or -ah suffix
makes a word feminine [comparable to the English suffix -ess,
used in such words as waitress and stewardess.]
n the original Hebrew of the Bible there
is one word, Eloah, which literally means “Goddess”. Eloah is the feminine form
of ‘God’. Other words describing God are also distinctly female. Hebrew nouns
are usually gender-specific [although some can be gender-neutral in usage].
While some of the Hebrew words for God have a distinctly feminine gender,
translators have almost universally chosen to suppress this, being unwilling to
use the feminine word “Goddess”. Likewise, they have consistently used masculine
pronouns when referring to God, even when gender-neutral or feminine pronouns
would have been more appropriate. Most present-day Bible dictionaries,
commentaries, and concordances are still biased, and ignore basic Hebrew
grammatical rules when it comes to translating the words designating Deity. This
has resulted in most Christians and Jews holding to the erroneous opinion that
God is exclusively male. To most Christians and Jews, awareness of the Divine
Feminine is not only unfamiliar, but, initially, may even seem unbelievable.
Elohim
Elohim6 is the Hebrew word that is most often translated as the English “God.”
Elohim is gender-combined, plural word. The word Elohim is concurrently male and
female, and simultaneously represents both unity and majestic plurality. Elohim
is a compound of the feminine singular Eloah with the masculine plural suffix –im.
The word Elohim represents a majestic, awesome God that is beyond the ability of
the human mind to fully comprehend. We can comprehend some of the attributes of
Elohim, but the fullness of the Godhead is beyond our understanding.
El7 is the masculine singular Hebrew word for God. Although specifically male,
in practice, El is often gender-neutral. Eloah8 is the feminine singular form of
the same word, and is correctly translated ‘Goddess’. In Hebrew, the –oah¬, –oh
or -ah suffix makes a word feminine. This is very similar to the English suffix
–ess, used in such words as waitress, stewardess, or poetess. Eloah is Goddess,
the feminine form of God.
Elohim is a combination of the singular feminine word Eloah, to which the
masculine plural suffix –im has been added. In Hebrew, the –im suffix is
normally added only used to make masculine words plural. The question that
naturally arises is, Why add a masculine suffix to a feminine root? The answer
is that Elohim is androgynous, being simultaneously male and female in principle
and attributes.
Eloah / El Shaddai
El Shaddai or simply Shaddai are other titles of God. As has already been
mentioned, El means ‘God’. The word shad means “woman’s breast” [Strong’s 7699],
and shaddai [7706] means “breasts”, “breasted”, or “many breasts”. Though El
Shaddai is translated as “Almighty God”, “God Almighty”, or “the Almighty” in
the English Bible, it literally means “God with breasts” or “[many] breasted
[One]”9 There remain some who refuse to properly translate shaddai as “breasts”,
however, the parallelism of the language used in Jacob’s blessing, in Genesis
49:25, emphasizes that this is the correct translation. “El Shaddai who blesses
you…with blessings of the breasts and womb.”10 The descriptive title El Shaddai
depicts the Goddess of Israel.
A fascinatingly important declaration was revealed in Exodus 6:3: “To Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob I appeared as El Shaddai, but I did not make my name Yahweh11
known to them.” While there is Scriptural evidence that the Patriarchs were
actually aware of the word Yahweh, evidently Elohim related to the Patriarchs
primarily in the feminine manifestations of Eloah and El Shaddai. This
revelation given to Moses is highly important to our understanding. The Deity
the Hebrews knew was the Goddess Eloah, or El Shaddai.
Eloah appears 57 times in the Old Testament; two-thirds of those mentions occur
in the book of Job. Shaddai or El Shaddai appears in the Tanakh [Old Testament]
forty-eight times. Thirty one of those occurrences are found in the book of Job.
The fact that Job lived during the days of the Patriarchs, combined with
Yahweh’s declaration to Moses about the Hebrew Patriarchs mainly recognizing
Deity as El Shaddai, allows us to conclude that the Goddess attributes of Elohim
were much more clearly understood in Patriarchal times. Although the names
Elohim and Yahweh appear in Scripture many more times than Eloah or El Shaddai13
, we must notice significance in the fact that the earliest Hebrews had a
considerable understanding of and relationship with the Divine Feminine.
In the book of Job are two specific declarations of the femininity of Eloah.
Yahweh announced to Job, “the sea…leapt tumultuous from the womb.” [Job 38:8]
Then, Yahweh rhetorically asked, “Out of whose womb came the ice?” [Job 38:29]
Obviously, these verses [and others] undeniably attribute feminine
characteristics to Eloah.
Eloah is synonymous with Shaddai, the Goddess. “Can you claim to fathom the
depth of Eloah? Can you reach the limit of Shaddai?” [Job 11:7]14 “Then Shaddai
will be your delight, and you will lift your face to Eloah.” [Job 22:26] “Can he
be happy with Shaddai? Can he call on Eloah at all times?” [Job 27:10] A similar
verse is, “Now what portion does Eloah allot from above; what fate does Shaddai
apportion from [Her] heaven?” [Job 31:2]
A number of verses, mostly within the book of Job, mention either El or Yahweh
as distinct from Eloah. “I would seek unto El, and unto Eloah I would commit my
case.” [Job 5:8] “Does El pervert judgment, or does Shaddai pervert justice…if
you search for El and plead for mercy from Shaddai?” [Job 8:3,5] “This is the
portion of a wicked man from El, and the heritage appointed him by Eloah.” [Job
20:29] “I swear by the living El who denies me justice, and by Shaddai who has
filled me with bitterness.” [Job 27:2] “El judges the Righteous and Eloah is
angered by the Wicked every day.” [Psalm 7:11] Similar passages include Job
15:25, 22:17, 23:16, 33:4, 34:12, and 35:13.
In Aramaic, the
original language of New Testament times, the word Abwoon is
similarly gender-combined, meaning “Father-Mother.” In the
original Aramaic, 'The Lord's Prayer' begins with the word
Abwoon, but in English translations of the Bible, it has been
translated as Father, only. El Shaddai is another name of God
used in the Bible. The word 'shad' means 'woman's breast,' and
'shaddai' means 'breasts,' or 'many breasts.' Though El Shaddai
is translated as 'God Almighty,' or 'the Almighty' in the
English Bible, it literally means 'God with breasts' or '[many]
breasted [God].' The name El Shaddai refers to the Goddess of
Israel. There is a radically important declaration in Exodus
6:3: “I appeared to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob by the name
of El Shaddai, but by my name Yahweh I was not known to them.”
The Patriarchs were aware of the Father [Yahweh], but Elohim
related to them primarily as the Goddess, El Shaddai. The word
Eloah appears fifty-seven times in the Old Testament, and
Shaddai or El Shaddai appears forty-eight times; two-thirds of
these are found in the book of Job. Job lived during the days of
Abraham, and Job is the second most ancient book of the Bible.
There are two specific declarations of the femininity of Eloah,
in Job. The Father announced, “the sea 'leapt tumultuous from
the womb'.” [Job 38:8] Then, He rhetorically asked, “Out of
whose womb came the ice?” [Job 38:29] Obviously there is a
Biblical Goddess, Eloah, from whose Divine Womb sprang the sea
and ice. Ruach ha Kodesh is the Hebrew phrase that means 'Holy
Spirit.' Ruach is feminine, and the Aramaic equivalent ruah is
also a feminine noun. These words are always paired with
feminine verbs and pronouns. The Holy Spirit is feminine, and is
another designation of Eloah. In the original Aramaic texts,
Messiah promised: “And I will pray the Father, and He shall give
you another Comforter, that She may dwell with you forever.”
[John 14:16] Wisdom is another name for the Goddess. 'Wisdom' is
the feminine Hebrew word Hochmah; the equivalent name in Greek
is Sophia. Although the word 'wisdom' definitely is equated with
good judgment and astuteness, Wisdom unmistakably refers to
Goddess in several scripture passages, The Messiah said: “Wisdom
is proven by Her children.” [Luke 7:35] Wisdom announces that
She was brought forth before the physical creation, and She also
assisted in the generative process, alongside Yahweh. “Yahweh
created Me, first-fruits of His fashioning, before the oldest of
His works. From everlasting I was firmly set – from the
beginning, before the earth came into being. The deep was not
when I was born, nor were the springs with their abounding
waters. Before the mountains were settled, before the hills, I
came to birth; before He had made the earth, the countryside,
and the first elements of the world. When He fixed the heavens
firm, I was there; when He drew a circle on the surfaces of the
deep, when He thickened the clouds above, when the sources of
the deep began to swell, when He assigned the sea its boundaries
(and the waters will not encroach on the shore), when He traced
the foundations of the earth. I was beside the Master Craftsman,
delighting Him day after day, ever at play in His presence, to
play everywhere on His earth, delighting to be with the children
of men.” [Proverbs 8:22-31] The Bible makes numerous references
to the Goddess. It instructs us to praise and worship Her; to
offer prayer to Her. “I am one who calls on Goddess and expects
an answer.” [Job 12:4] “Then Shaddai will be all your delight,
and you shall lift your face to Eloah. You will pray and She
will hear.” [Job 22:26-27]
“Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and
thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and
thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee.
And unto Adam he said, Because thou hast hearkened unto the
voice of thy wife, and hast eaten of the tree, of which I
commanded thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat of it: cursed is the
ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days
of thy life; Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to
thee; and thou shalt eat the herb of the field; In the sweat of
thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground;
for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust
shalt thou return.”
“The word that is translated as “rule” comes from the root
mashal, and not from malakh, which means to rule by domination
and is the root of melekh, or king. Mashal has a different
connotation: it implies affinity or complementarity. It is the
root used in Genesis 1: 16 to say that the sun “rules” the day
and the moon “rules” the night. Concerning the zodiac, it is
similarly said that each planet “rules” a constellation. The use
of “rule” does not mean to dominate; rather, it means to have an
affinity for each other, to go together because of complementary
qualities...
The story of Chavah lends itself to further contemplation. For
instance, what does it mean when Genesis Rabbah 20: 7 compares a
woman’s desire for her husband to the desire of rain for the
earth and the desire of God for Israel? Surely this is not
domination!”
In this quotation, Chavah is a more accurate transliteration of
the Hebrew name usually rendered as Eve, and Genesis Rabbah is
the first book of Midrash Rabbah, a homiletic exposition of
Hebrew scriptures, compiled up to the eleventh century.
“A major misunderstanding of the role of woman in relation to
man has also been created by inaccurate translation of ezer
knegdo. Usually rendered as “helpmate,” the term has been used
to say that women should be subordinate to men. Actually,
however, nothing could be further from the truth. Elsewhere in
the Bible, God is referred to as an ezer to Israel. Surely, God
is not subordinate to the Jewish people!
Knegdo means “opposite” or “against” him: “If he is worthy, she
shall be a help (ezer) to him; if he is unworthy, she shall
oppose him (knegdo), to fight him” (Rashi; Yev.63a*). This is
certainly not a prescription for an obedient wife! Rather, it
validates a woman’s ability to accurately judge her husband’s
behavior and to treat him accordingly.”
~ Ibid., page 6. * This is a reference to Rashi’s commentary on
Yevamot, 24th tractate of the Talmud. Rashi (Rabbi Solomon ben
Isaac, 1040–1105, France) became widely known for his scholarly
commentaries on the Talmud and Hebrew scriptures, and influenced
Christian theologians.
Pertaining to the exclusive maleness of the Hebrew Priesthood,
in the cultural context of Exodus: Of the varieties of religious
service in neighboring Pagan cultures, whether priest or
priestess of god or goddess, only the male priest of a male god
performed a service that had no sexual component. Typically, the
priest of a goddess was a transvestite eunuch who had ritual sex
with men, the priestess of a god had ritual sex with the king or
Pharoah at harvest festivals, and the priestess of a goddess was
a “holy” prostitute who had sex with any man who paid the temple
fee. The priest of a god served through offering sacrifices,
libations, incense and psalms. The pagan gods, goddesses, myths
and festivals were explicitly sexual, and often brutal in
nature. It makes sense that God’s effort to differentiate a
covenant people, a holy “set–apart” nation, and to prevent or
eliminate the semblance of ritual sexual exploitation,
mutilation and phallus worship — given the context — should
involve instituting a male priesthood to serve a linguistically
“male” god with no graphically portrayed sexual nature.
God is Light
ISRAEL
The origin of the word Israel is quite interesting and takes all of our Judeo
Christian heritage back to a deep connection with ancient Egypt.
The word Israel is made up of three ancient forms IS RA EL.
When we define each part we find a deep truth.
IS Female---- I·sis1 (º s¹s) n. Mythology. An ancient Egyptian goddess of
fertility, the sister and wife of Osiris.
RA Male---- Ra1 (rä) also Re (r³) --n. Mythology. The ancient Egyptian sun
god, the supreme deity represented as a man with the head of a hawk crowned
with a solar disk and uraeus.
EL GOD---- the Hebrew term el also became an equivalent to the English
term god, as in the verse: "Who is like unto Thee, O Lord, among the gods"
(Exodus 15:11), in which elim (the plural of el) is used as gods.
There is Israel. The female and male that is within all living things that
together equal God. Or as Jesus put it, the Kingdom of God Is Within You.
The Hebrew shâkhan is a root that translates into words such as
abide, reside, or dwell. Some examples from Exodus — [24: 16]
And the glory of the Lord abode upon mount Sinai... [25: 8] And
let them make me a sanctuary; that I may dwell among them.
[29: 45] And I will dwell among the children of Israel and will
be their God. [40: 35] And Moses was not able to enter into the
tent of the congregation, because the cloud abode thereon, and
the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle. Numbers —
[9: 17,18] And when the cloud was taken up from the tabernacle,
then after that the children of <st1:country-region Israel
journeyed; and in the place where the cloud abode, there the
children of Israel pitched their tents. At the commandment of
the Lord the children of Israel journeyed, and at the
commandment of the Lord they pitched: as long as the cloud abode
upon the tabernacle they rested in their tents. [35: 34] Defile
not therefore the land which ye shall inhabit, wherein I dwell:
for I the Lord dwell among the children of Israel «» That root
term, with a Divine Name appended, becomes Shekhinah — the
Presence of God. In Jewish tradition, whenever God is immanent
(perceptible as present) rather than utterly transcendant, this
is the Shekhinah. The Shekhinah is characterized as feminine
(likewise, some early Christians speculated on the feminine
nature of the Holy Spirit). According to much rabbinical
commentary, the Shekhinah dwells inherently in a woman; but in a
man, only through marriage — his enjoyment of the Divine
Presence depends upon his relationship with a woman. And the
Torah specified that a man could function as a Priest only if he
was married.
Jewish tradition points out that although God started Creation,
it was left to mankind to finish it, to produce a kingdom of
priests, and that Abraham was the first to really sense this,
covenanting with God to that end. But that co–creative
(procreative) aspect can be overemphasized, to the neglect of
other considerations. The traditional Christian notion that
procreation is the only valid purpose for sexual relations is a
concept alien to the scriptures. The Torah requires that a
husband cater to the sexual gratification of his wife, with his
failure to do so constituting grounds for divorce. That
obligation is distinct from his duty to reproduce. Jewish
tradition regards the passion of a sacred bond as holy and
meritorious in its own right. From a process viewpoint, that
makes considerable sense: God delights in the prehension of
intense, harmonious feeling. Promoting such unity of feeling is
God’s work, and contributes to God’s Glory. In a very real
Eternal sense, priesthood might be best used to describe the
glory inherent in the Eternal bond of man and woman. The common
spirit through which they act and feel greatly magnifies the
character of their being, far beyond simply the sum of the two.
Considering the wealth of feeling, and consequent glory, that
can derive from a sacred marriage bond, the dynamics of such a
holy union of genders is something that God would want to
validate with Eternal Life. It could be argued that, given God’s
nature, God might necessarily do so. Should degree of
“exaltation” be equated with degree of procreative success?
Might it be that qualitative factors are of equal, if not
greater ultimate value than the quantitative?
Although Hebrew scripture and Jewish tradition may support some
unique concepts of marriage, they do not support blatant
antifeminism and repressive patriarchalism, errors which are
common to most fundamentalist religious groups. Perhaps the
notion that a woman can pass through the veil, into the Presence
of God, only if she is escorted by a man should be reconsidered,
with a twist — for it might well be that a man cannot pass
through the veil, into the Presence of God, unless accompanied
by a woman.
The Greek 'feminine' term for wisdom', sophia; translates a
Hebrew 'feminine' term, hokhmah. In the book of 'Proverbs'
contained in the Bible as well as 'The Wisdom of Solomon'
contained in the Apocrypha; It is clearly shown that the early
Hebrews saw God's wisdom and spirit as female.
Wisdom is a spirit that is friendly to people, but she will not
forgive anyone who speaks against God, for God knows our
feelings and thoughts, and hears our every word. Since the
Lord's spirit fills the entire world, and holds everything in it
together, she knows every word that people say. Wisdom of
Solomon 1:6-7
Early interpreters have pondered the meaning of certain Biblical
passages - for example, the saying in Proverbs that God made the
world in Wisdom'. Could Wisdom be the feminine power in which
God's creation was 'conceived'?, the double meaning of the term
conception - physical and intellectual - suggests this
possibility: The phrase "He knew his wife" is to know physically
but also as 'ennoia'; within thoughtfulness. This character of
thought [ennoia] is feminine, since ... [it] is a power of
conception." "Wisdom, " God's earliest creation and playmate,
who had her counterpart in the Greek Sophia; is a Deity in which
biblically, God's wisdom is specifically expressed as female
(Prov 8:1-36).
The bride of the lamb is interpreted to be the new city of
Jerusalem, in Christianity again symbolizes the Church. We read:
"And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from
God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband."
That the interpretation is later than the original idea of a
bride is quite obvious in the Fourth Book of Esdras, where the
prophet encounters a woman and listens to the tale of her
tribulation. The woman disappears and in her place he beholds a
city whereupon the angel Uriel explains the vision saying (4
Esdras x. 44): "The woman which thou hast seen is Sion, which
thou now seest before thee as a builded city." A similar idea is
found in the Wisdom of Solomon where wisdom is personified as
Sophia and is spoken of as having existed before the world,
taking the place of the Holy Ghost in Christianity. We read for
instance in chapters vii and viii:
"For wisdom is more moving than any motion: she passeth and
goeth through all things by reason of her pureness. . . . And p.
458 being but one, she can do all things: and remaining in
herself, she maketh all things new: and in all ages entering
into holy souls, she maketh them friends of God, and prophets.
For God loveth none but him that dwelleth with wisdom. . . .
Wisdom reacheth from one end to another mightily: and sweetly
doth she order all things. . . . In that she is conversant with
God, she magnifieth her nobility: yea, the Lord of all things
himself loved her. For she is privy to the mysteries of the
knowledge of God, and a lover of his works."
English translations usually translate the feminine "Sophia"
into the abstract "Wisdom". Although the Greek and Hebrew words
were fully feminine, the English is not.
“Martin Luther, the originator of the Protestant movement, was
not ashamed to think of the Holy Spirit in feminine terms. We
often miss this in Luther studies because his feminine
terminology is translated into English masculine terms, but if
his German is translated without such a gender bias, his sense
of the Holy Spirit being feminine shines out like a beacon.”
Even the famous Church Father Origen speaks of the Holy Spirit
as
being feminine, when saying:
Paidiske de kypias tou hagiou Pneumatos he psyche.
The soul is handmaiden to her mistress, the Holy Spirit. Another
illustration is found in the now lost Gospel of the Hebrews (cf.
The
Lost and Hostile Gospels by Rev. S. Baring-Gould, London, 1874,
pp.
130-1), probably one of the first ever written by Christian
hands,
extracts from which have survived in the writings of Origen and
Jerome. This particular passage is quoted by Origen and runs as
follows:
Arti elabe me he meter mou to hagion pneuma, hen mia ton trichon
mou,
kai anenenke me eis to horos to mega thabor.
Straightway my mother the Holy Spirit took me in one of my hairs
and
bore me to the great mountain Thabor. -- Homily xv, on Jeremiah
and
on John. Similarly Jerome, another Church Father, wrote
(Micheas,
vii, 6):
Modo tulit me mater mea Spiritus Sanctus in uno capillorum
meorum.
Then my mother the Holy Spirit took me in one of my hairs.
The fullest development of her is in the so-called "Wisdom
Books" of the apocryphia in the Greek Pentateuch that were
canonized into Christian Scripture and are still used by the
Roman Catholic and English Orthodox churches.
Sophia dominates the first nine chapters of Proverbs and is
found in both the Old and New Testaments.
There was no attempt in the West to maintain the integrity of
the original texts until Jerome produced the Latin Vulgate at
the request of the papacy in the fourth century. Zuntz, by using
the standard practice of textual comparison, in his detailed
analysis of the oldest Pauline manuscript, notes, in his book,
The Text of the Epistles, numerous places where the text has
been altered. Jerome, himself, in letters to his colleagues,
bewails the fact that he has so many variant texts to select
from for the compilation of a standardized version. At one point
before him he has the old Hieronymian text and its revision. He
says, “The differences throughout are clear and striking.” In
his writings he does leave us a clue to the subject at hand. At
one point he has before him the gospel of the Hebrews used by
the Syrian Christians which, as some now say, predated the four
canonical gospels. In it, Jerome says that the Holy Spirit is
expressed in the feminine gender and is considered the mother in
law of the soul. (Library 11, commentary in Isaiah, chapter 11:
Library 2, commentary. in Micah 7.6:) So here is some additional
external evidence from an unrelated source that the Holy Spirit
was originally considered feminine. In Judaism, the medieval
writers of the Kaballah concentrated on the masculine aspects of
the sefiroth (the 13 aspects of God) and relegated Sophia to an
inferior sphere than that she had heretofore occupied. Roman
Catholicism explicitly associated Old Testament Sophia texts
with Mary or the Mother Church. In the Eastern Church, Sophia
survives and is often associated liturgically with the Holy
Spirit and sometimes with Christ, himself. Further, the church
fathers of the Patristic Age preferred the male "Logos" when
describing Christ in order to avoid gender confusion. Philo, who
at first equated Sophia with Logos, "substituted Logos for
Sophia, until the masculine person of the Logos has taken over
most of Sophia's divine roles including the firstborn image of
God, the principle of order and the intermediary between God and
humanity. Sophia's powers are restricted and she is limited to
Heaven.
In both Greek and English, "Spirit" is a neuter noun. And we
think of a neuter noun as an "it" rather than a he or she. Thus
we think of the Holy Trinity of orthodox theology in a peculiar
way. God the Father we visualize in warm, personal terms. God
the Word (i.e., Logos) we more often speak of as God the Son and
think of personal images ranging from Bethlehem to Nazareth to
Jerusalem. Not so, however, with the Holy Spirit. Both the
neuter noun and the biblical images of fire and anointing tend
us away from personal to impersonal imagery, from Spirit as
divine personality to Spirit as divine emanation. How
unfortunate. In the Gospel of John, Jesus invites us to know
about, expect, and experience the Holy Spirit. And he speaks of
the third member of the divine family in terms that are
personal. In fact, he challenged his original followers to think
of the Holy Spirit in the same personal ways they had
experienced him.
John’s concept of the Logos, the Word that was God and became
flesh (John 1:1-14) was derived from the Old Testament
understanding of Wisdom as much, probably more, than from the
Greek idea of Logos. And yet Wisdom, the one before whom are
riches and honor and righteousness (Proverbs 8:18) and who
shared with God in the creation of all things (Proverbs 8:27-31)
is consistently given a female gender in Proverbs and by Jesus
(Proverbs 1:20; 4:6; 8:1,11; 9:1; 14:33; Matthew 11:19; Luke
7:35). "Jesus and Sophia came to be associated through a process
that took place during the first two centuries of our era. The
apostle Paul said it clearly: 'We are preaching a crucified
Christ . . . who is the Wisdom of God' (1 Corinthians 1:23; see
also 1 Corinthians 2:6-8). Others, the author of John 1:1-18,
for example, describe Sophia clearly but only imply that the
person they are describing is Jesus. Elsewhere, such as in the
Gospels of Matthew, Luke and Thomas, Jesus speaks the words of
Sophia as if he were Sophia. Yet others, among them the authors
of Ephesians, Colossians, and James depend heavily on their
readers' knowledge of Sophia in communicating who they thought
Jesus really was. Finally, the literature that came to be called
gnostic includes a wide range of stories in which Jesus and
Sophia exchange roles in a variety of earthly settings.
In the Hebrew tradition, Sophia was considered to have been with
God from the beginning of Creation. In Proverbs 8:27-51, Sophia
says:
When God set the heavens in place, I was present,
Sophia is found throughout the wisdom books of the Bible. She is
Wisdom Incarnate, the Goddess of all those who are wise. There
are references to Her in the book of Proverbs, and in the
apocryphal books of Sirach and the Wisdom of Solomon (accepted
by Catholics and Orthodox, found in the Greek Septuagint of the
early Church). Paul explicitly identifies Jesus with Sophia in
1st Corinthians 1:23-25,30 "By God's action, Jesus Christ has
become our Sophia." Then following, in 2:6-8, "But still we have
a Sophia to offer those who have reached maturity: not a
philosophy of our age, it is true....The hidden Sophia of God
which we teach in our mysteries is the Sophia that God
predestined to be for our glory before the ages began...." John
more directly incorporates Sophia scriptures into his
description of Jesus. Sophia's statement (Ecc. 24:8) "Then the
creator of all things instructed me...'Pitch your tent in Jacob,
and make Israel your inheritance'" ... becomes John 1:14, "The
Word was made flesh, and pitched his tent among us." Extensive
references in Paul, John and the Synoptic Gospels are given.
Is it any wonder that She is constantly associated with wise
King Solomon? 1 Kings 4:29-31 tells us that God gave wisdom to
Solomon, and that he became wiser than all the kings of the East
and all the wise people of Egypt. Wisdom 8:2, 16, 18 tells us
that Solomon was seen as married to Sophia. One of the many
layers of symbolism attributed to the Song of Songs (also known
as Song of Solomon or Canticle of Canticles) is that it speaks
of Solomon's marriage to Holy Sophia. Wisdom 9:8-11 even tells
us that Sophia instructed Solomon in building the Temple!
Most New Testament (better rendered, new covenant) translations,
by naming and renaming of places, people and movements, have
changed identity and position to pass distinctly as Christian,
and not as another Jewish faction.
The dissociation of the New Covenant as a Jewish book begins
with the mutation of Semitic names into Greek names. The
messianic (christian) belief itself is not a new concept.
Avraham (Abraham) himself was a messianic. He believed in a
messiah bringing salvation; he simply looked forward while we
look back. In the New Covenant, members of the messianic
movement are referred to using largely Greek or seemingly Greek
names. The Greek name most often is but a vague reference to the
original Hebrew name in sound and association.
James is the New Covenant name for Yeshua's half-brother, who
was later head of the church in Jerusalem. English James
scarcely echoes Greek Iakobos and Hebrew Ya'akov. So James,
wearing a new British costume, is removed from his Semitic
connotation. From Ya'akov to James is quite a journey. Such a
gap in translation may be shocking -accomplished by translation
traditions of removing Christian from Jew -in a book that is
entirely Jewish. Though, it should be a pleasure to return and
redeem the names once we understand how far we have been led
from the Hebrew name.
The "New Testament" is a mistranslation of the Greek title New
Covenant based on Jerome's intermediate Latin mistranslation,
which he rendered as Novum Testamentum. The title New Covenant
itself derives from Luke 22.20, Paul in 1 Corinthians 11:25 and
Hebrews 8.8-13.21. The idea of a new covenant, we must remember,
comes from Paul who takes it directly from Jeremiah 31:31: "I
will establish a new covenant with the house of Israel." Paul, a
Greek-speaking Jew from Tarsos, who knew the Hebrew texts, used
diatheke to convey its meaning in Hebrew, berit , which is
covenant, and also a cut or circumcision, as we see when Paul
speaks of a "new circumcision of the heart" (Rom. 2.25-29).
The Greeks of the New Covenant texts were largely Greek-speaking
Jews. The texts themselves were meant to persuade them that
Jesus was not only a Jewish prophet, but was their messiah,
hence the name Christian for their sect, Christian meaning
"messianic". The probable Aramaic script or oral witness
accounts containing the Hebrew biblical names found themselves
Hellenized, given to Greek translation or transliteration, from
late Hebrew or Aramaic. So, we see, Yeshua or, more fully,
Yehoshua the Messiah, Yehoshua and Ha-Mashiach, rendered into
Greek as Iesous 0 Hristos. Iesous is a transliteration of Yeshua
and Hristos (meaning the "anointed"), being a translation of
mashiach. Greek Iesous 0 Hristos is in turn translated into
English as Jesus [the] Christ. Similarly, Yochanan becomes
Ioannes in Greek, Johannes in Latin, and John in English.
However we are not Greek-speaking Jews and gentiles. We speak
English. Why not biblical Yochanan in English rather than Greek
John? Why adopt an English transcription of a Hellenized Greek
transcription of Hebrew names from the Hebrew Scriptures?
If we have failed to demonstrate the purposeful inconsistency,
consider that the Tanakh (Old Testament) is done with minimal
change. (Abraham may be written Avraham since the b and v in
Hebrew, as in Spanish and other languages, are interchangeable)
Why not transcribe biblical names from the New Covenant directly
into English without an intermediary Greek transcription?
Hellenizing Yeshua the Messiah, into Jesus Christ is comparable
to Hellenizing Yahweh (YHWH) into Zeus. If this were acceptable,
we would read the story of creation as, "In the beginning Zeus
created the heavens and the earth," The Tanakh (Old Testament)
would be in harmony with the presently Hellenized New Covenant.
The English "God" of Old English and is equivalent to the Dutch
god, German Gott, Icelandic godh, and Goth guth. The epithet
"god" has no added correlation with Greek or Hebrew than "hell";
also of Germanic origin. In the Greek scriptures "hell" is
rendered hades, in the Hebrew it is Sheol or Gehenna (Gei
Hinnom).
The Greeks chose to Hellenize the Semitic epithets for God.
However, in English there exists no grounds (other than the
lethargy of tradition) for the Hellenized, Romanized and
Germanized words for God not acquiescing to Elohim, Adonai and
Yahweh in the New Covenant. "God", the name of a northern pagan
divinity, is standard English. Elohim, Yahweh and Adonai may
soon beckon to be embraced by His followers.
The first name for God, we encounter as the third word in the
Hebrew Genesis (reading right to left): brereshit bara elohim et
ha-shamayim ve-et ha-aaretz. Following the Hebrew word order
this reads: "In the beginning | created | Elohim | the skies |
and the earth". Elohim a "plural of majesty" with a singular
meaning, derived from Eloah , or from El meaning "God" as in El
Shaddai. In the second account of creation (Gen. 2.4), (be-yom
asot adonai elohim eretz ve-shmayim), our triune God is again
called Elohim but also Adonai, meaning, "lord". Genesis has
provided thusly, two words for God: Elohim and Adonai early in
the text.
Yet since His/Her secret name -or any word signifying that name
-is ineffable, the true name cannot be known, written, or
sounded. There is however a way to represent God with letters
that do not spell or reveal His secret name. The Tetragrammaton
(also Tetragram), consists of the four Hebrew consonants YHWH or
YHVH (yod, he, waw or vav, he ), normally pronounced Adonai (the
Semitic word for "lord"). Some choose to sound out the letters,
YHWH giving Yahweh another surrogate name for the nameless one.
The Hebrew Ruach ha Kodesh is the phrase
that translates into the Holy Spirit. Ruach is feminine, and the
Aramaic equivalent ruah is also a feminine noun. These words are
paired with feminine verbs and pronouns15. The Hebrew phrases
“Spirit of Elohim” and “Spirit of Yahweh” consistently use
feminine grammatical construction. The Holy Spirit is feminine,
and is another designation of Eloah. Therefore, following the
original texts, the Messiah promised: “I will ask the Father,
and He shall give you another Comforter, that she may dwell with
you forever.” [John 14:16]
The Holy Spirit is identifies as the Comforter in John chapters
14 to 16. This role of comforting is associated with mothering,
of course. “As a mother comforts a child, so shall I comfort
you.” [Isaiah 66:13] In Isaiah 11:2, the “Spirit of Wisdom” is
also called the “Spirit of Yahweh”. Irenaeus, a second century
bishop, declared that the ‘Wisdom’ of whom Solomon wrote in the
Old Testament is identical to the Holy Spirit so often mentioned
in the New Testament. [Against Heresies]
The Holy Spirit inspired those who wrote the Scripture. [2nd
Timothy 3:16] It is through infusion of insight from the Holy
Spirit that we are able to understand the depths of Scripture.
[1st Corinthians 2:11] The Holy Spirit reveals spiritual truths
to sincere believers. [Moroni 10:5] She interprets our prayers
and the intents of our hearts. [Romans 8:26] She gives spiritual
gifts to believers, such as the gifts of healing, prophecy,
beholding spirits and angels, and speaking words of wisdom. [1st
Corinthians 12:1-12; Moroni 10:7-17 (7-11)]
Another word commonly used to refer to the Holy Spirit is ‘shekinah’.
The feminine word shekinah appears in Aramaic translations of
the Bible, and is commonly use within modern Judaism. Shekinah
is the equivalent of the Holy Spirit; it means “Divine
Presence”. The –ah suffix indicates that it is Feminine Divine
Presence.
The Didascalia, Apostolic teachings written during the 3rd
century, compared the Deaconess [female minister] with the
feminine Holy Spirit. The ministry of the Deacon was likened to
the masculine attributes of God. “Let the Deaconess be honored
by you in the place of the Holy Spirit.” [II:4:26]
In the Gospel of Philip, written in the late 2nd or early 3rd
century, it is also quite evident that the Holy Spirit was
understood by the earliest Christians to be the Divine Feminine.
In lines 24 and 25 we read: “Some said, ‘Mary conceived by the
Holy Spirit.’ They are in error. They do not know what they are
saying. When did a woman ever conceive by a woman?” The author
of Philip was making an important clarification. The Scriptures
say that Mary, the earthly mother of Messiah, conceived by the
power of the Holy Spirit – not that the Holy Spirit impregnated
her16.
God Became
In some Hebrew traditions, God is referred to as Ain Sof – which
means “without end”. God is infinite, ultimate, and immeasurable
– beyond our capability to fully understand. Although we cannot
fully comprehend God, the Scriptures do contain a wealth of
knowledge about the Divine that we can understand.
The Scriptures are emphatic that there is one God – one Elohim.
The Shema declares: “Listen, O Israel, Yahweh your Elohim is
One.” [Deuteronomy 6:4] Though there is unmistakable unity in
God, the Scriptures simultaneously reveal a plurality. “The
Father, and…the Son, and…the Holy Ghost. The Spirit Eloah is
part of the Divine – one facet. This is just like the Father and
Son existing as distinct elements within the majestic plurality
that is Elohim. The ‘trinity’ is Father, Mother [Holy Spirit],
and Son.
The words Elohim and Yahweh may each be classified as collective
nouns. Collective nouns include words such as family, flock,
herd, forest, jury, staff and team. The plurality of Elohim [or
of Yahweh] can be understood in the collective sense of family.
Paul wrote that “the whole family in Heaven” receives its name
from Elohim. [Ephesians 3:15]
Considering these things, it should come as no surprise that in
Hebrew writings, God had no singular epithet. S/He was at once,
nameless, but with a secret sign that could not be uttered, and
so took on one name that meant itself, which was HaShem, which
means "The Name".
A not often remembered image of God is one in which Yahweh is
described by an analogy to the action of a female bird
protecting her young (Ps. 17:8; 36:7; 57:l; 91: 1,4; Isa. 31:5;
etc.). The sustaining care of Yahweh for Israel is represented
in Dent. 32:11-12 by the words: "Like an eagle that stirs up its
nest, that flutters over its young, spreading out its wings,
catching them, bearing them on its pinions, the LORD alone did
lead him, and there was no foreign god with him." In a similar
reference in Matt. 23:37 (Luke 13:34) Jesus says: "O Jerusalem,
Jerusalem ... ! How often would I have gathered your children
together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you
would not!" Other passages compare the love of God with the love
of a mother for her child, or the loyalty and affection of a
wife for her husband (Dent. 32:18; Isa. 46:3; 51:1; 49:14-15;
Ps. 131: 2).70 We need to remind ourselves of the importance of
three words used in the femine gender in Hebrew tradition which
stress feminine attributes of God: Shekinah or the glory of the
presence of God on earth; Torah or the guidance of God; Chokmah
or the pre-cosmic divine wisdom . In the New Testament, Jesus is
associated with all three of these attributes, Thus in Matt.
18:20 we read: "For where two or three are gathered together in
my name, there am I in the midst of them." With this we may
compare the saying in PirkeAbo ' th: "When they sit together and
are occupied with the Torah, the Shekinah is among them. " In I
Cor. 1:24, 30, Paul calls Christ the Wisdom of God . From this
we can conclude that both feminine and masculine characteristics
play a part in the description of Yahweh and Christ. In the
Bible when God has to be described metaphorically, both male and
female imagery is used. "Now will I scream like a woman in
labor", says God in Isaiah. "Gather her brood under her wings",
says Jesus to the people. "Having ten pieces of silver and
losing one", is the Woman who seeks diligently for the lost
soul. "As a nurse cherisheth her children", says the evangelist
in the epistles. In Proverbs and elsewhere the female figure,
'Wisdom' personifies the Divine.
" How beautiful Sarah is!
Her long soft hair her bright eyes and her radiant face,
her full breasts and her delicate hands,
her round hips and her thighs!
There is no woman more beautiful than Sarah,
no woman who ever stood under the canopy to be wed to a good
man.
Excellent is her beauty,
fair is she under the wide sky. Yet this is not why she attracts
our love: it is her wisdom,
her prudence, and the graceful way she moves her hands."
~Genesis Apocryphon and Jubilees
The Hebrew matriarch Sarah is one of the most renowned of the
heroines of the Jewish nation. She is the inspiration for the
wise and virtuous woman of the proverbs. She was nearly a
century old when she bore her child, who transformed that nation
into Israel. But it was not her motherhood that made her great
and beloved. It was her wisdom, based on inner strength and
knowledge.
Wisdom is a quality that is not, today, often acknowledged. Yet
in ancient times a woman's wisdom - gained through years of
watchful awareness and inner searching - was important for the
health and happiness of all her family and, beyond that, of her
entire people. Sophia retains this place which she holds in the
Old Testament Apocrypha with the Gnostics, and as we know from a
fragment of the Gospel According to the Hebrews, the Holy Ghost
is regarded as the wife of God the Father, for there Jesus uses
the expression "My Mother the Holy Ghost," as quoted by
Epiphanius (Haeres LXII, 2).
In India, a dove was uniformly the emblem of the Holy Spirit or
Spirit of God. A dove stood for a third member of the Trinity,
and was the regenerator or regeneratory power. Compare this with
Titus (3:5): regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost. A
person being baptized under the Brahminical theocracy was said
to be regenerated and born again, or, they were born into the
spirit, or the spirit into them—the dove into or upon them. In
Rome a dove or pigeon was a legendary spirit, the accompaniment
of Venus, the emblem of female procreative energy. It is
therefore appropriately shown as descending at baptism in the
character of the third member of the Trinity. The dove also
fills the Grecian oracles with their spirit and power. A dove
was, in several ancient religions, the Spirit of God (Holy
Ghost) moving on the face of the waters at creation (Gen. 1:2),
a pigeon was often substituted. The dove and the pigeon were
used interchangeably. In the ancient Syrian temple of
Hierapolis, Semiramis is shown with a dove on her head, the
prototype of the dove on the head of the Christian messiah at
baptism.
the Eastern Orthodox Church has women deaconesses, married
priests, and the Feminine Principle is recognized in Sophia, the
Wisdom of Christ.
The Holy Ghost was the third member of the Trinity in several
Eastern religions as well as the Gothic and Celtic nations. This
notion of a third person in the the godhead was diffused among
all the nations of the earth. Father, Son and Holy Ghost, or
Father, Word and Holy Ghost (1 John 5:7) express the divine
triad of which the Holy Ghost was the third member. The Holy
Ghost was the Holy Breath which, in the Hindu traditions, moved
on the face of the waters at creation, and imparted vitality
into everything created. A similar conception appears in the
scriptures. In Psalms 33:6 the Word of the Lord made the
heavens, and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth.
The Brahminical conception of creation by the Divine Breath, the
Holy Ghost, which was breathed into Adam to make him a living
soul. The Prana or principle of life of the Hindus is the breath
of life by which the Brahma, the Creator, animates the clay to
make man a living soul. Holy Ghost, Holy Breath and Holy Wind
were equivalent terms for the sigh from the mouth of the Supreme
God, as laid down in pagan traditions. The Holy Wind is
suggested by the mighty rushing wind from heaven which filled
the house on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:2). The Holy Wind is
an accepted term for the Holy Ghost in ancient religions. The
doxology, reported by a missionary, in the religious service of
the Syrian church runs thus:
Praise to the Holy Spiritual Wind, which is the Holy Ghost;
Praise to the three persons which are one true God. The Hebrew
Ruh Elohim, translated Spirit of God (Gen. 1:2) in our version,
is literally, Wind of the Gods.
The word Pneuma, of the Greek New Testament, is sometimes
translated Ghost and sometimes Wind, as suited the fancy of the
translators. In John 3:5 the word is Spirit, in verse eight both
Wind and Spirit, and in Luke 1:35 the term is Holy Ghost—all
translated from the same word. In the Greek Testament the word
Pneuma is used for Spirit, Holy Ghost, breath and Wind so that
in the Christian Scriptures they are synonymous. An unwarranted
license has been assumed by translators in rendering the same
word different ways. The Holy Ghost appears also as a tongue of
fire, which sat upon each of the apostles in Acts 2:3. Buddha,
an incarnate God of the Hindus over two thousand years ago, is
often seen with a glory or tongue of fire upon his head. The
visible form of the Holy Ghost as fire was accepted among the
Buddhists, Druids and Etrurians. The Holy Ghost, or Holy Spirit
when visible, was in the form of fire or a bird and was always
accompanied with wisdom and power. The Hindus, Persians and
Chaldeans made offerings to fire, emblem of the Holy Ghost or
Holy Spirit as the solar fire. The Gospel of the Hebrews is
known only through quotations from it given in the writing of
early church fathers. In one such, a feminine Holy Spirit,
descending upon Jesus at his baptism, says: "My Son, in all the
prophets was I waiting for you that you should come and I might
rest in you." Another quote, this time from Jesus: "Even so did
my mother, the Holy Spirit, take me by one of my hairs and carry
me away to the great mountain Tabor." The Acts of Thomas, a
legendary account of the apostle Thomas’s travels to India,
contains prayers invoking the Holy Spirit as, among other
titles, "the Mother of all creation" and "compassionate mother."
In the Secret Book of James,Another Nag Hammadi discovery; Jesus
refers to himself as "the son of the Holy Spirit." The Gospel of
Thomas was composed at about the same time as the biblical
Gospels. Ron Cameron of Wesleyan University agrees. In The Other
Gospels, a collection of 16 apocryphal Gospels,the Gospel of the
Hebrews dates as circa 100 AD. or earlier, and the Secret Book
of James in the first half of the second century. However, all
three could have been written as early as the middle of the
first century (about the time of Paul). Congregations founded by
Paul used a baptism ritual which reunified the male and female
in each new believer. The key verses are in Galatians, the
much-quoted 3:27-28: "For as many of you as were baptized into
Christ have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, there
is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for
you are all one in Christ Jesus." The early Christian groups
thought of themselves as a new genus of mankind, or as the
restored original mankind. The Christian baptismal initiation
reversed the division of male and female, returning to the
gender unity found in Adam before Eve and in God. Paul also uses
reunification language in I Corinthians and Colossians, but
without specific reference to male and female. The androgynous
concept received expanded treatment from Gnostic Christians,
some of whom developed the sacrament of the bridegroom chamber
to reunite the two halves in the believer. (In the Second
Epistle of Clement, a second century sermon, appears a saying
not inconsistent with Galatians 3:28: "When the Lord himself was
asked by someone when his kingdom would come, he said, ‘When the
two become one, and the outside as the inside and the male with
the female neither male nor female.’") That rite’s imagery can
be linked with the imagery of Jesus as the reappearing Primal
Man, the androgynous Anthropos, or, as Paul expressed it, the
"Last Adam" (I Cor. 15:45). Also, Jesus urged his followers to
become his equal -- Luke 6:40, the Gospel of Thomas 13, 108, and
in the Secret Book of James. "Make yourselves like the son of
the Holy Spirit," Jesus says in the latter text; and again, "If
you . . . do his [the Father’s] will, I [say] that he will love
you, and make you equal with me."
Teaching attributed to Jesus might challenge any thoughts that
God the Father is much more important than the Holy Spirit. The
synoptic Gospels all have a version of the saying, admittedly
mysterious, that no blasphemy against the Holy Spirit is ever
forgiven, unlike sins or blasphemies against sons of men (Mark)
or the Son of Man (Matthew and Luke). Thomas 44 says it more
strongly: blasphemies against Father and Son will be pardoned,
but those against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven on earth
or in heaven.
So why do we not use the term "Sophia" often today? Becuase of
what is called 'Gnosticism', which rejected Jesus's humanity and
crucifixion while boldly proclaiming his identification with
Sophia. The writers of the Gospels had no wish to identify with
the Gnostic heresy and often muted the connection while they
explored it. Further, there was Wisdom's (and woman's)
connection with the stars, hence astrology, which was also a
source of heresy, and which was systematically removed from
scripture. The same can be said about the "Celestial Father"
which is also "heavenly" father.
The idea of a trinity as God,—father, mother and son—faded away
quickly during the early development of the Christian dogma and
it seems that the replacement of the word logos for sophia
helped to obliterate the idea that the second person of the
deity was female. The change was also favored by the fact that
while ruwach (ruah), the Hebrew term for spirit, is feminine,
the Greek term pneuma is neuter.
In the Aramaic roots of The Lord's Prayer. Jesus's original
language, the prayer takes on a much fuller meaning. Of
particular relevance is the opening line...."Abvwoon
Debashmaya." The words Jesus used to address God. It means, the
birther, the bearer, the breather/bringer of life and light.
From this, it appears that Jesus is addressing a God that is
mother and father. It would suggest that a mother aspect of God
is real and Holy
The Prayer To Our Father in the Original Aramaic
Abwûn... O cosmic Birther, from whom the breath of life comes,
d'bwaschmâja... who fills all realms of sound, light and
vibration.
Nethkâdasch schmach... May Your light be experienced in my
utmost holiest.
Têtê malkuthach... Your Heavenly Domain approaches.
Nehwê tzevjânach aikâna d'bwaschmâja af b'arha... Let Your will
come true in the universe (all that vibrates) just as on earth
(that is material and dense).
Hawvlân lachma d'sûnkanân jaomâna... Give us wisdom
(understanding, assistance) for our daily need,
Waschboklân chaubên wachtahên aikâna daf chnân schwoken
l'chaijabên... detach the fetters of faults that bind us,
(karma) like we let go the guilt of others.
Wela tachlân l'nesjuna... Let us not be lost in superficial
things (materialism, common temptations),
ela patzân min bischa... but let us be freed from that what
keeps us off from our true purpose.
Metol dilachie malkutha wahaila wateschbuchta l'ahlâm almîn...
From You comes the all-working will, the lively strength to act,
the song that beautifies all and renews itself from age to age.
Amên... Sealed in trust, faith and truth. (I confirm with my
entire being)
In about 200 CE, Clement of Alexandria wrote similarly: “God…out
of love to us became feminine. In his ineffable essence He is
Father; in His compassion to us He became Mother, …by loving,
became feminine. [The Rich Man’s Salvation, XXXVII, in the
Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume 2] Methodius, a bishop of the third
century, wrote: “Adam [was] the type and resemblance of God the
Father…whilst Eve, who proceeded from Adam, signified the person
and procession of the Holy Spirit.” [Ante Nicene Fathers.
Fragments from the Homily on the Cross and Passion of Christ]
Adam, the first human, was created in Elohim’s image. At first,
Adam, like Elohim, was simultaneously male and female. [Genesis
1:27] Then, Elohim divided Adam, separating the feminine from
the masculine into two individuals, with distinct male and
female gender. [Genesis 2:21-23]
Synesius, Bishop of Libya in the early 5th century, in his 2nd
Hymn, wrote of the Divine as both masculine and feminine. ‘Thou
art Father, thou art Mother; Thou art male, and thou art
female.’ [lines 63-64]
The Aramaic word, abwoon, is gender-inclusive. It means
‘ancestor’, and includes both male and female. In the Aramaic
version of the “the Lord’s prayer”, abwoon is the first word. It
was translated into ‘father’ in Greek, instead of ancestor.
Consequently, the Lord’s Prayer in the English, Greek or Latin
New Testament begins with “Our Father in Heaven”, whereas in
Aramaic it begins by addressing “Our Parents in Heaven”.
There can also be no maleness without
femaleness. There is no Father unless there is Mother. There is
no Bridegroom unless there is a Bride. There is no Savior
without they who are the Lost. There are no children unless
there are parents.
Elohim became the Father, the Son, the Spirit, and the whole
Divine Family. The presence of family necessitates the existence
of gender. Similarly, the fact that Messiah is the Bridegroom
necessitates that there must be a Bride. Not only did Elohim
become the masculine Father and the masculine Messiah, Elohim
also became the feminine Holy Spirit / Eloah / Wisdom, and the
Bride [the Elect]. There is a perfect male-female balance within
the Divine. Because of the unity of the Father, the Spirit, and
the Son, when an individual believes in one, she believes in the
other aspects of Elohim as well. Jesus said, “Whoso believeth in
Me believeth in the Father also; and unto him will the Father
bear record of Me, for He will visit him with fire and with the
Holy Ghost. And thus will the Father bear record of Me, and the
Holy Ghost will bear record unto him of the Father and Me; for
the Father and I and the Holy Ghost are one.”
The Aramaic Language has (like the Hebrew and Arabic) different
levels of meaning. The words are organized and defined by a
poetical system where different meanings of every word are
possible. So, every line of the Lords Prayer could be translated
into English in many different versions. As an example of how
the intent of a passage can be changed, here are some
translations of the Lord's Prayer directly translated from the
ancient Aramaic language into modern English.
Here is another translated version;
The Prayer To Our Father
(in the original Aramaic)
Abwûn
"Oh Thou, from whom the breath of life comes,
d'bwaschmâja
who fills all realms of sound, light and vibration.
Nethkâdasch schmach
May Your light be experienced in my utmost holiest.
Têtê malkuthach.
Your Heavenly Domain approaches.
Nehwê tzevjânach aikâna d'bwaschmâja af b'arha.
Let Your will come true - in the universe (all that vibrates)
just as on earth (that is material and dense).
Hawvlân lachma d'sûnkanân jaomâna.
Give us wisdom (understanding, assistance) for our daily need,
Waschboklân chaubên wachtahên aikâna
daf chnân schwoken l'chaijabên.
detach the fetters of faults that bind us, (karma)
like we let go the guilt of others.
Wela tachlân l'nesjuna
Let us not be lost in superficial things (materialism, common
temptations),
ela patzân min bischa.
but let us be freed from that what keeps us off from our true
purpose.
Metol dilachie malkutha wahaila wateschbuchta l'ahlâm almîn.
From You comes the all-working will, the lively strength to act,
the song that beautifies all and renews itself from age to age.
Amên.
Sealed in trust, faith and truth.
(I confirm with my entire being)
Scripture proclaims an entirely
different understanding of power. In both the
Old and New Testaments, our God hears the cries of the oppressed and leads
them to freedom, while over-lords are reduced to insignificance. Jesus
incarnated this theme in his life and teachings especially with regard to women.
When a woman preaches, she is a living testimony to the God who turns Nobody
into Somebody. Outside the church, women still struggle with inferior jobs,
low pay, the trivializing and wasting of their talent. but within the church,
women proclaim a God who puts down the mighty and exalts the humble and meek.
However we choose to describe God's transcendence, the mystery of God's freedom
points to
I AM , & LOVE IS
I AM MADE IN THE IMAGE OF THE GREAT I AM,
THE MYSTERY OF THE HOLY SPIRIT IS THAT 'LOVE IS'
THE TWO TOGETHER MAKES ALL THE LAW AND THE PROPHETS
English translations usually translate the feminine "Sophia" into the abstract
"Wisdom". Although the Greek and Hebrew words were fully feminine, the English
is not.
“Martin Luther, the originator of the Protestant movement, was not ashamed to
think of the Holy Spirit in feminine terms. We often miss this in Luther studies
because his feminine terminology is translated into English masculine terms, but
if his German is translated without such a gender bias, his sense of the Holy
Spirit being feminine shines out like a beacon.”
Even the famous Church Father Origen speaks of the Holy Spirit as
being feminine, when saying:
Paidiske de kypias tou hagiou Pneumatos he psyche.
The soul is handmaiden to her mistress, the Holy Spirit. Another
illustration is found in the now lost Gospel of the Hebrews (cf. The
Lost and Hostile Gospels by Rev. S. Baring-Gould, London, 1874, pp.
130-1), probably one of the first ever written by Christian hands,
extracts from which have survived in the writings of Origen and
Jerome. This particular passage is quoted by Origen and runs as
follows:
Arti elabe me he meter mou to hagion pneuma, hen mia ton trichon mou,
kai anenenke me eis to horos to mega thabor.
Straightway my mother the Holy Spirit took me in one of my hairs and
bore me to the great mountain Thabor. -- Homily xv, on Jeremiah and
on John. Similarly Jerome, another Church Father, wrote (Micheas,
vii, 6):
Modo tulit me mater mea Spiritus Sanctus in uno capillorum meorum.
Then my mother the Holy Spirit took me in one of my hairs.
The fullest development of her is in the so-called "Wisdom Books" of the
apocryphia in the Greek Pentateuch that were canonized into Christian Scripture
and are still used by the Roman Catholic and English Orthodox churches.
Sophia dominates the first nine chapters of Proverbs and is found in both the
Old and New Testaments.
There was no attempt in the West to maintain the integrity of the original texts
until Jerome produced the Latin Vulgate at the request of the papacy in the
fourth century. Zuntz, by using the standard practice of textual comparison, in
his detailed analysis of the oldest Pauline manuscript, notes, in his book, The
Text of the Epistles, numerous places where the text has been altered. Jerome,
himself, in letters to his colleagues, bewails the fact that he has so many
variant texts to select from for the compilation of a standardized version. At
one point before him he has the old Hieronymian text and its revision. He says,
“The differences throughout are clear and striking.” In his writings he does
leave us a clue to the subject at hand. At one point he has before him the
gospel of the Hebrews used by the Syrian Christians which, as some now say,
predated the four canonical gospels. In it, Jerome says that the Holy Spirit is
expressed in the feminine gender and is considered the mother in law of the
soul. (Library 11, commentary in Isaiah, chapter 11: Library 2, commentary. in
Micah 7.6:) So here is some additional external evidence from an unrelated
source that the Holy Spirit was originally considered feminine. In Judaism, the
medieval writers of the Kaballah concentrated on the masculine aspects of the
sefiroth (the 13 aspects of God) and relegated Sophia to an inferior sphere than
that she had heretofore occupied. Roman Catholicism explicitly associated Old
Testament Sophia texts with Mary or the Mother Church. In the Eastern Church,
Sophia survives and is often associated liturgically with the Holy Spirit and
sometimes with Christ, himself. Further, the church fathers of the Patristic Age
preferred the male "Logos" when describing Christ in order to avoid gender
confusion. Philo, who at first equated Sophia with Logos, "substituted Logos for
Sophia, until the masculine person of the Logos has taken over most of Sophia's
divine roles including the firstborn image of God, the principle of order and
the intermediary between God and humanity. Sophia's powers are restricted and
she is limited to Heaven.
In both Greek and English, "Spirit" is a neuter noun. And we think of a neuter
noun as an "it" rather than a he or she. Thus we think of the Holy Trinity of
orthodox theology in a peculiar way. God the Father we visualize in warm,
personal terms. God the Word (i.e., Logos) we more often speak of as God the Son
and think of personal images ranging from Bethlehem to Nazareth to Jerusalem.
Not so, however, with the Holy Spirit. Both the neuter noun and the biblical
images of fire and anointing tend us away from personal to impersonal imagery,
from Spirit as divine personality to Spirit as divine emanation. How
unfortunate. In the Gospel of John, Jesus invites us to know about, expect, and
experience the Holy Spirit. And he speaks of the third member of the divine
family in terms that are personal. In fact, he challenged his original followers
to think of the Holy Spirit in the same personal ways they had experienced him.
John’s concept of the Logos, the Word that was God and became flesh (John
1:1-14) was derived from the Old Testament understanding of Wisdom as much,
probably more, than from the Greek idea of Logos. And yet Wisdom, the one before
whom are riches and honor and righteousness (Proverbs 8:18) and who shared with
God in the creation of all things (Proverbs 8:27-31) is consistently given a
female gender in Proverbs and by Jesus (Proverbs 1:20; 4:6; 8:1,11; 9:1; 14:33;
Matthew 11:19; Luke 7:35). "Jesus and Sophia came to be associated through a
process that took place during the first two centuries of our era. The apostle
Paul said it clearly: 'We are preaching a crucified Christ . . . who is the
Wisdom of God' (1 Corinthians 1:23; see also 1 Corinthians 2:6-8). Others, the
author of John 1:1-18, for example, describe Sophia clearly but only imply that
the person they are describing is Jesus. Elsewhere, such as in the Gospels of
Matthew, Luke and Thomas, Jesus speaks the words of Sophia as if he were Sophia.
Yet others, among them the authors of Ephesians, Colossians, and James depend
heavily on their readers' knowledge of Sophia in communicating who they thought
Jesus really was. Finally, the literature that came to be called gnostic
includes a wide range of stories in which Jesus and Sophia exchange roles in a
variety of earthly settings.
In the Hebrew tradition, Sophia was considered to have been with God from the
beginning of Creation. In Proverbs 8:27-51, Sophia says:
When God set the heavens in place, I was present,
Sophia is found throughout the wisdom books of the Bible. She is Wisdom
Incarnate, the Goddess of all those who are wise. There are references to Her in
the book of Proverbs, and in the apocryphal books of Sirach and the Wisdom of
Solomon (accepted by Catholics and Orthodox, found in the Greek Septuagint of
the early Church). Paul explicitly identifies Jesus with Sophia in 1st
Corinthians 1:23-25,30 "By God's action, Jesus Christ has become our Sophia."
Then following, in 2:6-8, "But still we have a Sophia to offer those who have
reached maturity: not a philosophy of our age, it is true....The hidden Sophia
of God which we teach in our mysteries is the Sophia that God predestined to be
for our glory before the ages began...." John more directly incorporates Sophia
scriptures into his description of Jesus. Sophia's statement (Ecc. 24:8) "Then
the creator of all things instructed me...'Pitch your tent in Jacob, and make
Israel your inheritance'" ... becomes John 1:14, "The Word was made flesh, and
pitched his tent among us." Extensive references in Paul, John and the Synoptic
Gospels are given.
Is it any wonder that She is constantly associated with wise King Solomon? 1
Kings 4:29-31 tells us that God gave wisdom to Solomon, and that he became wiser
than all the kings of the East and all the wise people of Egypt. Wisdom 8:2, 16,
18 tells us that Solomon was seen as married to Sophia. One of the many layers
of symbolism attributed to the Song of Songs (also known as Song of Solomon or
Canticle of Canticles) is that it speaks of Solomon's marriage to Holy Sophia.
Wisdom 9:8-11 even tells us that Sophia instructed Solomon in building the
Temple!
Most New Testament (better rendered, new covenant) translations, by naming and
renaming of places, people and movements, have changed identity and position to
pass distinctly as Christian, and not as another Jewish faction.
The dissociation of the New Covenant as a Jewish book begins with the mutation
of Semitic names into Greek names. The messianic (christian) belief itself is
not a new concept. Avraham (Abraham) himself was a messianic. He believed in a
messiah bringing salvation; he simply looked forward while we look back. In the
New Covenant, members of the messianic movement are referred to using largely
Greek or seemingly Greek names. The Greek name most often is but a vague
reference to the original Hebrew name in sound and association.
James is the New Covenant name for Yeshua's half-brother, who was later head of
the church in Jerusalem. English James scarcely echoes Greek Iakobos and Hebrew
Ya'akov. So James, wearing a new British costume, is removed from his Semitic
connotation. From Ya'akov to James is quite a journey. Such a gap in translation
may be shocking -accomplished by translation traditions of removing Christian
from Jew -in a book that is entirely Jewish. Though, it should be a pleasure to
return and redeem the names once we understand how far we have been led from the
Hebrew name.
The "New Testament" is a mistranslation of the Greek title New Covenant based on
Jerome's intermediate Latin mistranslation, which he rendered as Novum
Testamentum. The title New Covenant itself derives from Luke 22.20, Paul in 1
Corinthians 11:25 and Hebrews 8.8-13.21. The idea of a new covenant, we must
remember, comes from Paul who takes it directly from Jeremiah 31:31: "I will
establish a new covenant with the house of Israel." Paul, a Greek-speaking Jew
from Tarsos, who knew the Hebrew texts, used diatheke to convey its meaning in
Hebrew, berit , which is covenant, and also a cut or circumcision, as we see
when Paul speaks of a "new circumcision of the heart" (Rom. 2.25-29).
The Greeks of the New Covenant texts were largely Greek-speaking Jews. The texts
themselves were meant to persuade them that Jesus was not only a Jewish prophet,
but was their messiah, hence the name Christian for their sect, Christian
meaning "messianic". The probable Aramaic script or oral witness accounts
containing the Hebrew biblical names found themselves Hellenized, given to Greek
translation or transliteration, from late Hebrew or Aramaic. So, we see, Yeshua
or, more fully, Yehoshua the Messiah, Yehoshua and Ha-Mashiach, rendered into
Greek as Iesous 0 Hristos. Iesous is a transliteration of Yeshua and Hristos
(meaning the "anointed"), being a translation of mashiach. Greek Iesous 0
Hristos is in turn translated into English as Jesus [the] Christ. Similarly,
Yochanan becomes Ioannes in Greek, Johannes in Latin, and John in English.
However we are not Greek-speaking Jews and gentiles. We speak English. Why not
biblical Yochanan in English rather than Greek John? Why adopt an English
transcription of a Hellenized Greek transcription of Hebrew names from the
Hebrew Scriptures?
If we have failed to demonstrate the purposeful inconsistency, consider that the
Tanakh (Old Testament) is done with minimal change. (Abraham may be written
Avraham since the b and v in Hebrew, as in Spanish and other languages, are
interchangeable) Why not transcribe biblical names from the New Covenant
directly into English without an intermediary Greek transcription? Hellenizing
Yeshua the Messiah, into Jesus Christ is comparable to Hellenizing Yahweh (YHWH)
into Zeus. If this were acceptable, we would read the story of creation as, "In
the beginning Zeus created the heavens and the earth," The Tanakh (Old
Testament) would be in harmony with the presently Hellenized New Covenant.
The English "God" of Old English and is equivalent to the Dutch god, German
Gott, Icelandic godh, and Goth guth. The epithet "god" has no added correlation
with Greek or Hebrew than "hell"; also of Germanic origin. In the Greek
scriptures "hell" is rendered hades, in the Hebrew it is Sheol or Gehenna (Gei
Hinnom).
The Greeks chose to Hellenize the Semitic epithets for God. However, in English
there exists no grounds (other than the lethargy of tradition) for the
Hellenized, Romanized and Germanized words for God not acquiescing to Elohim,
Adonai and Yahweh in the New Covenant. "God", the name of a northern pagan
divinity, is standard English. Elohim, Yahweh and Adonai may soon beckon to be
embraced by His followers.
The first name for God, we encounter as the third word in the Hebrew Genesis
(reading right to left): brereshit bara elohim et ha-shamayim ve-et ha-aaretz.
Following the Hebrew word order this reads: "In the beginning | created | Elohim
| the skies | and the earth". Elohim a "plural of majesty" with a singular
meaning, derived from Eloah , or from El meaning "God" as in El Shaddai. In the
second account of creation (Gen. 2.4), (be-yom asot adonai elohim eretz
ve-shmayim), our triune God is again called Elohim but also Adonai, meaning,
"lord". Genesis has provided thusly, two words for God: Elohim and Adonai early
in the text.
Yet since His/Her secret name -or any word signifying that name -is ineffable,
the true name cannot be known, written, or sounded. There is however a way to
represent God with letters that do not spell or reveal His secret name. The
Tetragrammaton (also Tetragram), consists of the four Hebrew consonants YHWH or
YHVH (yod, he, waw or vav, he ), normally pronounced Adonai (the Semitic word
for "lord"). Some choose to sound out the letters, YHWH giving Yahweh another
surrogate name for the nameless one.
Considering these things, it should come as no surprise that in Hebrew writings,
God had no singular epithet. S/He was at once, nameless, but with a secret sign
that could not be uttered, and so took on one name that meant itself, which was
HaShem, which means "The Name".
A not often remembered image of God is one in which Yahweh is described by an
analogy to the action of a female bird protecting her young (Ps. 17:8; 36:7;
57:l; 91: 1,4; Isa. 31:5; etc.). The sustaining care of Yahweh for Israel is
represented in Dent. 32:11-12 by the words: "Like an eagle that stirs up its
nest, that flutters over its young, spreading out its wings, catching them,
bearing them on its pinions, the LORD alone did lead him, and there was no
foreign god with him." In a similar reference in Matt. 23:37 (Luke 13:34) Jesus
says: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem ... ! How often would I have gathered your
children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you would
not!" Other passages compare the love of God with the love of a mother for her
child, or the loyalty and affection of a wife for her husband (Dent. 32:18; Isa.
46:3; 51:1; 49:14-15; Ps. 131: 2).70 We need to remind ourselves of the
importance of three words used in the femine gender in Hebrew tradition which
stress feminine attributes of God: Shekinah or the glory of the presence of God
on earth; Torah or the guidance of God; Chokmah or the pre-cosmic divine wisdom
. In the New Testament, Jesus is associated with all three of these attributes,
Thus in Matt. 18:20 we read: "For where two or three are gathered together in my
name, there am I in the midst of them." With this we may compare the saying in
PirkeAbo ' th: "When they sit together and are occupied with the Torah, the
Shekinah is among them. " In I Cor. 1:24, 30, Paul calls Christ the Wisdom of
God . From this we can conclude that both feminine and masculine characteristics
play a part in the description of Yahweh and Christ. In the Bible when God has
to be described metaphorically, both male and female imagery is used. "Now will
I scream like a woman in labor", says God in Isaiah. "Gather her brood under her
wings", says Jesus to the people. "Having ten pieces of silver and losing one",
is the Woman who seeks diligently for the lost soul. "As a nurse cherisheth her
children", says the evangelist in the epistles. In Proverbs and elsewhere the
female figure, 'Wisdom' personifies the Divine.
" How beautiful Sarah is!
Her long soft hair her bright eyes and her radiant face,
her full breasts and her delicate hands,
her round hips and her thighs!
There is no woman more beautiful than Sarah,
no woman who ever stood under the canopy to be wed to a good man.
Excellent is her beauty,
fair is she under the wide sky. Yet this is not why she attracts our love: it is
her wisdom,
her prudence, and the graceful way she moves her hands."
~Genesis Apocryphon and Jubilees
The Hebrew matriarch Sarah is one of the most renowned of the heroines of the
Jewish nation. She is the inspiration for the wise and virtuous woman of the
proverbs. She was nearly a century old when she bore her child, who transformed
that nation into Israel. But it was not her motherhood that made her great and
beloved. It was her wisdom, based on inner strength and knowledge.
Wisdom is a quality that is not, today, often acknowledged. Yet in ancient times
a woman's wisdom - gained through years of watchful awareness and inner
searching - was important for the health and happiness of all her family and,
beyond that, of her entire people. Sophia retains this place which she holds in
the Old Testament Apocrypha with the Gnostics, and as we know from a fragment of
the Gospel According to the Hebrews, the Holy Ghost is regarded as the wife of
God the Father, for there Jesus uses the expression "My Mother the Holy Ghost,"
as quoted by Epiphanius (Haeres LXII, 2).
In India, a dove was uniformly the emblem of the Holy Spirit or Spirit of God. A
dove stood for a third member of the Trinity, and was the regenerator or
regeneratory power. Compare this with Titus (3:5): regeneration and renewing of
the Holy Ghost. A person being baptized under the Brahminical theocracy was said
to be regenerated and born again, or, they were born into the spirit, or the
spirit into them—the dove into or upon them. In Rome a dove or pigeon was a
legendary spirit, the accompaniment of Venus, the emblem of female procreative
energy. It is therefore appropriately shown as descending at baptism in the
character of the third member of the Trinity. The dove also fills the Grecian
oracles with their spirit and power. A dove was, in several ancient religions,
the Spirit of God (Holy Ghost) moving on the face of the waters at creation
(Gen. 1:2), a pigeon was often substituted. The dove and the pigeon were used
interchangeably. In the ancient Syrian temple of Hierapolis, Semiramis is shown
with a dove on her head, the prototype of the dove on the head of the Christian
messiah at baptism.
the Eastern Orthodox Church has women deaconesses, married priests, and the
Feminine Principle is recognized in Sophia, the Wisdom of Christ.
The Holy Ghost was the third member of the Trinity in several Eastern religions
as well as the Gothic and Celtic nations. This notion of a third person in the
the godhead was diffused among all the nations of the earth. Father, Son and
Holy Ghost, or Father, Word and Holy Ghost (1 John 5:7) express the divine triad
of which the Holy Ghost was the third member. The Holy Ghost was the Holy Breath
which, in the Hindu traditions, moved on the face of the waters at creation, and
imparted vitality into everything created. A similar conception appears in the
scriptures. In Psalms 33:6 the Word of the Lord made the heavens, and all the
host of them by the breath of his mouth. The Brahminical conception of creation
by the Divine Breath, the Holy Ghost, which was breathed into Adam to make him a
living soul. The Prana or principle of life of the Hindus is the breath of life
by which the Brahma, the Creator, animates the clay to make man a living soul.
Holy Ghost, Holy Breath and Holy Wind were equivalent terms for the sigh from
the mouth of the Supreme God, as laid down in pagan traditions. The Holy Wind is
suggested by the mighty rushing wind from heaven which filled the house on the
day of Pentecost (Acts 2:2). The Holy Wind is an accepted term for the Holy
Ghost in ancient religions. The doxology, reported by a missionary, in the
religious service of the Syrian church runs thus:
Praise to the Holy Spiritual Wind, which is the Holy Ghost; Praise to the three
persons which are one true God. The Hebrew Ruh Elohim, translated Spirit of God
(Gen. 1:2) in our version, is literally, Wind of the Gods.
The word Pneuma, of the Greek New Testament, is sometimes translated Ghost and
sometimes Wind, as suited the fancy of the translators. In John 3:5 the word is
Spirit, in verse eight both Wind and Spirit, and in Luke 1:35 the term is Holy
Ghost—all translated from the same word. In the Greek Testament the word Pneuma
is used for Spirit, Holy Ghost, breath and Wind so that in the Christian
Scriptures they are synonymous. An unwarranted license has been assumed by
translators in rendering the same word different ways. The Holy Ghost appears
also as a tongue of fire, which sat upon each of the apostles in Acts 2:3.
Buddha, an incarnate God of the Hindus over two thousand years ago, is often
seen with a glory or tongue of fire upon his head. The visible form of the Holy
Ghost as fire was accepted among the Buddhists, Druids and Etrurians. The Holy
Ghost, or Holy Spirit when visible, was in the form of fire or a bird and was
always accompanied with wisdom and power. The Hindus, Persians and Chaldeans
made offerings to fire, emblem of the Holy Ghost or Holy Spirit as the solar
fire. The Gospel of the Hebrews is known only through quotations from it given
in the writing of early church fathers. In one such, a feminine Holy Spirit,
descending upon Jesus at his baptism, says: "My Son, in all the prophets was I
waiting for you that you should come and I might rest in you." Another quote,
this time from Jesus: "Even so did my mother, the Holy Spirit, take me by one of
my hairs and carry me away to the great mountain Tabor." The Acts of Thomas, a
legendary account of the apostle Thomas’s travels to India, contains prayers
invoking the Holy Spirit as, among other titles, "the Mother of all creation"
and "compassionate mother." In the Secret Book of James,Another Nag Hammadi
discovery; Jesus refers to himself as "the son of the Holy Spirit." The Gospel
of Thomas was composed at about the same time as the biblical Gospels. Ron
Cameron of Wesleyan University agrees. In The Other Gospels, a collection of 16
apocryphal Gospels,the Gospel of the Hebrews dates as circa 100 AD. or earlier,
and the Secret Book of James in the first half of the second century. However,
all three could have been written as early as the middle of the first century
(about the time of Paul). Congregations founded by Paul used a baptism ritual
which reunified the male and female in each new believer. The key verses are in
Galatians, the much-quoted 3:27-28: "For as many of you as were baptized into
Christ have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither
slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ
Jesus." The early Christian groups thought of themselves as a new genus of
mankind, or as the restored original mankind. The Christian baptismal initiation
reversed the division of male and female, returning to the gender unity found in
Adam before Eve and in God. Paul also uses reunification language in I
Corinthians and Colossians, but without specific reference to male and female.
The androgynous concept received expanded treatment from Gnostic Christians,
some of whom developed the sacrament of the bridegroom chamber to reunite the
two halves in the believer. (In the Second Epistle of Clement, a second century
sermon, appears a saying not inconsistent with Galatians 3:28: "When the Lord
himself was asked by someone when his kingdom would come, he said, ‘When the two
become one, and the outside as the inside and the male with the female neither
male nor female.’") That rite’s imagery can be linked with the imagery of Jesus
as the reappearing Primal Man, the androgynous Anthropos, or, as Paul expressed
it, the "Last Adam" (I Cor. 15:45). Also, Jesus urged his followers to become
his equal -- Luke 6:40, the Gospel of Thomas 13, 108, and in the Secret Book of
James. "Make yourselves like the son of the Holy Spirit," Jesus says in the
latter text; and again, "If you . . . do his [the Father’s] will, I [say] that
he will love you, and make you equal with me."
Teaching attributed to Jesus might challenge any thoughts that God the Father is
much more important than the Holy Spirit. The synoptic Gospels all have a
version of the saying, admittedly mysterious, that no blasphemy against the Holy
Spirit is ever forgiven, unlike sins or blasphemies against sons of men (Mark)
or the Son of Man (Matthew and Luke). Thomas 44 says it more strongly:
blasphemies against Father and Son will be pardoned, but those against the Holy
Spirit will not be forgiven on earth or in heaven.
So why do we not use the term "Sophia" often today? Becuase of what is called
'Gnosticism', which rejected Jesus's humanity and crucifixion while boldly
proclaiming his identification with Sophia. The writers of the Gospels had no
wish to identify with the Gnostic heresy and often muted the connection while
they explored it. Further, there was Wisdom's (and woman's) connection with the
stars, hence astrology, which was also a source of heresy, and which was
systematically removed from scripture. The same can be said about the "Celestial
Father" which is also "heavenly" father.
The idea of a trinity as God,—father, mother and son—faded away quickly during
the early development of the Christian dogma and it seems that the replacement
of the word logos for sophia helped to obliterate the idea that the second
person of the deity was female. The change was also favored by the fact that
while ruwach (ruah), the Hebrew term for spirit, is feminine, the Greek term
pneuma is neuter.
In the Aramaic roots of The Lord's Prayer. Jesus's original language, the prayer
takes on a much fuller meaning. Of particular relevance is the opening
line...."Abvwoon Debashmaya." The words Jesus used to address God. It means, the
birther, the bearer, the breather/bringer of life and light. From this, it
appears that Jesus is addressing a God that is mother and father. It would
suggest that a mother aspect of God is real and Holy
The Prayer To Our Father in the Original Aramaic
Abwûn... O cosmic Birther, from whom the breath of life comes,
d'bwaschmâja... who fills all realms of sound, light and vibration.
Nethkâdasch schmach... May Your light be experienced in my utmost holiest.
Têtê malkuthach... Your Heavenly Domain approaches.
Nehwê tzevjânach aikâna d'bwaschmâja af b'arha... Let Your will come true in the
universe (all that vibrates) just as on earth (that is material and dense).
Hawvlân lachma d'sûnkanân jaomâna... Give us wisdom (understanding, assistance)
for our daily need,
Waschboklân chaubên wachtahên aikâna daf chnân schwoken l'chaijabên... detach
the fetters of faults that bind us, (karma) like we let go the guilt of others.
Wela tachlân l'nesjuna... Let us not be lost in superficial things (materialism,
common temptations),
ela patzân min bischa... but let us be freed from that what keeps us off from
our true purpose.
Metol dilachie malkutha wahaila wateschbuchta l'ahlâm almîn... From You comes
the all-working will, the lively strength to act, the song that beautifies all
and renews itself from age to age.
Amên... Sealed in trust, faith and truth. (I confirm with my entire being)
The Aramaic Language has (like the Hebrew and Arabic) different levels of
meaning. The words are organized and defined by a poetical system where
different meanings of every word are possible. So, every line of the Lords
Prayer could be translated into English in many different versions. As an
example of how the intent of a passage can be changed, here are some
translations of the Lord's Prayer directly translated from the ancient Aramaic
language into modern English.
The Prayer To Our Father
(in the original Aramaic)
Abwûn
"Oh Thou, from whom the breath of life comes,
d'bwaschmâja
who fills all realms of sound, light and vibration.
Nethkâdasch schmach
May Your light be experienced in my utmost holiest.
Têtê malkuthach.
Your Heavenly Domain approaches.
Nehwê tzevjânach aikâna d'bwaschmâja af b'arha.
Let Your will come true - in the universe (all that vibrates)
just as on earth (that is material and dense).
Hawvlân lachma d'sûnkanân jaomâna.
Give us wisdom (understanding, assistance) for our daily need,
Waschboklân chaubên wachtahên aikâna
daf chnân schwoken l'chaijabên.
detach the fetters of faults that bind us, (karma)
like we let go the guilt of others.
Wela tachlân l'nesjuna
Let us not be lost in superficial things (materialism, common temptations),
ela patzân min bischa.
but let us be freed from that what keeps us off from our true purpose.
Metol dilachie malkutha wahaila wateschbuchta l'ahlâm almîn.
From You comes the all-working will, the lively strength to act,
the song that beautifies all and renews itself from age to age.
Amên.
Sealed in trust, faith and truth.
(I confirm with my entire being)
Lords Prayer Translated from Aramaic
A Translation of "Our Father" directly from Aramaic into English
O cosmic Birther of all radiance and vibration. Soften the ground of our being
and carve out a space within us where your Presence can abide.
Fill us with your creativity so that we may be empowered to bear the fruit of
your mission.
Let each of our actions bear fruit in accordance with our desire.
Endow us with the wisdom to produce and share what each being needs to grow and
flourish.
Untie the tangled threads of destiny that bind us, as we release others from the
entanglement of past mistakes.
Do not let us be seduced by that which would divert us from our true purpose,
but illuminate the opportunities of the present moment.
For you are the ground and the fruitful vision, the birth, power and
fulfillment, as all is gathered and made whole once again.
Lords Prayer, from the original Aramaic
Translation by Neil Douglas-Klotz in Prayers of the Cosmos
O Birther! Father- Mother of the Cosmos
Focus your light within us - make it useful.
Create your reign of unity now-
through our fiery hearts and willing hands
Help us love beyond our ideals
and sprout acts of compassion for all creatures.
Animate the earth within us: we then
feel the Wisdom underneath supporting all.
Untangle the knots within
so that we can mend our hearts' simple ties to each other.
Don't let surface things delude us,
But free us from what holds us back from our true purpose.
Out of you, the astonishing fire,
Returning light and sound to the cosmos.
Amen.
Lords Prayer, from Aramaic into Old English
Translation by G.J.R. Ouseley from The Gospel of the Holy Twelve
Our Father-Mother Who art above and within:
Hallowed be Thy Name in twofold Trinity.
In Wisdom, Love and Equity Thy Kingdom come to all.
Thy will be done, As in Heaven so in Earth.
Give us day by day to partake of Thy holy Bread, and the fruit of the living
Vine.
As Thou dost forgive us our trespasses, so may we forgive others who trespass
against us.
Shew upon us Thy goodness, that to others we may shew the same.
In the hour of temptation, deliver us from evil.
Amun.
The Lord's Prayer, sometimes known by its first two Latin words as the Pater
Noster, or the English equivalent Our Father, is probably the most well-known
prayer in the Christian religion. The Lord's Prayer is excerpted from Matt.
6:9-13 during the Sermon on the Mount. A similar prayer is found on Luke 11:2-4.
It is called the "Lord's Prayer" because it was the prayer given by Jesus in
response to a request from the Apostles for guidance on how to pray. Most
Christian theologians point out that Jesus would have never used this prayer
himself, for it specifically asks for forgiveness of sins or, more literally,
for cancellation of debts, and in most schools of Christian thought, Christ
never sinned. However since it says "forgive us our sins", not "forgive me my
sins", Christ might have prayed it by way of identifying himself with the common
plight of man and of asking for the forgiveness of the sins of his disciples.
The doxology (For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever
and ever. Amen) was not present in the original version of the prayer, but
rather was added to the Gospels as a result of its use in the liturgy of the
early church. For this reason, it is not included in many modern translations.
The Old testament word for spirit is ruaka, meaning wind, breath, inspiration,
and the OT Hebrew noun is always feminine. Aramaic is a Semetic language very
similar to Hebrew and it is certain that Hebrew and Aramaic would be the primary
languages used in the Jewish Christian Church; The Mother Church. Greek would
have been a secondary and universal languge and is the language of our earliest
surviving gospel texts.
The New Testament is that the one used by the Western Churches is a Greek
translation of the original Hebrew, a language evolved within a pagan context as
opposed to the Hebrew of the Old Testament which was, The original divine
language and which evolved within the context of a divine theocracy (Israel).
the New Testament was originally written in Hebrew and subsequently translated
into Greek. Therefore in terms of defining the gender of the Holy Spirit,
Christians are more disposed to the Hebrew Old and New Testament witness of the
Bible which overwhelmingly reveals the Holy Spirit to be feminine. Recent
studies of the original Hebrew New Testament, before it was translated into
Greek, show conclusively that the Holy Spirit is feminine in both Old and New
Testament.
In other passages, too, Philo speaks of God as "the Father of all things ... and
the Husband of Wisdom, who sows the seed of eudaemonia in the good and virginal
earth."' These lines speak of a marriage to a Mother Wisdom, who constantly
renews the mystery of her virginity. Hence, she is at once both a virgin bride
and a mother-an image that will again appear in highly significant contexts in
Kabbalistic symbolism. Wisdom likewise appears as God's daughter, in an image
fusing allegory and archetype in an interpretation of the biblical name Bethuel:
"because she is the true daughter [i.e., of God] ( bath el) and eternally
virginal (bethulah)."' But in the same passage we immediately find a statement
that negates any archetypal understanding of this image:
Other feminine attributes within God are the "Daughter Voice" (Bath Qol),
through whom God's will was made audlble on earth; Zion, regarded as the mother
of the people; and her counterpart, the Daughter of Zion, who represented the
Mother's children, the people of Israel.' All of these were personafied, all
were female and all partook, to a greater or lesser extent, of the feminine
numina who, in one period or another, played a role in the history of Hebrew and
Jewish religion.
The ancient Greek words for soul and spirit were Psyche and Pneuma.
Historically, the early Greek imagination used psyche for both spirit and soul,
but later dropped psyche as spirit, in favor of pneuma. This occurred at the
time when mythological and poetic imagination was transformed to philosophy and
rhetoric. However, the difference between soul and spirit is not one of
substance but of operation. Man's immaterial aspect is represented in Scripture
by the single terms (psyche) spirit, or (pneuma) soul, or both of them together.
Both psyche and pneuma in their pristine condition pictured "breath" or "wind"
The Greek word psyche also means butterfly Psyche was said by Plato to be in
form, winged, and that its proper prophetic, poetic, erotic, and philosophic
function is "to fly" (Matt 3:16). . The analogy between psyche and pneuma are
remarkable; both form the active visualization of breathing or blowing, as the
wind. However, the origin of the concept of Psyche as 'collective soul' is the
same as that which developed into the Oriental concept of Tao ( the Spirit's way
) Within the writings of the 'Tao' the female traits are not hidden but clearly
manifest. Also, in the early Greek language Psyche is feminine.
The only "holy spirit" that can be found in Judaism is the female holy spirit,
often called Pneuma, or the Holy Soul.
In Judaism, the medieval writers of the Kaballah concentrated on the masculine
aspects of the sefiroth (the 13 aspects of God) and relegated Sophia to an
inferior sphere than that she had heretofore occupied. Roman Catholicism
explicitly associated Old Testament Sophia texts with Mary or the Mother Church.
In the Eastern Church, Sophia survives and is often associated liturgically with
the Holy Spirit and sometimes with Christ, himself.
it flowered in the writings of the Jewish Kabbalists of medieval Spain and
southwestern France. In Kabbalah, religion ceases to be a matter of worship and
collective belief. It becomes a direct path of communion between the individual
and the Divine. In the imagery of the Shekinah, Kabbalah gives us the cosmology
of the soul and the relationship between the two aspects of the godhead that has
been lost or hidden for millennia. The mythology of the Kabbalah is so
gloriously rich, so broad in its imaginative and revelatory reach, and so
intensely nourishing to a world that lacks any awareness of the Divine Feminine,
that to discover this tradition is immensely exciting. The Shekinah reveals the
missing imagery of God-as-Mother that has been lost or obscured in both Judaism
and Christianity. Whereas the Old Testament is the written tradition of Judaism,
Kabbalah offers the hidden oral tradition, wonderfully named as "The Voice of
the Turtle" (turtledove). This mystic knowledge or mystic tradition of the
direct path to God was described as the Jewels of the Heavenly Bride. The Bronze
Age imagery of the Great Goddess returns to life in the extraordinary beauty of
the Kabbalistic description of the Shekinah and in the gender endings of nouns
that describe the feminine dimension of the godhead. But the Divine Feminine is
now understood as cosmic soul, the intermediary between the godhead and life in
this dimension who, as the Shekinah brings together heaven and earth, the divine
and the human in a resplendent vision of their essential relationship. The
mythology of this tradition restores the image of the sacred marriage in the
union of the Divine Father-Mother in the ground of being. There is not a Mother
and a Father but a Mother-Father who are one in their eternal embrace: one in
their ground, one in their emanation, one in their ecstatic and continuous act
of creation through all the invisible dimensions they bring into being and
sustain. No other tradition offers the same breathtaking vision, in such
exquisite poetic imagery, of the union of male and female energies in the One
that is both. The Song of Songs was the text most used by Kabbalists for their
contemplation of the mystery of this divine union. Yet one has the feeling that
this way to union with the Divine may descend from some unknown source that
nourished Egypt, Sumer, and India. The Kabbalistic tradition describes the
feminine image of the godhead as Mother, Daughter, Sister, and Holy Spirit,
giving woman what she has lacked throughout the last two and a half thousand
years in Judeo-Christian culture - an image of the Divine Feminine in the
godhead that is reflected at the human level in herself. The Shekinah is Divine
Motherhood, Mother of All Living. Women can know themselves, in their role as
mothers, in their care and concern for the well-being of their loved ones, as
the instinctive custodians of her creation. The thirteenth-century "Zohar, The
Book of Radiance or Splendor" that was the principal text of Kabbalah,
contemplates the mystery of the relationship between the female and male aspects
of the godhead expressed as Mother and Father, and their emanation through all
levels of creation as Daughter and Son. The essential conception of this
mystical tradition expresses itself as an image of worlds within worlds. Divine
Spirit (Ain Soph or Ein Sof) beyond form or conception is the light at the
center, the heart, and moves outward as creative sound (word), thought and
energy, bringing into being successive spheres, realms, veils, or dimensions
imagined as veils or robes that clothe and hide the hidden source yet at the
same time transmit its radiant light.
As the upper Shekhinah of the Sefirah of Binah, femininity is the full
expression of ceaseless creative power-it is receptive, to be sure, but is
spontaneously and incessantly transformed into an element that gives birth, as
the stream of etemally flowing divine life enters into it. One might almost say,
to use the terms of Indian religion, that the upper Shekhinah is the Shakti of
the latent God; it is entirely active energy, in which what is concealed within
God is externalized. In the division of the Sefirotic world into the three upper
and seven lower Sefiroth-a division generally accepted since Sefer ha-Bahir-the
upper Shekhinah stands at the edge of the seven Sefiroth or seven primal days,
emitting them from herself and realizing her strength in them (this is the
inner, theogonic side of Creation!). In the same way, the lower Shekhinah stands
at the edge of the external Creation, formed during the temporal seven days of
Creation. Insofar as each of the two Shekhinahs is, so to speak, the "mother" of
one of the two aspects of the process of God's self-manifestation or
extemalization (the esoteric and exoteric aspects, respectively), the two
necessarily share many features in terms of this structure. But the difference
between them is equally plain. The process of emanation, through which the
Kabbalists represented their conception of God as an expanding life (one doubts
whether the Neoplatonic image of emanation adequately expresses their actual
intention), achieves its richest expression in Binah, the "upper mother," while
it ends in the "lower mother," the final Sefirah. That which flows out of Binah
still belongs to the realm of Godhead, and is identical with God in His
unfolding oneness. But this is not true of the lower Shekhinah: the divine
potency in all its purity flows from it only back into itself; what emerges from
the lower Shekhinah is no longer God, but Creation. This Sefirah can only
receive the Divine, not transmit it. Thus, the active side of the female energy
in God, the strength by which He eternally gives birth to Himself and emerges in
His attributes as a personal God, is realized in the upper Shekhinah, while the
passive side is realized as the lower Shekhinah. One must realize however that
the whole process is a circit or hoop. This circut has been applied to both the
Zodiac and Christian symbols by gnostic mystics.
While the Bible does not mention the name Shekhina, she is nevertheless bound to
extremely old traditions, and closely relates to the ancient goddesses.
Particularly significant is the Canaanite goddess Ashera who, at the beginning
of the Israelites' settlement in the land of Canaan, was often referred to as
Yahweh's Consort. The literature also calls her the "Holy Spirit"(Chokma) which,
in Hebrew, is also a feminine form. The feminine nature of the Shekhina is so
easy to establish in Hebrew, because the gender of the subject plays an
important role in the sentence structure. In English, you can say "The Glorious
Shekhina returned to bless us" without mentioning gender. In Hebrew, both verbs
and adjectives have a male or female forms, and many names suggest gender to
anyone who understands the language. The simple sentence above indicates three
times that the Shekhina is female, and the fact sinks easily into the
consciousness of the reader.
From the first covenant, Yahweh presented an image of a harsh, daunting God. His
character almost demanded the birth of an entity like Shekhina. Also, He could
not be seen by human eyes, and only a few prophets heard His voice. Yet almost
every religion shows that human nature seeks intimacy with a deity. The
manifestation of a loving maternal entity, ready to defend her people even from
God Himself, brings a feeling of comfort that a paternal, invisible entity like
Yahweh cannot bestow upon His worshipers. Shekhina represented compassion in its
purest form, and despite being, officially, the female side of God, she was
visible and audible as a feminine entity in her own right. A beautiful being of
light, whose most important function was to intercede with God on behalf of her
children. Such an entity had to come into being to soften the harshness of the
original Judaism.
But how did such a complex entity develop? It started with the changing of God's
dwelling. During Biblical times, people assumed God dwelled in the clouds. When
the Israelites built the desert Tabernacle, and later, Solomon's Temple, Yahweh
descended in a cloud and dwelt there. The word Shekhina, in Hebrew, is derived
from the Biblical verb shakhan, meaning "the act of dwelling" but taking the
feminine form. Therefore, at the beginning of the Talmudic era, the word
Shekhina meant
the aspect of God that dwelt among people and could be apprehended by the
senses. For example, one Talmudic verse said: "Let them make Me a sanctuary that
I may dwell (ve'shakhanti) among them." However, in a later version, the
translation said "Let them make Me a Sanctuary so that My Shekhina will dwell
among them." In other words, a separate entity.
Slowly, the manifested entity became stronger. A complete distinction appears in
a Talmudic quotation from the end of the 1st century BCE: "...while the Children
of Israel were still in Egypt, the Holy One, blessed be He, stipulated that He
would liberate them from Egypt only in order that they built him a Sanctuary so
that He can let His Shekhina dwell among them... As soon as the Tabernacle was
erected,
the Shekhina descended and dwelt among them." Another quotation from early 3rd
century says: "On that day a thing came about which had never existed since the
creation of the world. From the creation of the world and up to that hour the
Shekhina had never dwelt among the lower beings. But from the time that the
Tabernacle was erected, she did dwell among them."
Another tradition claimed that she had always dwelt among her people, but their
sins drove her, on and off, into Heaven. However, she was drawn back to her
children and tried to save them, over and over. By that time, her image was so
ingrained into real historical events, that when the Jews were exiled to
Babylonia, she transferred her seat there, and appeared alternately in two major
synagogues. She often made herself visible to the congregations there,
particularly in one synagogue, which was built of stones and dust taken from a
holy place in Jerusalem.
As the Jews dispersed further, sightings occurred in Italy, Spain, Germany,
Poland, Russia - in every town where Jews lived. Shekhina comforted the sick,
the poor, the suffering, and had a particular concern for repentant sinners
"These are accepted by the Shekhina as if they were righteous and pious persons
who never sinned. They are carried aloft and seated next to the Shekhina...he
whose heart is broken and whose spirit is low, and whose mouth rarely utters a
word, the Shekhina walks with him
every day...".
The paradox of dwelling in one place, and being in various places and with many
people at the same time, had to be resolved. The Talmud reconciled the two ideas
beautifully in a well-known anecdote. "The Emperor said to Raban Gamaliel: ‘You
say that wherever ten men are assembled, the Shekhina dwells among them. How
many Shekhinas are there?' Thereupon Raban Gamaliel beckoned a servant and began
to beat him, saying: ‘Why did you let the sun enter the Emperor's house?'
‘Have you gone mad?' said the Emperor, surprised at the violence of the usually
gentle Raban Gamaliel, ‘the sun shines all over the world!' ‘If the sun,'
answered Gamaliel ‘which is only one of a thousand myriad servants of God,
shines all over the world, how much more so the Shekhina of God!"
As time went by, her position strengthened. An interesting Medieval anecdote
shows the Shekhina as a total separate entity, in her most important role -
interceding on behalf of her children. "The Shekhina comes to the defense of
sinful Israel by saying first to Israel: ‘Be not a witness against thy neighbor
without a cause' and then thereafter saying to God: ‘Say not: I will do to him
as he hath done to me..' " This is obviously a conversation taking place among
three distinct entities - Israel, God, and the Shekhina. Another significant
passage from the 11th century, describes Rabbi Akiva (a second century sage)
saying: "When the Holy One, blessed be He, considered the deeds of the
generation of Enoch and that they were spoiled and evil,
He removed Himself and His Shekhina from their midst and ascended into the
heights with blasts of trumpets..."
Like any good mother, she could punish too. When she behaved violently, her
character came closer to her powerful aspect of the great Asherah, Yahweh's
Canaanite Consort. She descended to Earth to punish Adam, Eve, and the Serpent
when they sinned at the Garden of Eden. She confused the builders of the Tower
of Babel. She drowned the Egyptians at the Red Sea crossing during Exodus. When
needed, she even killed righteous people. Since the beginning of time, six
people -- Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, Aaron, and Miriam -- could not be taken
by the Angel of Death because of their perfect purity. Someone had to bring
their souls to Heaven, and only Shekhina could do that. By kissing them, she
released their souls from bondage to this world. In a particularly touching
story, after kissing
and releasing Moses' soul, she carried his body for a long distance on her
wings, to his secret grave. This myth connects Shekhina to another ancient
goddess, Anath. According to the legends, Moses had to live apart from his wife
so that he would always be pure enough to communicate with the Shekhina. This
gave rise to the curious myth, later elaborated on in the Kabbalah, that Moses
and Shekhina
lived as husband and wife. The image of Shekhina, carrying the dead body of her
husband to his final resting place, resembles the myth of Anath, carrying the
body of her husband Baal to his burial place.
Nor is this the end of her development. The Kabbalah greatly elaborated on the
theme of the feminine aspect of God. She would appear as the powerful Matronit,
the controversial Lilith, and finally, as the glorious figure of Shabbat Hamalka
- Queen, Bride of God, celebrated every Saturday by Jews all over the world as
they light the Sabbath candles. And by tradition, the candles must always be lit
by a woman. Naturally -- Ashera, too, was served chiefly by priestesses. The
cycle
is very neatly completed.
Shekinah is the Supreme Spirit
devoted to the good of all people . .
She shines bright in the bloom of ignorance;
She is unfading;
She is easily seen by those who love Her;
easily found by those who look for Her,
And quickly does She come to those who seek Her help.
One who rises early, intent on finding Her, will not grow weary of the quest--
For one day he will find Her seated in his own heart.
To set all one's thoughts on Her is true wisdom,
And to be ever aware of Her is the sure way to perfect peace.
For Shekinah Herself goes about in search of those who are worthy of Her.
With every step She comes to guide them;
in every thought She comes to meet them . . .
The true beginning of spiritual life is the desire to know Shekinah.
A desire to know Her brings one to love Her.
Loving Her enables one to follow her will.
Following Her will is the sure path of immortality.
And immortality is oneness with God.
So the desire to know Shekinah leads to God
and His Kingdom - - a never-fading Kingdom.
With all your thrones and scepters you may rule the world for a while,
But take hold of Shekinah and you will rule the world forever.
~ The Wisdom of Solomon (50 BCE)
Wisdom is another name for the Goddess. ‘Wisdom’ is translated from the feminine
Hebrew word Hochmah. [Strong’s 2451, 2452 and 2454] Hochmah has the –ah feminine
suffix. The equivalent name in Greek is Sophia. [4678]
Although the word ‘wisdom’ definitely is equated with good judgment and
astuteness, in several Scripture passages, Wisdom is also unmistakably a Divine
Personage. Wisdom is feminine, and consistently referred to by feminine
pronouns. “Say to Wisdom, You are my sister.” [Proverbs 7:4]
The Messiah also referred to Wisdom as a person. He said: “Wisdom is proven by
Her children.” [Luke 7:35] He also quoted19 a declaration made by Her. “The
Wisdom of God said, ‘I will send them prophets and apostles…’” [Luke 11:49]
“How blind and impenetrable are the understandings of the children of men; for
they will not seek Wisdom, neither do they desire that She should rule over
them.” [Mosiah 8:20 (5:85)]
In a number of passages of scripture, Wisdom is described and adored by writers,
and also speaks on Her own behalf. This is particularly true of the 8th chapter
of Proverbs, the 24th chapter of Ecclesiasticus, and the 7th chapter of the
Wisdom of Solomon20.
Wisdom announced that She was brought forth before the creation21. She also
assisted in the creative process, alongside Yahweh. “Yahweh created Me,
first-fruits of His fashioning, before the oldest of His works. From everlasting
I was firmly set – from the beginning, before the earth came into being. The
deep was not when I was born, nor were the springs with their abounding waters.
Before the mountains were settled, before the hills, I came to birth; before He
had made the earth, the countryside, and the first elements of the world. When
He fixed the heavens firm, I was there; when He drew a circle on the surfaces of
the deep, when He thickened the clouds above, when the sources of the deep began
to swell, when He assigned the sea its boundaries (and the waters will not
encroach on the shore), when He traced the foundations of the earth. I was
beside22 the Master Craftsman, delighting Him day after day, ever at play in His
presence, to play everywhere on His earth, delighting to be with the children of
men. ¬[Proverbs 8:22-31]
Within the apocryphal books of Ecclesiasticus [also known as Ben Sirach], and
the Wisdom of Solomon [sometimes known simply as Wisdom], the Feminine Deity is
quite evident. It is apparent that the following passages refer to much more
than mere personifications of the attribute of wisdom, but actually represent
statements by and about Eloah. {The surviving originals of these manuscripts
exist only in Greek. However, based upon translation in the Septuagint, we can
extrapolate the original Hebrew equivalent of certain words.}
“Wisdom [Sophia] speaks Her own praises in the midst of Her people She glories
in Herself. She opens Her mouth in the assembly of the Most High {El Elyon}; She
glories Herself in the presence of the Mighty One {Abi’ir}: I came forth from
the mouth of the Most High, and I covered the earth like mist. I had My
tabernacle in the heights, and My throne was a pillar of cloud. Alone I have
made the circuit of the heavens, and walked through the depths of the abyss.
Over the waves of the sea and over the whole earth, and over every people and
nation I have held sway. Among all these I searched for rest, and looked to see
in whose territory I might pitch camp. Then the Creator of all things instructed
Me, and He who created Me fixed a place for My tent. He said, ‘Pitch your tent
in Jacob; make Israel Your inheritance.’ From eternity, in the beginning, He
created Me, and for eternity I shall remain. In the holy tabernacle I ministered
before Him, and thus became established in Zion. [Ecclesiasticus 24:1-10]
“And so I prayed…I entreated, and the spirit of Wisdom came to me. I esteemed
Her more than scepters and thrones; compared with Her, I held riches as nothing.
I reckoned no precious stone to be Her equal, for compared with Her all gold is
a pinch of sand, and beside Her silver ranks as mud. I loved Her more than
health or beauty; preferred Her to the light since Her radiance never sleeps. In
Her company all good things came to me, and at Her hands incalculable wealth.
All these delighted me, because Wisdom brings them, though I did not then
realize that She was their Mother…” [Wisdom of Solomon 7:7-12]
“And now I understand everything, hidden or visible, for Wisdom, the designer of
all things, has instructed me. For within Her is a spirit intelligent, holy,
unique, manifold, subtle, mobile, incisive, unsullied, lucid, invulnerable,
benevolent, shrewd, irresistible, beneficent, friendly to human beings,
steadfast, dependable, unperturbed, almighty, all-surveying, penetrating,
all-intelligent, pure and most subtle spirits. For Wisdom is quicker to move
than any motion; She is so pure, She pervades and permeates all things. She is a
breath {ruach} of the power of God {Elohim}, pure emanation of the glory of the
Almighty {Shaddai}; so nothing impure can find its way into Her. For she is a
reflection of the eternal light, untarnished mirror of God’s active power, and
image of His goodness.” [Wisdom of Solomon 7:21-26]
“Although She is alone [only one power, but] She can do everything. Herself
unchanging, She renews the world, and, generation after generation, passing into
holy souls, she makes them into God’s friends and prophets; for God loves only
those who dwell with Wisdom. She is indeed more splendid than the sun; She
outshines all the constellations. Compared with light, she takes first place;
for light must yield to night, but against Wisdom, evil cannot prevail. Strongly
She reaches from one end of the world to the other and She governs the whole
world for its good.” [Wisdom of Solomon 7:27-30]
Solomon prayed to Yahweh regarding Wisdom. “With You is Wisdom; She Who knows
your works, She Who was present when You made the world. She understands what is
pleasing in Your eyes, and what agrees with Your commandments. Dispatch Her from
the holy heavens, send Her forth from Your throne of glory to help me and toil
with me, and teach me what is pleasing to You. Because She knows and understands
everything, She will guide me prudently in my actions, and will protect me with
Her glory.” [Wisdom 9:9-11]
In the Divine, there is neither male nor female yet there is both. To argue
which is first or which is superior is, quite literally, a chicken and egg
argument. The feminine gives birth to the son who espouses the feminine as bride
who again gives birth to the son in the eternal heiros gamos. The feminine is
maid, mother and spouse, as the masculine is son, father and spouse. There is
unity in this duality, but there is not eternal dominance. "AGAIN Jesus taught
them saying, God hath raised up witnesses to the truth in every nation and every
age, that all might know the will of the Eternal and do it, and after that,
enter into the kingdom, to be rulers and workers with the Eternal, 2. God is
Power, Love and Wisdom, and these three are One. God is Truth, Goodness and
Beauty, and these three are One. 3. God is Justice, Knowledge and Purity, and
these three are One. God is Splendour, Compassion and Holiness, and these three
are One. 4. And these four Trinities are One in the hidden Deity, the Perfect,
the Infinite, the Only. 5. Likewise in every man who is perfected, there are
three persons, that of the son, that of the spouse. and that of the father, and
these three are one. 6. So in every woman who is Perfected are there three
persons, that of the daughter, that of the bride, and that of the mother and
these three are one; and the man and the woman are one, even as God is One 7.
Thus it is with God the Father-Mother, in Whom is neither male nor female and in
Whom is both, and each is threefold, and all are One in the hidden Unity. 8.
Marvel not at this, for as it is above so it is below, and as it is below so it
is above, and that which is on earth is so, because it is so in Heaven. 9. Again
I say unto you, I and My Bride are one, even as Maria Magdalena, whom I have
chosen and sanctified unto Myself as a type, is one with Me; I and My Church are
One. And the Church is the elect of humanity for the salvation of all. 10. The
Church of the first born is the Maria of God. Thus saith the Eternal, She is My
Mother and she hath ever conceived Me, and brought Me forth as Her Son in every
age and clime. She is My Bride, ever one in Holy Union with Me her Spouse. She
is My Daughter, for she hath ever issued and proceeded from Me her Father,
rejoicing in Me. 11. And these two Trinities are One in the Eternal, and are
strewn forth in each man and woman who are made perfect, ever being born of God,
and rejoicing in light, ever being lifted up and made one with God, ever
conceiving and bringing forth God for the salvation of the many. 12. This is the
Mystery of the Trinity in Humanity, and moreover in every individual child of
man must be accomplished the mystery of God, ever witnessing to the light,
suffering for the truth, ascending into Heaven, and sending forth the Spirit of
Truth And this is the path of salvation, for the kingdom of God is within."
Gospel of the Holy Twelve Lection 66: 1-12
Further, the church fathers of the Patristic Age preferred the male "Logos" when
describing Christ in order to avoid gender confusion. Philo, who at first
equated Sophia with Logos, "substituted Logos for Sophia, until the masculine
person of the Logos has taken over most of Sophia's divine roles including the
firstborn image of God, the principle of order and the intermediary between God
and humanity. Sophia's powers are restricted and she is limited to Heaven.
The "Word," (feminine) who also had a Greek counterpart in Logos; (In the
beginning) The same can also be said of the Spirit which is spoken of in Hebrew
by a word of feminine gender, ruach ("wind" or "breath"), and translated into
Greek in the neuter gender as pneuma .
"For the Hebrew scriptures Sophia was, first of all, part of the creative
process. She created the world with God. She was present in the birth of
individuals. She was described as ordering all things and making them new. "With
this central aspect of Sophia in mind, listen to the way the author of the
Gospel according to John (1:1-3) introduces Jesus: In the beginning was the
Word: and the Word was with God And the Word was God. He was with God in the
beginning. Through him all things came to be, not one thing had its being but
through him. "The description of Jesus as Word in John corresponds to the
description of Sophia in the Hebrew scriptures.
In English, the Holy Spirit is conventionally referred to as "He", because the
Latin word for "Spirit" is spiritus (masc.). In Greek, "Spirit" is pneuma
(neut.), leading to references as "It" (e.g., Romans 8:16, "The Spirit
itself...) In Hebrew/Aramaic, "Spirit" is ruach (fem.), leading to references as
"She". In the "Odes of Solomon'; the oldest surviving Christian hymnal, the Holy
Spirit is female.
Ode 36
(Odist speaks)
1. I rested on the Spirit of the Lord,
And She¹ lifted me up to heaven;
2. And caused me to stand on my feet in the Lord's high place,
Before His perfection and glory,
The "Odes of Solomon" is the earliest known Christian book of hymns, psalms or
odes. It probably dates from before 100 A.D. It has been reconstructed from
manuscripts in the British Museum, John Rylands Library and Bibliothèque Bodmer.
It contained 42 Odes.
The original tounge of the Hebrew or Aramaic would translate 'Holy Spirit' as
female. Also, Greek would translate 'Holy Spirit' as either female or more
likely 'neuter in reference to the subject' and it only became 'He' in Latin and
English bibles. Yet, even Milton, in his writing of Paradise Lost, refers to the
Holy Spirit and Divine Reason as his celestial patroness!
Mother in Heaven
Eloah is the Heavenly Mother23. She is the Father’s partner and spouse, the true
Queen of the Universe. In language similar that used by Job, the Heavenly Mother
is mentioned in Ecclesiasticus 40:1. “A hard lot has been created for human
beings…from the day they come out of their [earthly] mother’s womb, they day
they return to the Mother of them all.”
In the gnostic book of Sophia, we read, “The great Sophia is [the Father’s]
spouse…[She is the] Begetress Sophia, Mother of the Universe…” [3:104] The word
used in some Greek texts in reference to Goddess is koinonos, which means
[equal] partner. In common use, it meant ‘spouse’, or ‘consort’, particularly in
the sense of the wife of the king, or the husband of the queen. This is not
precisely the same as human marriage, but mortal marriage is a reflection of the
hierosgamos – or sacred cosmic union of El sand Eloah.
Yahweh commanded Moses to have sculptures of two cherubim placed atop the Ark of
the Covenant. When Solomon built the Temple, images of cherubim were embossed
upon the walls, carved in relief into doors and panels, and were incorporated
into tapestries and other furnishings. According to a few historical accounts,
the two cherubim were male and female, representing the Divine Male and the
Divine Female – El and Eloah.
Several first or second-century Christian documents discovered at Nag Hammadi,
Egypt, plainly identify the Holy Spirit as feminine – as the Mother figure
within the Godhead. In the Apocryphon of John, Elohim appeared to John and said,
“I am the Father, I am the Mother, I am the Son. I am the undefiled and
uncorruptible One.” In the Gospel According to the Hebrews we read the phrase
“my Mother the Holy Spirit”. Regarding this phrase, Jerome commented around 400
AD, “No one should be offended by this, because ‘spirit’ in Hebrew is feminine,
while in our language [Latin] it is masculine, and in Greek it is neuter.
[Commentary on Isaiah 11]
In the Acts of Thomas, written around 200 CE, an invocation includes: “Come,
compassionate Mother; come She that revealeth the hidden mysteries.” [2:27]
Another prayer, referring to the Holy Spirit as the “Holy Dove”, invites “Come,
hidden Mother.” [5:50] “We glorify and praise thee [Messiah], and thine
invisible Father, and thine Holy Spirit, the Mother of all creation.” [3:39]
The Holy Spirit gives new birth to the Elect. The believers are ‘born again’ of
the Heavenly Mother. The sons and daughters of God/dess are the assembly of
believers. The New Testament epistles often speak of the fellowship of believers
as ‘brethren’. The covenant members of the church or synagogue are spiritual
brothers and sisters, born of the same spiritual Mother. The Greek word for
‘brethren’, adelphos, literally means “of the same womb” [delphos meaning
‘womb’].
Not the Goddesses of the Gentiles
The apostle Paul wrote that people give honor to many different gods and
goddesses. [1 Corinthians 8:5-6] We acknowledge the same to be true today –
adherents to a variety of religions worship many gods and goddesses. Although
people worship “many gods and many lords”, for the People of the Covenant, there
is only one true God – Elohim. Those whom the Scriptures call Gentiles24
generally worshipped other gods or goddesses. This means that they worship gods
or goddesses that have been invented within their own imagination, or are
misinterpretations of the true El and Eloah. Instead of worshiping the true
Elohim, they worship gods and goddesses that were created within human minds.
[Romans 1:25] Elohim consistently and plainly banned worship of Gentile gods and
goddesses.
Contrary to modern pluralistic thinking, this means that there is a difference
between Elohim and the gods and goddesses of other nations. Plainly said, Baal
is not the same as Yahweh, just as Ashtoreth is not the same as Eloah25. Inanna,
Isis and Lilith are not Eloah called by other names – they are truly “other
gods”.
Throughout the history of Israel, the nation waxed and waned through cycles of
the worship of “other gods”.
Ruach or Ruacha. Feminine. Ruach HaKadosh rather than Ha Kodesh. Kodesh is
referred to as an object, kadosh is use to refer to a living entity. We know the
name of the Father - Yahuweh. And of the Son - Yahashua. But what is the name of
the Ruach HaKadosh (the Holy Spirit)? Her name in the Hebrew is “Chochmah”
(pronounced “KohK-mah”, which in English means, and is translated as, Wisdom.
And as it is written and stated previously, in Luke 7:35 7:35 “Wisdom is
justified by all Her children.” Proverbs 8:1 She/Ruach calls for truth in the
assembly and the lives of believers… Mishlei (Proverbs) 8:6,7 it states that
Wisdom is the instructor of Truth, as it is written, 8:6 Listen, for I will
speak excellent things, and from the opening of my lips will come right things,
8:7 for my mouth will speak truth...” And in I Yahchanan (I John) 5:6 we read
that the Ruach (the Spirit) is Truth. And in Yahchanan (John) 16:13 that, 16:13
“When She, the Ruach (Spirit) of Truth has come, She will lead you into all
truth.” And isn’t it most often the mother who teaches the children the
commandments and instruction of her husband? Yahshua promised that Mamas Torah
would internalize the mitzvoth of the Abba. The Torah of ema is called wisdom,
and she is the Spirit of Torah bringing comfort to balance the Fathers
discipline. Mishle 1:8 And in Yochanan (John) 14:26 it says, 14:26 But the
helper, the Ruach HaKadosh (Holy Spirit), whom the Father will send in My Name,
She will teach you all things, and declare to you all things that I said to
you.” So here She is referred to as “the Helper“ or EZER, even as Havah (Eve)
was given as Adam‘s “helper“. EZER KENGEDO a Helper against or to balance the
overwhelming gevurah/power of the ABBA. The Ruach is the balance to ABBA just
like man and woman balance each other in the natural! Some translations state
comforter rather than helper. Both are correct, and comforter still describes a
female entity for it is the mother who usually comforts the children. She
balance the fathers strict discipline and rigidity. These things should all be
making sense by now. It’s only common sense that if Havah (Eve) was called by
Adam the “mother of all living” that there must also be one who is the mother of
all spiritually living; and that of course, is the one whose image Havah (Eve)
was created in; B‘resheet (Genesis) 1:26,27. Adam was made in Yahshua’s image
the Adam Kadmon and Chavah was made in the Ruach’s image. Male and female. Now,
going back to B’resheet (Genesis) 1:26,27 where Elohim says, “Let ‘Us’ make
humans in our image” In Beresheeth (Genesis) 11:7 it says, 11:7 Come let “Us” go
down there and confuse their language that they may not understand one another’s
speech. If the second party in the “Us” statement is the Ruach HaKadosh (the
Holy Spirit), then is it any surprise that the one who caused the languages to
become confused is the same who caused the languages to be brought back into
unity at Shavuot (Pentecost) in Acts 2:1-12? And doesn’t even science indicate
that it is the female gender that is the more gifted in language? Chochmah, like
the Ruach HaKadosh (the Holy Spirit), is feminine, gifted in language, a mother
of the Sons of Elohim - one through whom we must be born. And in Romans 8:2 it
is written that the Ruach of truth is the Spirit “of Life“. And finally, last
but not least, in Mattityahu (Matthew) 29:19 Yeshua says, 29:19 Go therefore and
make disciples of all nations, immersing them in the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Ruach HaKadosh (the Holy Spirit).” The Great Commission is
in essence in invitation to join the 2 parent family of YHWH. She was there in
the beginning, nurtures and comforts her children, and leads Her children into
all truth as she upholds the Torah. And what a joy and wonderful thing it is to
know that we are part of a complete, two-parent family. 1:13 In Him is the
gospel of your deliverance, in whom also, after having believed, you were sealed
with the Ruach haKadosh (Holy Spirit) of Promise.” In this verse we see the
birth process described once again; this time to describe the formation of our
character, into the character of Yahshua, thus completing the picture of us
being sealed inside the womb of our spiritual mother until the character of
Yahshua can be formed in us.
Liberty of consciousness brings human liberty. In the great drama of Calvary,
there is one fact that stands out very clearly; the men failed, the women did
not.
A civilization that does not kneel before God in reverence is also a
civilization that has denounced the dignity of woman; she struggles as the most
beautiful of unfinished symphonies, contending for spiritual understanding and
human recognition.
It is a terrible thing for individuals, either male or female not to know their
own image as made in the image of God. We pay lip service to being above the
limitations of words when it comes to speaking of the sex of God; but are we? Do
we not rather continue our prejudes by enslaving people with words? This is
tyranny and ungodly blasphemy. It is a historical fact, that whenever the world
has been in danger of collapse, there has been re-emphasis of devotion to the
Woman. Calvary was the greatest crisis the world has ever known, and women did
not fail. May not She also be the strength of heart we need so desperatly today?
VeriIy,I tell you She is!
Christian are fond of telling unbelievers that, "there are no atheists in a fox
hole." Will we also admit that the last word's on nealy every soldiers lips is
love and devotion to wife or mother? In the sanctuary of her arms life takes its
first breath, and in her arms is the sanctuary where life wants to flee in
death. In the arms of our angel.
Equity goes beyond equality by claiming superiority in certian aspects of life.
Equity is the perfection of equality and should be the basis of feminine claims.
She is also the protector and defender of all life. Our lady of Equity. The
choice before women today is whether to equate themselves with men in rigid
exactness or to rally to equity, to mercy and love; giving light, life, and
grace in a cruel and lawless world. This liberty is something that a sterile
equality can never truely achieve.
In Catholicism there is a tradition that Mary is the Mediatrix, who takes
prayers before Yeshua and El. This continues an ancient tradition,
In the first century Church, the idea of Mary and the Saints as mediators
expressed a Christian concept of the solidarity of the Church as community.
Salvation was mediated by relation of Christ to God, and by Christians'
relationship to one another. The community created a 'cloud of witnesses,' not
only among the living, but also with those of past generations, who are in
solidarity with one another and us in communicating grace. In this manner the
Church extends from the Saints in Heaven down to the faithful here on earth. As
the representative of humanity in its original goodness, Mary becomes the
anticipation of its restoration and fulfillment at the end of history.
Theologically, Mary is the personification of the Church, the New Israel, the
hope of mankind. Her true essence as the Church cannot be found in its earthly
institution but must be sought in the spiritual life. This takes place in the
heart; for it is within the Heart that Christ reveals Himself. Thus, it is
within Her, the Holy Church, { that is in truth and spirit } that heaven and
earth meet and communion with God begins.
Clearly the ancient church traditions refer to the Holy Spirit in feminine
rather than masculine terms. "Syriac theology (and sometimes Orthodox Theology)
often regarded it as an archetype of femininity and hypostatic union
The Hebrew word for spirit (ruwach) is feminine. Furthermore, in the Old
Testament the wisdom of God (Sophia) is portrayed as a female spirit (Proverbs,
chaps. 8 and 9). Finally, in John's Gospel, the Holy Spirit which Jesus promises
his disciples serves the feminine function of comforting and reassuring
Christians whose faith is threatened by persecution. There is clear evidence
that early Christians believed that the Holy Spirit was a female entity. The
Gospel of the Nazarenes, used by Jewish-Christians in the post-apostolic age,
contained a quotation of Jesus in which he speaks of "my mother, the Holy
Spirit." The Acts of Thomas, a product of either early Syriac or Egyptian
Christianity, includes hymns or liturgical prayers of invocation to the Holy
Spirit addressed to "the compassionate mother ... the Feminine who reveals
hidden mysteries ... and darling of the Most High's compassion. In the Gospel of
Mani, we find a trinitarian doxology, derived from some ancient Christian group,
which praises the power of the Father, the blessing of the Mother and the
goodness of the Son.
What ultimately emerges from this conspectus is that, contrary to the generally
held view, the religion of the Hebrews and the Jews ( including the first
Christians ) was never without the feminine in its God-concept. At times, as in
the Tahnudic and even more so in the post-Talmudic periods, the female element
in the deity was pushed into the background. At others, as in the Biblical and
again in the Kabbalistic eras, it occupied an important place in popular
theology, occasionally even to the extent of overshadowing the male deity or the
male component of the godhead. Only in the most recent times, after the
Kabbalistic upsurge had subsided, was the female element eliminated from the
God-concept among Reform, Conservative, and non-Hasidic Orthodox Jews,
The Shekinah, in the everyday tradition of Judaism, denotes the presence of God
- the name is derived from the Hebrew word meaning 'to dwell'. She is the
dwelling place of God, his presence, and she shines in glory. Although her name
is feminine, most mainstream rabbis did not stress this but often identified the
community of Israel with her. Sometimes she was understood as God's Holy Spirit.
However, in the strong mystical - and for a very long time, secret - tradition
within Judaism, named the Kabbalah, the Shekinah assumes her divine female form.
She is the central presence in the Tree of Life, she is partner to God, and is
the channel of His glory; She is in direct line with ancient Hebrew goddesses.
She was understood to be a personified female, she accompanied the dispossessed
Jews and mourned with them in their troubles and persecutions, and she is
believed to be an intermediary between God and the world. There are many
similarities between her and descriptions of Wisdom.
The relation of the Holy Spirit to the Father and Son is not precisely defined
in the New Testament. The first Christians were plainly more concerned with
God's presence among them than with meticulous theological formulations. Later
Church councils defined the Holy Spirit as the third person of the triune God.
There is no distinct term for spirit in the languages of the Bible;Recognizing
that the renewal of God's people could come only from God, the prophets came to
look for a general outpouring of his spirit (Isa- 32.15)- In no case is the
fulfillment of this hope ascribed to the mediation of an expected messianic
king; but in the portrayal of this figure in the prophecy of *Isaiah, he is to
be the permanent bearer of the spirit (Isa. ii.2; 6i.i)-perhaps in contrast to
the charismatic leaders of Israel, such as Saul, from whom the spirit departed.
The distinctive mark of the messianic era will be the bestowal of God's spirit
on all, high and low, old and young, male and female (Joel 2.28). The
designation "holy spirit" occurs only in Psalm 51-1 i and Isaiah 63-10-11- The
New Testament announces the fulfillment of the eschatological hope of the spirit
proclaimed by the prophets. Two elements are emphasized: the coming of the one
who is the permanent bearer of the spirit and the outpouring of'the spirit on
"all flesh"; and both are linked. Jesus is identified as the promised one on
whom the Spirit will remain (John 1-33). This identification took place at his
baptism by the visible descent of the Holy Spirit on him in the form of a dove.
The story need not imply that the association of the Spirit with Jesus began at
his baptism and that he was at that moment adopted as Son of God; John
especially saw in the baptism of Jesus the epiphany of the preexisting Son (John
1.'29-34), the one in whom the prophetic hope was fulfilled. According to Luke
(4-16-21), Jesus explicitly claimed this identity in his sermon at Nazareth; and
it is indicated in the nativity stories, where the emphasis is on the conception
by the Holy Spirit rather than on the virginity of Mary (Matt. 1.18; Luke 1.35).
It is important to speak of the Holy Spirit, the Comforter and Reconciler, with
a feminine pronoun. The functions of the Holy Spirit as characterized in
Biblical texts are often, but not exclusively, those which have been associated
with women: consolation, eschatological groaning in travail of childbirth,
emotional warmth, and inspiration.
Jesus left to prepare our place in heaven; The Spirit has come to empower us to
continue freeing the hearts of others.
The name which best communicates the reality of the Spirit’s relationship to
Christians is simply "Mother" because those who know the Spirit know her as the
Mother. Those who experience the Trinity in their hearts know that "a family
must be complete. We must have a Father, Mother, and Spouse." God [Christ] is
even our dear husband, his Father is our dear Father, and the Holy Spirit is our
dear Mother, The family-idea, the oldest, the simplest, the most respectable,
the most endearing idea among all human ideas, and which is the true biblical
idea. This is language that even a child can comprehend. It is the best language
to communicate spiritual reality for all people because it does not depend on
abstract reasoning or speculation on unfathomable realities.
Certainly one is "born" of a female, not of a male. That is the most potent
oversight of the patriarchs & points clearly to the femininity of the Holy
Spirit.
There are more pages in the Hebrew scriptures about Sophia than about Abraham,
Isaac, Jacob, Solomon, Isaiah, Sarah, Miriam, Adam, or Noah. But we do not know
her. Churches and synagogues insure that children can recite the storeis of
Aaron or Joseph, but they never even allude to Sophia. Literature classes in
schools and colleges examine the epics of Abraham or Solomon or even the story
of Ruth, but Sophia, who stands taller than any of them, is ignored.
Sophia, then, is an eternal Being, which before all creatures, with the Holy
Trinity, is eternal, and remains forever in eternity. She is above all the
Angels; the eternal wisdom has her root alone in the Godhead itself, and through
her Being it reveals itself. Sophia is not a Person outside the Trinity; the
spirit of Jesus and the spirit of Sophia are not separate. The eternal Sophia
urges men through being reborn to return to completeness in Paradise, to which
she will lead them. Sophia leads man back to the wholeness of Paradise. As
Wisdom consubtantials with Christ, Sophia is the breath of the spirit within the
Scriptures; and we come into contact with her only after we have undergone
metanoia. No one is permitted to make the error through reasoning that another
were to have written the testimonies found in Scriptures. Since above, one must
remember, the spirit of Wisdom and the spirit of Jesus are essentially one, so
one comes to one by what was said by the other; and no one may try to separate
them. But one ought not to rely only on the letter of the Scripture, for "Wisdom
ought not be sought only in letter; and hence not only in written works, without
effective struggle and prayer in oneself. One ought not gape after things
outside oneself, but rather look toward the inward ground, for there she is
first glimpsed, where the will is descended and sunken in her. This looking
within brings about the metanoia, or inward regeneration
Pentecost is second only to Calvary in importance to the Christian, for
Pentecost is the complement of Calvary. Without Pentecost, Calvary would have
been ineffective to redeem lost mankind. It required the dynamic of the Spirit
as well as the sacrifice of the Saviour to bring the benefits of salvation to a
waiting world, for all Christian experience revolves around the twin centres of
Calvary and Pentecost. Calvary opened the fountain from which all the blessings
of Pentecost flowed. Pentecost made available to men all that Calvary made
possible.
Doth not wisdom cry? and understanding put forth her voice? She standeth in the
top of high places, by the way in the places of the paths. She crieth at the
gates, at the entry of the city, at the coming in at the doors. Unto you, 0 men,
I call; and my voice is to the sons of man. For my mouth shall speak truth; and
wickedness is an abomination to my lips. Counsel is mine, and sound wisdom: I am
understanding; I have strength. By me kings reign, ... and nobles, even all the
judges of the earth. ... I love them that love me; and those that seek me early
shall find me. Riches and honour are with me; yea, durable riches and
righteousness. My fruit is better than gold, yea, than fine gold; and my revenue
than choice silver. The LORD possessed me in the beginning of his way, before
his works of old. I was set up from everlasting, from the beginning, or ever the
earth was. ... When he prepared the heavens, I was there: when he set a compass
upon the face When he gave to the sea his decree, that the waters should not
pass his commandment: Rejoicing in the habitable part of his earth; and my
delights were with the sons of men... Now therefore hearken unto me, 0 ye
children: for blessed are they that keep my ways... For whoso findeth me findeth
life, and shall obtain favour of the LORD.
In Western Christian tradition Adam and Eve were created in every sense equal,
however, Eve became subject to Adam due to the fall. Also in the Western
Christian tradition, Christ is a new Adam and Mary a new Eve. If as 'born
again'Christians we are to conform to the image of Christ, then are not we
called to live in the manner of a new Adam? Would not this mean that we are
called again into a condition of equity and equality with the new Eve? Would not
this paradisal state be ordained by God, as it was in the beginning?(Matt 10:6)
If this is so, then are we not required by Christian conviction to admit a
Divine decree of gender equality in the heavens? Does not nature teach us the
same? Surely, St. Clare was right to teach the equality of the brothers and
sisters in all.
Clearly, for a time in early Christian worship, the Holy Spirit was imaged in
feminine terms (symbolized, as it would be later as well, by a dove), and was
sometimes referred to as the divine Mother; which mirrors the cultural and
biological role of women is seen in the use of bird imagery in the Scriptures.
Here God's concern for humanity is expressed in imagery that possibly is drawn
from the representation of female goddesses with sheltering wings. The people of
Palestine associated El with the title Ia-hu; hence, "Jehovah". Ia-hu ,
translated "Exalted Dove", seems to have been associated with the Cyprus Dove
Goddess; and is the preform of the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove. However,
over time, the Holy Spirit was conceived rather in more general and impersonal
terms as a mysterious and numinous power, whose intensity seemed to have
radically diminished as time grew more distant from the generation of the first
apostles, and whose continuing presence, activity, and authority were lodged
chiefly in the institutional Church.
s it blasphemy to teach that there is a Heavenly Mother?
Certainly not! The Scriptures, in their original language, proclaim it to be
true.
Having become aware of this previously hidden mystery of Eloah, many will wonder
about their own personal relationship to Her. The Scriptures naturally provide
guidance in this regard.
It is appropriate to pray to Eloah. For example, Job wrote: “My desire is that
Shaddai would answer me.” [Job 31:35] “Oh that I might have my request, and that
Eloah would grant me the thing that I long for!” [Job 6:8] “He will pray to
Eloah who has restored him to favor.” [Job 33:26] “I shall say to Eloah, ‘Do not
condemn me; tell me what Your case is against me.” [Job 10:2] My friends scorn
me, and my eyes pour out tears unto Eloah. [Job 16:20] “I want to speak to
Shaddai; I wish to argue my case in front of El.” [Job 13:3] “Seek El, and plead
with Shaddai.” [Job 8:5] “[The Wicked say] ‘What is the point of serving Shaddai?
What shall we gain from praying to Her?’” [Job 21:15] “Then Shaddai will be all
your delight, and you shall lift your face to Eloah. You will pray and She will
hear.” [Job 22:26-27] “I am one who calls on Eloah and expects an answer.” [Job
12:4]
Attributes of the Goddess are signified through Her titles. She is El Shaddai,
having many comforting, nourishing spiritual breasts. All who desire can come to
Her and suckle and find security and sustenance, just as children, regardless of
gender, find comfort at their mother’s breasts. "The Divine power, though
exalted far above our nature and inaccessible to all approach, like a tender
Mother who joins in the inarticulate utterances of Her babe, gives to our human
nature what it is capable of receiving; and thus in the various manifestations
of God to humanity, God both adapts to humanity and speaks in human language."
[Gregory of Nyssa, late 4th century] The Ruach ha Kodesh [Holy Spirit] trait of
Goddess is associated with the breath. The word ruach means ‘breath’ or ‘wind’.
We can deliberately increase our breath when we like, or stifle it at will. In a
like manner, we can willfully influence the degree to which we fellowship with
the Ruach ha Kodesh, or Holy Spirit – and we can also suppress the degree of
communion with Her. As breath or wind is normally only noticed when it is in
motion, it is common for people to only notice the Holy Spirit when She is
moving. When She is still, She cannot be perceived.
The Hagia Sophia
Hagia Sophia or Holy Wisdom is the mother church of all Eastern Christians of
the Byzantine liturgical tradition both Orthodox and Greek Catholic. Early
accounts suggest that the site of this, the grandest church in Christendom, in
the first millennium had been the site of a pagan temple appropriated for the
service of the new religion. Hagia Sophia underwent two phases of construction
before attaining its present state. Documents indicate that the first Hagia
Sophia was built by Emperor Constantius, son of Emperor Constantinos I, and was
opened for services in 360 AD. Although very little is known about this church,
it is assumed that it was a basilica-type structure with a rectangular floor
plan, circular apse and timbered roof. It was similar to St.Studios, a basilica
in Istanbul, the ruins of which still exist. Ancient sources emphasize that the
eastern wall was circular. Constantius donated gold and silver as well as
religious objects to his church, but these were vandalized by Arians during the
Council of 381 AD.
Hagia Sophia was first named "Megale Ekklesia" (The Great Church) as it was the
largest church in Constantinople. The historian Socrates indicated that the
church was named Sophia during the reign of Emperor Constantius. The name given
to the church symbolized the second divine attribute of the Holy Trinity.
Originally, Sophia, which means "Holy Wisdom", was a name given to Christ by 4th
century theologians. Both names, Megale Ekklesia and Hagia Sophia are used
today.
This approach to the Trinity is very old. Some early Christians did in fact
countenance the Spirit as Mother. For example, both Origen and Jerome
favorably quoted a passage from a second-century Jewish Christian Gospel (the
Gospel of the Hebrews) in which Jesus referred to the
Holy Spirit as his Mother. Up until the fifth century, the Syriac church used
the feminine pronoun of the Holy Spirit, regarding her as
"our Mother." The idea of a Father-Mother-Son Trinity was popular enough in the
fifth century to draw the criticism of Augustine (De
Trinitate XII.5).
However, the sacred feminine ideal in the early church was not limited to
Motherhood. For example, Methodius of Olympus (260 - 312
C.E.) explored Paul's image of the Spirit-indwelled Church as the Bride of
Christ, comparing the relationship of Christ and the Spirit with the
relationship of Adam and Eve. Using biblical terms, we can actually use sacred
feminine language of each of the three "persons" of the Trinity. For example, we
can say that the feminine divine is God as Mother and God (Wisdom)-in-Christ, as
well as the indwelling God (the Spirit). This expanded Trinitarian formula
images each of the three "persons" using feminine metaphors that actually
complement masculine metaphors like "Father" and "Son."
Why can't more churches incorporate these biblical terms into their liturgies
and worship? Wouldn't it help to restore the rightful place
of women as equal partners with men in the task of building up the Church?
Wouldn't it also signal a willingness to consider seriously
the criticism that churches have historically suppressed women? This approach to
the divine feminine also holds promise for addressing another difficult
Trinitarian question: The humanity and divinity of Christ. Some oversimplify the
issue by depicting the divinity of Christ as a doctrine of fourth-century
political expedience. But the problem goes deeper than that, since Christ was
considered divine long before the fourth-century Council of Nicea. A more
profound problem, at least for Christians, is how to recover an appreciation for
the humanity of Christ without denying his divinity.
The question is particularly poignant since the Church Councils articulated
their ideas in the philosophical language of their day
(neoplatonism), and the ideas and terms they used are all outmoded. Posing the
question afresh, what does it mean to say that Jesus was
"human"? The humanity of Jesus is emphasized most vividly by the contention that
Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene. A fully human Jesus could very well have
married and fathered children. That many Christians are troubled by the thought
arguably reveals a deep-seated reluctance to think of him as truly human.
Nevertheless, again, there are more substantial considerations that force the
question of Jesus' humanity even more acutely.
How could a divine being -- the omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent Creator of
all things, "become" truly human? If "humanity" isn't just
a "substance" but a collection of experiences of uncertainty, limitation, and
mortality, how could a divine Jesus truly have been
"human"? Could Jesus have been imperfect? Wrong about anything? Uncertain? If
not, he could hardly have been human. And in actual fact, there is a strong
tradition in the New Testament that Jesus was human in those very ways. For
example, Jesus "grew in wisdom" (Luke 2:52) and "learned obedience" (Hebrews
5:8). He admitted when he was wrong, as illustrated by his encounter with the
Syrophoenician woman (Mark 7:24-29). But if Jesus was that authentically human,
how could he also have been the very incarnation of God?
One compelling answer is, again, that what Jesus incarnated in his life was the
Word or Wisdom of God -- that is, the personification of
God's own character. That which was "pre-existent" in Christ was God's Wisdom.
To put the question differently, when John 1:14 states that "the Word became
flesh," should we propose that Jesus became flesh, or that the
Word became Jesus? Many Christians tend toward the former notion, but that makes
it much more difficult to think of him as truly human. The
latter interpretation, however, could very well accentuate Jesus' humanity. A
fully human Jesus who incarnated the very character and love of God could still
suffer as we do and sympathize with us,
And why do we neglect the fact that the Church of Christ is the 'elect lady';
Heavenly Jerusalem, the 'bride' (Rev 22:17) of the 'bridegroom' which is Christ?
Would not the Spirit within the Church and the Spirit within God's people be The
same Spirit? And would not this be the Holy Spirit? If God's Wisdom, Kingdom,
and People are expressed as female, it can be seen that the Holy Spirit; from
which we are spiritually born, is also best represented as a ' female aspect'
within the trinity symbol of the Godhead (John 3:6).
In Iranian Sufism, Sophia is Perfect Nature, the object of ecstatic vision. She
is also called: the philosopher's Sun, the Daena—the visionary organ of the
soul"; personal master and suprasensory guide, sun of the heart, etc. She is the
guide in exile, the watcher and shepherd, and paradoxically, the essential
individuality and the "pre-terrestrial vision of the celestial world." Perfect
Nature was described in an 11th century text as '"the philosopher's angel,' his
initiator and tutor, and the object and secret of all philosophy, the dominant
figure in the Sage's personal religion. She has been equated with the Purple
Archangel of Supreme Illumination in the writings of the Persian Neoplatonists.
Socrates declared Perfect Nature to be the sun of the philosopher, the "original
root of his being and at the same time the branch springing from him." The
philosopher's Angel is the Form of light, the heavenly Sophia "conjoined with
his star, which rules him and opens the doors of wisdom for him, teaches him
what is difficult, reveals to him what is right, in sleeping as in waking."
(Corbin, 1978, 17) : (Thunder Perfect Mind; 2 Sophias, higher & lower—Sophia
Achamoth, the generative wisdom of the world).> Alchemy (Sapientia, moon, tree,
ogdoad, alchemical salt—the psychic form of the body, the ash remaining that
serves to fix the 'volatile' spirit.)
The Holy Spirit is a real person who came to reside within Jesus Christ's true
followers after Jesus rose from the dead and ascended to heaven (Acts 2). Jesus
told His apostles... "I will ask the Father, and She will give you another
Helper, that She may be with you forever; the Spirit of truth, whom the world
cannot receive, because it does not behold Her or know Her, but you know Her
because She abides with you, and will be in you. I will not leave you as
orphans; I will come to you." (John 14:16-18) The Holy Spirit is not a vague,
ethereal shadow, nor an impersonal force. She is a person equal in every way
with God the Father and God the Son. She is considered to be the third member of
the Godhead. Jesus said to His apostles... "All authority has been given to Me
in heaven and on earth. Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always,
even to the end of the age." (Matt. 28:18-20) God is Father, Son and Holy
Spirit. And all the divine attributes ascribed to the Father and the Son are
equally ascribed to the Holy Spirit. When a person becomes born again by
believing and receiving Jesus Christ (John 1:12-13; John 3:3-21), God resides in
that person through the Holy Spirit (1Cor. 3:16). The Holy Spirit has intellect
(1Cor. 2:11), emotion (Rom. 15:30), and will (1Cor. 12:11). A primary role of
the Holy Spirit is that She bears "witness" of Jesus Christ (John 15:26, 16:14).
She tells people's hearts about the truth of Jesus Christ. The Holy Spirit also
acts as a Christian's teacher (1Cor. 2:9-14). She reveals God's will and God's
truth to a Christian. Jesus told His disciples... "The Helper, the Holy Spirit,
whom the Father will send in My name, She will teach you all things, and bring
to your remembrance all that I said to you." (John 14:26) "When He, the Spirit
of truth, comes, She will guide you into all the truth; for She will not speak
on His own initiative, but whatever She hears, She will speak; and She will
disclose to you what is to come." (John 16:13) The Holy Spirit was given to live
inside those who believe in Jesus, in order to produce God's character in the
life of a believer. In a way that we cannot do on our own, the Holy Spirit will
build into our lives love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, gentleness and self-control (Gal. 5:22-23). Rather than trying to
be loving, patient, kind, God asks us to rely on Her to produce these qualities
in our lives. Thus Christians are told to walk in the Spirit (Gal. 5:25) and be
filled with the Spirit (Eph. 5:18). And the Holy Spirit empowers Christians to
perform ministerial duties that promote spiritual growth among Christians (Rom.
12; 1Cor. 12; Eph. 4). The Holy Spirit also performs a function for
non-Christians as well. She convicts people's hearts of God's truth concerning
how sinful we are -- needing God's forgiveness; how righteous Jesus is -- She
died in our place, for our sins; and God's eventual judgment of the world and
those who do not know Her (John 16:8-11). The Holy Spirit tugs on our hearts and
minds, asking us to repent and turn to God for forgiveness and a new life.
The idea that the Holy Spirit was female is a basic from the Hebrew language and
from Old Testament scriptures. The Holy Spirit or 'Rauch'(rawach) , was feminine
in all of Solomon's writings as the divine presence that was feminine, in both
Proverbs and other writings of Solomon.
The early Palestinian Jesus movement used this Wisdom theology in its
understanding of Jesus. For them, Jesus is Sophia's messenger, and the earliest
Christian theology is Sophialogy. This communal understanding is rooted in the
biblical writers' understanding of Jesus as the prophet and child of Sophia. The
Christian missionary movement, saw Jesus as divine Sophia herself. Jesus as
Christ-Sophia, is enthroned as ruler of the whole cosmos, and this is the
foundational myth of the Christian community.
Sophia is not derivative or secondary to Yahweh, but rather existed in her own
right before creation -- indeed, that Yahweh needed her to begin the creative
process. As alternative reading of Proverbs 8:22 ("Yahweh created me") is
"Yahweh acquired me," which also hints at her status as an autonomous divine
figure. Again, in Wisdom 10, Sophia is depicted as the divine saving figure in
history, guiding Noah to safety, calling Abraham, and leading Moses and the
Hebrew people to safety through the sea. In fact, Sophia and God seem to be
fully interchangeable ..."
It is clear that the life went out of 'Psyche' as Occidental thought moved from
myth to philosophy. It is also clear that this movement from myth to philosophy
coincided with the rise of Babylon's dualism and Western Christian dogma adopted
pneuma as a neuter, never feminine, grace. As a result, rather than
investigating the resourceful living imagery of life and nature, the Christian
tradition is limited by a 'disassociate' concept for spirit. Yet Daphne is not
so easily forgotten or captured, and from the wilderness she whispers, "I am
dreams, I am butterfly, I am woman.
The Mother Church of the first century worshiped the Holy Spirit both as female
and as part of the Godhead. So the "Holy Spirit," is rediscovered; closely akin
to, yet in some characteristics distinct from, the Shiekhina; This concept not
entirely unknown even today, and may be discovered within some of the eastern
Christian churchs of the Byzintine Empire. Why does the Holy Spirit remain
poverty stricken in Her symbolic life within the Church? Unless theology can be
reinvested with psychology, in the manner prescribed to Nicodemus, there can be
no true spirituality in the Church. Since the Christian religion is pregnant
with multi-vocal images of the inner universe of mind, what has hindered this
development for so long? Is it because of the orthodox view of a split between
our soul and our spirit; Psyche and Pneuma? You cannot separate Humanity from
the love of the Creator.
The Spirit is vital, quick, and alive, winged, subtle, and beautiful. She cannot
abide a gilded age, no matter how extravagant. This is why the Spirit went out
of dogmatic religion after Pentecost If we are to discover paradise we must look
within. We must look up from our books of philosophy. We must break the cords of
apathy and despair forever and hear the sound of enlightenment; which is the
'Word of God'. If you listen, you can hear it now; the song your spirit has been
singing from the moment of your birth. The words of Christ contain the dynamic
of the Holy Spirit; they cause upheaval in our habitual preoccupation with
apathy and despair. We must allow the words of Christ to accomplish their
transforming work. The heart of the universe is still perfect love.
I am my beloved's and his desire is for me.. Song of Songs
So definitely , the Holy Spirit is Female. She moves in mysterious ways.
The image of Mary has inspired some of the loftiest architecture, some of the
most moving poetry, some of the most beautiful paintings in the world. She has
filled women and men with deep joy and fervent trust; she has been an image of
the ideal, inspiring women and men to their noblest emotions of love and awe. In
Her will be realized the final glorification of the human community and the
creation of a new heaven and a new earth, in cooperation with the redemptive
work of God in Christ.
As told in the Gospels, Mary was a virgin, probably in her teenage years, when
she conceived Jesus through the intercession of the Holy Spirit ( Luke 1:26-35
). Mary was greeted by the Archangel Gabriel as "full of grace, the Lord is with
you." This is a unique phrase, in that it reflects the holiness of the person
addressed. This occured just prior to her choosing to accept her mission in
Christ's birth. This reveals the pre-existing holiness given to her by the grace
of God.
In the Gospel of Luke, chapter one, verse thirty five, we read, 'And the angel
answered and said to her, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of
the Highest will overshadow you; therefore, also that Holy One who is to be
born, will be called the Son of God." Why is God spoken of as Holy Spirit 'and'
Highest? Is this dramatic speech by the angel or is it something more? Is it
perhaps to be seen as two elements of the Divine, joining in union? What is the
meaning of the usage of 'upon' and 'overshadow'? In the ancient Greek, 'come
upon' derives from the words epe' erchomai, meaning, upon 'and operating in' a
person. The ancient Greek term for overshadow is epe' skiazo, meaning, upon yet
over. Is there a deeper implied meaning or nuance within the words 'therefore,
also that Holy One who is to be born'? 'Therefore, also' can also be read as
'for that reason'. For what reason? Is it only because of supernatural agency
being involved, or is it also because the miracle spoken of was to be seen as a
nuptial union, resulting in birth? By understanding the Holy Spirit as female
this scripture becomes clear.
By understanding the Holy Spirit as female and operating within her chosen
vessel, Mary; we can understand one of the great mysteries of the Church. Namely
that, Mary is the mother of Jesus, Jesus is God, therefore She is the Mother of
God. As the chosen vessel of a female Holy Spirit this is not an impossibility.
It is not blasphemous to speak of Holy Spirit as being the Mother of God; and
although Mary is a creature like the rest of God's creatures, and all her
dignity comes from God, through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, Mary is
become a second Eve and the spiritual mother of all humanity; and this by the
grace of the Spiritual Mother of all creation. And just as Jesus is the image of
his Heavenly Father, Mary is the image of her Holy Mother. The Holy Spirit Who
is the Love of God, will descend into her, and He that will be born of Her will
be the Son of God. If God's wisdom is female cannot God's love be also seen as a
mother's love. This is also a theologically correct interpretation of the text.
the Gospel of Philip, a Valentinian writing, says "The Father united with the
Virgin who came down (i.e. descended)"; and states that Mary did not conceive
*by* the Holy Spirit, since it is feminine as herself, but *in* the Holy Spirit,
being part of her own nature..
The idea that the Holy Ghost intervened in Jesus' virgin birth is met with open
hostility in the gospel of Phillip, where Phillip the Apostle even says: "when
did a woman ever conceive of another woman?", which is a clear reference to the
Ruach, or Holy Spirit. This is the one time in the Christian scriptures where
the Holy Ghost is refered to clearly and directly as a 'woman'. It is no wonder
that Phillip's gospel is excluded from the patriarchal canon, which was
organized by the Pauline School. Phillip, who walked with the historical Jesus,
was in fact adamantly rejecting the view of the Pauline School and other
Christians on the Holy Ghost and the fathering of Jesus by this agent, because
Ruach is a female.
The term 'Ruach', which is the word used by Jesus to refer to the Spirit, is a
feminine Aramaic term translated as the Holy Spirit or Holy Ghost in English,
which came through Latin as the Spiritus Sanctus. The (Pauline influenced)
Romanization of Christianity brought about the masculinization of the Ruach,
whose feminine gender is central to the Christian mystery.
The Gospels of Mary," calls this a reliance on "Peter's
story," which he describes as "a line through a male God to a man named Jesus to
a man named Peter." In contrast, Gnostic texts and a certain 21st-century novel
purport to tell "Mary's story" one in which gender doesn't matter, and sexuality
is a natural, even a celebrated, part of life. At a time when sexual ethics and
the definition of the nuclear family are changing for many people, this
alternative vision of Christian can be very attractive. In addition, these texts
offer hope for anyone who's felt rejected or marginalized in their lives,
In the Secret Gospel of John (Codex II, pages 3 - 5) of the Nag
Hammadi Texts,
"For the Perfect One beholds itself in the light surrounding it.
This is the spring of the water of life that gives forth all the
worlds of every kind. The Perfect One gazes upon its image, sees it
in the spring of the spirit, and falls in love with the luminous
water. This is the spring of pure, luminous water surrounding the
Perfect One."
"It's Thought became active, and she who appeared in the presence
of the Father in shining light came forth. She is the first power:
she preceded everything, and came forth from the Father's mind as
the Forethought of all. Her light resembles the Father's light; and
the perfect power, she is the image of the perfect and invisible
virtin Spirit. She is the first power, the glory, Barbelo, the
perfect glory among the worlds, the emerging glory."
"She glorified and praised the virgin Spirit, for she had come
forth through the Spirit."
During
the early centuries scholars and believers already understood Mary, the mother
of Yesu, to be a saint of very special character. As a woman and human being in
first century Palestine, to be chosen and called by God to be the one woman on
earth fit to bring the Saviour into the world - to give birth to this boy, to
suckle him and dry his bottom, to care for him physically and care after his
education, to sit with him nights and tell him stories and impart motherly
wisdom.
God chose Mary in the beginning to bring forth are Redeemer (Gen. 3:15). Mary
mother of Jesus gave us a picture of holiness in her obedience to the Lord. Mary
was the first Christian to say yes to Jesus, and he loved Mary as his mother and
as one of his special children. Mary, a beautiful humble child of God, bore the
perfect gift to mankind. She was Mary the mother of Jesus our Lord. She was a
humble servant that God gave a special task to do. Our Father God trusted Mary
enough to bring his only Son into the world and to raise him. Mary nurtured are
Lord from birth and had a big influence on him. Mary held a unique place in the
early Christian Church. God came into Mary not once, but twice. God came into
Mary the first time when the Holy Spirit created Jesus Christ in her (Luke
1:35). God came into Mary the second time at Pentecost. The Holy Spirit filled
her with the Spirit along with all her Christian brothers and sisters (Acts
2:1–4). Jesus loves his mother, Mary, with a special love, and she is are sister
in Christ. The Scriptures say that she’s blessed. I am sure that she holds a
high place in the Kingdom of Heaven, because she is the King’s mother. Moses and
the profits gave us the Word in the OT. The desciples wrote the Word in the NT.
Mary gave us Jesus, the True Word of God.
Woman was created in the image of God along with man. Women are baptized with
the Holy Spirit as well as men. The revolt of woman against her inequalities
with man is at bottom a protest against the restraints of a culture without
faith, one that has chained her God given talents. One of the most beautiful
lessons in the world emerges from the Annunciation, namely, the vocation of
woman to supreme religious values.
Jesus is quoted at the wedding at Cana and also at his crucifixtion as
referring to his mother as "Woman". This is parallel to referring to himself as
the "son of man"; and implies 'Genesis 3:15' in which God promised salvation
through the woman's offspring.
Mary seemed to be the hostess at the marriage party, the one in charge, the one
responsible for the entertainment of the guests. It was she who recognized the
need for more wine, who sought to replenish the supply, who directed the
servants to follow whatever instructions Jesus gave. Considering the customs of
the day, it is a virtual certainty that one of Mary's children was being
married.....Jesus also had a close personal interest in and connection with the
marriage and the subsequent festivities which attended it. He and apparently at
least five of his disciples (John, Andrew, Peter, Philip, and Nathaneal) were
"called" to attend. Since the short age of wine occurred near the close of the
festivities, and since these commonly lasted from seven to fourteen days, it is
apparent that Jesus' party was remaining for the entire celebration. Seemingly,
also, he had some personal responsibility for entertaining the guests and felt
an obligation to supply them with added refreshments.
For a Jewish feast wine was essential and hospitality in the East is a sacred
duty. For the provisions to fail at a wedding would be a terrible humiliation
for the bride and bridegroom. So Mary came to tell Jesus that it was so. The
Authorized Version of the translation of Jesus's reply makes it sound
discourteous. It makes him say: "Woman, what have I to do with thee?" That is
indeed a translation of the words but it does not in any way provide the tone of
those words. The phrase, "What have I to do with thee?" was a common
conversational phrase.
This phrase is also the question, "Who am I? addressed from God to Woman
universally. To us the word 'Woman' sounds to us as a very rough and abrupt way
to address one's mother. However, it is the same word as Jesus used on the cross
to address Mary as he left her in the care of John. (John 19:26) In Homer it is
the title by which Odysseus addresses Penelope, his well loved wife. It is also
the title by which Augustus, the Roman Emperor, addressed Cleopatra, the famous
Egyptian Queen. In all cases this title represents the divine feminine; one
religiously, one mythically, and one to a queen revered as a goddess by her
royal birth
The most important belief we possess is true knowledge of who God is
Cultural influences also might explain why the Arch Angel Gabriel was
historically seen as female, yet is now seen as sexless or male. Gabri-el is the
ruler of the Cherubim. Gabri-el is unique amongst an otherwise male or
androgynous host, for it is certain that this great Archangel is female. She is
the only angel mentioned in the Old Testament by name, except for Michael, and
is said to sit on the left hand side of God which is further evidence of her
being female.
[Gabriel's] attributes are a lily and a scroll inscribed with "Ave Maria Gratia
Plena." She is sometimes shown with a scepter or an olive branch as a symbol of
peace on earth.
In Judeo-Christian lore she is the Angel of the Annunciation, Resurrection,
Mercy, Revelation and Death. As ruler of the first heaven, she is closest to
Man. According to the testimony of Joan of Arc it was Gabri-el who persuaded the
Maid of Orleans to help the Dauphin. Gabriel appears to Daniel in order to
explain the prophet's, awesome vision of the fight between the rain and the
he-goat (the oracle of the Persians being overthrown by the Greeks). She appears
again to Daniel to tell him of the coming of a messiah, a message which half a
millennium later she repeats to Mary in the Annunciation.
So then God's angel is also female, and is it curious that she should appear at
conceptions. Before Mary she had just announced to Zacharias the coining of John
the Baptist.
To Mohammedans, Jibril/ Gabriel is considered the angel of Truth.
Although devout Moslems will hardly agree to her female sex, sufi Ruzbehan Bagli
spoke of a vision in which he says, "In the first rank I saw Gabriel, like a
maiden, or like the moon among the stars. His hair was like a woman's, falling
in long tresses... the most beautiful of angels.
Sophias presence is also found in Islam. Fatimah is a prominent female in the
Islamic tradition. Muhammad revered Fatimah as if she were a divine being,
saying "Allah, The Most High; is pleased when Fatimah is pleased. He is angered;
whenever Fatimah is angered!" Whenever Fatimah would go to the house of
Muhammad, he would stand up out of respect for her and honour her by giving her
a special place to seat herself in his house. He regarded her as a sort of
primordial woman, a symbol of divine womanhood giving her many holy names, such
as: Siddiqah; The Honest, The Righteous; Al-Batool, Pure Virgin; Al-Mubarakah,
The Blessed One; .Al-Tahirah, The Virtuous, The Pure, Al-Zakiyah ;The Chaste,
The Unblemished ;Al-Radhiatul Mardhiah, She who is gratified and who shall be
satisfied; Al-Muhaddathah, A person other than a Prophet, that the angels speak
to; Al-Zahra, The Splendid; Al-Zahirah, The Luminous.
Shias revere the person of Fatimah, Muhammad's daughter and mother of the line
of inspired imams who embodied the divine truth for their generation. As such,
Fatimah is associated with Sophia, the divine wisdom, which gives birth to all
knowledge of God.
Sunni Islam has also drawn inspiration from the female. The philosopher Muid
ad-Din ibn al-Arabi (1165-1240) saw a young girl in Mecca surrounded by light
and realised that, for him, she was an incarnation of the divine Sophia. He
believed that women were the most potent icons of the sacred, because they
inspired a love in men which must ultimately be directed to God, the only true
object of love.
Even more surprising is the Koran’s reverence for Mary, mother of Christ.
Muhammad (and also in later Islamic theological scriptures) regarded Mary as the
most marvellous of all women, a high adept and living example of the pure and
holy life. Later Koranic c ommentaries describe Mary as an intervening force
between God (Allah) and humanity. This intervening force is characterised by
Allah’s mercy, forgiveness, sweetness and humility- the embodiment of Allah’s
love for creation.
Rev 14:4 - virgins--spiritually (Mat_25:1); in contrast to the apostate Church,
Babylon (Rev_14:8), spiritually "a harlot" (Rev_17:1-5; Isa_1:21; contrast
2Co_11:2; Eph_5:25-27). Their not being defiled with women means they were not
led astray from Christian faithfulness by the tempters who jointly constitute
the spiritual "harlot."
Rev 14:4 - These are they which were not defiled with women,.... With the whore
of Rome, and her harlots, she is the mother of; while the kings and inhabitants
of the earth were drunk with the wine of their fornication, or committed
idolatry with them, which is spiritual fornication, and is here meant by being
defiled with them, these were free from such pollutions, or idolatrous
practices: for they are virgins; for their beauty and comeliness in Christ,
chastity, sincerity of their love, uncorruptness in doctrine and worship, and
for the uprightness of conversation; See Mat_25:1;
Mary occupies ten times as much of Our Lord's life then do the other apostles.
The years of subjection young Jesus lived honoring his mother are associated
with his growth "in wisdom and favor with God." The very fact that He makes
himself subject endows Her with the power of the Spirit.
Nowhere is the gulf which divides Christian church's wider than on the subject
of Mary. Those who in principle balk at a serious consideration of Marian
doctrines are inconsistent, for example, in accepting the doctrine of the
Trinity, a word which nowhere appears in the Bible and the very concept of which
is by no means obvious there. The strong anti-Marian reaction of the Reformation
period has frozen later Protestants into a permanent state of aversion to taking
Mary seriously, except in marginal ways. Thus the fear of exaggerating Mary's
importance causes her to be denied even an ordinary mothers recognition. A major
obstacle to Marian devotion for Fundamentalists is the idea that devotion to
Mary "competes" with devotion to Jesus. Once we realize that Mary is the Mother
given to us by the Holy Trinity and that we turn to her as we would to an
earthly mother without "competing" with the worship we owe to God, many of the
Fundamentalist misconceptions problems would evaporate. And once we realize that
Jesus honors Mary as His mother we who are His followers can do no less.
Why do some think that any reverence paid to the Mother of Jesus detracts from
His Divinity? Mary does not prevent our honoring Our Lord, and nothing is more
cruel of false than to say She takes souls away from Christ. The less we think
of Him, the less we think of Her; the more we adore His Divinity, the more we
venerate Her. Never will it be found that anyone who really loves Our Lord as a
Divine Savior dislikes Mary. Those who dislike any devotion to Mary are those
who deny His Divinity or find fault with Our Lord because of what he says about
life, equality and liberty. Coldness toward Mary is a consequence of
indifference to Christ. Any objection to calling her the Mother of God is
fundamentally an objection to the Deity of Christ.
This idea of the Goddess or maternal womb is embedded in history. It was and is
symbolized by the ceremonial bowl. When used in the Egyptian temples as the
temple basin it was called the shi. In Biblical times it became the brass sea in
Solomon's temple (1 Kings 7:23-26). Such bowls or vassals were used for
illustrations, baptisms and various purification ceremonies. Although the
Christians often fail to disclose that the holy water fount still symbolizes the
womb. This symbolically is true since the water is to bestow blessings or grace
upon the one which it is sprinkled upon, or who sprinkles it upon himself, and
this grace supposedly comes from Jesus Christ who came from the womb of Mary.
Although, in the ancient maternal temples this womb-vessel was very much
respected for its inherent fertile power. Its holy waters were revered as they
were considered spiritual representing the birth-giving energy of the Goddess.
Throughout the history of Goddess worship, witchcraft, and currently in
Neo-pagan witchcraft the cauldon has been a feminine symbol associated with the
womb of the Mother Goddess.
All Christian sects have not thought of God as just masculine. This is
especially true of the Gnostics. It is in the Apocryphon of John one sees the
apostle John grieving after the crucifixion. John was in a "great grief" during
which he experienced a mystical vision of the Trinity:
the [heavens were opened and the whole] creation [which
is] under heaven shone and [the world] trembled. [And I
was afraid, and I] saw in the light...a likeness with multiple
forms...and the likeness had three forms.
To John's question of the vision came this answer: "He said to me, 'John, Jo[h]n,
why do you doubt, and why are you afraid?...I am the one who [is with you]
always. I [am the Father]; I am the Mother; I am the Son.'"
To many this description of the Trinity is shocking, but it need not be. What so
many forget, or do not realized is that the New Testament was written in Greek;
whereas, the Old Testament was written in Hebrew. The Hebrew word meaning spirit
is ruah having a feminine gender, but the Greek word for spirit is pneuma having
a neuter gender. Thus the Greek language, or to be more specific a change in
language when writing the New Testament, virtually made the Holy Spirit, the
third person of the Trinity, asexual. It also, when accepted by the orthodox
Christian Church, eliminated any femininity concept of God. Also Mary is held to
have remained a virgin by Catholics and some Christians because Matthew in his
gospel used the Greek word parthenos, meaning "virgin," instead of almah when
referring to the virgin birth of Jesus.
The term 'Theotokos' Mother of God, contains the whole mystery of the
Incarnation. The mystery of the incarnation begins with God's asking a woman
freely to give him a body; showing that the particular person whom he chose to
consult was a woman. Woman gave Our Lord His human nature that he might give us
a rebirth in freedom and love. It was through Her that He became the bridge
between the Divine and the Human. No one, therefore, who thinks logically about
Christ can divide Son and Mother. The relation of Mary to Christ extends beyond
Bethlehem and Calvary even to His Mystical Body the Church. Since Mary is the
mother of Christ, She is also the Mother of everyone whom Christ redeemed. Born
of the virgin Mary; this is a true statement not only of Christ but also of
every Christian who is 'born again'. In virtue of Our common Baptism did we
become children of Mary. If Christ is a Mediator between God and humanity; Mary
is the Mediatrix between Christ and us. In this one Woman are virginity and
motherhood united, as if God willed to show us that both are necessary for the
world. Things seperated in other creatures are united in Her; and so are we
united to God in Her. The love of God would so inflame her heart , her body, her
soul that when Jesus was born the world could say of Him; "This is a child of
Love." Mary is here recapturing woman's vocation from the beginning, namely, to
be to humanity the bearer of the Divine; every mother is this when she gives
birth to a child. The mother in the order of the creation brings the spirit that
issues from the Hand of God to the cradle of the earth. Can religion do without
motherhood? It certainly does not do without fatherhood. She is the image of the
eternal within the temporial for she is the giver of life. She thus becomes
co-worker with Divinity; she bears what God alone can give.
And to those who would discount the labour of Mary's womb, it should be pointed
out that without the labour of Mary's hands, there would be no blessed Saviour,
either.
ary's last recorded words in the Gospels are at a wedding in Cana, where Jesus
performs his first miracle. She said, "Do whatever he tells you." This is a
statement of complete faith in the ability of Jesus to perform miracles, and
shows her to be his first true disciple. The human race became incorporated to
the first Adam by being born of the flesh; incorporation to the new Adam,
Christ, is by being born of the Spirit. This spiritual birth is symbolized in
Christ's life by a virgin birth. This is also symbolic of the pristine earth in
the spring when she brings forth new life. Mary, the woman, presided at the
three great moments of life: at a birth on the occasion of the Visitation, at a
marriage at the Marriage Feast of Cana, and a Death, or surrender of Life, at
the Crucifiction of Her Divine Son.
Father, Mother and Child (often a Savior-Son) is an ancient trinity, naturally
reflected in the world around us. Just as Mary is strongly linked to Isis, so
the Holy Family, Joseph, Mary and Jesus, is linked to the trinity of Osiris,
Isis and Horus. In Christianizing the pagan world, this family trinity was
familiar and, therefore, effective in encouraging conversion to a religion that
seemed so similar to native worship In the process of the Hellenistic world's
adoption of Christianity, many essential features of the pagan mystery religions
now found successful expression in the Christian religion: the belief in a
savior deity whose death and rebirth brought immortality to man, the themes of
illumination and regeneration, the ritual initiation with a community of
worshipers into the salvational knowledge of cosmic truths, while some of the
mystery religions emphasized the evil imprisonment of matter, which only
initiates could transcend, early Christianity heralded Christ as inaugurating
the redemption of even the material world. Jesus Christ was not a mythical
figure but an actual historical person who fulfilled the Judaic messianic
prophecies and brought the new revelation to a universal audience, with
potentially all of mankind as the new initiates rather than a select few. What
was to the pagan mysteries an esoteric mythological process-the death-rebirth
mystery-had in Christ become concrete historical reality, enacted for all
humanity to witness and openly participate in, with a consequent transformation
of the entire movement of history.
From this viewpoint, the pagan mysteries were not so much an impediment to the
growth of Christianity as they were the soil from which it could more readily
spring. But unlike the mystery religions, Christianity was proclaimed and
recognized as the exclusively authentic source of salvation, superseding all
previous mysteries and religions, alone bestowing the true knowledge of the
universe and a true basis for ethics. Such a claim was decisive in the triumph
of Christianity in the late classical world.
Now let's address your questions on the Biblical support of the Trinity. You are
right in stating there is no one verse that explicitly defines the Trinity.
However, in order to consistently interpret the Bible, the Trinity is the only
logical solution. We can build this argument on three bases: the Bile's claim to
who God is, what God's attributes are, and what our actions toward God should
be.
This means that Jesus incarnated both his "Father" (God) and his "Mother"
(Wisdom) in his own person (cf. also Luke 7:35). If we add to this the fact that
God's Wisdom and God's Spirit are closely linked or even equated in biblical
literature (cf. Wisdom 7:22ff) and the fact that the Spirit is an archetypal
image of the feminine divine, we may think of the Spirit as (in a sense) Jesus'
Mother.
Some have tried to give human illustrations for the Trinity, such as H2O being
water, ice and steam (all different forms, but all are H2O). Another
illustration is an egg having a shell, egg yolk and egg white, but this egg
illustration shows that there would be "parts" to God, which isn't the case. God
the Son (Jesus) is fully, completely God. God the Father is fully, completely
God. And God the Holy Spirit is fully, completely God. Yet there is only one
God. In our world, with our limited human experience, it's tough to understand
the Trinity. But from the beginning we see God this way in Scripture. Notice the
plural pronouns "us" and "our" in Genesis 1:26 -- Then God said, "Let us make
man in our image, in our likeness, and let them rule over the fish of the sea
and the birds of the air, over the livestock, over all the earth, and over all
the creatures that move along the ground."
The most difficult thing about the Trinity is that there is no way to adequately
explain it. The Trinity is a concept that is impossible for any human being to
fully understand, let alone explain. God is infinitely greater than we are,
therefore we should not expect to be able to fully understand Him. The Bible
teaches that the Father is God, that Jesus is God, and that the Holy Spirit is
God. The Bible also teaches that there is only one God. Though we can understand
some facts about the relationship of the different persons of the Godhead to one
another, ultimately, it is incomprehensible to the human mind. However, this
does not mean it is not true. Keep in mind when studying this subject that the
word "Trinity" is not used in Scripture. This is a term that is used to attempt
to describe the triune God, the fact that there are 3 coexistent, co-eternal
persons that make up God. Understand that this is NOT in anyway suggesting 3
Gods. The Trinity is 1 God made up of 3 persons. There is nothing wrong with
using the term "Trinity". It is shorter to say the word "Trinity" than to say "3
coexistent, co-eternal persons making up 1 God." If this presents a problem to
you, consider this: the word grandfather is not used in the Bible either. Yet,
we know there were grandfathers in the Bible. Abraham was the grandfather of
Jacob. So don't get hung up on the term itself. What should be of real
importance is that the concept that is REPRESENTED by the word "Trinity" does
exist in Scripture. With the introduction out of the way, verses will be given
in discussion of the Trinity. 1) There is one God: Deuteronomy 6:4; 1
Corinthians 8:4; Galatians 3:20; 1 Timothy 2:5. 2) The Godhead consists of three
Persons: Genesis 1:1; 1:26; 3:22; 11:7; Isaiah 6:8; 48:16; 61:1; Matthew
3:16-17; Matt 28:19; 2 Corinthians 13:14. In the passages in the Old Testament,
a knowledge of Hebrew is helpful. In Genesis 1:1, the plural noun "Elohim" is
used. In Genesis 1:26; 3:22; 11:7 and Isaiah 6:8, the plural pronoun for "us" is
used. That "Elohim" and "us" refer to more than two is WITHOUT question. In
English, you only have two forms, singular and plural. In Hebrew, you have three
forms: singular, dual, and plural. Dual is for two ONLY. In Hebrew, the dual
form is used for things that come in pairs like eyes, ears, and hands. The word
"Elohim" and the pronoun "us" are plural forms - definitely more than two - and
must be referring to three or more (Father, Son, Holy Spirit). In Isaiah 48:16
and 61:1, the Son is speaking while making reference to the Father and the Holy
Spirit. Compare Isaiah 61:1 to Luke 4:14-19 to see that it is the Son speaking.
Matthew 3:16-17 describes the event of Jesus' baptism. Seen in this is God the
Holy Spirit descending on God the Son while God the Father proclaims His
pleasure in the Son. Matthew 28:19 and 2 Corinthians 13:14 are examples of 3
distinct persons in the Godhead. 3) The members of the Godhead are distinguished
one from another in various passages: In the Old Testament, "LORD" is
distinguished from "Lord" (Genesis 19:24; Hosea 1:4). The "Lord" has a "Son"
(Psalm 2:7, 12; Proverbs 30:2-4). Spirit is distinguished from the "LORD"
(Numbers 27:18) and from "God" (Psalm 51:10-12). God the Son is distinguished
from God the Father (Psalm 45:6-7; Hebrews 1:8-9). In the New Testament, John
14:16-17 is where Jesus speaks to the Father about sending a Helper, the Holy
Spirit. This shows that Jesus did not consider Himself to be the Father or the
Holy Spirit. Consider also all of the other times in the Gospels where Jesus
speaks to the Father. Was He speaking to Himself? No. He spoke to another person
in the Godhead - the Father. 4) Each member of the Godhead is God: The Father is
God: John 6:27; Romans 1:7; 1 Peter 1:2. The Son is God: John 1:1, 14; Romans
9:5; Colossians 2:9; Hebrews 1:8; 1 John 5:20. The Holy Spirit is God: Acts
5:3-4; 1 Corinthians 3:16 (The One who indwells is the Holy Spirit - Romans 8:9;
John 14:16-17; Acts 2:1-4). 5) The subordination within the Godhead: Scripture
shows that the Holy Spirit is subordinate to the Father and the Son, and the Son
is subordinate to the Father. This is an internal relationship, and does not
deny the deity of any person of the Godhead. This is simply an area which our
finite minds cannot understand concerning the infinite God. Concerning the Son
see: Luke 22:42; John 5:36; John 20:21; 1 John 4:14. Concerning the Holy Spirit
see: John 14:16; 14:26; 15:26; 16:7 and especially John 16:13-14. 6) The tasks
of the individual members of the Godhead: The Father is the ultimate source or
cause of: 1) the universe (1 Corinthians 8:6; Revelation 4:11); 2) divine
revelation (Revelation 1:1); 3) salvation (John 3:16-17); and 4) Jesus' human
works (John 5:17; 14:10). The Father INITIATES all of these things. The Son is
the agent through whom the Father does the following works: 1) the creation and
maintenance of the universe (1 Corinthians 8:6; John 1:3; Colossians 1:16-17);
2) divine revelation (John 1:1; Matthew 11:27; John 16:12-15; Revelation 1:1);
and 3) salvation (2 Corinthians 5:19; Matthew 1:21; John 4:42). The Father does
all these things through the Son, who functions as His agent. The Holy Spirit is
the means by whom the Father does the following works: 1) creation and
maintenance of the universe (Genesis 1:2; Job 26:13; Psalm 104:30); 2) divine
revelation (John 16:12-15; Ephesians 3:5; 2 Peter 1:21); 3) salvation (John 3:6;
Titus 3:5; 1 Peter 1:2); and 4) Jesus' works (Isaiah 61:1; Acts 10:38). Thus the
Father does all these things by the power of the Holy Spirit. None of the
popular illustrations are completely accurate descriptions of the Trinity. The
egg (or apple) fails in that the shell, white, and yoke are parts of the egg,
not the egg in themselves. The Father, Son and Holy Spirit are not parts of God,
each of them is God. The water illustration is somewhat better but still fails
to adequately describe the Trinity. Liquid, vapor, and ice are forms of water.
The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are not forms of God, each of them is God. So,
while these illustrations may give us a picture of the Trinity, the picture is
not entirely accurate. An infinite God cannot be fully described by a finite
illustration. Instead of focusing on the Trinity, try to focus on the fact of
God's greatness and infinitely higher nature than our own. "Oh, the depth of the
riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and
his paths beyond tracing out! Who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has
been his counselor?" (Rom 11:33-34)
Definition of the
Trinity (Triunity) of God
Trinity: Webster’s dictionary gives the following definition of trinity: “The
union of three divine persons (or hypostases), the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,
in one divinity, so that all the three are one God as to substance, but three
Persons (or hypostases as to individuality).” Synonyms sometimes used are
triunity, trine, triality. The term “trinity” is formed from “tri,” three, and
“nity,” unity. Triunity is a better term than “trinity” because it better
expresses the idea of three in one. God is three in one. Hypostases is the
plural of hypostasis which means “the substance, the underlying reality, or
essence.”
The three Persons are the same in substance, i.e., in essence or in their
essential nature, but distinct in subsistence which describes God’s mode or
quality of existence in three Persons. By mode of existence we do not mean one
God acting in three different ways, but one Divine Being existing in three
distinct Persons within one Divine Substance or Essence. Again, this is not
exactly three individuals as we think of three personal individuals, but one
Divine Being who acts and thinks as one within a three-fold personality. This is
incomprehensible to our finite and limited minds, but it is the teaching of the
Scripture. “In the Being of God there are not three individuals, but only three
personal self distinctions within the one Divine Essence.”
(5) 1 Corinthians 8:4-6 “Therefore concerning the eating of things sacrificed to
idols, we know that there is no such thing as an idol in the world, and that
there is no God but one. For even if there are so-called gods whether in heaven
or on earth, as indeed there are many gods and many lords, yet for us there is
but one God, the Father, from whom are all things, and we exist for Him; and one
Lord, Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we exist through Him.”
(6) Ephesians 4:4-6 “There is one body and one Spirit, just as also you were
called in one hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God
and Father of all who is over all and through all and in all.”
While there is no explicit statement in the Old Testament affirming the
Triunity, we can confidently say that the Old Testament not only allows for the
Triunity, but also implies that God is a triune Being in a number of ways:
(1) The name Elohim, translated God, is the plural form of El. While this is
what is called a plural of plenitude pointing to the power and majesty of God,
it certainly allows for the New Testament revelation of the Triunity of God.
(2) There are many instances where God uses the plural pronoun to describe
Himself (see Gen. 1:26; 3:22; 11:7; Isa. 6:8).
(3) In the creation account, both God the Father and God the Holy Spirit are
seen in the work of creation. It is stated that God created heaven and earth
(Gen. 1:1), but that it was the Holy Spirit who moved over the earth to infuse
it with life in the sense of protecting and participating in the work of
creation (Gen. 1:2).
(4) Writing about the Messiah, Isaiah reveals Him to be equal with God, calling
Him the “Mighty God” and “Eternal Father” (Isa. 9:6).
(5) Several passages reveal a distinction of Persons within the Godhead.
In Psalm 110:1, David demonstrates there is a distinction of Persons between
“LORD,” the one speaking, and the one addressed called by David, “my Lord.”
David was indicating the Messiah was no ordinary king, but his own Lord, Adoni
(my Lord), one who was God Himself. So God the first Person addresses God the
second Person. This is precisely Peter’s point when He quotes this Psalm to show
the resurrection of the Messiah was anticipated in the Old Testament.
The Redeemer (who must be divine, Isa. 7:14; 9:6) is distinguished from the Lord
(Isa. 59:20).
The Lord is distinguished from the Lord in Hosea 1:6-7. The one speaking here is
Yahweh, the Lord, yet, note the statement in verse 7, “I will have compassion …
and deliver them by the Lord their God.”
The Spirit is distinguished from the Lord in a number of passages (Isa. 48:16;
59:21; 63:9-10).
(6) In the Messianic prophecy of Isaiah 7:14, God made it clear that the One who
would be born of the virgin would also be Immanuel, God with us.
(7) Two other passages which imply the Trinity are Isaiah 48:16 and 61:1. In
Isaiah 48:16 all three Persons are mentioned and yet seen as distinct from each
other. See also Gen. 22:15-16.
New Testament Scriptures
The case for the Triunity of God is even stronger in the New Testament. Here it
can be unequivocally demonstrated the Father is God, the Son is God, and the
Holy Spirit is God. Furthermore, the New Testament teaches us that these three
names are not synonymous, but speak of three distinct and equal Persons.
(1) The Father is called God (John 6:27; 20:17; 1 Cor. 8:6; Gal. 1:1; Eph. 4:6;
Phil. 2:11; 1 Pet. 1:2).
(2) Jesus Christ, the Son is declared to be God. His deity is proven by the
divine names given to Him, by His works that only God could do (upholding all
things, Col. 1:17; creation, Col. 1:16, John 1:3; and future judgment, John
5:27), by His divine attributes (eternality, John 17:5; omnipresence, Matt.
28:20; omnipotence, Heb. 1:3; omniscience, Matt. 9:4), and by explicit
statements declaring His deity (John 1:1; 20:28; Titus 2:13; Heb. 1:8).
(3) The Holy Spirit is recognized as God. By comparing Peter’s comments in Acts
5:3 and 4, we see that in lying to the Holy Spirit (vs. 3), Ananias was lying to
God (vs. 4). He has the attributes which only God can possess like omniscience
(1 Cor. 2:10) and omnipresence (1 Cor. 6:19), and He regenerates people to new
life (John 3:5-6, 8; Tit. 3:5), which must of necessity be a work of God for
only God has the power of life. Finally, His deity is evident by the divine
names used for the Spirit as “the Spirit of our God,” (1 Cor. 6:11), which
should be understood as “the Spirit, who is our God.”
Ryrie writes: “Matthew 28:19 best states both the oneness and threeness by
associating equally the three Persons and uniting them in one singular name.
Other passages like Matthew 3:16-17 and 2 Corinthians 13:14 associate equally
the three Persons but do not contain the strong emphasis on unity as does
Matthew 28:19.”18
The New Bible Dictionary, adds to this the following evidence:
The evidence of the NT writings, apart from the Gospels, is sufficient to show
that Christ had instructed his disciples on this doctrine to a greater extent
than is recorded by any of the four Evangelists. They whole-heartedly proclaim
the doctrine of the Trinity as the threefold source of redemption. The
outpouring of the Spirit at Pentecost brought the personality of the Spirit into
greater prominence and at the same time shed light anew from the Spirit upon the
Son. Peter, in explaining the phenomenon of Pentecost, represents it as the
activity of the Trinity: ‘This Jesus … being … exalted at the right hand of God,
and having received from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, he has
poured out this which you see and hear’ (Acts 2:32-33). So the church of
Pentecost was founded on the doctrine of the Trinity.
In 1 Cor. there is mention of the gifts of the Spirit, the varieties of service
for the same Lord and the inspiration of the same God for the work (1 Cor.
12:4-6).
Peter traces salvation to the same triunal source: ‘destined by God the Father
and sanctified by the Spirit for obedience to Jesus Christ’ (1 Pet. 1:2). The
apostolic benediction: ‘The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God
and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all’ (2 Cor. 13:14), not only
sums up the apostolic teaching, but interprets the deeper meaning of the Trinity
in Christian experience, the saving grace of the Son giving access to the love
of the Father and to the communion of the Spirit.
What is amazing, however, is that this confession of God as One in Three took
place without struggle and without controversy by a people indoctrinated for
centuries in the faith of the one God, and that in entering the Christian church
they were not conscious of any break with their ancient faith.19
From the above evidence, it should be clear that the Scripture teaches God is
one and three.
It is often suggested that the Egyptian triad was the model for the Christian,
though the Christian concept of a total unity does not correspond to the
Egyptian concept.
The concept of the Christian Trinity is not defined from the New Testament,
rather it belongs to the times of the first Christians. Its background was the
troubled disunity of a God acting on earth as a distinct figure without God's
omnipotence (i.e. Jesus) and a third emanation of God, a spirit acting within
the community of the first Christians (i.e. Holy Spirit). Still, the concept of
the Trinity would take centuries to develop, and with many controversies.
Before arriving at the final definition of trinity, the early church went
through a numer of development stages. The need to safeguard monotheism was the
main motive in the debates. One early explanation of the three emanations was to
define Jesus as subordinate to God. A second theory was to define the three as
modes of the disclosure of God, all being part of the same being.
It was first late in the 4th century, that the final definition of trinity was
set down. At the Council of Nicaea in 325 a hard-to-get definition of Jesus made
him both distinct from God, yet of the same substance. At this time, the Holy
Spirit still came out as little defined. A long process involving Athanasius and
the Cappadocian Fathers (Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of Nyssa, and Gregory of
Nazianzus) would eventually come to define trinity as it ever since has been
understood.
Christianity has a second trinity, which is weaker in its formulation, yet
important with many cults: Jesus, and his mother Mary and father Joseph. The
latter, rarely plays much of a role, but the link between Mary and Jesus has
many interesting similarities with Isis and Horus of Ancient Egyptian religion.
In both religions, the father is a detached figure, Joseph appears not very
different from Osiris in many ways.
Sophia, one of humanity’s oldest deities, is often described as the Threefold
Goddess--the Maiden, Mother, and Crone--who represents three phases of women’s
spiritual power: independence, creativity, and wisdom. It was Her Divine
guidance that was invoked when life-altering decisions were to be made. Sophia
is the archetypal Divine Feminine wisdom of the past brought into the present to
direct and manifest the future.
Thus, Holy Wisdom is a female image for the whole of the “triune” God—for “[the
eternal] Mother, her beloved Child, and the Spirit of their mutual love”; she is
Wisdom’s transcendent Vitality, Wisdom’s immanent Word, and Wisdom’s radiating
Energy. So, Mother-Sophia, Child-Sophia, and Spirit-Sophia; Wisdom’s
Transcendent Depth, Wisdom’s Immanent Word, and Wisdom’s Radiating Energy. When
spoken of in these ways, the symbol of the “triune” God is depicted in a female
metaphor as “a threefold reality [that is] hidden in the fullness of her power,
eternally uttering the distinct word of herself, and pouring forth her personal
love.” (Ibid., p. 215) So, People of God! Let us: “Laud and magnify God, the
everlasting Wisdom, the holy, undivided … Trinity[, worthy of adoration].…”
(Sayers, p. 114) Let us pray: O Holy Wisdom, Triune God, You are Sacred Three
and Blessed One. We pray to You, O Mother-Sophia, that we may give forth new
life. We pray to You, O Christ-Sophia, that we may be rooted deeply in this
life. We pray to You, O Spirit-Sophia, that we may soar beyond all present
possibilities. To You, O Holy Wisdom, Triune God, be all honor and glory, now
and forevermore. Amen.
There are three fundamental ways in which Ultimate Reality is defined: personal
being (a personal and loving God), impersonal being (as origin and target of all
personal beings) or an eternal truth or principle that governs the universe. Are
these three possibilities mere manifestations of the same Ultimate Reality?
In Buddhism, we take refuge in Three Jewels -- Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha. These
refuges are a very deep practice. They are the Buddhist trinity:
I take refuge in the Buddha, the one who shows me the way in this life. I take
refuge in the Dharma, the way of understanding and love. I take refuge in the
Sangha, the community that lives in harmony and awareness.
The three gods-Brahma, Vishnu and Siva together form the Hindu Trinity. Brahma
creates the world, Vishnu sustains it and Siva destroys it. Hindus are divided
into three main groups based on the deity they worship. The worshippers of Siva
are known as Saivas, worshippers of Sakti (consort of Siva) as Saktas and
worshippers of Vishnu as Vaishnavas. Each of these gods has a consort, and the
gods and their consorts have many manifestations. Each god also has a vehicle on
which they ride, and a symbol. Brahma Brahma, the creator, from the cosmological
point of view is the Golden Embryo (Hiranyagarbha), the ball of fire, from which
the universe develops. The icon of Brahma has four heads facing the four
quarters and they represent the four Vedas, the four Yugas (epochs of time), and
the four Varnas (divisions of society based on nature, nurture and vocation).
There are four arms holding different objects and in different poses. The
objects usually shown are Aksamala (rosary), Kurca ( a bunch of Kusa grass),
Sruk (ladle), Sruva (spoon), Kamandalu (water pot) and Pustaka (book). The
rosary represents time, and the water pot; the casual water, from which all
creation has sprung. The Kusa grass, the ladle and the spoon being sacrificial
implements, represent the system of sacrifice which means to be adopted by the
various creatures to sustain one another. The book represents knowledge, sacred
and secular. The poses of the hand (Mudras) are Abhaya (assuring protection) and
Varada (granting boons). Saraswati is his consort. She is the goddess of
knowledge and music. Hamsa (goose/swan) is his vehicle. The temples dedicated to
Brahma are rare. One of them is at Puskar in Rajasthan. Vishnu Vishnu is also
known as Mahavishnu, represents Sattvaguna and is the centripetal force as it
were responsible for sustenance, protection and maintenance of the created
Universe. Another name of Vishnu is Narayana. Vishnu is always described as
Nialamegahasyana, of a dark blue hue like than of the rain-bearing cloud.The
icon of Vishnu has one face and four arms each one holding Sankha (conch),
Chakra (discus), Gada (mace), Padma (lotus) and wears a necklace with the famous
gem Kaustubha dangling on the lock of hair Srivatsa, on the left chest. He also
wears a garland (of gems or fragrant flowers) Vaijayanti by name. The Sankha
represents the five elements like the earth, water etc; chakra stands for the
cosmic mind, Gada indicates the cosmic intellect and the Padma points to the
evolving world. The curl of hair, Srivatsa, represents all objects of enjoyment,
the products of nature. The gem Kaustubha, resting on it, stands for the
enjoyer. The garland Vaijayanti is symbolical of the subtle elements. Vishnu's
consort is the beautiful Lakshmi, who came from the sea and is the goddess of
wealth, prosperity, honour and love. Vishnu's vehicle is the half man,
half-eagle known as the Garuda. Vishnu is supposed to have 10 incarnations
(Dasavatara). SIVA Siva, last deity of the Trinity is responsible for the
dissolution of the Universe. Literally, Siva is one in whom the Universe
'sleeps' after destruction before the next cycle of creation. Iconographically
Siva may have two, three, four, eight, ten or even thirty-two hands. Some of the
various objects shown in the hands are :Trisula (trident), Chakra (discus),
Parasu (battle axe), Damaru (drum), Aksamaba (rosary), Mrga (deer), Pasa
(noose), Danda (staff), Pinaka or Ajagava (bow), Khatvanga (magic wand),
Pasupata (spear), Padma (lotus), Kapala (skull-cap), Darpana (mirror), Khadga
(sword) and soon. The icon of Siva is never worshipped as the Mulamurti
(original, installed in the sanctum sanctorum), but only as an Utsavamurti (the
icon used during festivals for taking out in a procession). Lord Siva is a great
master of dance (Nataraja). It is believed that all the 108 modes of dancing
known to the treatises on dancing have come from him. Siva's consort is Parvati
(also known as Uma, Sati, Kali and Durga). His vehicle is bull (Nandi). Ganapati
and Subrahmanya are his son's.
The "Godhead" has always been understood by Christian theologians to refer to
the divine Trinity--Father, Son and Holy Spirit: one God manifest in three
Persons. The Greek word itself does not mean "trinity," but simply
"Godhood"--the nature of God: God as He has revealed Himself. But that is the
point; He has revealed Himself as a triune God. He is one God (Deuteronomy 6:4;
James 2:19), yet not as the ineffable, unapproachable unitary God of the Muslims
but as invisible omnipresent Father and as visible , approachable Son, and also
as indwelling, guiding Spirit. This remarkable structure of God, like His
eternal power, is clearly reflected in His physical creation, which could almost
be said to be a model of the Godhead. That is, the created universe is actually
a tri-universe of space, matter and time, with each permeating and representing
the whole. However, the universe is not partly composed of space, partly of
matter, partly of time (like, for example, the three sides of a triangle). A
trinity is not a trio or a triad, but a tri-unity, with each part comprising the
whole, yet all three are requ ired to make the whole. Thus, the universe is all
space, all time, and all matter (including energy as a form of matter); in fact,
scientists speak of it as a space-matter-time continuum. Furthermore, note the
parallels between the tri-universe and the divine Trinity in terms of the
logical order of the three components. Space (like the Father) is the invisible,
omnipresent background of everything. Matter (like the Son) reveals the univer
se (like the Godhead) in visible, understandable form. Time (like the Spirit) is
the entity by which the universe (like the Godhead) becomes applicable and
understandable in events and experience. But that is not all. Space is a
tri-unity comprised of thr ee dimensions, with each dimension permeating all
space. The reality of any portion of space is obtained by multiplying the three
dimensions together (the "mathematics of the Trinity" is not 1 + 1 + 1 = 1, but
rather 1 x 1 x 1 = 1). Further, space is identified in one dimension, seen in
the second dimension, experienced in the third dimension. Similarly, time is
future, present and past. The future is the unseen source of time, manifest
moment-by-moment in the present, experienced and understood in the pa st.
Finally, matter is unseen, omnipresent energy, manifesting itself in various
forms of measurable motion, then experienced in corresponding phenomena. For
example, light energy generates light waves which are experienced in the seeing
of light. Sound energy generates sound waves which we experience when we hear
sound. Thus the physical universe is a great "Trinity of trinities," with the
inner relationships of each element beautifully modeling the relationships of
Father, Son and Holy Spirit. All of this does not prove that God is a Trinity,
but it certainly is a re markable fact. It is an amazing effect which can be
explained on the assumption that God is a triune God, and has made His creation
to reflect Himself, but it is very hard to explain any other way.
In Mary it becomes quite clear to us that God reverses this world's scale of
values. The proud, the mighty, the violent are scattered, deposed from their
thrones, made ineffective. The lowly--to whom Mary belongs--the poor, the
powerless who expect everything from God are raised to high places, becoming a
blessing for others. That is why the Church should open herself to the might God
has shown, and reject pride, vanity. Thus, in a world of so much violence and
oppression, she can be a sign of hope for the poor, for those who are powerless,
oppressed and persecuted. Mary stands for the hungry who, in the poverty and
barrenness of life, long for God's promise, for his peace, his word and his
salvation. The promise that God gives every good thing to the hungry is
fulfilled in her. It is fulfilled in us too if we do not have a satiated heart,
but are hungry and thirsty for God's justice; if, in a world of hunger, we seek
to relieve the bodily hunger of those in need and their hunger for God's
promises. Mary is linked with Abraham, the forefather of Israel, the father of
the promise. In the coming of the Messiah, in Jesus Christ, God's faithfulness
is sealed conclusively and in an unparalleled way. The Mother of the Savior
becomes the sign of the Lord's faithfulness. The People of God can depend on
their God. In hope, calmness and fearlessness they can rest assured in the
company of his Son on life's path. Mary's very existence points to God and to
her Son. In her response to God's initiative, through her faith, she sets the
pace for the Church, for the faithful. That is how Mary's song, the Magnificat,
becomes the song of the Church, our song.
In the beginning of Christ's misson on earth Mary was filled with the Holy
Spirit. Thirty-three years later the Mystical Body of Christ, His Church, will
be filled with the Holy Spirit, as Mary too, will be in the midst of the
Apostles abiding in prayer.
To pray for her Heavenly intercession with Our Lord Jesus Christ dates back to
the earliest day of Christianity. In some of the earliest catacombs going back
to the very first Century, we find images of Mary and inscriptions pleading her
intercession for the souls of the dead.
Christianity has always been suffused with the old ways, especially in England
and France. In England the old ways are still present in superstitions, sayings
and beliefs. People still believe in fairys and magic, there is heresy, but
fusion. Many people believe that God is a woman and that she was the Virgin Mary
and that the Virgin is the Bride of God
If we can call God "our Father", then we can call the Holy Spirit, "our Mother."
As she who is Mary formed Jesus in her body, so She who is Holy Spirit forms
Jesus in our souls. As Eden was the Paradise of Creation, Mary is the Paradise
of the Incarnation. Through Mary we entered once again into possession of the
Tree of Life. Since all creation is in perfect balance, Mary was the
co-mediator, the Second Eve, and the reconciler between woman and God. It does
not take anything away from Christ. If you stop to think about what Mary must
have gone through, it's mind boggling. Knowing she had served the Lord every
moment of her life and then to watch her child suffer and be nailed to a cross -
knowing his spirit was free and yet she was appointed to continue living. Can
you imagine a loving mother that wouldn't plead to die in her child's place or
one that would want to continue living after suffering that kind of loss? Jesus
shed his blood as an atonement for our sins, but it was also a sacrifice for
Mary, as well as God, who each gave up their son for the world's sake.
The biblical image of Mary expressed as Goddess can be found in Revelations 12:
1-17
A woman, whose dress was the sun and who had the moon under her feet and a crown
of twelve stars on her head...
Holy Spirit, Holy Breath, becomes the Mother of God, the theotokos, The meaning
of the Word { almighty FATHER MOTHER GOD (El-Shaddai) } in Genesis as "Our." LET
US MAKE THEM IN OUR IMAGE!
he Holy Spirit is the breath of God’s life, the flame of his glory, and the
stream of his love. In Her elusiveness She is God’s mystery. In Her liveliness,
beauty, and grace, She is God’s poetry. In Her compassion She is God’s comfort.
Through Her we come to know God most intimately. In the Holy Spirit of love we
learn that the heart of God is Infinite Joy. From the Holy Spirit we come to
understand that all of Creation springs from this Divine Joy. It is the
celebration of sharing God’s interior happiness, or as it used to be called,
beatitude. It is She who begins to interpret for us what Jesus did; and does in
us subjectively all that Jesus Christ did for us objectively.
A major consideration in the discussion of the femininity of the Deity must be
found in the many, many references to the "Spirit" of God. In Hebrew, the word
is actually "Breath" and similar roots are present in both the Latin and Greek
words used to translate it. In Hebrew, this "Breath" is most often mentioned
using the feminine form of the word. There are those who proclaim that the Holy
Ghost is the focus of femininity in the Trinity. The orthodox would argue that
all members of the Trinity are equally male and female – indeed that they
radically transcend the whole dynamic. A female Holy Ghost, however, receives
further reinforcement from the "Wisdom" literature in the Old Testament. There,
"Wisdom" is portrayed as lover and spouse of humanity. In Proverbs 5:17&f she is
presented as: "the wife you married in your youth, fair as a hind, graceful as a
fawn, Let hers be the company you keep, hers the breasts that ever fill you with
delight, hers the love that ever holds you captive.” Indeed, the next verse
reveals a very, very frequent theme of the prophets too, that turning from
proper worship to false gods is adultery. Now if the "son" commits adultery when
committing idolatry, then it stands to reason that God is the true wife!! Isaiah
54:6: "Yes, like a forsaken wife, distressed in spirit, / YHVH calls you back."
This kind of rhetoric has led to the building of churches like Hagia Sophia
(Holy Wisdom – now the great mosque of Istanbul). It has also led to the cult of
Sophia as the Bride of God which is popular among neo Gnostic strains of
Christian Esotericism. In Classic Gnosticism, Sophia is often the emanated
entity who forgets the true source and engenders the demiurge! Further, much of
the poetical rhetoric of the scripture about Sophia was applied quite early to
Mother Mary.
Click Here..to see Michelangelo's picture of ( the Divine Sophia?? ) at the
creation of Adam; Sistine Chapel,
The spirit of Wisdom is intelligent and holy. She is of one nature but reveals
herself in many ways. She is not made of any material substance, and She moves
about freely. She is clear, clean, and confident; She cannot be harmed. She
loves what is good. She is sharp and unconquerable, 23 kind, and a friend of
humanity. She is dependable and sure, and has no worries. She has power over
everything, and sees everything. She penetrates every spirit that is intelligent
and pure, no matter how delicate its substance may be. 24 Wisdom moves more
easily than motion itself; she is so pure that she penetrates everything. 25 She
is a breath of God's power-a pure and radiant stream of glory from the Almighty.
Nothing that is defiled can ever steal its way into Wisdom. 26 She is a
reflection of eternal light, a perfect mirror of God's activity and goodness. 27
Even though Wisdom acts alone, she can do anything. She makes everything new,
although she herself never changes. From generation to generation she enters the
souls of holy people, and makes them God's friends and prophets. 28 There is
nothing that God loves more than people who are at home with Wisdom. 29 Wisdom
is more beautiful than the sun and all the constellations. She is better than
light itself, 30 because night always follows day, but evil never overcomes
Wisdom. Her great power reaches into every part of the world, and she sets
everything in useful order.
Wisdom of Solomon: 7;22-30, 8;1
Creativity is ever-vital. Vitality is ever-creative. She *is* the energy-force
of creativity, itself. She is the vital essence of vitality. Her numinous
vitality is creatively generating across the parallel dimensions, evolving
realities. We *are* Her vitality, Her mercy, Her creativity, Her ever-evolving
reality -- every organism, every *thing*; not only the animate but the
inanimate. She is the If of yet-to-be, the ineffable, the wholly free... She is
Living Eternity... & even to be but momentarily aware of this, as light*spark
dancing within Her veil of because, brings a brightening of awe in the Presence
of Her mystic splendors, Her radiant darkness, enwombing the Cosmos..
You were given the most understanding, the most self-sacrificing, the most
loving of mothers. God created in her heart a love for us of infinite
tenderness, of undying devotion, and of profound affection. Her mother's heart
is merciful, understanding, vigilant, and unchanging in its love for each of us.
Of all the children of Eve, our Blessed Lady most perfectly fulfills the
function of motherhood. Thus when we call Mary, "Mother"-in a very true sense we
have said everything that can be said to her! She is physical mother of Christ
and spiritual mother of all Christians. She mothers spiritually all men called
to share in the life that her Son came to pour out so abundantly. What should
your response be to the truth of Mary's spiritual motherhood? You should
approach her with the heart and spirit of a child. The humility, the spirit of
confident trustfulness, the dependence (here in the spiritual realm) of a child
should characterize our love. Each of her children will express his love in
accord with his nature, of course, but the interior love must be there. This
devotedness should be a persistent and habitual thing. Mary is not our spiritual
mother now and then - she is ALWAYS our spiritual mother. True devotion to our
Blessed Mother is more than an occasional "Hail Mary." It's not just rattling
off a prayer in times of a spiritual or temporal crisis. True devotion to Our
Blessed Mother means a permanent state of mind and an habitual manner of acting.
It's something that fills every hour of every day - just like a child's
relationship to his mother! You should turn to her always, depend on her with
confidence, and lean on her wise guidance. The words of the great Apostle St.
Paul sum up perfectly the function of Our Blessed Lady in your life. He said:
"My little children, for whom I am in labor until Christ be formed in you." If
this be so true of the Apostle Paul, how much more true it is of the Mother of
Christ. She is in constant and perpetual labor, as it were, to bring forth even
more perfectly, the likeness of Christ, her divine Son in our hearts and lives.
St. Bernard sums up the great spiritual advantage of true devotedness to our
Blessed Mother in the following consoling sentences:'
"By following her, you will not go astray.
By praying to her you will not despair.
By thinking of her you will not make a mistake.
Supported by her, you will not fail.
Under her protection, you will no longer be afraid.
Guided by her, you will never grow weary.
Having her benevolence, you are assured of salvation."
The first statue I saw of the Virgin Mary was on the campus of Fordham
University in New York. I was startled that a college would have a statue, not
of Einstein or Newton or Plato, but, instead, of a robed figure, half-child,
half-woman, doing nothing except extending her palms upward in a gesture of
receptivity. As I got to know Catholic men, I was amazed at the attachment they
had for the mysterious Mary. My godfather could not pass a picture of Mary
without tears filling his eyes. Tough Catholic boys carried rosaries in the
frayed pockets of their jeans next to their knives. Why? Reflecting on the words
of the rosary prayer, ". . . blessed is the fruit of your womb .... holy Mary,
mother of God ... pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death . . . , "
I came to understand that man, who has no womb, was yet born from a womb and
ever seeks the protective warmth of the feminine. He turns to the women in his
life and to his heavenly mother to heal the wounds the world has inflicted on
him. The feminine teaches him to put love before the competitiveness he falls
into in pursuing his role as provider. The figure of the heavenly mother on the
altar draws him out of weariness into the hope of the promises of the kingdom
where there will be for all, women and men, no more toil and tears, only joyl
Paintings of Mary have played a crucial role in my life. I love the famous
Botticelli Annunciation, where the angel starts the dance and Mary bends
backwards in ecstasy. I love the flaming Grunewald Madonna, with her flowing
blondish-red hair, in a brilliant red velvet gown, her eyes gazing down in
utterly peaceful joy at the gift of God held in her long slender hands. Most of
all, I love the unfinished sepia-colored Da Vinci Nativity. 1, an untamed
sensual girl, first discovered the beauty of purity upon gazing at the simple,
girlish outline of this virgin Madonna in a museum in Florence, Italy, and shed
the tears that began the cleansing of my heart. At Fordham University, Father
Donceel, the well-known Jesuit theologian- philosopher, used to begin the class
with the Our Father followed by the phrase, "Seat of Wisdom, pray for us." I was
perplexed. What was the seat of wisdom? Oh, that woman, Mary. How could a
village girl with no graduate degrees be the seat of wisdom?l Then I learned
about contemplation. I had never heard of the word before. I was told that the
lyrical, poetic side of me, with its luminous images hidden deep in my heart,
this soft blissful innerme, counted as much, if not more, than the me who
churned out term paper after term paper of well-organized concepts. Deep within
me was the source of wisdom. joy, joy, Joyl Your title Our Lady, Star of the Sea
also attracted me. I have rarely been at sea, but the name Our Lady, Star of the
Sea on churches in beach towns has always moved me: the contrast between the
raging waves and the still, silent woman -the image of strong men in small boats
rowing towards the harbor, towards the waiting woman, glowing in the darkness,
hands outstretched in welcome. The feminine is the refuge. This universal need
for refuge and comfort, is She to be scomed as weak, whining self-pity? I think
not. Self-pity is nurtured in lonely brooding. The one who acknowledges her
vulnerability and fear and feels reassured in the fact that there are mothers to
tend her wounds, is far less prone to whining. I resented She when the often
sentimental statues of Mary were pitched out of the churches, to be replaced by
jagged, triangular glass shapes, coldly beautiful, but chilling for the child in
man. Then Mother Mary came back to me personally in the form of the women of the
prayer groups, encircling the heaving, battered forms of each other with
embraces of compassion. I became mother over and over again kissing the cheeks
of women whose tears had smeared away their cosmetic masks and of men whose
stoicism cracked at the miraculous touch of sisters and brothers who were
unafraid to be tender. Soothed, they were ready to join us in the circle to
rescue the next supplicant. I thought at the time: Oh, I wish we had a queen.
And so we do in you, Mary. "To the queen of hearts is the ace of sorrows," goes
the ballad. And so I wonder what I would have seen in your face and form as you
were crowned Queen of Heaven and Earth. Would there be some sorrow lingering in
your eyes still, souvenirs of old wars? A compassion and a depth that would draw
the beholder? Are you different as queen than you were as girl, as bride, as
woman of sorrows? I would like to paint you if I could, or bring you flowers on
a rainy day. I would stand a long time on a corner to see you smile and wave
your hand. Why is feminine power so beautiful? Liquid grace and ease and warmth,
freedom and flow, earth, air, and fire reflected on the water that is woman. The
water mirrors them all - light and movement, buoyancy, containment, floating,
floating- all the sea's movement and power evoke the queenly hand. No wonder we
hasten to call you Star of the Sea, fire reflecting on water. I read that our
ancestor's pre-ancestors came from the sea, that the fluid in our veins has the
same salts as those in the seas. When I look at the sea and throw to her my
confusion and fear, she takes them as my mother and hides them in her faithful
ebb and tide which soothes me with its receding roar. The sea is queen, and I am
strengthened by bathing in the reflection of her waters. Are you, as Queen of
Heaven, the sea become person; are you the waters from above become separate for
the waters below? I am comforted that you are my queen and mother; like the sea,
you will not fail. I, too, will not fail, but endure all the tides and seasons,
all the elements of earth, air, fire, and water, for as you were made of heaven
and for heaven and brought full circle crowned with sorrow and with glory, so I
am made not only of sea salts, but made of heaven, for heaven. "Our life, our
sweetness and our hope," we sing in the Salve moaning over the "0 mild, 0
devout, 0 sweet Virgin Mary." Oh, we who are in the valley of tears are pulled
from its darkness by the thought of you who passed through the dark, help me to
know to whom I pledge my loyalties, whom I serve, whose colors I wear.
Let me bow down before the glory of the feminine, willing to wear her liquid
graces.
Reign, O Mother and Queen, by showing us the path of holiness, and by guiding
and assisting us that we may never stray from it.
In the heights of Heaven, thou doth exercise thy primacy over the choirs of
Angels, who acclaim thee as their sovereign, and over the legions of Saints who
delight in beholding thy radiant beauty.
Much of Judeo-Christian theology is actually based on the Divine Feminine.
Divine Harmony, Wisdom and Truth. The Divine Feminine archetype is also related
to the process of purification, transformation and illumination of matter. By
its very essence, this archetype is the printing and the implementation of
spiritual ideas in the material world. The Christ-Sophia (principle of
love-wisdom and masculine-feminine) the divine feminine in balance with the
divine masculine The divine eternal feminine took the shape of woman. Just like
the Verb of God (Christ/Sophia) became flesh in Jesus, the Divinity could also
adopt, in order to manifest its feminine side, the shape of a woman, blessed
amongst all women of all times, and "full of grace". Those words belong to
Gabriel, one of the High spirits that assist God, according to the Gospel of
Luke (Luke 1:28 and 30).
Maybe it serves to transcribe here a surprising version of how Mary was seen by
the early followers of Jesus: "At this time the mother of Jesus died and was
buried in the same place were He had been crucified, and a stone was erected on
the site. On that stone, the relatives of Jesus wrote these words: "Behold that
here is a ladder erected upon the land that reaches heaven, and upon She the
angels of God ascend and descend, and the Mother rejoices here with Her
children". (Memoirs of Heggesipus quoted by Eusebius/Acts of the Nazarites by
Julius Africanus)
The word matter comes from the same word as mother... parts of a document called
the "Gospel of the Hebrews" has been quoted by the Church Fathers Origen and
Jerome, writing in the 3rd and 4th centuries CE. This document explicitly
identifies Mary with the Holy Spirit. This strongly suggests that the Christian
sect which accepted this early Gospel believed that
Mary was divine, and part of a Trinity.
The presence of Mary in the Woman clothed with the Sun
A reflective analysis of Revelation 12:1 and following versicles can come upon
certain deductions: The woman is a mother for she is about to give birth. The
fact that she is clothed with the sun, symbol of light, warmth and life, can
very well represent her divine essence. What other visions contained in the
Bible concede these attributes to another person? The moon beneath her feet
could very well indicate the triple goddess and that she has conquered and
surpassed the seven spheres of the planets like Christ overcame the world. And
as a crown upon her head, twelve stars that can symbolize both : The twelve
tribes of Israel and the twelve apostles of Jesus.
As the result of new findings in the Dead Sea Scriptures, the Coptic Nag Hammadi
and intertestamental texts of Jewish mystics found side-by-side the writings of
the early Christian church, scholars are recognizing the Holy Spirit as the
"female vehicle" for the outpouring of higher teaching and spiritual rebirth.
The Holy Spirit plays varied roles in Judeo-Christian traditions: acting in
Creation, imparting wisdom, and inspiring Old Testament prophets. In the New
Testament She is the presence of God in the world and a power in the birth and
life of Jesus.
The Eastern Church places the Holy Spirit as the Second Person of the Trinity
with Christ as the Third, whereas the Western Church places the Son before the
Holy Spirit.
In the Old Testament and the Dead Sea Scrolls the Holy Spirit was known as the
Ruach or Ruach Ha Kodesh (Psalm 51:11). In the New Testament as Pneuma (Romans
8:9). The Holy Spirit was not rendered as "Holy Ghost" until the appearance of
the 1611 Protestant King James Version of the Bible.
Ruach Ha Kodesh was considered a voice sent from on high to speak to the
Prophet. Thus, in the Old Testament language of the prophets, She is the Divine
Spirit of indwelling sanctification and creativity and is considered as having a
feminine power. "He" as a reference to Spirit has been used in theology to match
the pronoun for God, yet the Hebrew word ruach is a noun of feminine gender.
Thus, referring to the Holy Spirit as "she" has some linguistic justification.
Denoting Spirit as a feminine principle, the creative principle of life, makes
sense when considering the Trinity aspect where Father plus Spirit leads to the
Divine Extension of Divine Sonship.
Church doctrine regards the Holy Spirit as a person, not a force like magnetism.
The writings of the Catholic fathers, in fact, preserve the vision of the Spirit
encapsulating the "peoplehood of Christ" as the Bride or as the "Mother Church."
Both are feminine aspects of the Divine. In the Eastern Church, Spirit was
always considered to have a feminine nature. She was the life -bearer of the
faith. Clement of Alexandria states that "she" is an indwelling Bride.
Amongst the Eastern Church communities there is none more clear about the
feminine aspect of the Holy Spirit as the corpus of the Coptic-Gnostics. One
such document records that Jesus says, "Even so did my mother, the Holy Spirit,
take me by one of my hairs and carry me away to the great mountain Tabor [in
Galilee]."
The 3rd century scroll of mystical Coptic Christianity, The Acts of Thomas,
gives a graphic account of the Apostle Thomas' travels to India, and contains
prayers invoking the Holy Spirit as "the Mother of all creation" and
"compassionate mother," among other titles. The most profound Coptic Christian
writings definitely link the "spirit of Spirit" manifested by Christ to all
believers as the "Spirit of the Divine Mother." Most significant are the new
manuscript discoveries of recent decades which have demonstrated that more early
Christians than previously thought regarded the Holy Spirit as the Mother of
Jesus.
According to Professor Neil Q. Hamilton at Drew University School of Theology,
the Gospel of John shows us how "the Holy Spirit begins to perform a mothering
role for us that is unconditional acceptance, love and caring." God then begins
to parent us in father and mother modes.
A Catholic scholar, Franz Mayr, a philosophy professor at the University of
Portland, also favors the recognition of the Holy Spirit as feminine. He
contends that the traditional unity of God would not have to be watered down in
order for scholars to accept the feminine side of God . Mayr, who studied under
the renown German theologian Karl Rahner, said he came to his view during his
study of the writings of St. Augustine (AD 354-430) who saw that a significant
number of early Christians must have accepted a feminine aspect of the Holy
Spirit such that the influential church father of North Africa castigated this
view.
It is becoming clear in re-examining the first 100 years of Christianity that an
earlier Christianity was closer to the "Feminine Spirit" of the Old Testament,
the Ruach or the beloved Shekinah. The Shekinah, distinct from the Ruach, was
seen as the indwelling Divine Presence that activated the "birth of miracles" or
the anointed self. Accordingly, the growth of traditional Christianity made
alternative adjustments of the original position of the "birth of gifts" as
Christendom compromised for the privilege of becoming an establishment.
The new directions of spiritual and scientific studies are showing that it is
now possible that the Holy Spirit, Ruach Ha Kodesh, can be portrayed as feminine
as the indwelling presence of God, the Shekinah, nurturing and bringing to birth
souls for the kingdom.
The Keys of Enoch tell us that the Divine Trinity is beyond the anthropo-morphic
forms of male and female. Here our own masculine or feminine natures are only
symbols of the Divine and our Life's manifestation in the Universe. And herein
we understand who we really are, as we both male and female make our own
preparation for the rebirth of our "Christed Overself," unified as the
peoplehood of Light, the "Bride," for the coming of the "Bridegroom"- - the
Christ.
I am that Goddess. I am the force of the universe in the shape of a woman.
Nothing exists that is not me, and nothing but me exists. All women are but
manifestations of me. And I am the manifestation of all women.
The evolution of a new feminist spirituality stands at the heart of the
process of human transformation.
The Eastern religious traditions have for millennia observed that if you fail to
show respect to the female principle within and without, the results can be
awesomely destructive.
Within the analytical tradition of Carl Jung and the work of mythologists such
as Joseph Campbell, there is much evidence to support the existence of the
feminine principle (anima) within the human psyche alongside that of the male
principle (animus). Jung's definition of spiritual growth within the individual
in large part relates to the development and integration of those male and
female components of the human psyche.
We must create and express a vision of connectedness in order to move beyond the
unequal power relations that are tearing our world apart. Yet the symbol systems
with which we understand reality are often essentially patriarchal. We lack
alternative images with which to transform ourselves and creation. In too many
cases the great religions of the world have built up rather than dismantled our
vision of inequality and disconnection. The angry father God in heaven raining
down punishment upon disobedient children reinforces destructive human behavior.
But traditional religion still exerts a great influence on many hearts and
minds. "Sophia bridges the gap between feminist spirituality's need for
transforming images and the demand of the biblical traditions that such images
be congruent with their history and experience. Sophia can serve as the image,
the "role model" a the heart of feminist spirituality, symbolizing as she does
the connectedness between all beings.
Urge every person of faith to sink their lives deeply into all that their
religious system can be, but never to assume that God is a Being who can be
known only through that tradition. God cannot be limited and the ultimate
judgment about what is finally true belongs to God alone, not to us. So walk in
love. Join hands with all those who seek God and a god-filled life. They are not
the enemies of your religious convictions.
The myth of the lost Goddess, for example, is not designed to tell us about
women, but about the human condition. The God and the Goddess represent two
aspects of our identity, regardless of whether or not we are male or female."
Perhaps most surprising, however, is that the stories of women we thought we
knew well are changing in dramatic ways.
The New Testament Gospels, written toward the last quarter of the first century
CE, acknowledge that women were among Jesus' earliest followers. From the
beginning, Jewish women disciples, including Mary Magdalene, Joanna, and
Susanna, had accompanied Jesus during his ministry and supported him out of
their private means (Luke 8:1-3). He spoke to women both in public and private.
Certainly he learned his mother's wisdom, and according to the Gospel story, an
unnamed Gentile woman persuaded Jesus to declare that the ministry of God is not
limited to particular groups and persons, but belongs to all who have faith
(Mark 7:24-30; Matthew 15:21-28). Jesus was a frequent visitor at the home of
Mary and Martha, and was in the habit of teaching and eating meals with women as
well as men. When Jesus was arrested, women remained firm, even when his male
disciples fled, and women accompanied him to the foot of the cross. It was women
who were reported as the first witnesses to the resurrection, chief among them,
Mary Magdalene. It is certain that God created Man and Woman as companions and
equals from the beginning; Yet, two thousand years after the birth of Christ the
Southern Baptist Convention voted to add a clause to the denomination's
statement of beliefs affirming that a wife is to submit herself to the
leadership of her husband; and the Vatican warned that those Catholics who
continue to argue in favor of woman's ordination would be subject to penalty.
Why is this so? What does the Bible say about the roles of men and women?
Time and again Jesus demonstrated his respect
for women as persons, not possessions. In the Judean society of
Jesus' day a man was not to speak with a woman in public;
sometimes even is she was a wife or daughter, and never to
converse with a Gentile woman. Nor was a man to touch any woman
other than his wife or daughter, however innocent the purpose.
Certainly a man was not to teach women. Nonetheless, Jesus
defied every one of these rules! The genealogy of Jesus as
reported in Matthew is remarkable because it includes references
to several female ancestors, something not done in Jewish
genealogies at the time. Not only are five women mentioned, but
all of these women are associated with some form of less then
ideal sexual behavior. Jesus, for his time and place, was
notably unsexist. In Samaria, when he talked with the woman at
the well—this is the longest personal exchange he has with
anyone in the Bible—his disciples “marveled”; a Jewish man did
not, in public, speak to a woman unrelated to him. In another
episode, in Luke, Jesus is dining with Simon the Pharisee when a
“woman in the city,” a “sinner”enters the house, washes Jesus’
feet with her tears, dries them with her hair, kisses them, and
then anoints them with balm from a jar. Simon says to Christ
that if he can accept that tribute from such a person then he is
surely not a prophet. Christ answers that the “sinner” has shown
him more love than Simon has.
What is the Christian view on a woman's conduct or place? Is
it what the Pope says it is? Is it what Billy Graham says it is? Is it what Al
Sharpton says it is? Or Jerry Falwell or James Kennedy or Robert Schuler? You
see when we pose the issue this way, we discover that there is no consensus, and
when the various defenders of Christianity discover that, when each defines what
he or she believes Christianity to be, there is no consensus. There are some who
believe that the way is only found in the New Testament. There are those who
believe the same of the Old. Some hold that if the New has no word on a
particular subject then the word of the Old stands. Still other believe that
where the Old and New conflict, the New supercedes the Old. This is just a few
of the variations. You know what, all of them are each convinced that their way
is the 'right' one. If you add to that the fact that the Bible is composed of
various writings of people from all walks of life and from all points of view,
you soon realize that it is not strictly a literal account, but the
interpretation of the facts by the individual writers. Lets look at the way
Jesus spent his time here and the values he lived his life by. He spent time
with sinners. He was kind, understanding, gentle, forgiving in most cases. The
few things he did get angry about were issues that still hold true today. He was
tolerant of those who did not follow his way, and his love was not in any way
conditional on belief in him. He tried to better the lot of those he touched,
irrespective of their belief. He never made conversion a condition of healing -
he simply did his mission and let others come to him if they felt him in their
hearts by their own free will. I believe that a true Christian would try and
emulate the values of his Saviour.
Does the Bible in fact say that God cares equally for men and women and that
they have equal responsibilities under Christ's authority; And 'that it is all
worth nothing without love'? What part did Jewish women have in the movement
that grew up around Jesus of Nazareth? Is there any evidence that Jesus married
Mary Magdalene? How do we know what the earliest Christians really believed
about these questions? What are The Gospel of Philip and The Gospel of Mary
Magdalene?
Since the Gospels do not leave these women anonymous but
identify them by name, it is obvious that they must have played
an important role in the Christian movement in Palestine. Their
leader appears to have been Mary of Magdala. All four Gospels
transmit her name, whereas the names of the other women vary.
She has, moreover, a position equaling that of Peter in the
apocryphal gospel literature. Thus, according to the Gospel
traditions, women were the primary apostolic witnesses for the
fundamental events of the early Christian preaching: they were
witnesses of Jesus' ministry, his suffering and death, his
burial and his resurrection. They were moreover, sent to
proclaim the message of the resurrection. Not only does Paul
repeatedly mention the prophets directly after the apostles but
he even values the gift of prophecy higher than that of speaking
in tongues. Luke asserts that the Spirit of prophecy is given to
women as well as to men (Acts 2:17). He specifically mentions
the four daughters of Philip as renowned Christian prophets
(Acts 21:9). Paul takes it for granted that women prophesy and
have liturgical functions:
Chief among these is Mary Magdalene, a woman infamous in Western
Christianity as an adulteress and repentant whore. Discoveries
of new texts from the dry sands of Egypt, along with sharpened
critical insight, have now proven that this portrait of Mary is
entirely inaccurate. She was indeed an influential figure, but
as a prominent disciple and leader of one wing of the early
Christian movement that promoted women's leadership.
Christianity was the next major cultural wave of systemic,
systematic Western airbrushing of History. Just as the Male
Shamans - High Priests - of the Jews hid the reality of Yahweh's
other, feminine half - so the Male Shamans of Christianity were
laying the foundations of Male Power in Western societies. They
have achieved an almost complete cover-up of the Feminine,
illustrated so well in the airbrushing of Mary Magdalene, whose
true identity was not just hidden, but cleverly presented as its
opposite.
We may pause here to ask if this did not happen to Eve - and
Lilith before her? Are these "Goddesses" the real place to begin
the story of Jewish and Christian history-tampering around
Feminine Power? For both Eve and Lilith belong in some form or
other to the Sumerian legends which are agreed now to be the
origins of the Jewish Bible - the Torah that Christians like to
appropriate by calling the "Old Testament".
However, for the moment, let us look at Mary Magdalene. This
Mary was not only clearly an intellectual woman to whom Jesus
confided knowledge he withheld from his jealous male disciples,
but she was likely his wife just as Asherah was the wife of
Jehovah...The persecution of the Gnostic tradition in
convulsive, repeating cycles of Christian history up until the
mass extermination of the Cathars in the 13th century A.D. was
aimed at many heresies, but chief among them was the persistent
reverence for Mary Magdalene, the understanding of the sacred
marriage of Jesus and Mary and "the Magdalene's" status as a
divinely inspired, indeed divinely appointed, teacher.
The non-biblical image of Magdalene as a repentant prostitute is
an image that had been officially sanctioned by the Roman
Catholic Church in the sixth century. And it's that image that
has been perpetuated by dozens of Christian paintings and movies
ever since. The misreading of Mary Magdalene, is almost as
ancient as the Gospels of the New Testament themselves, if only
because there are up to five Marys in the Gospels and seven in
the New Testament as a whole. Mary, Mother of Jesus Mary of
Magdala Mary, mother of James and Joses Mary, wife of Clopas
Mary of Bethany Mary, mother of John Mark Mary, of church at
Rome. 1 Six Marys 1 Six Marys are to be distinguished in the
N.T.: (1) the mother of Jesus; always clearly identified by the
context. (2) Mary Magdalene, a woman of Magdala, " out of whom
went seven demons" Luke 8:2 She is never mentioned apart from
the identifying word "Magdalene." (3) The mother of James
(called "the less," Mark 15:40) and Joses, the apostles. A
comparison of ; John 19:25; Matthew 27:56; Mark 15:40
establishes the inference that this Mary, the mother of James
the less, and of Joses was the wife of Alphaeus (called also
Cleophas), John 19:25 and a sister of Mary the mother of Jesus.
Except in ; Matthew 27:61; 28:1 where she is called "the other
Mary (i.e. "other" than her sister, Mary the Virgin); and John
19:25 where she is called "of Cleophas," she is mentioned only
in connection with one or both of her sons. (4) Mary of Bethany,
sister of Martha and Lazarus, mentioned by name only in Luke
10:39-42; John 11:1,2,19,20,28,31,32,45; 12:3 but referred to in
; Matthew 26:7; Mark 14:3-9. (5) The mother of John Mark and
sister of Barnabas Acts 12:12. (6) A helper of Paul in Rome
Romans 16:6. 2 of whom was born 2 The changed expression here is
important. It is no longer, "who begat," but, "Mary, of whom was
born Jesus." Jesus was not begotten of natural generation.
However, in reality there are only two Mary's in the gospel
story, and three at the cross, the Mother and the Magdalene and
Mary (Jerusalem)Salome.
The Jesus group did not accept the values and institutions of
their Jewish society and milieu but often stood in opposition to
them. Jesus and his disciples, for example, did not live an
ascetic life-style like John the Baptist and his followers. The
Jesus group rejected the religious purity laws and attracted the
outcasts of their society as well as those who were for various
reasons ostracized from their religious community. In
distinction to the community at Qumran or the Pharisees, the
Jesus movement in Palestine was not an exclusive but an
inclusive group. Woman were prominent among the people who made
up much of Jesus's circle. Jesus defied oppressive customs
concerning women.
The New Testament gospels tell us that Mary was a Jewish woman
who followed Jesus of Nazareth. Apparently of independent means,
she accompanied Jesus during his ministry and supported him out
of her own resources (Mark 15:40-41; Matthew 27:55-56; Luke
8:1-3; John 19:25).
Now if Mary was a prostitute, how is it that she supported
Jesus?
The Synoptic Gospels (Mt, Mk, Lk)describe Mary Magdalene as a
woman of Galilee who assisted our Lord and his disciples and who
was present at the crucifixion and burial of our Lord. The
Gospel of St. John records that Mary Magdalene as the first
witness of the Risen Lord Himself. St. Luke records that “seven
demons had gone out of her” and just prior to this note is the
account of the sinful woman who tenderly anointed our Lord with
her tears and dried them with her hair. While Luke does not make
an explicit connection between these two figures, from Patristic
times until the present there is a strong tradition of
associating Mary of Magdalene with the sinful woman who anointed
our Lord:
7:36 One of the Pharisees asked him to eat with him, and he went
into the Pharisee's house, and took his place at table. 7:37 And
behold, a woman of the city, who was a sinner, when she learned
that he was at table in the Pharisee's house, brought an
alabaster flask of ointment, 7:38 and standing behind him at his
feet, weeping, she began to wet his feet with her tears, and
wiped them with the hair of her head, and kissed his feet, and
anointed them with the ointment. 7:39 Now when the Pharisee who
had invited him saw it, he said to himself, "If this man were a
prophet, he would have known who and what sort of woman this is
who is touching him, for she is a sinner." 7:40 And Jesus
answering said to him, "Simon, I have something to say to you."
And he answered, "What is it, Teacher?" 7:41 "A certain creditor
had two debtors; one owed five hundred denarii, and the other
fifty. 7:42 When they could not pay, he forgave them both. Now
which of them will love him more?" 7:43 Simon answered, "The
one, I suppose, to whom he forgave more." And he said to him,
"You have judged rightly." 7:44 Then turning toward the woman he
said to Simon, "Do you see this woman? ed your house, you gave
me no water for my feet, but she has wet my feet with her tears
and wiped them with her hair. 7:45 You gave me no kiss, but from
the time I came in she has not ceased to kiss my feet. 7:46 You
did not anoint my head with oil, but she has anointed my feet
with ointment. 7:47 Therefore I tell you, her sins, which are
many, are forgiven, for she loved much; but he who is forgiven
little, loves little." 7:48 And he said to her, "Your sins are
forgiven." 7:49 Then those who were at table with him began to
say among themselves, "Who is this, who even forgives sins?"
The few details told us of the encounter between Mary Magdalene
and our Lord in the Garden seen of the Resurrection inclines one
to imagine that this may be the same woman, who was so grateful
for having been set free of sin and who once again weeping and
sought to touch our Lord:
20:11 But Mary stood weeping outside the tomb, and as she wept
she stooped to look into the tomb; 20:12 and she saw two angels
in white, sitting where the body of Jesus had lain, one at the
head and one at the feet. 20:13 They said to her, "Woman, why
are you weeping?" She said to them, "Because they have taken
away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid him." 20:14
Saying this, she turned round and saw Jesus standing, but she
did not know that it was Jesus. 20:15 Jesus said to her, "Woman,
why are you weeping? Whom do you seek?" Supposing him to be the
gardener, she said to him, "Sir, if you have carried him away,
tell me where you have laid him, and I will take him away."
20:16 Jesus said to her, "Mary." She turned and said to him in
Hebrew, "Rab-bo'ni!" (which means Teacher). 20:17 Jesus said to
her, "Do not hold me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father;
but go to my brethren and say to them, I am ascending to my
Father and your Father, to my God and your God." 20:18 Mary
Mag'dalene went and said to the disciples, "I have seen the
Lord"; and she told them that he had said these things to her.
(John)
Beyond associating Mary Magdalene with the unnamed sinner who
anointed Jesus, there is a tradition going back to the
Patristics which associates her with Mary of Bethany, sister of
Martha and Lazarus. Such a link is suggested by the other
anointing episode which occurred at Bethany by Mary, as
described in Mt, Mk, and John:
12:1 Six days before the Passover, Jesus came to Bethany, where
Laz'arus was, whom Jesus had raised from the dead. 12:2 There
they made him a supper; Martha served, and Laz'arus was one of
those at table with him. 12:3 Mary took a pound of costly
ointment of pure nard and anointed the feet of Jesus and wiped
his feet with her hair; and the house was filled with the
fragrance of the ointment. 12:4 But Judas Iscariot, one of his
disciples (he who was to betray him), said, 12:5 "Why was this
ointment not sold for three hundred denarii and given to the
poor?" 12:6 This he said, not that he cared for the poor but
because he was a thief, and as he had the money box he used to
take what was put into it. 12:7 Jesus said, "Let her alone, let
her keep it for the day of my burial. 12:8 The poor you always
have with you, but you do not always have me."
Those who hold that this is Mary Magdalene regard the episode of
anointing with tears as an earlier foreshadowing of this more
perfect anointing more immediately associated with the burial of
Christ, by the same woman.
ere is a fact that few people seem to know: The Bible never
explicitly says that Mary Magdalene was ever a prostitute at any
point in her life. By comparison with the other women in
Jesus'following, Mary Madalene "alone stands out undefined by a
designation attaching her to some male as wife, mother, or
daughter and she is the only one to be identifiable by her place
of birth".
It is, however, that in the gospel of John, that Mary Magdalen
appears as one of the several women of faith, and Unequivocally
as the first witness of the Empty Tomib and of the Risen Christ,
the cornerstone of Christian belief the first recipient of all
apostolic commission, she becomes not only the herald of the
"New Life," but also the first apostle.
"And it came to pass afterward, that he went throughout every
city and village, preaching and shewing the glad tidings of the
kingdom of God: and the twelve were with him, And certain women,
which had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities, Mary
called Magdalene, out of whom went seven devils, And Joanna the
wife of Chuza Herod's steward, and Susanna, and many others,
which ministered unto him of their substance." The Greek version
says "them" inferring the 12 were also supported by the women
They are also referred to in Mark (I 5:40) "There were also
women looking on afar off: among whom was Mary Magdalene, and
Mary the mother of James the less and of Joses, and Salome; (Who
also, when he was in Galilee, followed him, and ministered unto
him;) and many other women which came up with him unto
Jerusalem.
When Martha had complained for serving help Jesus indicates she
has a pivotal role to play Luke 10:41: " Jesus answered and said
unto her, Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about
many things: But one thing is needful: and Mary hath chosen that
good part, which shall not be taken away from her." This could
be interest in his teachings, but sounds also like the role of
partner.
In the ancient world nearly everyone had two names and often
titles or aliases as well. Greek was the universal language and
nealy everyone had a name in his 'or her' own native tounge.
Thomas was the Aramaic and Didymus the Greek for 'a twin'.
Tabitha was the Aramic and Dorcas the Greek for 'a gazelle'.
When Jesus saw Simon, as he was then called, he said to him;
"Your name is Simon; but you are going to be called Cephas,
which means a rock." Peter and Cephas are not different names;
rather, the same name in a different language. In the Old
Testament names were given by God and a change of name often
denoted a change in relationship to God. For example, Abram
became Abraham , Jacob became Israel. Sarai became Sarah, which
means princess; for "She shall be a mother of nations, kings of
people shall be of her." Also, James and John became the "Sons
of thunder", so named by Jesus. Daniel became also Belteshazzar,
so named by the king of babylon. Saul became Paul. All of these
people are called by their various names at different times and
places throughout the scriptures. The name Magdalene means
'tower of the flock'. Mary of Bethany, Mary the sister of
Martha, and Mary Magdalene are the same woman. Further, this
woman is the Samaritian woman Jesus met at the well of Jacob and
the woman with the alabaster jar which annonted the Messiah.
'Messiah' means 'the annointed one' and Mary knew something of
the Lord's coming temptation in the final week which the other
disciples seemed ignorant of.
"Mary Magdalene had her surname of Magdala, a castle, and was
born of right noble lineage and parents, which were descended of
the lineage of kings. And her father was named Cyrus, and her
mother Eucharis. She with her brother Lazarus, and her sister
Martha, possessed the castle of Magdalo, which is two miles from
Nazareth, and Bethany, the castle which is nigh to Jerusalem,
and also a great part of Jerusalem, which, all these things they
departed among them." - Legenda Aurea (published in Genoa in
1275)
nd being in Bethany in the house of Simon the leper, as he sat
at meat, there came a woman having an alabaster box of ointment
of spikenard very precious; ans she brake the box, and poured it
on his head. And there were some there that had indignation
within themselves, and said, "Why was this waste of ointment
made?" For it might have been sold for more than three hundred
pence, and have been given to the poor, and they murmered
against her. And Jesus said, "Let her alone; why trouble ye her?
She hath wrougth a good work on me. For ye have the poor with
you always, and whensoever ye will ye may do them good; but me
ye have not always. She hath done what she could.; she is come
aforehand to annoint my body to the burying. Verily, I say unto
you, Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached throughout the
whole world, this also that she hath done shall be spoken of for
a memorial of her."
This anointing of Jesus is, 'by an express command of Jesus', to
be recorded whenever the gospel is preached [Mt 26:13].
Therefore, because the only anointing Luke records is the one by
that "woman of the city," we must conclude that this is the same
anointing as we see recorded in the other gospels. Note what the
other accounts add: The anointing is in the house of Simon the
leper of Bethany and the box contained "very precious" ointment
[Mt 26:6-13]. This anointing of Jesus is followed by Judas
betraying Jesus, implying a direct link between the anointing
and Judas' decision [Mt 26:14-15]. Mark adds the fact that this
ointment in Simon's house was of a very precious substance
called "Spikenard"; but someone complains, "Why was this waste
of the ointment made? For it might have been sold for more then
300 pence."[Mk 14:3-5] That equals a YEAR'S WAGES in those days,
or several thousand dollars in modern terms, such as oil used to
anoint someone KING. John, at last, completes the story: The
woman who anoints Jesus is none other than Mary of Bethany, the
sister of Martha and Lazarus. So the woman was named Mary after
all. And because she and her sister are supposed to serve guests
in this house, a house we can now identify as the house of Simon
the Pharisee, a "leper", Simon perhaps is Cyrus the father of
Mary, Martha and Lazarus, or perhaps Simon is Lazarus. Now it
becomes clear why these three siblings are living in the same
house; it is a family estate. We know that Lazarus is wealthy
when we are told of the huge crowds that gather when Jesus
raises Lazarus from the dead. Bethany was on the eastern slope
of the Mount of Olives; prime real estate. Simon is a wealthy
man who owns choice property near Jerusalem with a house big
enough to sleep several adult men and women. It is his daughter
who anoints Jesus with royal ointment, and his daughter who
helps support Jesus and his apostles out of her means as Mary
Magdalene.
urther, the names of Mary and the Apostles, and Lazarus and/or
Simon, may have been changed to protect the innocent and the
royal house of David. The Scriptures never said that Jesus was
not married; we have seen from history that the physical danger
to his family and followers would have been reason enough to
remove Jesus' marriage from the record. The Mother Church had
been lost with Jerusalem and the latter destruction of Israel
itself. The Jewish Christian Church disappeared as the Jewish
people were killed or sold into slavery. After Jesus's death,
the messianic political revolutionary movements led by the
Zealot party continued among the Jews against the Romans,
reaching a critical peak a generation later in a widespread
Palestinian revolt. In the ensuing war, Roman troops crushed the
rebellion, captured Jerusalem, and destroyed the Jewish Temple
(70 A.D.). The Christian community in Jerusalem and Palestine
was thereby dispersed, and the closest link of the Christian
religion to Judaism-maintained and symbolized by the Jerusalem
Christians-was severed. Christianity thereafter was more a
Hellenistic than a Palestinian phenomenon. From Paul, at the
start of Christianity, to Augustine, its most influential
protagonist at the end of the classical era, the character and
aspirations of the new religion were decisively molded by its
Greco-Roman context. How many records were lost or censored? The
physical documents avalible to us today date 'several' years
after the life of Jesus. Early doucments speak of Jesus'
relation to Mary as romantic and her being most devoted of his
disciples. Romantic Love was killed by the established
traditions of Patriarchy; and dismissed when the church became
an arm of Rome. Suffice it to remember that his beloved sat at
his feet drinking in his every word (Luke 10: 39) and that she
anointed his feet with her tears and dried them with her hair
(John 12:3).
In John, Mary the sister of Martha and Lazarus is portrayed in a
different light. She lives in Bethany of Judea and she calls on
Jesus to return there to save her brother: 1 1:1 "Now a certain
man was sick, named Lazarus, of Bethany, the town of Mary and
her sister Martha."saying, Lord, behold, he whom thou lovest is
sick. Now Jesus loved Martha, and her sister, and Lazarus."
Jesus delays ceremonially for two days. Lazarus dies and is
'stinking'. Martha goes out to meet him. In almost ritual style
Jesus has Martha declare 1 1:27 "Yea, Lord: I believe that thou
art the Christ, the Son of God, which should come into the
world."
"And when she had so said, she went her way, and called Mary her
sister secretly, saying, The Master is come, and calleth for
thee. As soon as she heard that, she arose quickly, and came
unto him." This term is used again by Magdalene at the burial -
Rabboni.
Sarah also called her husband Lord.; Sitting Shiva ( an ancient
engagement custom ) explains the mystery of why she waited
before coming quickly.
When Jesus Calls on Lazarus, he groans. This very act of
'miracle work' with well known associates, sets the stage for
his own demise, a life for a life, because the priests plot
because of this miracle, that he should become the sacrifice ;
Did they know he was the atonement king?
"Nor consider that it is expedient for us, that one man should
die for the people, and that the whole nation perish not." John
then tells a story in which the foot anointing leads to
Jesus'demise: 12:2 "There they made him a supper; and Martha
served: but Lazarus was one of them that sat at the table with
him.
Then took Mary a pound of ointment of spikenard, very costly,
and anointed the feet of Jesus, and wiped his feet with her
hair: and the house was filled with the odour of the ointment.
Then saith ... Judas Iscariot, Simon's son, which should betray
him, Why was not this ointment sold for three hundred pence, and
given to the poor? ... Then said Jesus, Let her alone: against
the day of my burying hath she kept this ." Mary is thus
acclaimed by Jesus as the only one who has foreknowledge of the
inner mystery that is about to take place, unlike his disciples.
There are in each gospel three women attending the crucifixion
the consistency, despite variation of the characters, suggests
that the three women are part of the sacred drama: Mark 15:40
has them as follows: "There were also women looking on afar off:
among whom was Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James the
less and of Joses, and Salome (Who also, when he was in Galilee,
followed him, and ministered unto him;) and many other women
which came up with him unto Jerusalem
Matthew 27:55 has: "And many women were there beholding afar
off, which followed Jesus from Galilee, ministering unto him:
Among which was Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James and
Joses, and the mother of Zebedees children." Luke 23:49 is less
specific at the Crucifixion "And all his acquaintance, and the
women that followed him from Galilee, stood afar off, beholding
these things.", but reverts to the three-fold pattern at the
tomb.
John 19:25 has a slightly different set of muses: "Now there
stood by the cross of Jesus his mother, and his mother's sister,
Mary the wife of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene." The only
satisfactory explanation of two'sisters' being Mary is that they
are sisters in law, but this idea was developed later. It is
extremely unlikely these repeated motifs concerning the Marys
and the women would have been included in all four gospels,
given the already established patriarchal heritage that followed
Paul, had not it had a basis in history and a truth to be
discovered in the Gospel.
From his controversial sermon at Galilee, we note that mother
Mary is'the mother of James and Joses': Mark 6:3 "Is not this
the carpenter, the son of Mary, the brother of James, and Joses,
and of Juda, and Simon? and are not his sisters here with us?
And they were offended at him." And in each of,the gospels it
was the women, and particularly Mary Magdelene who were first to
see the risen Christ, for which she receives the title Apostola
Apostolorum - apostle of apostles: Mark 16:9 "Now when Jesus was
risen early the first day of the week, he appeared first to Mary
Magdalene, out of whom he had cast seven devils." Now
unfortunately this section of Mark is missing from the Codex
Sinaiticus recovered from St. Catherine's monastery and is thus
beilived to be a later addition, however Luke 24:1 0 confirms
"It was Mary Magdalene and Joanna, and Mary the mother of James,
and other women that were with them, which told these things
unto the apostles." and of course they are not believed "And
their words seemed to them as idle tales, and they believed them
not. There is an earthquake and angels everywhere. Discounting
the angel and the earthquake, we still however have these two
female participants. 27:61 "And there was Mary Magdalene, and
the other Mary, sitting over against the sepulchre." : 28:1 "In
the end of the sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day
of the week, came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary to see the
sepulchre. And, behold, there was a great earthquake: for the
angel of the Lord descended from heaven, and came and rolled
back the stone from the door, and sat upon it. His countenance
was like lightning, and his raiment white as snow." In John 20:1
it is Mary Magdalene who calls [the risen] Jesus'Rabboni'and who
afterwards utters the exhaltation to the others: "Thefirst day
of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early, when it was yet dark,
unto the sepulchre, and seeth the stone taken away from the
sepulchre. When she goes to get Peter the disciples did not
understand the Resurrection John 20:8 "Then cometh Simon Peter
... then went in also that other disciple, which came first to
the sepulchre, and he saw [the empty napkins] and believed. For
as yet they knew not the scripture, that he must rise again from
the dead." They depart but Mary waits. Mary then utters the
searching cry : 20:13 "And they say unto her, 'Woman, why
weepest thou? 'She saith unto them,'Because they have taken away
my LORD, and I know not where they have laid him'." Compare with
the Song of Songs "I opened to my beloved-, but my beloved had
withdrawn himself and was gone: my soul failed when he spake: I
sought him, but I could not find him".
Immediately she turns and he is there! 20:15: "Jesus saith unto
her, Woman, why weepest thou? whom seekest thou? She, supposing
him to be the gardener, saith unto him, Sir, if thou have borne
him hence, tell me where thou hast laid him, and I will take him
away. Jesus saith unto her, Mary. She turned herself, and saith
unto him, Rabboni; which is to say, Master. Jesus saith unto
her, "do not cling to me; for I am not yet ascended to my
Father:" In Greek this reads 'Do not continue embracing me'."
Jesus then tells her to tell his "brethren," "I ascend unto my
Father, and your Father; and to my God, and your God."" ' Are
the few accounts in the gospels tell is all we can claim to know
about Mary Magdalene?
The woman in the passage is called "O Magdal-eder, watchtower of
the flock" and the title "Magdalene" is like saying "the great"
or "elevated, magnificent." She was "First Lady."
The whole "priestess"/harlot idea was imputed to her because of
the similarities with ancient rites of the bridegroom/King with
the Gospel anointing, passion and resurrection stories.... but
that doesn't mean that this Mary was a "priestess." Anointing
had ancient associations with marriage thoughout the
region...and identified her as Bride. Since it was the
prerogative of the Bride to anoint and to meet the King
resurrected in the garden, she can be easily identified as Mary
"called Magdalene" by these actions, although John identifies
her as Mary, the sister of Lazarus (John 11:2 and 12:3). Mary
and Jesus EMBODIED the ancient mythology of the archetypal Bride
and Bridegroom -- they weren't just doing a ritual--they were
living it!
Mary Magdalene in The Dialogue of the Savior
The Dialogue of the Savior, also written in the second century
A.D., is a dialogue between the Savior (never called Jesus or
Christ) and some of his disciples, including Mary. The disciples
ask questions about esoteric religious things, and Jesus gives
equally esoteric answers. Although Mary is one of the frequent
interrogators of the Savior, at one point she makes an
observation. The text explains, "This word she spoke as a woman
who knew the All" (Section 139, trans. Harold Attridge). In
other words, Mary has special knowledge of spiritual reality.
The Pistis Sophia is a Gnostic gospel and is a revelation of
Christ in which Mary plays a prominent role, asking the majority
of the questions about all measure of esoteric matters.
Mary is praised in The Pistis Sophia as one "whose heart is more
directed to the Kingdom of Heaven than all [her] brothers"
(Chapter 17, trans. Carl Schmidt and Violet MacDermott). Jesus
says that she is "blessed beyond all women upon the earth,
because [she shall be] the pleroma of all Pleromas and the
completion of all completions" (section 19). In other words,
Mary will have the fullness of knowledge and therefore spiritual
life within her. So impressed is Jesus with Mary's spiritual
excellence that he promises not to conceal anything from her,
but to reveal everything to her "with certainty and openly"
(section 25). She is the blessed one who will "inherit the whole
Kingdom of the Light" (section 61).
The Gospel of Mary, written in the second century, goes even
further than The Pistis Sophia in portraying Mary as a source of
secret revelation because of her close relationship to the
Savior. At one point Peter asks, "Sister, We know that the
Savior loved you more than the rest of women. Tell us the words
of the Savior which you remember--which you know but we do not
nor have we heard them" (section 10, trans. George W. MacRae and
R. McL. Wilson). So Mary reveals what the Lord made known to her
in a vision.
The Gospel of Mary reports that several of the disciples were
none too impressed by Mary's purported insights into heavenly
things. Andrew responded to her revelation by saying "I at least
do not believe that the Savior said this. For certainly these
teachings are strange ideas" (section 17). Then Peter asked,
"Did he really speak privately with a woman and not openly to
us? Are we to turn about and all listen to her? Did he prefer
her to us?" But Levi speaks up for Mary, "Peter, you have always
been hot-tempered. Now I see you contending against the woman
like the adversaries. But if the Savior made her worthy, who are
you indeed to reject her? Surely the Savior knows her very well.
That is why he loved her more than us" (section 18).
She is the recipient of his secret revelations and private
speeches. The Savior, who is not called Jesus in The Gospel of
Mary, even preferred Mary to the other disciples, loving her
more than them. Mary's relationship with Jesus has clearly
entered a new dimension we have not seen before.
Finally we come to The Gospel of Philip, the last of the
extra-biblical gospels to mention Mary Magdalene, and the one
that excites proponents of her marriage to Jesus more than any
other ancient document. The Gospel of Philip is one of the
latest of the non-canonical gospels, The first of these passages
reads, "There were three who always walked with the Lord: Mary
his mother and her sister and Magdalene, the one who was called
his companion" (section 59). The second passage in The Gospel of
Philip that concerns Mary is the most suggestive: "And the
companion of the Savior is Mary Magdalene. But Christ loved her
more than all the disciples and used to kiss her often on her
mouth. The rest of the disciples were offended by it and
expressed disapproval. They said to him, 'Why do you love her
more than all of us?' The Savior answered and said to them, 'Why
do I not love you like her?' When a blind man and one who sees
are both together in darkness, they are no different from one
another. Then the light comes, then he who sees will see the
light, and he who is blind will remain in darkness" (sections
63-63).
Although it is barely mentioned in the Bible, Magdala was among
the larger of the cities around the Sea of Galilee at the time
of Jesus. According to Jewish historian Josephus Flavius it had
a population of 40,000 at the time of the first Jewish revolt
(66-70 AD)
the Greek original (?? µ?? ?pt??) is better represented by a
translation of cease from holding on to me,
Magdalene; this name was coined by Christ's
disciples after Pentecost, as it makes reference literally
to "migdal," which means tower, and to In
other words, it was their wish to express that Magdalene is the
one
who has been magnified,
The Fourth Gospel was authored by an anonymous follower of Jesus
referred to within the Gospel text as the Beloved Disciple. In
the Fourth Gospel's community, the now "anonymous" Beloved
Disciple was known to be Mary Magdalene.
Mary Magdalene is the author of the Fourth Gospel in the sense
in which antiquity defined authorship The author is the person
whose ideas the book expresses, not necessarily the person who
set pen to papyrus The Gospel went through several phases of
modification. The end result of these modifications was the
eventual suppression of her role as author of this Gospel and
leader of their community.
One fact is very clear: For some reason, the writer of the
Gospel of John wanted to keep the identity of the Beloved
Disciple a secret. This disciple was obviously an extremely
important figure in the history of their community. Why, then,
is the name of this disciple concealed? Was the goal to protect
this disciple from persecution? Is it possible that the writer
of the final draft had forgotten the name of their beloved
founder? Not very likely. This is, indeed, an interesting
mystery.
Mary Magdalene remains a most elusive and mysterious figure.
Speculation about her role in the development of early
Christianity is not new. . this woman who is cited by all four
Gospels as being present at both the Crucifixion of Jesus and
the Empty Tomb on the morning of the Resurrection.
The identification of Mary Magdalene as the disciple whom Jesus
loved is reflected in the Gnostic Christian writings of Nag
Hammadi -- e.g., the Gospel of Philip and the Gospel of Mary.
The evidence which links authorship of the Fourth Gospel to Mary
Magdalene is found in the Gnostic writings of the Nag Hammadi
Library. Of particular interest are the Gospel of Philip and the
Gospel of Mary (referring to Magdalene).
These manuscripts belonged to Gnostic Christians. Most scholars
cite the mid-second century as the earliest plausible date of
composition for these documents. However, a few of the documents
are said by some to have been written as early as the late first
century -- making them contemporary with the New Testament
Gospels
Let's look at excerpts from the Nag Hammadi Library. This first
passage comes to us from the Gospel of Philip:
** And the companion of the [Savior is] Mary Magdalene. [But
Christ loved] her more than [all] the disciples [and used to]
kiss her [often] on her [mouth].
Another passage from the Gospel of Philip reads as follows:
**There were three who always walked with the Lord: Mary his
mother and her sister and Magdalene, the one who was called his
companion. each a Mary
Orthodox Tradition teaches us that the Holy Virgin Mary was the
only child of Saints Joakhim and Anna, but at John 19:25 we
read, "Standing near the Cross of Jesus was His mother, and His
mother's sister, Mary of Klopas, and Mary magdala." If our
Church history is correct, how could Mary have had a sister? The
first clue to our answer is that both women are named Mary. ! No
family has two daughters and gives them both the same name!
Therefore it is evident that the relationship between the two
women has to be something different than our modern English
concept of "sister".
The Gospel of Mary (referring to the Magdalene) says the
following:
**Peter said to Mary, "Sister, we know that the Savior loved you
more than the rest of women. Tell us the words of the Savior
which you remember
Clearly, these passages establish as indisputable fact that, at
least in some ancient gnostic communities, Mary Magdalene was
thought of as having been the "Beloved Disciple" and the
companion of the Lord. She is repeatedly singled out as the
disciple whom Jesus loved the most. This would seem to
contradict the assertion in the Fourth Gospel that the male
founder of the Johannine Community is "the disciple whom Jesus
loved" (John 13:23). How can there be two strong traditions each
identifying two different people as the disciple whom Jesus
loved the most? This begins to make sense if we explore the
possibility that, in reality, both of these traditions are
referring to the juxtaposition of John and Mary as one and the
same disciple.
There is no doubt that the Beloved Disciple in the canonical
version of the Fourth Gospel is an anonymous male disciple. Yet,
as we have seen, the writings of the Nag Hammadi Library reflect
a strong tradition repeatedly naming Mary Magdalene as the
disciple whom Jesus loved. How do we explain this contradiction?
They made references in the text to a "Beloved Disciple," but
turned the disciple into an anonymous male. In two passages of
the text, the Beloved Disciple and Mary Magdalene seem to be two
different individuals by having them appear together in the same
scenes. Perhaps they did this because they knew that the
Greek-Roman gentile church leaders would not accept the
authenticity of a Gospel written by a woman.
The Gospel apparently chose not to confuse or to offend its
readers, to arouse suspicions or to strengthen prejudices, by
explicitly identifying the witness behind the Gospel as female
and by unreservedly presenting female disciples. Instead, it
chose to leave both anonymous, making them male, in order to be
able to present the thoughts and stories of Mary Magdalene, as
the one behind the Gospel, in an acceptable manner.
The Gospel of Mary was discovered in 1896 by a man named Dr.
Carl Reinhardt. Due to a series of unfortunate events, a
translation wasn't published until 1955, when it appeared first
in German. It first appeared in English along with the texts
from the Nag Hammadi Library in 1977.
The Gospel of Mary is, sadly, missing several pages, so our
understanding of the text is somewhat incomplete. Enough
survives, however, to draw the conclusion that at least one sect
of early Christianity, sometimes classified as "gnostic," held
Mary Magdalene in high esteem as a visionary, apostle, and
leader.
There is "abundant evidence of familiarity with Johannine
ideas" in the Gnostic writings of Nag Hammadi. Enough to show
that there was obviously much contact between the Johannine
Community and Gnostic groups very early on. Therefore, it cannot
be mere coincidence that Mary Magdalene is cited in the Gnostic
writings as the "disciple whom Jesus loved" in much the same way
as the anonymous male disciple is cited as such in the Fourth
Gospel.
The passage from the Fourth Gospel which has Mary Magdalene and
the Beloved Disciple together at the foot of the Cross reads as
follows:
Near the cross of Jesus stood his mother, his mother's sister,
Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene. When Jesus saw his
mother there, and the disciple whom he loved standing nearby, he
said... (John 19:25ff)**
The Gospel of Philip makes reference to the same group of women
that are standing by the Cross in the Fourth Gospel. However,
the Gospel of Philip clearly cites Mary Magdalene as the
"companion" of Jesus.
When did Mary Magdalene return to the tomb? There is a broken
trail in the travels of Mary Magdalene from one place to another
Mary Magdalene is abruptly portrayed as remaining behind weeping
at the tomb. However, there is no account of her returning to
the tomb in this scene after telling Peter and the "other
disciple" that the body of Jesus was missing.the account of
Peter and the Beloved Disciple running to the tomb together is
"sandwiched between" Mary Magdalene's initial discovery of the
Empty Tomb and her first encounter with the Risen Jesus. This
"contrivance" let the Gospel retain the tradition that Mary
Magdalene was the first to discover the Empty Tomb while still
giving the Beloved Disciple prominence as the first person to
reach the Empty Tomb and believe that Jesus has risen
Finally the other disciple, who had reached the tomb first, also
went inside. He saw and believed. (They still did not understand
from Scripture that Jesus had to rise from the dead.) (John
20:8-9)
The contrast between "he saw and believed" in v. 8 and "they
still did not understand" in v. 9 is peculiar. Verse 9 is
clearly making reference to verse 8. However, the reference is
contradictory. This appears to be an attempt to blend two
different traditions: one in which the disciples did not
immediately understand, or believe in, the Resurrection (Matthew
28:17; Mark 16:11,13; Luke 24:11), and another in which Mary
Magdalene, changed here to the "other disciple," instantly
perceives the truth (Matthew 28:1,8; Mark 16:9; Luke 24:10).
If anonymity in the case of the disciple Jesus loved was so
important to the author of John, would indeed the use of
masculine gender not guarantee the anonymity in a better way
than the use of feminine gender, which would obviously reveal to
the readers at least one important feature of the disciple,
namely that she is a woman?
a woman being referred to as male perhaps was not so strange at
the time, as it would be to us now. spirituality in early
Christianity gradually became identified with maleness. She
gives several examples of the fact that ‘women whose
spirituality was beyond question were described as honorary
males’. With regard to Mary Magdalene there is a tradition which
speaks of her maleness. In the Gospel of Thomas Jesus promises
Peter that he will lead Mary Magdalene in order to make her male
‘so that she too may become a living spirit resembling you
males. For every woman who will make herself male will enter the
Kingdom of Heaven.’ In the Acts of Philip the Savior praises
Mary Magdalene for her manly character. Because of this he gives
her the task of joining the weaker Philip on his mission
journey. But she is not to join him as a woman. ‘As for you,
Mary,’ he says, ‘change your clothing and your outward
appearance: reject everything which from the outside suggests a
woman.’
this leaves open the possibility that this figure could be a
woman, in spite of the masculine grammar. Perhaps the final
proof that the disciple must be male, is not the grammar, but
the circumstance that the disciple is called ‘son’? However,
John’s Jesus does not address the disciple as ‘son’, and uses no
other masculine address, which would have completed the
parallelism: He said to his mother: ‘Woman, behold your son.’
Then he said to the disciple ‘behold your mother.’ By leaving
out any masculine address, and by only saying ‘Behold your
mother’, he instead declares the disciple to represent him as a
son; both John and Mary were at the cross. This kind of
representation does not necessarily mean that the disciple has
to be only a male. A woman may fulfill the function of a son to
a mother as clearly seen from the story of Ruth and Naomi. The
female neighbors praise the way Ruth cared for her
mother-in-law, by mentioning her to Naomi as: ‘she, who has been
more to you than seven sons’ (Ruth 4,15). Moreover, the word
‘son’ in John 19,26 does not in any way primarily refer to the
disciple Jesus loved, but rather refers to Jesus himself. For
the reader who does not know the flow of the story beforehand,
the word ‘son’ directed to the mother of Jesus designates her
own son: the dying crucified Jesus. The reader thoroughly
relates with Mary when hearing Jesus’ words towards her: ‘Woman,
behold your son.’ It is only after Jesus’ words to the disciple
‘behold your mother’ that the reader suddenly turns to this
second person and begins to grasp that Jesus is inviting his
mother to understand the meaning of his death and to join his
followers. Turning to the disciple Jesus loved, and hearing
those words ‘behold your mother’ the reader is reminded of
earlier farewell words of Jesus:
I will not leave you desolate; I will come to you. Yet a little
while, and the world will see me no more, but you will see me.
Because I live, you will live also. In that day you will know
that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you. /He who has
heard my commandments and keeps them, /he it is who loves me;
and /he who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will love
/him and manifest myself to /him. (14,18-21)
This reference to both Marys is to Both the Mother and the Holy
Spirit. It is in fact, addressed to both the Spirit and the
Bride.
Obviously, after Jesus died, he can be found in those who keep
his words and as a consequence are loved by him. His father and
he himself will come to them and live in them (14,23). The
ultimate importance of the scene in 19,26-27 lies in Jesus’
invitation to his mother to look away from her dying son to find
him, alive, in the disciple he loved. At the same time Jesus’
words are a solemn declaration to this disciple: he or she may
act on Jesus’ behalf, as if he or she were Jesus himself. To the
reader, who remembers Jesus’ prayer to his Father for all those
who followed him, and who in their turn will attract new
followers - ‘... that the love with which thou has loved me, may
be in them, and I in them…’ (17,26) -, the disciple Jesus loved
is the first of a vast number of those disciples yet to come.
Both Jesus’ mother and the disciple react to Jesus’ words. The
disciple by taking Jesus’ mother to him (or her) and the mother
by accepting this. Jesus’ words to his mother and the disciple
he loved, together with their reaction to them, constitute the
beginning of the growing ‘koinonia’ of those who follow Jesus.
In this interpretation of 19,26-27 the word ‘son’ in 19,26 does
not say anything about the gender of the disciple Jesus loved.
The ‘son’ is the dying Jesus, who, alive, can be found in the
disciple he loved as the one who may represent him.
Further, there is an ancient tradition that John, Mary
Magdalene, and Mother Mary go to Ephesus and live together
The Johannine attitude toward women was quite different from
that attested in other first-century Christian churches. The
unique place given to women (as proclaimers) in the Fourth
Gospel reflects the history, the theology, and the values of the
Johannine community. Mary Magdalene as author of the Fourth
Gospel does not challenge its apostolic origin. If Mary
Magdalene was the leader and hero of the Fourth Gospel's
community, then she was probably recognized as an Apostle within
that community. Indeed, in recognition of the fact that she was
the first to proclaim the Resurrection of Christ, the Roman
Catholic Church has honored her with the title apostola
apostolorum which means "the apostle to the apostles."
At the last supper the beloved disciple is reclining on Jesus;
is this Mary? (John 13;23 )
Now there was leaning on Jesus' bosom one of his disciples, whom
Jesus loved.
It is obvious that Peter recognizes the fact that the disciple
Jesus loved is closer to Jesus than he himself (13,23-24 and
21,7.20-23). In the Synoptics there is no disciple closer to
Jesus than Peter. In the later non-canonical sources, such as
the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary and Pistis Sophia,
Peter and Mary Magdalene appear together, Peter denying rather
than recognizing Mary Magdalene’s closeness to Jesus. [59] In
these writings Mary Magdalene indeed has a special position. In
the Gospel of Philip and the Gospel of Mary she is the only
person to whom the other disciples refer to as the one loved by
Jesus more than the others and as the one who has a greater
insight. [60] In the Gospel of John the two are held in balance,
Peter receiving the authority to care for Jesus’ followers in a
pastoral way (21,15-19), [61] whereas Mary Magdalene receives
and understands the crucial message of the Gospel (20,17; cf.
1,12). At the ressurection Mary and Jesus are reunited lovers.
This is the best of all love stories; a story of love reaching
beyond death.
It has always been thought to be a high distinction when God has
called a man by his name. When he spoke and said, “Moses,
Moses;” then it was a sign that he had found favor in his sight.
When Jesus said “Mary,” I can imagine that the word brought up
all her history before her mind; her bad days, when her
distracted mind was tossed on fiery billows; her happy days,
when she sat at her Master’s feet and caught his blessed words;
the times when she had seen his miracles amid wondered; when she
had given him of her substance, and been too glad to minister
unto him. If we love Jesus much, and cannot be content without
him, we too may expect to hear him in the secret of our soul,
calling us by our name. He will say, “I have called thee by thy
name: thou art mine.” Then Mary Magdalene had such a
manifestation of Christ’s glory us no other woman ever had.
Mary Magdalene, then, is the beloved disciple and the prototype
of the perfected soul because, through her favored and unique
relationship with Christ, she has entered into the perfect of
Adam/Eve, then by becoming a perfected human being, Mary
becomes, like Christ, androgynous, a true spiritual being. The
Magdalene myth recapitulates the fall of both Sophia and Helen;
and in rediscovering her divinity, she becomes a model for the
soul who seeks to do the same. Mary Magdalene is the true
founder and hero of what has come to be known as the Johannine
Community (i.e., Mary Magdalene was one of the original
apostolic founders and leaders of the early Christian
church).The Fourth Gospel (the Gospel of John) in the New
Testament was composed in the Mother Church in Jerusalem and
written in Ephesus. This gospel was penned by the disciples of
Mary Magdalene and Mother Mary with the Co-authorship of John
and the other Apostles.
In many societies a man is not considered to be fully adult
until he is married. He would be excluded from full
participation in "adult" institutions such as tribal or village
councils. This has caused many problems for Catholic missionary
priests both past and present. In fact, the Catholic Church in
Canada has several times unsuccessfully petitioned the Pope for
an exemption from the rule of priestly celibacy for those
priests serving in the far North. The Jewish attitude at the
time of Jesus was similar and is dramatically summarized by the
first century rabbi, Eliezar Ben-Asai, who wrote "Whoever
renounces marriage violates the commandment to increase and
multiply; he is to be looked upon as a murderer who lessens the
number of beings created in the image of God." These are strong
words indeed! Of the several hundred rabbis known to us from
that time only one is known to have been unmarried. More
correctly this rabbi had been married, lost his wife and refused
to remarry. He was severely criticized for this by his fellow
rabbis. It is also worth noting that the anti-sex, anti-female
pro virginity attitude that quickly developed in the Gentile
branch of the early church was the product of the strong
influence of Greek philosophy and not the result of any
authentic teaching of Jesus himself. The Jewish tradition, then
and now, is strongly family centered and has even been described
as somewhat "earthy". Of course the traditional presumption has
been that Jesus was unmarried. This really is a presumption
since, of course, the Bible says nothing definite whatsoever one
way or the other on the issue. However, considering the very
strong views the Jews held on marriage, it is strange indeed
that there is no record that he was ever criticized or
questioned on this account. He was accused of being a glutton
and a wine biber and of associating with low life. Why not an
accusation regarding his unmarried state. The very silence of
the Bible on this point is, in my view, highly suggestive that
perhaps he was married. We also know that there were a number of
female disciples of Jesus - Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of
James, the sisters Mary and Martha, Joanna, Susanna and Salome
are all named. Whenever the female disciples are mentioned in
the Bible, Mary Magdalene is always the first named. In the
literary tradition of the time the first named is always the
most important. Mary Magdalene is even named ahead of Mary his
mother. Even the name Mary Magdalene may be informative. Mary
"of Magdala" seems not to be correct since there is no solid
historical or archaeological evidence that there ever was such a
town. Another possible interpretation of the word "Magdalene" is
that it is derived from an Aramaic word meaning roughly "the
most important". Early Christian writers have sometimes referred
to her as "Mary the Great". Why should such importance be
attached to this woman? Christian, particularly Catholic
tradition, has been very unkind to Mary Magdalene. She has been
variously identified as the woman taken in adultery or the woman
who washed Jesus' feet with her tears and dried them with her
hair or possibly both. She is portrayed as a great sinner who
became a great saint. The Gospel of John says that Jesus cast
seven demons from her. Some might jump to the conclusion that
demonic possession is indicated here. However, we must examine
this in the context of the times. Scripture does indicate that
she should be ranked on a level with the apostles among the
disciples of Jesus. She was the first to the tomb to do what a
wife was expected to do for a deceased husband. When she
encountered the risen Jesus and finally recognized him, she
called him "Rabboni" and "Lord". "Rabboni" is the familiar or
affectionate form of "Rabbi", and "Lord" or "Master" is how a
Jewish wife would have addressed her husband in that very
patriarchal age. Many people believe that the Bible says Jesus
also warned her "do not embrace me". However, this is totally
inaccurate and in fact, the original Bible text quotes Jesus as
saying" "do not continue embracing me." All this is certainly
suggestive of a close relationship between the two but stops
short of anything definitive.
It is obvious that Peter recognizes the fact that the disciple
Jesus loved is closer to Jesus than he himself (13,23-24 and
21,7.20-23). In the Synoptics there is no disciple closer to
Jesus than Peter. In the later non-canonical sources, such as
the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary and Pistis Sophia,
Peter and Mary Magdalene appear together, Peter denying rather
than recognizing Mary Magdalene’s closeness to Jesus. [59] In
these writings Mary Magdalene indeed has a special position. In
the Gospel of Philip and the Gospel of Mary she is the only
person to whom the other disciples refer to as the one loved by
Jesus more than the others and as the one who has a greater
insight. [60] In the Gospel of John the two are held in balance,
Peter receiving the authority to care for Jesus’ followers in a
pastoral way (21,15-19), [61] whereas Mary Magdalene receives
and understands the crucial message of the Gospel (20,17; cf.
1,12). At the resurrection Mary and Jesus are reunited lovers.
This is the best of all love stories; a story of love reaching
beyond death.
It has always been thought to be a high distinction when God has
called a man by his name. When he spoke and said, “Moses,
Moses;” then it was a sign that he had found favor in his sight.
When Jesus said “Mary,” I can imagine that the word brought up
all her history before her mind, when her distracted mind was
tossed on fiery billows; her happy days, when she sat at her
Master’s feet and caught his blessed words; the times when she
had seen his miracles amid wondered; when she had given him of
her substance, and been too glad to minister unto him. If we
love Jesus much, and cannot be content without him, we too may
expect to hear him in the secret of our soul, calling us by our
name. He will say, “I have called thee by thy name: thou art
mine.” Then Mary Magdalene had such a manifestation of Christ’s
glory us no other woman ever had.
Mary Magdalene, then, is the beloved disciple and the prototype
of the perfected soul because, through her favored and unique
relationship with Christ, she has entered into the perfect of
Adam/Eve, then by becoming a perfected human being, Mary
becomes, like Christ, androgynous, a true spiritual being. The
Magdalene myth recapitulates the fall of both Sophia and Helen;
and in rediscovering her divinity, she becomes a model for the
soul who seeks to do the same. It is Mary who performed the
opening rites of Heiros Gamos by publicly annointing Jesus
before His followers. Mary Magdalene is the true founder and
hero of what has come to be known as the Johannine Community
(i.e., Mary Magdalene was one of the original apostolic founders
and leaders of the early Christian church).The Fourth Gospel
(the Gospel of John) in the New Testament was composed in the
Mother Church in Jerusalem and written in Ephesus. This gospel
was penned by the disciples of Mary Magdalene and Mother Mary
with the Co-authorship of John and the other Apostles.
The State Church renamed the Gospel of Mary to the Gospel of
John. So the exploits of John was in fact the exploits of Mary
Magdelene. Another Gnostic Gospel called Pistis Sophia (Sophia
was the Goddess of wisdom) is about a dialogue between Jesus and
Mary Magdelene whom he calls, "dearly beloved. In one dialogue
Peter complained to Jesus that Mary Magdelene dominated the
conversation with Jesus but Jesus rebukes him. In another
Gnostics text called "Dialogue of the Saviour" she is portrayed
as a very wise Woman who understood Jesus completely unlike the
rest of Jesus's disciples. So it seems that Mary Magdelene was a
very important member of early Christianity. To the degree that
some modern scholars have suggested that She and Jesus were
married. It is assumed by most Christians that Jesus was a
follower of the Jewish faith at the time. But if one of his
closest and important followers was a priestess who were hated
so much by the priests of Israel. To the degree she could of
been murdered if she was discovered.
The Tetragrammaton, or the four-lettered Name of God, written
thus ????, is pronounce Jehovah.
The first letter is ?, Yod, the Germ, the Life, the Flame, the
Cause, the One, and the most fundamental of the Jewish phallic
emblems. Its numerical value is 10, and it is to be considered
as the 1 containing the 10.
In the Qabbalah it is declared that the a Yod is in reality
three Yods, of which the first is the beginning, the second is
the center, and the third is the end. Its throne is the Sephira
Chochmah (according to Ibn Gebirol, Kether), from which it goes
forth to impregnate Binah,
which is the first ?, He. The result of this union is Tiphereth,
which is the ? Vau, whose power is 6 and which symbolizes the
six members of the Lesser Adam. The final ?, He, is Malchuth,
the Inferior Mother, partaking in part of the potencies of the
Divine Mother, the first He.
3444. yeshuw'ah, yesh-oo'-aw; fem. pass. part. of H3467;
something saved, i.e. (abstr.) deliverance; hence aid, victory,
prosperity:--deliverance, health, help (-ing), salvation, save,
saving (health), welfare.
In the unfolding of the Lord's sacred name which is YHWH,
Yod-He-Vau-He, the First Yod was masculine meaning God the
Father, . The second He was the Holy Spirit and female which is
the point of this post..... While the third letter Vau
represents the Son and of course is Jesus the Messiah which
makes the Trinity, yet all are one, the three are one. But the
Lord is not complete without the Bride , the people that love
the Lord with all their heart and soul, and mind. These comprise
the last /He, and she becomes ONE with the Trinity (John 16,
Revealtions, Isaiah, etc. etc.) and the Holy Family and Holy
Name is complete. This is called the unspeakable and holy
TETRAGRAMMATON, which could only be spoken out loud by the High
Priest once a year inside the Holy of Holies on the Day of
Atonement, for the hoped for remssion of all sins of the people
for the whole year.
Y - God the Father (Supreme YHWH:Creator Gen 1:1, Ex 13:21)
H - Goddess the Mother (Supreme Holy
Spirit/Shekinah-Sophia:Creatrix Pro 8:30-31)
W - Lord the Son (The Christ:Savior/Messiah/Jesus Jn 1:34)
H - Lady the Daughter (The Holy
Spirit:Lover/Spouse/Counselor-Pro 5:17,8:1, Jn 14:26)
"Originally, these four consonants [in YHWH] represented the
four members of the Heavenly Family:
Y represented El the Father;
H was Asherah the Mother;
W corresponded to He the Son; and
H was the Daughter Anath.
In accordance with the royal traditions of the time and region,
God's mysterious bride, the Matronit, was also reckoned to be
his sister. In the Jewish cult of the Cabbala God's dual
male-female image was perpetuated. Meanwhile other sects
perceived the Shekinah or Matronit as the female presence of God
on Earth. The divine marital chamber was the sanctuary of the
Jerusalem Temple, but from the moment the Temple was destroyed,
the Matronit was destined to roam the Earth while the male
aspect of Jehovah was left to rule the heavens alone.
It must continually be emphasized that the Sephiroth and the
properties assigned to them, like the tetractys of the
Pythagoreans, are merely symbols of the cosmic system with its
multitude of parts. The truer and fuller meaning of these
emblems may not be revealed by writing or by word of mouth, but
must be divined as the result of study and meditation. In the
Sepher ha Zohar it is written that there is a garment--the
written doctrine-which every man may see. Those with
understanding do not look upon the garment but at the body
beneath it--the intellectual and philosophical code. The wisest
of all, however, the servants of the Heavenly King, look at
nothing save the soul--the spiritual doctrine--which is the
eternal and ever-springing root of the law
It is written that Mary went to the tomb to anoint Jesus with
aloes and spices, this very act was a traditional custom
assigned only to mothers, or wives, it was never allowed in
those days, indeed, even today in that same part of the world,
it is still not allowed, and women today die from honour
killing, for talking with a man who is not a relative, so in
those days, she would not have been allowed to be part of Jesus'
entourage, only wives, and relatives or the wives and relatives
of the other apostles.
he is Christ's helper! She is the one who sought to comfort
Jesus before his tribulations; without being concern with her
own glory as the other apostles were. She is the one who loved
most; She is the one who chose wisdom, She is the one who
remained in the garden searching for Her beloved Jesus, She is
the one to which our risen Lord first said, "Go tell...". this
truth needs to be maintained!
In the ancient world of the Middle East it was the Goddess who
descended through the seven nether spheres to revive God. This
was common to myths describing what is known as the mystical
year or the death and rebirth of nature annually.
From earliest times, people have been fascinated by the moon.
They realized the vital connection between a woman's monthly
menstrual (from mensis, Latin for "moon") cycle, and the waxing
and waning of the moon. They also recognized that the moon
controls the tides, whose ebb and flow parallels the organic
rhythms of female fluids. Because of these connections, the moon
has been universally associated with femininity and women's
procreative power. In popular ancient Israelite belief, too, the
moon was thought to influence fertility; the women wore
moon-shaped pendants, as discovered in archaeological finds and
as mentioned by Isaiah in his admonition: "On that day, my Lord
will strip off the finery of the anklets, the fillets, and the
crescents."
Jewish woman have long celebrated the special female symbolism
of the moon. From the talmudic period to our day, Rosh Hodesh,
the minor festival of the New Moon, has been especially sacred
to Jewish women. According to legend, the women in the
wilderness refused to contribute their jewelry to make the
Golden Calf, and were rewarded for their faithfulness by being
granted the New Moon as a day off from work. For many centuries,
Jewish women refrained from doing heavy work on this day.
Among the Kabbalists, the moon has traditionally represented the
Shekhinah, God's feminine aspect, whose exile is symbolized by
the moon's monthly waning. Thus, for them, the blessing of the
new moon and the anticipation of Rosh Hodesh, marking the moon's
return, came to symbolize the renewal of hope in the restoration
of Divine Unity. In a contemporary reading of this midrash,
Jewish women will acquire full equality within the tradition.
"In this orientation," "Rosh Hodesh becomes a renewal both of
God's presence in the world — the Shekhinah, a female aspect of
God — and of the female side of the human race and the human
soul."
The moon is exactly the same size as the sun in appearance in
the heavens; It is 400 times smaller in its diameter and 400
times closer in proximity to the earth than the sun is. In an
eclipse they are perfectly matched, there is no scientific
explanation for this. It is the moon goddess that descends
through the seven orbits in the heavens; the triple goddess of
the ancients. It is the moon that weds the sun in the
mythologies, nature and God! She is the Pearl! Jesus and Mary
are this myth embodied and this dream come true!
Her very body commits her to the drama of existence and links
her with the rhytm of the Cosmos. In relation to Mary's
receptive aspect, the Church was viewed as the "bride of
Christ," to be united in Sacred Marriage with Christ when
humanity would receive the full divine influx at the end of the
age.
Here is a mystery; an ancient Hebrew legend speaks of pearls as
being the tears Eve wept upon being banished from the Garden; a
Medieval Christian tradition saw the pearl as a sign of hidden
wisdom; what color are the pearls the sea has given to princess
Anima?" How is it that we seem to have forgotten these things
only to replace them with the destructive dualism of Babylon.
And why is it that thousands of years later, Helen's story still
has the power to haunt us? Is it not that we long to believe
that beauty could really do that; That there really might be
someone worth launching a thousand ships to regain and someone
willing, out of passionate love, to launch those ships?
The reason we identify with fairy tales in some deep part of us
is that they rest on the true that the hero or heroine really
does have a heart of gold and the beloved really does possess
hidden beauty.
Jesus' Feminine Complement As the first human to witness the
resurrection of Christ, Mary Magdalene clearly occupies the
pivotal position at the very origin of Christianity. Just as
Jesus was the Bridegroom, Magdalene is the true bride of the
Church - the feminine physical principle which complements the
transcendental Christ. It is to her if anyone that the chruch
should turn as a physical embodiment of the Shekina in history.
Her time of penitence is ended.
The name Mary wether it is Mary the mother, or Mary the wife, or
Mary Jerusalem; whensoever it is employed in the Bible is the
name of those who bore the image of our (Female Holy Spirit)
'Goddess' expressing Herself through humanity.
A Jewish priest was required to marry. If Jesus
fulfilled all the law as the Bible says, he must have married.
It is more probable that Jesus was married then not; and that
this information was not recorded in the Gentile church, for if
Jesus was not married, this information would most likely have
been used to uphold monastisism and patriarchy. As it was, the
information was either removed or ignored, by monastisism and
patriarchy.
Beyond the speculation though, what
evidence do we have of either the celibate or married Christ? And why can't Jews
accept that the Messiah could be excluded from the commandment to wed? To the
Jews, their human Saviour, would be an embodiment of the laws of God, he would
typify them rather than being exempt from them. Just as Jesus was baptized "to
fulfil all righteousness", and said that he had not "come to destroy," the law,
"but to fulfil" it (Matt. 3:15, 5:17). They also expected a married Messiah,
because the prophets of their Tanach (the Hebrew Bible) predicted his marital
state as a feature of his life: In speaking of Israel's expectant deliverer in a
passage Paul identifies as referring to Jesus, David wrote, "Kings daughters
were among thy honourable women", or wives as the 1599 version of the Geneva
Bible, and a 1636 Church of England Bible puts it (Ps. 45:6, see Heb. 1:8) Of
him having children, Isaiah predicts, "he shall see his seed", and asks, "Who
shall declare his generation?" (Isa. 53:8, see Luke 23:27-28 & Isa 53:10, see
Acts 8:33 and Heb. 2:16)
Some Christian readers may be troubled by the implication of David's prophesy of
the Messiah having several "honourable wives," as one of the features of pagan
Roman religion that remained after its adoption of Christianity was that of
monogamy, and the laws restricting one woman to one man. The Old Testament
however contains many examples of righteous prophets who lived in such manner,
such as Abraham, Jacob, Moses, and David. The father of the Protestant movement,
Martin Luther, declared that "for a man to have two wives at once" was not
"contrary to the divine law" and himself authorised a nobleman (Philip the
Landgrave of Hesse) to marry a second wife, and is recorded as stating, "The
Gospel hath neither recalled nor forbid what was permitted in the law of Moses
with respect to marriage." (Thelyphthora 1:212, Rev. Martin Madan)
Of course other interpretations have been made of references to Jesus in the
role of father, husband, and some have supposed the Church was his symbolic
bride, and that its members are his `children', as he is the `father' of their
salvation. Indeed, the Catholic Church marries it's Nuns to Jesus, representing
their lifelong commitment to him. Whilst such concepts have great meaning to
those who believe in them, they neither rule out the possibility of Jesus being
married nor explain every passage in the Old and New Testaments that seem to
suggest he was. In fact, it is the four Gospels themselves that may hold the
answers to whether, when, where, and who Jesus married.
Some deny that Jesus was married based upon the supposed silence
of the Scriptures and doctrinal problems which were inconsistent
with the Church's dogma (e.g. a celibate priesthood, the ritual
defilement of seminal emissions, etc.). Yet, it much more
reasonable to assume that Jesus, like the overwhelming majority
of other males that have ever lived, had female companionship
and children. To assume otherwise is to assume the exceptional
without any correspondingly exceptional evidence. One might as
well assume, with an equal absence of evidence, that Jesus was
lactose intolerant. There was a 2nd Century tradition among
various heretical sects which taught that Jesus was married. In
their dispute with Augustine, the Celtic Pelagians argued that
the Atonement of Christ cancelled Original Sin. If Original Sin
was, as Augustine argued, a sexually transmitted disease of the
soul, then Christ has reversed the process and made it a
transmitter of healing, health, and virtue.
Jewish customs of
Jesus' day required married Rabbis. Unmarried men were
considered a curse to Jewish society. Jesus would not have had
much credibility as a leader had He not been married. Although
Jesus was a non-conformist and had many conflicts with Jewish
tradition, His parents, Joseph and Mary, were not. The Bible
says that they were careful to perfectly obey the laws of their
people. It also says that Jesus was "subject unto them". Since
Jewish culture practiced arranged marriages and early marriage,
as well (a Jewish boy was marriageable at age 16), it is
reasonable to assume that Jesus' parents would have performed
their parental duties faithfully and arranged a bride for the
young Jesus. There are 18 silent years in His life (12 - 30).
The Gospel of John tells us that there were many other things
which Jesus did which have not been recorded. Given the cultural
milieu in which Jesus lived and the supporting Biblical
evidence, the burden of proof lies with those who do not believe
Jesus was married. They must show why Jesus and His parents
would have been derelict in their civic responsibilities and not
contracted a marriage. According to Josephus, descendants of the
House of David felt a moral obligation to perpetuate their line,
never knowing which one among their descendants would be the
chosen Messiah. Jesus may or may not have known who He was, but
regardless, He lived as a normal person until called by the
ministry of John the Baptist. Hippolytus, a Christian leader
from the late 2nd Century, was followed by Origen in the 3rd
Century in saying that the Song of Solomon was a prophecy of a
marital union between Christ and Mary Magdalene. Although they
believed Mary was symbolic of the Church, nevertheless, the
notion presupposed a real, marriage between Mary and Jesus.
There are hints scattered in the Gospels of a special
relationship between Jesus and Mary. If she is the same Mary of
Bethany in John 11, then we can explain why Martha arose to
greet Jesus and not Mary. Some scholars say she was sitting
sheva according to Jewish custom. "Sheva" was when a woman was
in mourning. Married women were not allowed to break-off from
their mourning unless called by their husbands. In this story,
Mary does not come to Jesus, until He calls her. At the
Resurrection, when Mary meets Jesus in the Garden, there is a
degree of intimacy (see the Aramaic here) which one would expect
between lovers, not friends. The Greek word for "woman" and
"wife" is the same. Translators must rely upon the context in
deciding how to translate it. Sometimes, the translation is
arbitrary. When Mary is referred to as a "woman" who followed
Jesus, it can just as easily be translated as "wife". The story
of Mary with the alabaster jar anointing the feet of Jesus is
cited by some scholars as the most direct witness to their
marriage. It is in all four Gospels and was a story in which
Jesus gave express command that it be preserved. This ceremony
was an ancient one among many royal houses in the ancient world,
which sealed the marital union between the king and his
priestess spouse. We find it mentioned briefly in the Song of
Solomon. Although we may not understand its significance, Jesus
and Mary knew exactly what they were doing. To be the valid
Messiah, He had to be anointed first by the Bride. They were
by-passing the corrupt Jewish establishment. It was the custom
among the Jews for their young men to marry at an early age,
generally between the years of sixteen and eighteen. "Men
married at sixteen or seventeen years of age, almost never later
than twenty: and women at a somewhat younger age, often when not
older than fourteen. The Bible teaches that the enemies of
Christ spent their time: "Laying wait for him, and seeking to
catch something out of his mouth, that they might accuse him"
(Luke 11:54). It is almost universally agreed among all scholars
and denominations that Jesus Christ did not begin his ministry
until his early 30's. If Christ were unmarried at this age, then
his enemies could have proven that he did not obey the laws and
customs of his day
The Samaritans are unique among the many religious groups
described in the Bible apart from traditional Judaism and
Christianity: the others have long passed into oblivion, but the
Samaritans still survive in our own day, as a community
preserving its ancient rites on its holy site, Mount Gerizim,
near the ancient site of Shechem and the modern city of Nablus.
Samaria occupies the geographical center of the Holy Land. On
the west, the mountains of Samaria descend to the Plain of
Sharon, "I am the rose of Sharon, the lily of the valleys."
(Song of Songs 2;1 )
Shechem, which has been called "the uncrowned queen of
Palestine," lies in almost the exact center of the land. A broad
valley here separates the twin limestone massifs of Mount
Gerizim and Mount Ebal One day, while camped at Shechem,
Abraham, the ancestor of the people of Israel, knew that he was
in the presence of the Lord. During this transcendent experience
he heard the divine promise, never to be forgotten, "To your
descendants I will give this land" (Genesis 12:7).
Jewish pilgrims from Galilee on their way to Jerusalem for the
annual festivals usually avoided the direct route through
Samaria and detoured by way of the far side of the Jordan.
Jesus, however, used the road through Samaria at least three
times (Luke 9:52; 17:11; John 4:4). As has already been
mentioned, on one occasion he conversed at length with a
Samaritan woman and dealt with the chief problem dividing Jews
from Samaritans. This conversation took place at Jacob's well at
Sychar not far from the site of ancient Shechem. According to
the Fourth Gospel, "many Samaritans from that city believed in
him because of the woman's testimony" (John 4:39).
Now Jacob's well was there. Jesus therefore, being wearied with
his journey, sat thus on the well, and It was about the sixth
hour. There cometh a woman of Sama'ria to draw water. Jesus
saith unto her, Give me to drink. 8 (For his disciples were gone
away unto the city to buy meat) 9 Then saith the woman of
Samaria said unto him, How is It that thou, being a Jew, askest
drink of me, which am a woman of Samalria? for the Jews have no
dealings with the Sa-marl-tans. 10 Jesus answered and said unto
her. It thou knewest the gift of God, and who it Is that saith
to thee, Give me to drink thou wouldest have asked of him, and
he would have given thee living water. The woman saith unto him,
Sir, thou bast nothing to draw with, and the well Is deep: from
whence then bast thou that living water? 12 Art thou greater
than our father Jacob, which gave us the well, and drank thereof
himself, and his children, and his cattle? 13 Jesus answered and
said unto her, Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thrist
again But whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him
shall nev er thirst; but the water that I shall give him shall
be in him a well of water sp up Into everlasting life. 15 The
woman saith unto him, Sir, give me this water, that I thirst
not, neither come hither to draw. 16 Jesus saith unto her, Go,
call thy husband, and come hither. 17 The woman answered and
said, I have no husband. Jesus said unto her, Thou hast well
said, I have no husband: 18 For thou hast had five husbands; and
he whom thou now hast Is not thy husband, In that saidst thou
truly. 19 The woman saith unto him, Sir, I perceive that thou
art a prophet 20 Our fathers worshipped In this mountain; and ye
say, that In Jerusalem Is the place where men ought to worship.
21 Jesus saith unto her, Woman, believe me, the hour cometh,
when ye shall neither In this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem,
worship the Father. 22 Ye worship ye know not what: we know what
we worship: for salvation is of the Jews. 23 But the hour
cometh, and now Is, when the true worshippers shall worship the
Father In spirit and in truth: for the Father seeketh such to
worship him. 24 God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must
worship hhn in spirit and In truth. 25 The woman saith unto him,
I know that Mes-silas cometh, which is called Christ: when he Is
come, he will tell us all things. 26 Jesus saith unto her, I
that speak unto thee am he. 27 And upon this came his disciples,
and marvelled that he talked with the wonmw yet no man said,
VVhat seekest thou? or. Why talkest thou with her? 28 The woman
then left her waterpot, and went her way into the city, and
saith to the men, 29 Come, see a man, which told me all things
that ever I did. Is not this the Christ? 30 'Men they went out
of the city, and came unto him 31 In the mean while his
disciples prayed him, saying, Master, eat. 32 But he said unto
them. I have meat to eat that ye lmow not of. 33 'Iberefore said
the disciples one to another, Hath any man brought him ought to
eat? 34 Jesus saith unto them, My meat Is to do the will of him
that sent me. and to finish his work. 35 Say not ye, There are
yet four months, and then cometh harvest? behold, I say unto
you, Lift up your eyes, and look on the fields; for they are
white already to harvest 36 And he that reapeth receiveth wages,
and gathereth fruit unto life eternal: that both he that soweth
and he that reapeth may rejoice together. 37 And herein Is that
saying true. One soweth, and another reapeth. 38 I sent you to
reap that whereon ye bestowed no labour- other men laboured, and
ye are entered into their labours. 39 And many of the Samaritans
of that city believed on him for the saying of the woman, which
testified, He told me all that ever I did. 40 So when the
Samaritans were come unto him, they besought him that he would
tarry with them and he abode there two days. 41 And many more
believed because of his own word; 42 And said unto the woman,
Now we believe, not because of thy saying for we have heard him
ourselves, and know that this Is indeed the Christ, the Saviour
of the world.
In chapter three of the gospel of John, just prior to this
report about Jesus and the woman at the well, John is speaking
of himself as the friend of the Bridegroom (John 3:29)Jesus then
has a conversation with a Samaritian woman and their
conversation turns to her marital status.
Point blank; Jesus tells this woman what he has not confessed
openly to anyone else! That he is the Messiah. This is similar
to Mary later having the wisdom to anniont his head with oil
before his crucifiction; a knowledge that none of the male
apostles knew.
Further; this is the longest discourse by Jesus to another
person in the Gospels. She immediately proceeds to enter in to
the Lord's labour of harvesting souls; And many believed her
(John 4:29-42), while the male apostles are still asking about
bread. This is similar to Mary remaining in the garden seeking
the Lord while the others did not and then being the first to
say she found the risen saviour.
The woman speaks of "our father Jacob"; the Samaritians claimed
that they were descended from Joseph, the son of Jacob, by way
of Ephraim and Manasseh. The Jews of course have strenuously
denied that Jacob was the father of the Samaritans. Samaritan
women were the only other ethnic group of people a Jewish priest
could choose a wife from. This is a suprising fact due to what
it says about the relation of the Samaritains to the Jews.The
well was a gathering place for women.;the symbol of marriage and
woman in the Bible. Abraham, Issac, Jacob, recieved the first
covenant as well as their wives at a well. Moses found his wife
at a well. All these women were distant relatives to the men,
very similar to the relationship between the Jews and The
Samaritians. The well and water is Archetype of woman. Further,
this is not only the longest discourse by Jesus in the Bible; it
is also the giving of the second covenant.
The Jews had another way of using the word water. They often
spoke of the thirst of the soul for God. The Rabbis identified
this living water with Wisdom and the Holy Spirit, both female.
All Jewish pictorial religious language was full of the idea of
the thirst of the soul which could be quenched only with this
living water which was the gift of God. The promise is that the
chosen people would draw water with joy from the wells of
salvation. (Isaiah 12:3) The summons was that every one who was
thirsty should come tho the waters and freely drink. (Isaiah
55:1) It is the Lord who is the fountian of living water.
(Jeremiah 17:13) When Jesus spoke about bringing the water which
quenches thirst forever, he was doing no less than stating that
he was the Anointed One of God who was to bring in the new age.
To worship God in spirit and in truth is the heart of the
Gospel; hence, the New Testament, and is the Second Covenant. We
all feel the longing for eternity that God has put in every
persons soul. There is a thirst which only the Holy Spirit can
satisfy. This is God speaking to His Church. The five husbands
mentioned make this story not only an incident but also an
allegory. The original people of Samaria were exiled and
transported to Media, people from five other places were brought
in. These five different people brought in their own gods. ( 2
kings 17:29 ) The womans five husbands are like the five false
gods to whom the samaritans, as it were, married themselves. The
sixth husband stands for the true God, but, they worship him not
truly, but in ignorance; and therefore they are not married to
him at all. Being married to God in truth, is the seventh
husband; and is Jesus!
The chief city of Samaria was noted for its towers. Magdalene
means tower of the flock. If Jesus married a Samaritan princess
priestess, many prophicies of the uniting of the north and south
kingdoms of Judah and Israel ascribed to the coming Messiah
would be fulfilled. Also in this manner, Jesus not only fulfills
the Hebrew prophicies, but also fulfills the Archetype of the
ancient myths of the mystical years king and queen. Jubilee is
seven years and pagan religions had a annual marraige of
priestesses to celebrate the mystical year.
Jesus, then, was not just a man, nor even a great prophet, but
was the Messiah himself, the Son of God, ( Psalms 45 ) the long
awaited divine savior whose passion and death had inaugurated
the world's redemption and the birth of a new aeon. The Judaic
biblical prophecies could now be properly understood: The
Messiah was not a mundane king but a spiritual one, and God's
Kingdom not a political victory for Israel but a divine
redemption for humanity, bringing a new life suffused with God's
Spirit. Thus the bitterly disappointing event of their leader's
crucifixion was mysteriously transformed in the minds of his
disciples into the basis for a seemingly unlimited faith in the
ultimate salvation of mankind, and an extraordinarily dynamic
impulse to propagate that faith. Jesus had challenged his fellow
Jews to accept God's saving activity in history, an activity
visible in his own person and ministry.
"primitive" Christianity found in the Nag Hammadi scrolls, has
led many to the supposition that the chief disciple of Jesus, as
far as Jesus himself was concerned, was Mary Magdalene, not only
his wife and mother of his children (or child), but also called
by him to head a far more feminist church than what was
eventually manifested as "Christianity."
Mary Magdalene is associated in many old paintings and church
iconography with towers partly because the town she's from,
"Magdala" or Migdala," means "tower" in Hebrew, but of course
this has taken on religious connotation as well, as the watch
tower of the faith from which shines the beacon of hope].
Why do you think they ignore the Anointing part of the Anointed
One's story? Surely the Messiah would have to be anointed at
least one time in his
life, or how else could he hold the title? Why in the heck is
this never pointed out to us?
Imagine if they had not ignored it, and if, as it oft appears,
women had held the spiritual center of the new religion. It
could be we would be approaching equality from a far different
reality.
from the Legenda Aurea (13th century) by Jacopo di Voragine. See
Mary Magdalen. The Saints in Legend and Art, vol.5, by J. H.
Emminghaus. Text of story and legend by Leonhard Küppers. Aurel
Bongers, Recklinghausen 1964.
This ‘life’ was extremely influential in shaping medieval
devotion to Mary Magdalen. In 1260 Jacobus de Voragine, an
Italian dominican, wrote a standard legendarium, the Legenda
Aurea. The genre of these hagiographical compendia was not new,
but the order that Jacobus brought to the large number of rival
vitae and legends that had up to then been haphazardly
available, that order was certainly new. The hunger for
storytelling will certainly have contributed to the great
success of this legendarium. In the Legenda Aurea, as in the
other legendaria, elite sources and popular stories are welded
together and theological speculations about Mary Magdalen are
reconciled with popular devotional practices.‘The literary and
the iconographic image of Mary Magdalen’ by R. Baert, Alma Mater
Magazine.
“Mary Magdalene has the name Magdalene which was originally a
fortress (Magdalum). She was of noble birth, in fact of royalty.
Her father's name was Syrus, her mother's Eucharia. She, her
brother Lazarus and her sister Martha owned the castle two miles
from the Sea Genezareth as well as the village of Bethany near
Jerusalem, plus a considerable part of the city of Jerusalem,
but they distributed their treasures so that Mary Magdalene
owned the castle which also appears in her name while Lazarus
owned part of Jerusalem and Martha Bethany.
When Christ preached in the country she came—by God's
providence—into the house of Simon the leper for she had heard
that Christ was going to eat there. Not daring to sit among the
just because she was a sinner she walked straight up to the
Lord, washed His feet with her tears, dried them with her hair
and anointed them, for it was the custom that the people used
ointments for the heat of the sun was great. Simon the Pharisee
thought 'If this were a prophet he would scarcely allow himself
to be touched by a sinner.' But the Lord punished him because of
the superficiality of his justice and forgave the woman for all
her sins.”
“This is the Mary Magdalene upon whom God bestowed such great
grace and to whom he made evident so many signs of love. He
expelled seven evil spirits (wraths) from her and inspired in
her the love for Him. He made her a special friend, a great
hostess and a help on His road. He excused her at all times with
great love, defended her against the Pharisee who had called her
impure, against her sister who had accused her of idleness, and
against Judas who had called her a spendthrift. And whenever He
saw her weeping He wept, too. The Lord loved her so much that He
awakened her brother from death even though he had been in the
grave for four days, and He cured her sister Martha of
hemorrhages that had made her suffer for seven years. Out of
love for her He blessed Martilla, the maiden of her sister that
she raised her voice and said the sweet words of St. Luke 11, 27
'Blessed is the womb that bare thee and the paps which thou has
sucked.' For when Ambrose spoke the hemorrhaging woman was
Martha and the woman who spoke these words was her servant.
However, Magdalene was the woman who washed the Lord's feet with
her tears, dried them with her hair and anointed them with
ointment. In the time of grace she did her first penitence. She
elected the best part, she sat at the feet of the Lord to hear
His word, she anointed His head, she stood near the cross when
He died, she prepared the ointment for His corpse, she did not
leave the grave when the disciples did leave the grave. She was
the one to whom the Lord appeared first when He was resurrected
and she was the woman whom the Lord made the Apostle of the
Apostles.”
“When our Lord ascended to heaven after His sufferings in the
fourteenth year, when Stephanus had long before been stoned by
the Jews and the other disciples had been expelled from Judea,
the disciples went into many lands in order to spread the word
of God. With these apostles was Maximinus, one of the Lord's
seventy--two disciples to whose guardianship St. Peter had
commended Mary Magdalene. When the disciples were scattered St.
Maximinus, Mary Magdalene, her brother Lazarus, her sister
Martha with her servant Martilla and Cedonius (who was born
blind but who had been cured by the Lord) and many other
Christians were gathered on a ship by the heathens which was
then pushed into the ocean so that they would all perish. By
God's providence, however, they arrived in Massilia. They found
no one who wanted to give them hospitality and therefore
remained in the vestibule of the heathens’ temple.”
The Legenda Aurea then tells us how Mary Magdalene induced a
prince to put them up in his house; how she made it possible for
the wife of the prince to become the mother of a son; how the
princely couple made a pilgrimage to Rome and Jerusalem; how the
princess died on the ship while her son was born, and how the
dead princess was returned alive to the prince and his son by
the miraculous help of Mary Magdalene. Then
the Legend continues:
“Mary Magdalene desired meditation and went into the forest
wilderness where she lived incognito for thirty years in a place
prepared for her by the hands of angels. In this place there
were neither fountains nor trees nor grass. This indicates that
our Lord did not want to sustain her with earthly food but with
heavenly nourishment. Every day she was led to the heavens by
the angels—seven times for the seven hours of prayer—and with
her own ears she heard the chants of the heavenly hosts. And
every day she was taken back to earth with this sweet
nourishment so that she never needed earthly food.”
According to this legend Mary Magdalene died in Aix in Southern
France and was buried there by the Bishop Maximinus. Some of her
remains later were taken to the French monastery of Vezelay, the
church of which carried her name. The Legend continues
“In the time of Charlemagne, approximately in 769, there was in
Burgundy a Duke called Gerhard. His wife bore him no son. He
therefore gave all his belongings to the poor and built many
churches and monasteries. When he founded the monastery of
Vezelay he and the abbot sent a monk with a worthy following to
Aix and commissioned him to bring the remains of St. Mary
Magdalene to Vezelay. The monk found that Aix had been
completely destroyed by the heathen. However, he found a tomb
hewn entirely from marble and the tombstone indicated that St.
Mary Magdalene was buried there, and in fact her history could
be read because it was chiselled into the stone. When night came
he opened the grave, took the remains and brought them to the
place where he stayed. And it was then that Mary Magdalene
appeared to him that same night saying to him that he should not
be afraid but should complete the work which he had started. The
monk started home but one mile before he had reached the
monastery it seemed that the remains became so heavy that he
could no longer carry them. Then the abbot with the monks of the
monastery appeared in solemn procession and they all took St.
Mary Magdalene's remains to their domicile with the greatest of
honors.”
According to the Legend,the adoration of St. Mary Magdalene in
the French monastery of Vezelay was accompanied by many
miracles. She is supposed to have awakened a dead knight to
life, to have aided the sailors, to have returned vision to a
blind pilgrim when he had asked her for help in front of the
church of Vezelay. She is supposed to have released a prisoner
from chains and to have shown the path of virtue to a sinful
priest. No wonder, then, that a Saint so generally worshipped
was offered many patronages. The cities of France in particular,
such as Antun, Marseilles and Vezelay, looked upon her as their
patron saint. In fact the whole Provence respects her as such.
She is also the patron of the coiffeurs, gardeners, winegrowers,
sawers and weavers. Mothers turn to her when they pray for their
children who find it difficult to learn how to walk. Above all,
of course, she serves as the great model for all sinners eager
to convert to virtue.
The gardener metaphorically is God's son, Adam. Just as Inanna's
descent and the resurrection of Attis took three days, so did
that of Jesus, following on from Jonah: Matt 12:40 "For as Jonas
was three days and three nights in the whale's belly; so shall
the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of
the earth." "St Paul says that Christ' descended into the lower
parts of the earth' (Eph. 4:9). St Peter writes that Christ'
preached unto the spirits in prison (1 Pet. 3:19) and also that'
the gospel was preached to them that are dead' (1 Pet. 4:6). The
Apostles' Creed states explicitly that Christ' descended into
hell"'
"There is still the question of why it was to her Christ
appeared after his resurrection, and why, if a fundamental part
of the Christian kerygma (preaching) is based on the witness of
Mary Magdalene and other women, its importance and meaning has
been played down in the Christian tradition"
Although other information about her is more fantastic, she is
repeatedly portrayed as a visionary and leader of the early
movement.( Mark 16:1-9; Matthew 28:1-10; Luke24:1-10; John 20:1,
11-18; Gospel of Peter ). In the Gospel of John, the risen Jesus
gives her special teaching and commissions her as an apostle to
the apostles to bring them the good news. She obeys and is thus
the first to announce the resurrection and to play the role of
an apostle, although the term is not specifically used of her.
Later tradition, however, will herald her as "the apostle to the
apostles." The strength of this literary tradition makes it
possible to suggest that historically Mary was a prophetic
visionary and leader within one sector of the early Christian
movement after the death of Jesus. The newly discovered Egyptian
writings elaborate this portrait of Mary as a favored disciple.
Her role as "apostle to the apostles" is frequently explored,
especially in considering her faith in contrast to that of the
male disciples who refuse to believe her testimony. She is most
often portrayed in texts that claim to record dialogues of Jesus
with his disciples, both before and after the resurrection. In
the Dialogue of the Savior, for example, Mary is named along
with Judas (Thomas) and Matthew in the course of an extended
dialogue with Jesus. During the discussion, Mary addresses
several questions to the Savior as a representative of the
disciples as a group. She thus appears as a prominent member of
the disciple group and is the only woman named. Moreover, in
response to a particularly insightful question, the Lord says of
her, "´You make clear the abundance of the revealer!'"
(140.17-19). At another point, after Mary has spoken, the
narrator states, "She uttered this as a woman who had understood
completely"(139.11-13). These affirmations make it clear that
Mary is to be counted among the disciples who fully comprehended
the Lord's teaching (142.11-13). In another text, the Sophia of
Jesus Christ, Mary also plays a clear role among those whom
Jesus teaches. She is one of the seven women and twelve men
gathered to hear the Savior after the resurrection, but before
his ascension. Of these only five are named and speak, including
Mary. At the end of his discourse, he tells them, "I have given
you authority over all things as children of light," and they go
forth in joy to preach the gospel. Here again Mary is included
among those special disciples to whom Jesus entrusted his most
elevated teaching, and she takes a role in the preaching of the
gospel. In the Gospel of Philip, Mary Magdalene is mentioned as
one of three Marys " who always walked with the Lord" and as his
companion (59.6-11). The work also says that Lord loved her more
than all the disciples, and used to kiss her often (63.34-36).
The importance of this portrayal is that yet again the work
affirms the special relationship of Mary Magdalene to Jesus
based on her spiritual perfection. In the Pistis Sophia, Mary
again is preeminent among them.
The woman who anointed Jesus in the days before the crucifixion
was actually Mary Magdalene, and she was re-enacting an old
fertility ritual called the hieros gamos, or "sacred marriage."
In older sacred marriage rituals, a woman who represented the
"goddess" and the land was wedded to the king. Their union
symbolized many things, depending on the time and place such a
ritual was practiced, including the blessing of ongoing
fertility, the rejuvination of the land and the community soul,
and the connection between humans and the Divine. Some of these
old ceremonies included a ritualistic slaying of the king,
either symbolically or literally, after he was married to the
priestess/goddess. In the symbolic slayings, he would then rise
again in a mystical resurrection echoing the cycles of death and
rebirth evident in nature. the Gospel accounts of the anointing
and the events that follow reflect hieros gamos-like practices.
If Mary Magdalene was the woman who performed the anointing, she
would have been the woman filling the symbolic role of
priestess/goddess, and therefore would have been married to
Jesus.
It was Mary Magdalene who anointed Jesus as the Messiah, an
action whose symbolism was lost on the men of the group but that
moved our Lord to say, "Wherever the good news is proclaimed in
the whole world, what she has done will be told in remembrance
of her." This sacred anointing was directed by God; and beware
if you as a Christian preach that it was not! It places Mary on
a greater or equal basis with the most noteworthy of Old
Testament Prophets. What right does such a one have to be
compared to the high priest. Only the high priest, the holiest
man in Israel, can look behind the veil and then only to see the
type, not the reality. But Mary is enabled to see the reality,
the fullness, the Ark of the Covenant! Don't you see, the tomb
is the reality that the Ark of the Covenant foreshadowed. It is
in the tomb, that place of corruption, where our Lord Christ
reigns over death. The Ark had represented the throne of God. So
it is in the tomb where our Lord reigns over death and hell.
This is the vision that is given to Mary. What a love, what an
honor and a grace that is put upon her! That would be enough
honor, wouldn't it? Just to see the reality of what all the
priests of Israel had anticipated if in faithfulness they had
entered behind that veil. For Mary to see that would be
sufficient honor.
Mary the apostle, prophet, and teacher had become Mary the
repentant whore. This fiction was invented at least in part to
undermine her influence and with it the appeal to her apostolic
authority to support women in roles of leadership
It is clear from the four canonical Gospels that Mary Magdalen
enjoyed special precedence in the community of believers, since
she was the first person to see and speak to Jesus on Easter
Sunday, having hurried to his tomb at first light to perform
embalming rites for his dead body. There are seven lists in the
four Gospels that name the women who accompanied Jesus. In six
of the seven, the name of Mary Magdalen is given first--ahead of
Mary, the mother of Jesus, and ahead of the other women
mentioned. The Gospel writers, beginning with Mark, are most
likely reflecting the status of the Magdalen in the Christian
community--that of First Lady.
Jesus' lineage and marriage were concealed from all but a select
circle of royalist leaders. To protect the royal bloodline, this
marriage would have been kept secret from the Romans and the
Herodian tetrarchs, and after the crucifixion of Jesus, the
protection of his wife and family would have been a sacred trust
for those few who knew their identity. All reference to the
marriage of Jesus would have been deliberately obscured, edited,
or eradicated. Yet the pregnant wife of the anointed Son of
David would have been the bearer of the hope of Israel--the
bearer of the Sangraal, the royal bloodline. It is probable that
the original references to Mary Magdalen in the oral tradition,
the "pericopes" of the New Testament, were misunderstood before
they were ever committed to writing. I suspect that the epithet
"Magdaleri" was meant to be an allusion to the "Magdaleder"
found in Micah, the promise of the restoration of Sion following
her exile. Perhaps the earliest verbal references attaching the
epithet "Magdala" to Mary of Bethany's name had nothing to do
with an obscure town in Galilee, as is suggested, but were
deliberate references to these lines in Micah, to the
"watchtower" or "stronghold" of the Daughter of Sion who was
forced into political exile. The place name Magdal-eder
literally means "tower of the flock," in the sense of a high
place used by a shepherd as a vantage point from which to watch
over his sheep. In Hebrew, the epithet Magdala literally means
"tower" or "elevated, great, magnificent.."2 This meaning has
particular relevance if the Mary so named was in fact the wife
of the Messiah. It would have been the Hebrew equivalent of
calling her "Mary the Great," while at the same time referring
to the prophesied return of dominion to "the daughter of
Jerusalem" (Mic. 4:8).
Mari is associated with seven nether spirits of the ocean. The
person who anoints Jesus' feet is a 'sinner' reminiscent of
the'seven devils'of Magdalene associated the descent of Inanna:
Also the Seven Bridal Orbits and the Seven deadly sins.
Sevens abound in the Bible and throughout Jewish life. The world
was created in seven days, and marriage is a seven days a week
act of creation. There are also seven wedding blessings. The
seven wedding blessings or 'sheva b'rachot' mention the
beginning of time in Eden, when life was wholeness, and the end
of days when that wholeness will be restored. Since Eden the
world has been in exile from the experience of unfragmented
existence, an exile that extends from earth to heaven. The
Garden was lost, the Temple destroyed, even God was not whole.
Shekhinah, God's feminine self, wanders the earth, cut off,
bereaved. God and Shekinah are reunited on Sabbath, the day that
offers a taste of paradise, as bridegroom and bride. Both heaven
and earth long for redemption from this exile, a restoration to
Edenic harmony to the whole of creation. Since Judaism has no
concept of individual redemption, the wedding provides the whole
community with a glimpse into the blessing of the wholeness that
was once and is to come again.
The ancients counted seven planets, thus arranged; the Moon,
Mercury, Venus, the Sun, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. There were
seven heavens and seven spheres of these planets; these
corrospond to the seven lamps of the golden candelabrum in the
temple. To return to its source in the Infinite, the human soul,
the ancients held, had to ascend as it had descended, through
the seven spheres. From Egypt and Persia the new Platonists
borrowed the idea, and the Gnostics recieved it from them, that
man, in his terrestrial career, is successively under the
influence of the Moon, of Mercury, of Venus, of the Sun, of
Mars, of Jupiter, and of Saturn, until he finally reaches the
Elysian Feilds; an idea again symbolized in the Seven Seals. And
circling is thought of as the way the bride enters the groom's
s'ferot; the mystical spheres of his soul that correspond to the
seven lower attributes of God. In the ancient world these orbits
correspond to the seven spheres in the heavens and likewise are
reflected in the seven nether spheres of the sea. The two most
famous divisions of the Heavens, by seven, which is that of the
planets, and bv twelve, which is that of the signs, are found on
the religious monuments of all the people of the ancient world.
There is no more striking proof of the universal adoration paid
the stars and constellations,than the arrangement of the Hebrew
camp in the Desert, and the allegory in regard to the twelve
Tribes of Israel, Joseph in a dream associated twelve stars to
the patriarchs; and the twelve tribes bore the twelve signs of
the Hebrew zodiac on their standards. Heavenly Hosts" includes
not only the counsellors and emissaries of Jehovah, but also the
celestial. luminaries; and the stars. Seven Heavens, in the East
to be animated intelligences, presiding over human weal and woe,
were identified with the more distinctly impersonated messengers
or angels, who execute the Divine Justice and in each of which
were certain Powers that opposed the souls return to Heaven, and
often drove them back to earth, when not sufficiently purified.
( Luke 11:26 ) The last of these Powers, nearest the luminous
abode of souls, was a serpent or dragon.
THE MYSTERY OF SEVEN; SEVEN FOR EVIL, SEVEN FOR GOOD
(REVELATIONS 15:1) AND I SAW ANOTHER SIGN IN HEAVEN, GREAT AND
MARVELLOUS, SEVEN ANGELS HAVING THE SEVEN LAST PLAUGES; FOR IN
THEM IS FILLED UP THE WRATH OF GOD.
NOTES: [1] This story is the sixteenth tablet of a series called
the "Evil Demon Series," of which we have an Assyrian with a
parallel Sumerian text. Presumably, therefore, it was a very
ancient legend. [2] The Imkhullu appears also in the Creation
Epic. [3] Adad is god of storm, Anu of heaven, Enlil of storm,
Sin of the Moon, Shamash of the Sun, and Ishtar of love and
fruitfulness. The meaning of Massu is unknown; but Ea was long
the chief ruler. [4] The evil gods darken the moon by an
eclipse, Shamash helping them by withdrawing his light from the
moon, and Adad by sending cloudy weather. [5] A name for Ea.
Son of a prince, the gleaming Sin has been sadly darkened in
heaven, His darkening is seen in the heavens, The seven evil
gods, death-dealing, fearless are they, The seven evil gods,
like a flood, rush on, the land they fall upon, do they, Against
the land, like a storm, they rise, do they, Before the gleaming
Sin, they set themselves angrily; The mighty Shamash, Adad the
warrior, they brought on their side."
DESCRIPTIONS OF "THE SEVEN"
I Destructive storms and evil winds are they, A storm of evil,
presaging the baneful storm, A storm of evil, forerunner of the
baneful storm. Mighty children, mightv sons are they, Messengers
of Namtar are they, Throne-bearers of Ereshkigal. [1] The flood
driving through the land are they. Seven gods of the wide
heavens, Seven gods of the broad earth, Seven robber-gods are
they. Seven gods of universal sway, Seven evil gods, Seven evil
demons, Seven evil and violent demons, Seven in heaven, seven on
earth.
SATURN = KRONOS = TIME = DEVOUR = DRAGON = SATURN AS 7 TH SHPERE
= DRAGON GUARDIAN OF SEVENTH SPHERE (Ancient Mythologies)
(MATTHEW 12:22-45) "Then it goes out and brings seven other
spirits even worse".
(REVELATIONS 12:3:) There was a huge red dragon with seven
heads.. Saturn, "The hidden one," so, whatever other aspect this
name had, as applied to the father of the gods, it is to Satan,
the Hidden Lord of hell, ultimately that all came at last to be
traced back; for the different myths about Saturn, when
carefully examined, show that he was at once the Devil,
Also.. there are.. The Seven deadly sins...
A Different View of Adam and Eve
William Blake, the Gnostic poet of the early nineteenth century, wrote of the
differences between his view and the mainstream view of holy writ: 'Both read
the Bible day and night; but you read black where I read white." The same words
could have been uttered by Gnostic Christians and their orthodox opponents in
the first three or four centuries A.D.
The orthodox view then regarded most of the Bible, particularly Genesis, as
history with a moral. Adam and Eve were considered to be historical figures, the
literal ancestors of our species. From the story of their transgression,
orthodox teachers deduced specific moral consequences, chiefly the "fall" of the
human race due to original sin. Another consequence was the lowly and morally
ambivalent status of women, who were regarded as Eve's co-conspirators in the
fateful deed of disobedience in paradise. Tertullian, a sworn enemy of the
Gnostics, wrote to the female members of the Christian community thusly:
. . . you are the devil's gateway. . . you are she who persuaded him whom the
devil did not dare attack. . . . Do you not know that you are each an Eve? The
sentence of God on your sex lives on in this age; the guilt, necessarily, lives
on too.
The Gnostic Christians who authored the Nag Hammadi scriptures did not read
Genesis as history with a moral, but as a myth with a meaning. To them, Adam and
Eve were not actual historical figures, but representatives of two intrapsychic
principles within every human being. Adam was the dramatic embodiment of psyche,
or soul, while Eve stood for the pneuma, or spirit. Soul, to the Gnostics, meant
the embodiment of the emotional and thinking functions of the personality, while
spirit represented the human capacity for spiritual consciousness. The former
was the lesser self (the ego of depth psychology), the latter the transcendental
function, or the "higher self," as it is sometimes known. Obviously, Eve, then,
is by nature superior to Adam, rather than his inferior as implied by orthodoxy.
Nowhere is Eve's superiority and numinous power more evident than in her role as
Adam's awakener. Adam is in a deep sleep, from which Eve's liberating call
arouses him. While the orthodox version has Eve physically emerge from Adam's
body, the Gnostic rendering has the spiritual principle known as Eve emerging
from the unconscious depths of the somnolent Adam. Before she thus emerges into
liberating consciousness, Eve calls forth to the sleeping Adam in the following
manner, as stated by the Gnostic Apocryphon of John:
I entered into the midst of the dungeon which is the prison of the body. And I
spoke thus: "He who hears, let him arise from the deep sleep." And then he
(Adam) wept and shed tears. After he wiped away his bitter tears he spoke,
asking: "Who is it that calls my name, and whence has this hope come unto me,
while I am in the chains of this prison?" And I spoke thus: "I am the Pronoia of
the pure light; I am the thought of the undefiled spirit. . . . Arise and
remember . . . and follow your root, which is I . . . and beware of the deep
sleep."
In another scripture from the same collection, entitled On the Origin of the
World, we find further amplification of this theme. Here Eve whose mystical name
is Zoe, meaning life, is shown as the daughter and messenger of the Divine
Sophia, the feminine hypostasis of the supreme Godhead:
Sophia sent Zoe, her daughter, who is called "Eve," as an instructor in order
that she might raise up Adam, in whom there is no spiritual soul so that those
whom he could beget might also become vessels of light. When Eve saw her
companion, who was so much like her, in his cast down condition she pitied him,
and she exclaimed: "Adam, live! Rise up upon the earth!" Immediately her words
produced a result for when Adam rose up, right away he opened his eyes. When he
saw her, he said: "You will be called 'mother of the living', because you are
the one who gave me life."
In the same scripture, the creator and his companions whisper to each other
while Adam sleeps: "Let us teach him in his sleep as though she (Eve) came to be
from his rib so that the woman will serve and he will be lord over her." The
demeaning tale of Adam's rib is thus revealed as a propagandistic device
intended to advance an attitude of male superiority. It goes without saying that
such an attitude would have been more difficult among the Gnostics, who held
that man was indebted to woman for bringing him to life and to consciousness.
The Western theologian Paul Tillich interpreted this scripture as the Gnostics
did, declaring that "the Fall" was a symbol for the human situation, not a story
of an event that happened "once upon a time." Tillich said that the Fall
represented "a fall from the state of dreaming innocence" in psychological
terms, an awakening from potentiality to actuality. Tillich's view was that this
"fall" was necessary to the development of humankind.
WHAT HAPPENED TO STEVEN, (ACTS: 6; TO 8; 1-5) LEADER OF THE
SEVEN (FULL OF THE HOLY SPIRIT AND WISDOM (ACTS: 6;3); HAPPENED
TO THE ORIGINAL GODDESS BELIEVING CHURCH; AND PAUL STOOD BY AND
CONSENTED ; JUST AS ROME'S CHRISTIANS WOULD DO WITH THE GODDESS
BELIEVING JEWISH CHRISTIAN CHURCH AT THE DESTRUCTUON OF
JERUSALEM, AND AT THE START OF THE INQUSITION IN SOUTHERN
FRANCE, AND CONTINUE TO DO.
The confrontation of Mary with Peter, a scenario also found in
The Gospel of Thomas, Pistis Sophia, and The Gospel of the
Egyptians, reflects some of the tensions in second-century
Christianity. Peter and Andrew represent orthodox positions that
deny the validity of esoteric revelation and reject the
authority of women to teach. The Gospel of Mary attacks both of
these positions head-on through its portrayal of Mary Magdalene.
She is the Savior's beloved, possessed of knowledge and teaching
superior to that of the public apostolic tradition. Her
superiority is based on vision and private revelation and is
demonstrated in her capacity to strengthen the wavering
disciples and turn them toward the Good.
The Gnostic cosmology held that the Earth is the center of the
universe, surrounded by air and seven concentric heavenly
spheres (the moon and six of the planets). Beyond Saturn, the
last of the concentric spheres, resides Leviathan -- a snake
coiled in a single circle, devouring its own tail. Beyond the
spheres which are inhabited by the demonic entities called
archons and beyond Leviathan lies Paradise, with the Tree of
Life and the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil at its center.
The Divine Feminine--Sophia, the Goddess who presides over the
sacred convergence of time and space, destiny and choice, spirit
and nature--stands watch.
Sophia, one of humanity’s oldest deities, is often described as
the Threefold Goddess--the Maiden, Mother, and Crone--who
represents three phases of women’s spiritual power:
independence, creativity, and wisdom. It was Her Divine guidance
that was invoked when life-altering decisions were to be made.
Sophia is the archetypal Divine Feminine wisdom of the past
brought into the present to direct and manifest the future.
The birth of a new religion is a profound event in any culture,
arising when old religious models no longer explain reality or
satisfy people's spiritual needs. During the last 20 years, a
spiritual movement led largely by women, has emerged like
Persephone from the Underworld and it is now the fastest growing
religious movement in the United States.
In the dominant Western religions--Christianity, Judaism, and
Islam--the Divine is exclusively male, served by male prophets
and clergy who interpret the will of a Father/Son God. And
biblical dogma is both source of and reinforcement for the
exploitation of the earth and the oppression of women--from
Eve’s responsibility for the "downfall" of humanity to the
murderous Witch craze ordered by Pope Innocent VIII in the
Malleus Malifacraum, which condemns women as tools of the Devil,
liars, filled with carnal lust, and in constant need of male
supervision because
"When a woman thinks alone, she thinks evil."
The three biblical religions also share a common transcendental
theology in which God created the world, but is not present in
it. Two thousand years of Western civilization have been built
on the conviction that the Divine is absent from the world in
which we live. This existential separation of humanity from
divinity is the most profound condition of alienation
imaginable. It is a deep wound at the heart of Western culture
and it is precisely why our social crises so precisely parallel
the self-destructive behavior of neglected children,
particularly in terms of violence and addictions to alcohol,
drugs, sex, and rampant materialism--all intended but unable to
fill our spiritual emptiness.
But a new vision is emerging, springing from feminism’s
challenge to patriarchal religions. Women will never be
completely free as long as a culture's image of the Divine is
exclusively male. At the crossroads, women have found a home in
the ancient religions of the Goddess.
Retrieving and recreating the spirituality of their foremothers,
women have rediscovered Sophia.
Perhaps Her greatest gift to us at this crucial moment is Her
role as a shamanic guide through the three realms of divine
reality--the "underworld" of ancestors and spirits (the past or
unconscious), the "middle world" of daily life (the present
moment of choice or ego), and the "upper world" of divinity (our
future and our spirituality). Only Sophia has the power to
travel between all three realms of being, and it is She who
guides our collective journey from an underworld of greed,
destruction, and death, to a world of rebirth and divine
revelation.
Ancient and modern Goddess religions--particularly that of
Sophia--incorporate shamanic practices that enable us to
experience direct, personal, ecstatic communion with the Divine,
to discover the sacred within ourselves and to see it manifest
in the world around us. All of the practices, the arts of
Sophia, are varieties of active meditations conducted in the
presence of nature, enabling us to transform and empower
ourselves through our connection to this sacred source of being.
Among these techniques are ritual, meditation, (similar to
prayer), energy raising, dancing, visualization, and journeying.
These are all means of enabling us to experience all aspects of
creation as embodiments of Divine energy, and to experience the
interconnection and oneness of life created by that energy.
The world is a paradise that we have never left. With the
shamanic practices and insights of Old, we can transform our
culture by restoring the lost feminine. Sophia is the magic of
the moment--the infinite made visible in the miracle of
life--the Divine presence whose wisdom and magic await us at the
crossroads, guiding our choice.
Mary is linked to ancient Triple Goddesses through much of the
symbolism associated with her. The Protoevangelium of James,
which describes Mary's girlhood, portrays Mary as spinning in
the Temple. This links her with the triple Fates, the three
Goddesses known as the Moerae or "Marys" who spun out the
destinies of those on earth. Cyril of Jerusalem, in his Coptic
Discourse, linked the three Marys at the foot of the Cross
(Mother Mary, Mary Magdalene, and Mary Salome) with these same
triple Fates. A striking similarity occurs in Nordic mythology
where the three Fates stand at the foot of Odin's tree of
sacrifice. Welsh mythology links Mary with their triple White
Goddess, Brigit. Even today, Mary is called The White Mary
The concept of the Triple Goddess is found in many cultures and
belief systems. In fact, this triple-goddess has appeared in the
history of virtually every known culture around the globe.
As a Maiden (whole unto herself-symbolized by the moon), (The
Seventh Sphere) Saturn appears in our astrological chart for the
first time. Saturn returns to our natal chart when we are around
thirty-two years old to signal the commencement of the second
season, Mother (creatix-full moon). And like the waning of the
moon, the third Saturn return occurs around the age of
fifty-five, ushering in the time of the Crone (knower of
mysteries). (SEE REV 12;1-9)
In all religions of antiquity the number twelve, which applies
to the twelve signs of the zodiac, are reproduced in all kinds
and sorts of forms. For instance, such are the twelve great
gods; the twelve apostles or Osiris; the twelve apostles of
Jesus; the twelve sons of Jacob; the twelve tribes; the twelve
altars of James; the twelve labors of Mars; the twelve brothers
of Arvaux; the twelve gods Consents; the twelve governors in the
Manichean System; the adectyas of the East Indies; the twelve
asses of the Scandinavians; the city of the twelve gates in the
Apocalypse; the twelve wards of the city; the twelve sacred
cushions, on which the Creator sits in the cosmogony of the
Japanese; the twelve precious stones of the rational, or the
ornament worn by the high priest of the Jews, etc. The Jews of
Syria and Judea were the direct precursors of Gnosticism; and in
their doctrines were ample oriental elements. These Jews had had
with the Orient, at two different periods, close relations,
familiarezing them with the doctrines of Asia, and especially of
Chaldea and Persia. The prophet Daniel was Chief of the college
of the Magi at Babylon.
"Grace and peace to you from him who is, and who was, and who
is to come, and from the seven spirits before his throne. (Rev
1:4 ) can also be translated ' the sevenfold spirit'.
In Revelations 1:12-15; we see Jesus standing in the midst of
seven golden candlesticks holding seven stars in his hand.
Scripture makes it very clear that these seven candlesticks
represent seven church's which Jesus walks among, and the seven
stars the angels of the seven church's which Jesus holds in his
hand. Scripture always refers to the Church in the feminine
gender. The number seven is associated with Christ's Bride!
The ancient Hebrews aligned their calendar reckonings with the
phases of the moon, attributing to each month and its phases
with the powers and teachings of animals, plants, and spirits.
But the moon herself was Mari.
Before the calendar measured time, we marked the year by
observing the planets in their stately parade across the night
sky. We noted the tides and the moon's phases and the length of
days. We attuned ourselves to the seasons. We did not grow angry
when there was snow in winter or rain in summer. We recognized
that nature is more powerful than we are, and we honored her
strength. Now we live indoors, our lights shine at night; we
mark the days and weeks and seasons on our dayminders and
calendars. We have lost the sense of connection to the currents
of time as they flow through our world. In the process, we have
lost our sense of connection to that world. Honoring the lunar
goddess was a daily part of ancient tradition in Ireland and
Scotland, where bowing to the full moon and praising her beauty
was a monthly ritual. Even when we do not see her, the moon
still pulls the tides; she pulls as well on our inner tides,
drawing forth .womanly blood as she moves through her own
phases. To honor the moon is to honor the primal connection
between womanhood and nature's feminine force.
She was worshipped by the Semites as Mari-Anath; in consort as
an Elohim, Mari-El. "Is the Moon named Miriam among you?" "The
moon has many names among our poets."
Her blue robe and pearly necklace were classic symbols of Maria
"the Seas", edged with pearly foam.. She appears prophetically
as the "water of life" in Revelation 22:1.
the Latin word for ocean ("mar") is nearly identical to "Mary".
In English we might miss the connection, but in the romance
languages of Spanish, French, or Italian, the connection is
obvious. Coincidence?
Notre Dame," is French meaning "Our Lady
Myth is built on metaphor so what is the metaphor of the Jesus
story? What are the similes between this story and other stories
and situations that this group may have wanted to send down the
stream of time? Taking this thought experiment to its logical
conclusion we must begin top speculate on what is similar and
metaphorical about the myth. First off there is the metaphor of
the son and the sun. Jesus in Hebrew means Jesse or 'Fire'. Let
us -- for a moment assume that instead of 'son' they are
referring to the 'sun'. Then let us consider the twelve
apostles. Do they represent more than just twelve men? For a
moment let us consider that this actually refers to the twelve
signs of the Zodiac. Now for a moment let us consider Jesus'
mother Mary. Mary in Hebrew means sea or seawater, she is also
associated with a crescent moon. It is well known that the moon
controls the tides and therefore seawater. Is it possible that
Mary is a metaphor for the moon? So let us consider what we have
here. We have Jesus, or Fire, moves through the twelve men or
signs. Just as our sun moves through the twelve signs of the
zodiac. What is the missing astrological element? The moon of
course. And along comes Mary to fill this void. Does this mean
that the story of Jesus, Mary and his band of disciples is the
story of some kind of astrological situation? Is it possible
that this is what is happening -- at least on a metaphorical
level? I think so. This is what I mean by re-thinking these
myths in a metaphorical way. This is in no way meant to
denigrate the Christian religion or anyone's belief in Jesus,
Mary and the disciples as real men. The point that is being made
is that there are metaphorical links to this story that are just
as important as the human links. The names, and the numbers of
their names, of these people involved in this story are
important. Actually they are too important to be ignored -- for
it was within the names and the numbers inside the structure of
these myths that a true understanding of what they are about can
actually occur.
There is another point that needs to be considered. The number
seven in Scripture often refers to completeness. For example,
the creation of the world occurred in six days with God resting
upon the seventh. Consequently, Israel was told to work for six
days and to rest on the seventh because this was the pattern set
by creation.
Six days you shall labor and do all your work. But the seventh
day is a sabbath to the LORD your God; you shall not do any
work-you, your son or your daughter, your male or female slave,
your livestock, or the alien resident in your towns. For in six
days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in
them, but rested the seventh day; therefore the LORD blessed the
sabbath day and consecrated it (Exodus 20:9-11).
Seven days completes the creation and work week. In the same
manner the reference to the seven Spirit refers to the
completeness of the Person and work of the Holy Spirit
"In Proverbs 9, Wisdom sends out her handmaids to invite
everyone to her feast of wisdom. These seven virgins, inherited
perhaps from Manichaean cosmology, are the assessors of Wisdom.
The Middle Ages transformed them into the daughters of Sophia,
the Sophianic examining board of the Seven Liberal Arts. It was
the English cleric Alcuin (735-804) who associated Wisdom's
house with seven pillars as analogous to the Seven Liberal Arts.
These consisted of the trivium: Rhetoric; Dialectic (logical
thought) and Grammar, and the quadrivium; Music; Arithmetic;
Astronomy and Geometry. These formed the basis for Western
academic education up until the sixteenth century. These
handmaidens of Sophia are depicted on the right hand doorway of
the Portail Royal at Chartres. The central image is of the Black
Virgin, copied from the original pagan statue in the crypt, for
according to Albert the Great (1200-1280), Mary herself was the
possessor of the Seven Liberal Arts. As Black Virgin of Wisdom,
Mary is surrounded by seven female figures representing the
Liberal Arts who are accompanied by seven historical exponents
of each art: This is the Classical Klimax Heptapulos, the
seven-fold ladder which underlay the Mysteries of Mithras, and
the many Gnostic sects, elements of which passed into alchemical
usage. The purification of the soul through the seven planetary
experiences was common to many cultures and traditions. This
spiritual journey became a mundane study; an ascent through the
seven academic studies necessary for complete wisdom."
The concept of the Triple Goddess associated with the Seventh
Spheres found in the Virgin Mother can be seen in our Lady of
Sorrows
Mary has been worshiped as Our Lady of Sorrows since or before
the 3rd Century although the Catholic Church did not formalize
this as one of Mary's titles until the 14th Century. The Church
has formally recognized The Seven Sorrows of Mary as: 1. The
prophecy of Simeon that her heart would be pierced with swords
(Luke 2:34-35); 2. The Flight into Egypt when her infant son's
life was threatened by Herod (Matthew 2:13-21); 3. The Loss of
Jesus for Three Days when he was a twelve-year-old boy (Luke
2:41-50); 4. Jesus' Ascent to Calvary bearing the cross (John
19:17); 5. The Crucifixion and Death of Jesus (John 19:18-30);
6. Jesus Taken Down from the Cross (John 19:39-40); 7. Jesus
Laid in the Tomb (John 19:39-42). However, people (especially
women) around the world throughout the ages have been happy to
share their sorrow with Mary and to identify their sorrow with
hers.
A portion of The Gospel of Mary Magdalene describes a soul's
journey after death and the challenges it overcomes. These
passages are much like The Tibetan Book of the Dead which
reveals the Peaceful and Wrathful Dieties a soul encounters
during its journey after it has separated from the body at
death. This is very similiar to this portion of the Gospel of
Mary Magdalene, " When the soul had overcome the third power, it
went upwards and saw the fourth power, (which) took seven forms.
The first form is darkness, the second desire, the third
ignorance, the fourth is the excitement of death, the fifth is
the kingdom of the flesh, the sixth is the foolish wisdom of
flesh, the seventh is the wrathful wisdom. These are the seven
{powers} of wrath."
Seven in reference to Mary Magdalene means that rather then
being just a lost nobody once riddled with demons; She is at
once both the historically fallen and now redeemed Church
(Bride), without spot or blemish and in fact complete in
perfection and full of grace, she is Apostle to the Apostles and
the true Bride!She is Queen!
Wisdom hath builded Her house, she hath hewn out her seven
pillars. PROV 9:1 CHRIST CASTS OUT THE SEVEN DEMONS OF
ISRAEL(THE PHARISEES) BY WISDOM/WOMAN AND CASTS OUT THE SEVEN
DEVILS FROM THE CHURCH/WOMAN (LUKE 8:2) If Jesus cast out the
seven unclean spirits then the one unclean spirit is cast out,
hence this is a statement of Mary's attaining to a pure
state.(MATTHEW 12:22-45, LUKE11;26)
MARY TRANSCENDS THE SEVEN SPHERES TO PERFECTION THROUGH
CHRIST/SOPHIA (filled with wisdom and grace (MARY HAS CHOSEN
THE BETTER PART; LUKE 10:42, PROVERBS 9:1)) THROUGH THE SEVEN
BRIDAL ORBITS (Matthew: 26;13, Mark: 14;9 John 12;3) OF
THE S'FEROT OR MYSTICAL SHPERES OF THE SOUL THAT CORRESPOND TO
THE SEVEN ATTRIBUTES OF GOD. (JEREMIAH 31:22)
ALSO SEVEN IS USED IN REFERENCE TO BRIDES OR GROOMS
The Seven Spirits of God
The interpretation of the "seven Spirits" in the book of
Revelation is a reference to the Holy Spirit. John refers to the
"seven Spirits" in Revelation 1:4; 3:1; 4:5 and 5:6. The Jews
"talked of the seven angels of the presence," 1 Enoch 90:21.
John refers to seven angels of the seven churches (1:20). The
reference to the "seven Spirits" is a reference to seven holy
angels before the throne of God. Since seven is often used as a
number of completion, or perfection, in the Bible (and in the
book of Revelation in particular) it is thought that the "seven"
churches are representative of all churches, each of which has a
share in God's Holy Spirit in order to carry out its ministry to
the world.
Isaiah 11:2. The Greek translation of this verse in the
Septuagint reads: "The Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon Him,
the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel
and might, the spirit of knowledge and piety; by this spirit He
shall be filled with the fear of God." In this view, the "seven
Spirits" of Revelation refer to this sevenfold ministry of the
Holy Spirit, particularly evidenced in the life of Jesus.
The Seven Archangels In postbiblical Judaism -- especially in
apocalyptic literature, which describes God's dramatic
intervention in history -- seven angels, sometimes called
archangels, lead the heavenly hosts that in the Talmud (an
authoritative compendium of Jewish law, lore, and commentary)
are viewed as countless. These seven, noted in the noncanonical
First Book of Enoch (chapter 20), are: Uriel (leader of the
heavenly hosts and guardian of sheol, the underworld); Raphael
(guardian of human spirits); Raguel (avenger of God against the
world of lights); Michael (guardian of Israel); Sariel (avenger
of the spirits, "who sin in the spirit"); Gabriel (ruler of
paradise, the seraphim, and the cherubim); and Remiel, also
called Jeremiel (guardian of the souls in sheol). Of these, two
(Michael and Gabriel) are mentioned in the Old Testament and two
others (Raphael and Uriel) in the Apocrypha, a collection of
noncanonical works...
REVELATIONS 8:1 WHEN THE LAMB BROKE OPEN THE SEVENTH SEAL THERE
WAS SILENCE IN HEAVEN FOR ABOUT HALF AN HOUR. THEN I SAW THE
SEVEN ANGELS WHO STAND BEFORE GOD, AND THEY WERE GIVEN SEVEN
TRUMPETS.
THE SEVEN SORROWS OF MARY (PROVERBS: 9;1 WISDOM HAS BUILT HER
HOUSE, SHE HAS HEWN OUT HER SEVEN PILLARS;
REVELATIONS 1:20 "AS FOR THE MYSTERY OF THE SEVEN STARS WHICH
YOU SAW IN MY RIGHT HAND, AND THE SEVEN GOLDEN LAMPSTANDS: THE
SEVEN STARS ARE THE SEVEN ANGELS OF THE SEVEN CHURCHES, AND THE
SEEN LAMPSTANDS ARE THE SEVEN CHURCHES.
Revelation 1:4 John to the seven churches which are in Asia:
Grace be unto you, and peace, from him which is, and which was,
and which is to come; and from the seven Spirits which are
before his throne;
5 And from Jesus Christ, who is the faithful witness, and the
first begotten of the dead, and the prince of the kings of the
earth. Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in
his own blood,
6 And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father; to
him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.
Revelation 3:1 And unto the angel of the church in Sardis write;
These things saith he that hath the seven Spirits of God, and
the seven stars;
Revelation 4:2 And immediately I was in the spirit: and, behold,
a throne was set in heaven, and one sat on the throne.
3 And he that sat was to look upon like a jasper and a sardine
stone: and there was a rainbow round about the throne, in sight
like unto an emerald.
4 And round about the throne were four and twenty seats: and
upon the seats I saw four and twenty elders sitting, clothed in
white raiment; and they had on their heads crowns of gold.
5 And out of the throne proceeded lightnings and thunderings and
voices: and there were seven lamps of fire burning before the
throne, which are the seven Spirits of God.
Revelation 5:6 And I beheld, and, lo, in the midst of the throne
and of the four beasts, and in the midst of the elders, stood a
Lamb as it had been slain, having seven horns and seven eyes,
which are the seven Spirits of God sent forth into all the
earth.
LUKE 17:4 "AND IF HE SINS AGAINST YOU SEVEN TIMES A DAY AND
RETURNS TO YOU SEVEN TIMES, SAYING, 'I REPENT,' FORGIVE HIM."
THE SECRET OF SABBATH
The Secret of Sabbath: She is Sabbath! United in the secret of
One to draw down upon Her the secret of One. The prayer for the
entrance of Sabbath: The holy Throne of Glory is united in the
secret of One, prepared for the High Holy King to rest upon Her.
When Sabbath enters She is alone, separated from the Other Side,
all judgments removed from Her. Basking in the oneness of holy
light, She is crowned over and over to face the Holy King. All
powers of wrath and masters of judgment flee from Her. Her face
shines with a light from beyond; She is crowned below by the
holy people, and all of them are crowned with new souls. Then
the beginning of prayer to bless Her with joy and beaming faces:
Barekbu ET YHVH* ha-Mevorakh, "Bless ET YHVH, the-Blessed One,"
ET YHVH, blessing Her first.
Revelation talks about the seven Spirits of God in four places.
These are found in Rev.1:4, 3:1, 4:5, and in 5:6. One of the
places it speaks of the Seven Spirits is in the 4th Chapter the
5th verse. tells us that the seven lamps of fire burning before
the throne are the seven Spirits of God. Then in the 5th chapter
the 6th verse the seven horns and seven eyes on Jesus, who is
portrayed as a lamb, are the seven Spirits of God.
God is referred to as a Spirit many times in the Old Testament.
The power of God to replicate himself as Seven Spirits or Eyes
that "go forth into the Earth" as stated in Rev 5:6 (the last
mention of the 7 Spirits) comes straight from the Book of
Zechariah ...
"This is The Word of the LORD to Zerub'babel ... Not by might,
nor by Power, but by my Spirit, says the LORD of Hosts ... These
Seven are the Eyes of the LORD, which range through the whole
earth" (Zech 4:6,10). Seven spirits = seven lamps = seven eyes.
The only other biblical text where seven lamps, seven eyes and
the Spirit are connected is Zechariah 4! Revelation 11 provides
evidence that John knows this passage and has appropriated the
symbolism of the two olive trees. This strengthens the
consideration that John might be alluding to Zechariah 4 when he
mentions the seven spirits. What is John's description of the
Holy Spirit as seven spirits trying to tell us? First of all,
seven is the number of fullness in Scripture. Thus, John may be
referring to the fullness of the Spirit at work. But he actually
wants to say more than that. He wants to lead his readers to
consider Zechariah 4 as the proper context for the understanding
of their current situation. Zechariah 4 is well-known to many
readers because of the famous quote: "not by might, nor by power
but by my Spirit" (v. 6).
7 GIFTS OF THE HOLY SPIRIT
Isaiah 11:2: And the spirit of the LORD shall rest upon him, the
spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and
might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the LORD;
Isaiah 11:2 - Seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit: Wisdom,
Understanding, Counsel, Fortitude, Knowledge, Piety and Fear of
the Lord.
1st Cor 12:8 - Wisdom, Knowledge, Faith, Healing, Miraculous
Powers, Prophecy, Discernment, Tongues and Interpretation of
Tongues.
Proverbs 8:12 I wisdom dwell with prudence, and find out
knowledge of witty inventions.
13 The fear of the LORD is to hate evil: pride, and arrogancy,
and the evil way, and the froward mouth, do I hate.
14 Counsel is mine, and sound wisdom: I am understanding; I have
strength.
15 By me kings reign, and princes decree justice.
16 By me princes rule, and nobles, even all the judges of the
earth.
Isaiah 11:2 And the spirit of the LORD shall rest upon him, the
spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and
might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the LORD;
3 And shall make him of quick understanding in the fear of the
LORD: and he shall not judge after the sight of his eyes,
neither reprove after the hearing of his ears:
4 But with righteousness shall he judge the poor, and reprove
with equity for the meek of the earth: and he shall smite the
earth: with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his
lips shall he slay the wicked.
other biblical references also include : the spirit of grace,
the spirit of supplications, the spirit of judgment, the spirit
of holiness, the Spirit of adoption, the spirit of meekness, the
spirit of faith, the spirit of power, the spirit of love, the
spirit of a sound mind, the spirit of glory, the spirit of
truth, the spirit of prophecy.
These are the seven facets or manifestations of the Holy Spirit
in the believer's life:
1. The Spirit of Justification: "...you were justified in the
name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God." We are all
justified because of God's grace and by our faith, and it is the
Spirit of God who draws us and empowers us to acknowledge Jesus
as our Lord and Savior (1 Corinthians 12:3). This is the first
work of the Spirit when one is born again.
2. The Spirit of Sanctification: 2 Thessalonians 2:13, "...God
from the beginning chose you for salvation through
sanctification by the Spirit and belief in the truth."
Sanctification is the process of God's grace by which the
believer is separated from sin, purified by life lived in the
Spirit. (Galatians 5:16, 25 and Romans 8:1-14) The fruit of the
Spirit will begin to manifest as we yield to the process of
sanctification.
3. The Spirit of Life: Romans 8:2, "For the law of the Spirit of
life in Christ Jesus has made me free from the law of sin and
death." This is the Spirit of adoption (Romans 8:15) which makes
us the sons of God (Romans 8:16-19). We can now live in the
resurrection power of Christ where the operation of the gifts of
the Spirit cause our lives to become supernatural. The Spirit
will give life to our mortal bodies. Healing and strength will
come into our bodies of flesh (Romans 8:11) as well as giving us
a glorified body in that day.
4. The Spirit of Truth: John 14:17 "The Spirit of truth, whom
the world cannot receive, because it neither sees Him nor knows
Him; but you know Him, for He dwells with you and will be in
you." The truth will set us free. The truth will bring
revelation knowledge as we are taught by the Holy Spirit. The
Spirit of truth will reveal Jesus to us (John 15:26). Vision
will be given to lead us into all truth and reveal the kingdom
to us. Deception will be removed, and the lies destroyed.
5. The Spirit of Wisdom: Ephesians 1:17, "That the God of our
Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give to you the
spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him." Not
only will the Spirit give us a knowledge of Jesus, but it will
give us insight into His mind and what He is doing (1
Corinthians 2:6-16). The Holy Spirit is our teacher (John
14:26).
6. The Spirit of Deliverance: Matthew 12:28 "But if I cast out
demons by the Spirit of God, surely the kingdom of God has come
upon you." It is by the power of the Holy Spirit that we are
delivered from sin and by that same Spirit demons are cast out
and the powers of darkness are defeated.
7. The Spirit of Prayer: Romans 8:26, "Likewise the Spirit also
helps in our weaknesses. For we do not know what we should pray
for as we ought, but the Spirit Himself makes intercession for
us with groanings which cannot be uttered." Ephesians 6:18 tells
us that all prayer should be done in the Spirit.
Seven Spirits of the Lord – Expressions of the Anointing Isaiah
11 1There shall come forth a Rod from the stem of Jesse, And a
Branch shall grow out of his roots. 2The Spirit of the LORD
shall rest upon Him, The Spirit of wisdom and understanding, The
Spirit of counsel and might, The Spirit of knowledge and of the
fear of the LORD. A branch shall grow out of his roots. Spirit
of the Lord (1) Spirit of wisdom (2) and understanding (3)
Spirit of counsel (4) and might (5) Spirit of knowledge (6) and
fear of the Lord (7) 7 Spirits of God: Revelation 1 4 John, to
the seven churches which are in Asia: Grace to you and peace
from Him who is and who was and who is to come, and from the
seven Spirits who are before His throne... Revelation 4 5And
from the throne proceeded lightnings, thunderings, and voices.
Seven lamps of fire were burning before the throne, which are
the seven Spirits of God. These seven spirits of God describe
the different kinds of expression of the anointing. We as
believers, who have the anointing upon us by the Spirit of God,
should be expressing that anointing in all of these ways. As
described in John 7:38, there are different rivers of the
anointing that flow out from us, represented by the spirits of
God which flow out from the throne of God. We need to let each
of these expressions flow out of our lives to others: Spirit of
the LORD The breath of life of the LORD. Represents the total
authority and rule of God, and the very life of God, the essence
of who God is. We need to express God and pour out the life of
God by the anointing, with the authority he has given us Wisdom
An ability to discern by the Spirit of God. An understanding of
the right course of action. Skill in carrying that action out.
We can discern the ways of God and the actions He desires and
perform them with His skill. Understanding A thorough
acquaintance with the ways of God. Expertness in the practice of
God’s works. We can be totally familiar with the way God
operates and be able to cooperate expertly in that operation
because we know it and are familiar with it. Counsel Having
consulted with God, knowing His plan of action, and having the
ability to give right advice to others concerning it. We can, by
the anointing, be so thoroughly understanding of God’s character
and ways, that we can correctly instruct and advise others on
plans of action. We also can receive God’s counsel on issues in
our own lives. Might Strength, boldness, intensity, energy. The
power, authority, and resources of God. Also, skill in battle.
Believers by the anointing have as a tool of the Spirit the
might of God to accomplish God’s desires. The Holy Ghost is a
man of war, and believers can be skilful in spiritual battle,
exercising the might of the Spirit. Knowledge Knowledge,
perception, skill. Knowing God and His ways with familiarity
gained through experience. We as anointed believers can know the
things and secrets of God. We can have an intimate, familiar
knowing of Him through His word and by His Spirit. Fear of the
LORD Awesome respect and reverence of the person of God. We as
believers by the anointing will develop a profound adoring awed
respect for God, and instill that in others through the
expression of the anointing Make him of quick understanding
Isaiah 11: 3And shall make him of quick understanding in the
fear of the LORD: and he shall not judge after the sight of his
eyes, neither reprove after the hearing of his ears: 4But with
righteousness shall he judge the poor, and reprove with equity
for the meek of the earth: and he shall smite the earth: with
the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips shall he
slay the wicked. A. Quickens the mind by the anointing By the
anointing our minds are made sharp and discerning B. Not judge
after eyes By the anointing we will be able to rightly judge and
discern with God’s wisdom, even when the facts are difficult or
deceptive. C. Not reproving after hearing of the ears By the
anointing we can lovingly correct, not being judgmental or
critical from what we’ve heard from others, but knowing God’s
heart for each person. D. With righteousness shall he judge the
poor By the anointing we will have a right attitude toward those
experiencing hardship. E. Reprove with equity By the anointing
we will be able to discern and act according to God’s law of
justice, free from bias or favoritism of the flesh – judging
rightly with the mind of God. D. Seeing and Hearing by the
Spirit John 5 30I can of Myself do nothing. As I hear, I judge;
and My judgment is righteous, because I do not seek My own will
but the will of the Father who sent Me. Jesus did not go by what
he heard and saw in the natural (Isaiah 11:3). He was motivated
and supplied by the anointing to know what God desired to do,
desire to do it, and carry out that work effectively in the
power of God. He heard and saw what God wanted to do, and did
it. So should we. We need to exercise the seeing of the Spirit,
and the hearing of the Spirit, in our lives. We can hear from
God, know what He wants to do, know how He wants us to do it,
and be confident to carry it out. E. Feeling the Anointing John
8 48 Then the Jews answered and said to Him, "Do we not say
rightly that You are a Samaritan and have a demon?" These Jews
had no feeling for the anointing – they could not even tell the
difference between the Spirit of God and the devil. We can feel
after the anointing, and know and discern the presence and the
direction of God. As a result of the anointing: Isaiah 11
5Righteousness shall be the belt of His loins, and faithfulness
the belt of His waist. As a result of the anointing, we will
live lives that are right before God. We will be faithful to all
His desires and ways. We will be Spirit-filled and
Spirit-taught! We can express the anointing of God in every one
of these areas!
The Seven Healings We hear in the Gospels about many healings,
indeed, of crowds of the sick and needy gathering to receive
Jesus' healing touch or glance.(2) Only with Mary Magdalene do
we hear of seven demons ejected from one person. Usually people
have concluded, "She sinned more deeply, so she had more demons
to eject." We have a different point of view. The number seven
gives the clue. Since ancient times, spiritual science has
understood that human beings have seven energy centers through
the body. These "wheels of energy" are called "chakras" in
Sanskrit. One can trace this understanding from the earliest
teachings in India, into the cultures of Babylon and Assyria,
then into the culture of Egypt. From thence, it came through the
traditions of the Hebrews -- one can see many references to the
seven-fold structure of spiritual worlds in Hebrew scriptures
and thought, which they picked up from their captivities in
Babylon and Egypt.(3) "Wisdom (Sophia) has built her house; she
has hewn her seven pillars" (Proverbs 9) refers directly to the
seven-fold foundations of our being. Today this awareness is the
focus of the spiritual science of various healers who work with
the seven chakras and seven levels.(4) You can see this notion
of the seven levels in the Hebrew menorah, where the six arms of
the candle-holders come up and around the central light of
spirit. The fact that Mary Magdalene was released of seven
devils makes her unique in Christian lore. Yet, how was this
fact dealt with? With suspicion, fear, and scorn. The stigmata
of her past -- having had seven devils in her -- became more
important than her cleansed state. And she seemed to gather up
the sins of other women named in the Bible, i.e., Luke's
'sinner' and the woman accused of adultery. Around the year 600,
Pope Gregory "the Great" declared that Mary Magdalene was the
same as the unnamed prostitute in the Bible, therefore one ought
to hold her as the penitent whore. In his Homily 33, similar to
the Executive Orders used by Presidents to define policy, he
stated: She whom Luke calls the sinful woman, whom John calls
Mary, we believe to be the Mary from whom seven devils were
ejected according to Mark. And what did these seven devils
signify, if not all the vices?... It is clear, brothers, that
the woman previously used the unguent to perfume her flesh in
forbidden acts.(5) In this he designated Mary Magdalene the
whore, which he amended to become the "penitent whore," the
woman in tears seeking forgiveness for her sins. This
designation has shrouded her in a cloak of shame, and kept her
wisdom hidden from us. However, a strong case can be made about
the value her "repentance" has had through the centuries in
inspiring women (and men) to find hope when they were truly down
and out. Note that the Greek word interpreted as "sinner" in
this Gospel was "harmartolos". It can be translated to mean one
who has transgressed or placed herself outside the law-or quite
simply, one who was not Jewish. And it was used in that manner
elsewhere in the scriptures. The word itself does not imply a
street walker or a prostitute. One of the first big realizations
to occur when researching this story is that there is no direct
reference anywhere in the Bible to Magdalene as a prostitute.
Only in 1969 did the Catholic Church officially repeal Gregory's
labeling as "whore," admitting their error, though Mary
Magdalene as the penitent whore has remained in public teachings
of all Christian sects. Like a small error notice in the back
pages of a newspaper, the Church's correction goes unnoticed,
while the initial and incorrect article continues to influence
the readers. But let us remember that she was healed by Jesus
Christ of the seven demons, the aspects that cloud our vision
and energy at each of our seven centers. Presumably, she no
longer had the seven deadly sins -- pride, lust, envy, anger,
covetousness, gluttony, and sloth. In their place she had the
corresponding virtues.(6) She had cleared the way for "the seven
virgins of light."(7) This purification makes her the most
thoroughly sanctified person mentioned in the New Testament.
Imagine this for a moment: completely cleansed of prejudice and
old grudges, fogs of illusion, hereditary obstacles to health,
all desires.... If she had tears after these healings it was
because she could now truly see the spiritual truth that worked
in all things. She could see the barbarity of other human
beings, as well as the transcendent beauty of Jesus Christ's
healings and teachings. In modern terms, her "heart was open."
Mary's elevated state may explain why she took on such a strong
role in the early century texts of the Nag Hammadi library, the
Dead Sea Scrolls, and the Pistis Sophia. The latter text was
found in Egypt, where the secret teachings of Mary Magdalene
took refuge from the political decisions being made about the
form of the Christian Church. According to that doctrine, in the
forty-days teaching after the resurrection, Magdalene took the
lead in the conversations with the risen Christ. Indeed, at one
point, she alone follows Christ's questions, while the others
have fallen into a stupor, overwhelmed by the power of the
spiritual teachings being given. There exists a remarkable
similarity between Ancient Egyptian theology and the text of the
Pistis Sophia. Perhaps there is more to the mystery of her
identity than meets the eye. The alabaster jar and the anointing
of Jesus' head and feet "As he sat at table, a woman came with
an alabaster jar of very expensive perfume, made of pure nard.
She broke it open and poured the perfume on his head." (Mark
14:3) Our naïve reporter would look at this scene and might
wonder, "How is it that someone whose audience is sought by so
many lets this woman into his presence? What is she doing? Oh
well, he teaches about sinning, so let's go on to the next words
of Jesus." Yet in this act, Mary Magdalene shows much about her
identity. The first key has to do with the substance alabaster.
These vessels were carved from a soft form of calcium carbonate
from old ocean deposits. Typically white and partly translucent,
these jars were costly, as it takes time to carve the interior
of a stone jar. They were used in the funerary rites of Egypt
for hundreds of years to carry unguents as well as the organs of
the high priests and royalty. The Gospel of Thomas supplements
that of Mark to help fill in some of the blanks. Jesus Christ
makes it very clear that, in this act of anointing, Mary
Magdalene "helps prepare me for my burial."(8) From this we
begin to see a pattern emerge -- an integration with the
funerary practices that had become highly developed in Egypt,
especially in the mystery centers of Heliopolis and Alexandria,
which were quite active at the time of Jesus Christ. [Recall he
had spent his childhood in Egypt, and some say he studied in
Heliopolis.(9)] There was then a science of anointing with
special substances to assist the spirits of true kings to pass
through the seven veils of death to the Father-Ground. Indeed,
these included seven (and sometimes fourteen, or twice seven)
ointments to assist in this transition. In the case of Mary
Magdalene, we see in the surviving gospels only two of these,
once at Simeon's house and also what she carries to the tomb on
the morning of Resurrection. How can it be that Christians have
ignored the fact that the word "Christ" means "anointed one,"
and have pushed the female minister of this rite into a dark
corner? Interestingly, in Mark 14:9, Jesus remarks, "Verily I
say unto you, wheresoever this gospel shall be preached
throughout the whole world, what she has done here will be told
in remembrance of her." How is it that all Christians do not
hold and revere this memorial, so clearly marked by their
Teacher? Why do most people know her as the reformed prostitute,
rather than for her deep understanding of the thresholds of the
spirit world? And the following question must also rise to the
surface: By what authority did she have the right to anoint him?
Modern Christians will find it strange to consider that Mary
Magdalene may have acted within the tradition of the priestesses
of Isis, who for centuries had assisted in the passages from
spirit into life through birth and back into spirit through
death. Might the gold, frankincense, and myrrh brought to Jesus'
birth have come from this tradition? Might the spikenard have
been one of these substances meant to smooth the transition to
death? The Isis tradition was alive and well at this time in
Palestine, as was that of the Hebrew forms of the divine
feminine, in the form of Asherah and Ishtar.(10) Look also at
the importance of healing oil in modern Christian practice,
which picks up on the older traditions which have funneled
through it. Jesus Christ taught how to make and use these oils,
and this continues today in various denominations of
Christianity.(11) Oils are well known to receive and carry the
impress of special aromas, and, in the case of healing oils, the
impress of healing thoughts
The concept of the Triple Goddess associated with the Seventh
Spheres found in the Virgin Mother can be seen in our Lady of
Sorrows
Mary is equivalent to the Virgin daughter of the Father, in
other words, the Higher Sophia. The other aspect is the Lower
Sophia or redeemed prostitute/sister as embodied by Mary
Magdalen, the beloved disciple.
Mary has been worshiped as Our Lady of Sorrows since or before
the 3rd Century although the Catholic Church did not formalize
this as one of Mary's titles until the 14th Century. The Church
has formally recognized The Seven Sorrows of Mary as: 1. The
prophecy of Simeon that her heart would be pierced with swords
(Luke 2:34-35); 2. The Flight into Egypt when her infant son's
life was threatened by Herod (Matthew 2:13-21); 3. The Loss of
Jesus for Three Days when he was a twelve-year-old boy (Luke
2:41-50); 4. Jesus' Ascent to Calvary bearing the cross (John
19:17); 5. The Crucifixion and Death of Jesus (John 19:18-30);
6. Jesus Taken Down from the Cross (John 19:39-40); 7. Jesus
Laid in the Tomb (John 19:39-42). However, people (especially
women) around the world throughout the ages have been happy to
share their sorrow with Mary and to identify their sorrow with
hers.
Seven in reference to Mary Magdalene means that rather then
being just a lost nobody once riddled with demons; She is at
once both the historically fallen and now redeemed Church
(Bride), without spot or blemish and in fact complete in
perfection and full of grace, she is Apostle to the Apostles and
the true Bride! She is Queen!
IF IT SEEMS OUTRAGOUS TO CLAIM THAT JESUS OUR KING SHOULD MARRY
A USED WOMAN, REMEMBER THAT THE POINT IS NOT WHAT MAN DESIRES
BUT WHAT GOD HAS SUFFERED IN RELATION TO HIS BRIDE THE CHURCH.
Then there is the possibility that Mary was a harlot of sorts in
that she was a Samaritan who had been married to other men and
was currently living with a man outside of marriage when she
meet Jesus. This could easily be associated with seven devils to
the Hebrews. If Jesus married such a woman it would be enough to
send Judas to the high priest and good reason not to include it
in the gospel stories. But it is exactly what God was saying
throughout the Old Testament about his relationship with City
Zion. This is illustrated in the book of Amos where God commands
Hosea to take a harlot for his wife.
Let's consider how God made the first woman for the first Adam.
This account will tell us something about how God will provide a
bride for the last Adam, for Jesus. So how does the Father make
the bride? What is the wisdom of God in creating the woman? He
takes Adam, who has been made perfect and whole and brings upon
him a profound, a deep sleep, a deathlike sleep. Although Adam
is still innocent, he has committed no crime, he's broken no
law, he is innocent, nonetheless in his innocence he is wounded
by Father God. Father God pierces his side and takes from his
side that substance with which He creates the bride of Adam's
delight. He creates the woman in all of her loveliness and
purity and perfection. Then He heals Adam of his wounding, and
awakens him to behold his bride in all of her beauty and
innocence and loveliness. That is the wisdom of God in creating
the woman for man. And in doing that in Eden, Father God was
showing His Son in glory, the Son destined to become a man how
He would provide a bride for Him. And how does He do that? John
tells us that Father God brought the New Adam to a cross. And
this New Adam too was innocent, yet He too must be wounded. And
Jesus too had to endure the sleep of death and a fearful
wounding. And so He willingly surrendered Himself. He knowingly
bowed His head in death, lowered His head in death, knowing that
after Father God had brought upon Him the sleep of death, His
side too must be opened. And out of that wounding will come the
water and the blood. Father God will take the blood for the
bride's purchase. The water will be for her purity. And God will
fashion a community that will be the bride of Christ from the
wounding of His innocent Son. And so God will put His Son into a
garden again. And He will heal His Son of His wounding. And then
He will raise Jesus, the New Adam, to life again in a garden.
The first Adam made a garden into a grave but this Adam will
make the grave into a garden. And so all of heaven is saying on
resurrection morning, "Who is she that will be chosen by Father
God to represent the new Eve? Who is the one who for beauty and
for purity can represent Eve as a type and an anti-type? Who is
it that Father God in His wisdom will select to represent Eve in
all of her purity, one made suitable for the New Adam in all His
glory? And when the Lord awakens from death, His side, having
been healed so that his bride like Eve can recognize Him by His
scar, when Jesus awakens from death and comes forth from the
earth like Adam of old, the woman that He sees, the one selected
to represent the bride of Christ, the new Eve, is Mary
Magdalene. And Jesus calls her by that glorious name that Adam
had used of Eve when he first saw her. "She shall be called
woman," said Adam. And Jesus says, "Woman, why do you weep?" And
Mary recognizes Jesus when He calls her by name. And she
embraces him and wants to cleave unto him, but it is not yet the
appointed time. Our Lord Christ will respect all of the
provisions of the law. It is not His wedding day. And it is a
spiritual marriage to the entire body of the elect to which He
has been given. He looks ahead to that day yet future when all
of us have been cleansed of our defilements and, as one great
body, one glorious bride, we with Mary will be given by Father
God to the hand of His beloved Son, to the nail pierced hand, of
our precious Lord. That is the second portrait of Mary,
according to the evangelist. Mary is a new Eve. The evangelist
has already shown us how Mary is like the high priest by the way
the evangelist frames his gospel. Mary is the one who is like
the high priest. He likewise frames her portrait again, and she
is like the new Eve, like Eve before the fall. Her virginity and
her purity have been restored to her, don't you see? In the
natural that would be impossible. But the God of the
supernatural can accomplish the impossible. What an amazing
portrait, two amazing portraits actually, of Mary Magdalene and
her role in the history of redemption! But the evangelists'
picture of Mary is still not yet finished. There are other
frames to show you how they regarded Mary Magdalene. This
morning I only have time to share one of them, one final frame.
One other picture of Mary Magdalene! And what is that? God in
His providence had ordained that the birth of our Lord would
pre-figure His resurrection. Did you ever notice that? The
nativity of our Lord is a picture of the resurrection of Christ.
Everything is arranged in the providence of God. No one could
have cunningly devised such a "fable." It was all in the good
providence of God! What is the account of the birth of our Lord?
And how does this story anticipate the resurrection of Jesus
from death? The nativity of Jesus is a story about a miracle.
Here is a Child who is coming forth from the womb of a virgin, a
womb where "no man had lain." This Child comes forth from the
womb of a virgin. What child ever came forth, could ever come
forth from the womb of a virgin? It could never happen in the
natural world. A womb where no man had lain! And so they took
that Child, when He was born, and they wrapped Him in swaddling
bands. They wrap His body up entire in swaddling clothes. And
they laid him in a manger. Now to see what the manger represents
you have to understand that mangers in the ancient Orient were
made of hollowed out limestone block. They weren't the wooden
mangers that we see in our manger scenes. They were hollowed out
limestone. So Mary and Joseph took this Baby and wrapped Him up
like a mummy and set Him in this hollowed out stone box. What
does that look like to the eyes of faith? And consider the
story. Who is it that's doing that? This is a story about a Mary
and a Joseph. Mary of Galilee and Joseph of Bethlehem care for
this Baby is such a manner, just before He must receive the
bloody wound of circumcision. Moreover, the nativity story is
the account of those who come from the East, the Magi, who bring
gifts of frankincense and myrrh, the spices and oils that
represent death. Why death at a time of birth and celebration?
And it is a time when the angels come to earth and they
celebrate God's goodness in giving this Son. They teach us to
sing for joy for the news that the Son of God has been born into
the world. What is God intending in this story of the nativity
of Christ? At the resurrection, at our Lord's new birth, He
comes forth from a tomb where "no man had lain." It is a
"virgin" tomb. Jesus had been wrapped in the cloth bands of
death, the linen wrappings of burial, having received the bloody
wound of the cross. This time it is the women who bring Him
spices. Our Lord had said to the disciples, "When you see this
happening, you will lament and weep like a woman when her labor
comes upon her. But then of a sudden your weeping will be turned
to joy for delight that a boy is born into the world." That's
how our Lord described the sorrow and joy that would attend His
death and resurrection. What is the picture at the garden tomb?
Consider the account of the tomb on resurrection morning. There
are angels announcing good news to men. Here is Christ coming
forth from the virgin tomb, laying aside His grave clothes. It
is a story of Joseph of Arimathea, most particularly, and of
Mary Magdalene. And Mary is bringing spices. And Mary comes in
great sorrow. She comes with many tears and with anguish of
soul. But then the word of the angels comes to Mary, "Mary, He
has no need of spices, and you have no need of tears!" Mary's
great sorrow suddenly turns to great joy when she sees her Lord,
when she sees her precious Jesus given to her. What a
redemption! The Magdalene is the new Mary of Nazareth! Three
pictures! These are but three of the pictures drawn by our
evangelists to show us various aspects of the role of Mary in
the history of redemption. Mary Magdalene is given the honor of
the high priest of Israel. That is her place and her privilege.
All the defilements of the devil are done. She is made into the
image of one who wore on his forehead not the shameless brow of
the whore, who had forgotten to blush for shame, but rather
"holiness to the Lord!" That is Mary Magdalene! She is given the
privilege of representing the bride of Christ for the new Adam.
All of this is to speak again of a great purity restored to one
who had been greatly defiled. And lastly, she is given the great
privilege of being the Galilean Mary who witnesses the new birth
of our Lord from the tomb where no man had lain. Once again,
speaking of a spiritual virginity that was like Mary before her,
and that had, in God's good providence, been restored. That was
but some of what Mary Magdalene witnessed on that first Easter
morning. These are but three of a number of such frames the
Gospel writers use to tell us her story.
So then Mary is both the fallen and redeemed church; the apple
of God's eye.
Wisdom hath builded Her house, she hath hewn out her seven
pillars. PROV 9:1
Is the feminine element lacking in our perception of the Divine
because we fear so great a beauty? A beauty which so
exasperates, as to be overwhelming (Song of So)? Solomon is
renowned for the splendor of his reign, his wisdom, the power of
the magic of the Key of Solomon, and his appreciation for and
understanding of nature. "And Solomon's wisdom excelled all the
wisdom of all the children of the east country and all the
children of Egypt. For he was wiser than all men ... Solomon's
beautiful black bride the Shulamite, ( Song 1:5 ) reflects the
Goddess of the mystic darkness at, the fertile garden-paradise
of the Oriental kings. "Now when the Queen of Sheba heard of the
fame of Solomon concerning the name of the Lord, she came to
test him with hard questions. She came to Jerusalem with a very
great retinue, with camels bearing spices, and very much gold,
and precious stones; and when she came in to Solomon, she told
him all that was on her mind. And Solomon answered all her
questions; there was nothing hidden from the king which he did
not explain to her. (1 Kings 10:8) "And King Solomon gave to the
queen of Sheba all that she desired, whatever she asked besides
what was given her by the bounty of King Solomon. So she turned
and went back to her own land, with her servants" (I Kings 10: 1
3).
The song of songs, which is Solomon's. ( So 1:1-7 )
Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth: for thy love is
better than wine. Because of the savor of thy good ointments thy
name is as ointment poured forth, therefore do the virgins love
thee. Draw me, we will run after thee: the king hath brought me
into his chambers: we will be glad and rejoice in thee, we will
remember thy love more than wine: the upright love thee. I am
black, but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem, as the tents of
Kedar, as the curtains of Solomon. Look not upon me, because I
am black, because the sun hath looked upon me: my mother's
children were angry with me; they made me the keeper of the
vineyards; but mine own vineyard have I not kept. Tell me, O
thou whom my soul loveth, where thou feedest, where thou makest
thy flock to rest at noon: for why should I be as one that
turneth aside by the flocks of thy companions?
Observe the sweet titles with which the heavenly Solomon with
intense affection addresses His bride (The Church, as the body
of Christ -- which mirrors the possession of Wisdom/Shekhina by
Yaweh. ) "My sister, one near to me by ties of nature, partaker
of the same sympathies. My spouse, nearest and dearest, united
to me by the tenderest bands of love; my sweet companion, part
of my own self. My sister, by my Incarnation, which makes me
bone of thy bone and flesh of thy flesh; my spouse, by heavenly
betrothal, in which I have espoused thee unto myself in
righteousness. My sister, whom I knew of old, and over whom I
watched from her earliest infancy; my spouse, taken from among
the daughters, embraced by arms of love, and affianced unto me
for ever. " ~ Beautifully paraphrased by Charles Spurgeon See
how true it is that our royal Kinsman is not ashamed of us, for
He dwells with manifest delight upon this two-fold relationship.
We have the word "my" twice in our version; as if Christ dwelt
with rapture on His possession of His Church. Wisdom, the Female
Presence of God states: "My delights were with the sons of men,"
(Proverbs 8:31) because those sons of men were His/Her own
chosen ones. He, the Shepherd, sought the sheep, because they
were His sheep; He has gone about "to seek and to save that
which was lost," because that which was lost was His long before
it was lost to itself or lost to Him. The church is the
exclusive portion of Her Lord; none else may claim a
partnership, or pretend to share Her love. Jesus, your church
delights to have it so! Let every believing soul drink solace
out of these wells. Soul! Christ is near to you in ties of
relationship; Christ is dear to you in bonds of marriage union,
and you are dear to Him; behold He grasps both of your hands
with both His own, saying, "My sister, my spouse." Mark the two
sacred holdfasts by which the Lord gets such a double hold of
you that He neither can nor will ever let you go. Be not, O
beloved, slow to return the hallowed flame of His love. What a
beautiful Mystery uncovered--God and His Shekhina; Christ and
His Church!
The ancients counted seven planets, thus arranged; the Moon,
Mercury, Venus, the Sun, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. There were
seven heavens and seven spheres of these planets; these
correspond to the seven lamps of the golden candelabrum in the
temple. To return to its source in the Infinite, the human soul,
the ancients held, had to ascend as it had descended, through
the seven spheres. From Egypt and Persia the new Platonists
borrowed the idea, and the Gnostics received it from them, that
man, in his terrestrial career, is successively under the
influence of the Moon, of Mercury, of Venus, of the Sun, of
Mars, of Jupiter, and of Saturn, until he finally reaches the
Elysian Fields; an idea again symbolized in the Seven Seals. And
circling is thought of as the way the bride enters the groom's
s'ferot; the mystical spheres of his soul that correspond to the
seven lower attributes of God. In the ancient world these orbits
correspond to the seven spheres in the heavens and likewise are
reflected in the seven nether spheres of the sea. The two most
famous divisions of the Heavens, by seven, which is that of the
planets, and by twelve, which is that of the signs, are found on
the religious monuments of all the people of the ancient world.
Because the ancients believed in the real existence of the great
sphere of the stars, its various parts-- such as its axis and
poles-- played a central role in the cosmology of the time. In
particular, one important attribute of the sphere of the stars
was much better known in antiquity than it is today: namely, its
equator, known as the "celestial equator. Just as the earth's
equator is defined as a circle around the earth equidistant from
the north and south poles, so the celestial equator was
understood as a circle around the sphere of the stars
equidistant from the sphere's poles. The circle of the celestial
equator was seen as having a particularly special importance
because of the two points where it crosses the circle of the
zodiac: for these two points are the equinoxes, that is, the
places where the sun, in its movement along the zodiac, appears
to be on the first day of spring and the first day of autumn.
Thus the celestial equator was responsible for defining the
seasons, and hence had a very concrete significance in addition
to its abstract astronomical meaning.
She is the Gift.
THE SABBATH
The Sabbath, to which we now turn our attention, is an
exceptional figure among the female divinities of Judaism. All
the numerous images (Asherah, Astarte, Anath, Lilith, Naamah)
were originally either foreign goddesses and demons or had their
beginnings in Jewish divine attributes which were conceptualized
and personified (Shekhina, Matronit). As against them, the
Sabbath is a unique example of a day of the week-or more
precisely, the name and idea of such a day-having been developed
into a female numen and endowed with the character of virgin,
bride, queen, and goddess.
The Biblical name Sabbath (Shabbar), designating the seventh dav
of the week, seems to have had some connection with the Akkadian
shabattu or shapartu, the name for the feast of the full moon.
Yet neither in Akkadian nor in any other ancient Near Eastern
religion was there a weekly feast and day of rest in any manner
comparable to the Sabbath.
Following the end of the evening prayers, the men would return
home to be received by their wives-the wife in this instance
became for the husband the earthly representative of the
Shekhlna, with whom he was about to perform that night the
sacred act of cohabitation in imitation of, and in mystical
sympathy with, the union between God the King and His wife, the
Matronit-Shekhlna-Sabbath.
Now the husband would approach the table and pick up two bunches
of myrtle, each consisting of three twigs, prepared for the
bride and the groom, and then circle the table-all rites
imitative and symbolic of observances performed at actual
weddings-and sing welcomling songs to the two angels of peace
who were believed to accompany him home from the synagogue.
The chanting of Chapter 31 (Verses 10-31) of the Book of
Proverbs, which followed, had a double significance. It was
meant as a paean to the "woman of valor," the good wife and
mother whose very presence in the house, quite apart from all
the care she lavished on her family, made it possible for the
husband to live a complete Jewish life, in accordance with the
teachings of the Kabbala about the blessed state of male-female
togetherness.
Beyond that, however, there was a deeper meaning: the "woman of
valor" whose excellence is described in the twenty-two
alphabetically arranged verses was interpreted as being none
other than the Shekhlna herself, the divine Matronit, whose
image thus was mystically merged with that of the man's own
wife.
Next came the recitation of an Aramaic poem containing an
invitation addressed to God the King to take part in the festive
Sabbath meal. At some time during that meal or following it, the
husband chanted another mystical Aramaic poem written by Isaac
Luria and describing the union of God the King and his bride,
the Sabbath-Shekhina.',' The first six stanzas read as follows:
Let me sing the praises of Him who enters the gates Of the
orchard of apple trees, holy are they.
Let us invite her now, with a freshly set table, With a goodly
lamp which sheds light on tfie heads.
Right and left, and the bride in between Comes forth in her
jewels and sumptuous raiments.
hus, for the Jew reared in the great mystical tradition of his
faith, the Sabbath was a day whose pleasures, both physical and
spiritual, amplv compensated him for the drabness, narrowness,
and frequent sorrowfulness of the weekdays.
With the Sabbath, a queenly visitor entered even the humblest
abode, which, due to her presence, was transformed into a royal
palace, with the table set, the candles burning, and the wine
waiting. The mistress of the house became mysteriously
identified with the Queen Sabbath, who was also identical with
the Shekhlna, the divine Matronit, God's own consort.
As for the master of the house, he felt his chest swell and his
consciousness expand due to the "additional soul" which came
down from on high to inhabit his body for the duration of the
Sabbath. All these supernal presences made man and wife feel
part of the great spiritual world order in which every act and
word was fraught with cosmic significance, and in which the
supreme command of the day was "Rejoice!" When midnight came,
and the fulfilhnent of the commandment to rejoice on the Sabbath
found its most intense expression in the consummation of the
marital act, this was done with the fiill awareness not only, of
obeying a divine injunction, but also of aiding therebv the
divinity himself in achieving a state of male-female
togetherness which God is just as much in need of as man.
The mystically oriented and privately observed celebration of
marital sex in honor of the Sabbath, the divine queen and
consort of God... is certainly very far removed from the ancient
Canaanite mass orgiastic festivals performed in honor of
Astarte, the goddess of sexual love and fertility.
After nearly two thousand years, it is time to set the record
straight, to revise and complete the Gospel story of Jesus to
include his wife.
We believe in our King; let us also believe in our Queen!
There is, unquestionably, a feminine aspect within Elohim, the
God of the Hebrews. The Divine Feminine is known as Eloah, El Shaddai, Wisdom
[also Hochmah or Sophia], and the Holy Spirit. She is the Goddess ‘concealed’
within the Scriptures. She is part of the One True God [Who is beyond our
ability to fully comprehend]. Spiritual Israel has justifiable reason to
worship, praise and give honor to Eloah, the Holy Spirit, Who, with the Father
and Son, are One God. The People of the Covenant are not permitted to honor
other goddesses, such as Ashtoreth or Asherah, but should give praise and
worship to El Shaddai – the Goddess of the Scriptures - the Feminine within
Elohim.
In the Gospel to the Hebrews, Jesus speaks of "my Mother,
the Spirit." Again, in the Gospel of Thomas "Jesus contrasts his earthly
parents, Mary and Joseph, with his divine Father--the Father of Truth--and his
divine Mother, the Holy Spirit." And, in the Gospel of Philip, "whoever becomes
a Christian gains 'both father and mother' for the Spirit (rurah) is 'Mother of
many.'"
In a writing attributed to Simon Magus it states:
Grant Paradise to be the womb; for Scripture teaches us that this is
a true assumption when it says, "I am He that formed thee in thy mother's
womb" (Isaiah 44:2)...Moses...using the allegory had declared Paradise to
be the womb...and Eden, the placenta...
"The river that flows forth from Eden symbolizes the navel, which nourishes the
fetus. Simon claims that the Exodus consequently, signifies the passage out of
the womb and the 'the crossing of the Red Sea refers to the blood.'" Sethian
gnostics explain that:
heaven and earth have a shape similar to the womb ...and if...anyone wants
to investigate this, let him carefully examine the pregnant womb of any living
creature, and he will discover an image of the heavens and the earth.
In scriptural writings we find standing at the foot of the cross at the time of
the crucifixion three Marys: the Virgin Mary, the dearly beloved Mary Magdalene,
and a more shadowy or mysterious Mary. "The Coptic 'Gospel of Mary' said they
were all one. Even as late as the Renaissance, a trinitarian Mary appeared in
the Speculum beatae Mariae as Queen of Heaven (Virgin), Queen of Earth (mother),
and Queen of Hell (Crone)."
Within modern culture these roles of Goddess and Mother are seen to be
reemerging. While the psychanalyst Sigmund Freud down played the emergence
devotion to the Goddess as infantile desires to be reunited with the mother, his
theory was challenged by C.J. Jung who described this emergence devotion as "a
potent force of the unconscious."
Jung theorized that "the feminine principle as a universal archetype, a
primordial, instinctual pattern of behavior deeply imprinted on the human
psyche, brought the Goddess once more into popular imagination."
The basis of Jung's theory rested on religious symbolism extending from
prehistoric to current times. His archetypical concept is that it is not "an
inherited idea, but an inherited mode of psychic functioning, corresponding to
that inborn 'way' according to which the chick emerges from the egg; the bird
builds its nest;...and eels find their way to the Bermudas."
The biological evidence of Jung's archetypical concept indicates the
psychological meaning. Although the psychological meaning cannot always be as
objectively demonstrated as the biological one, it often is as important or even
more important than the biological one. It lies deep within the levels of
personalities, and can elicit responses not possible by mere abstract thinking.
These responses energize and deeply effect persons. "Jung believed all religions
rest on archetypical foundations."
This does not necessarily mean that all or every religion originated from an
archetype, but rather the archetype on which most, if not all, religions were
and are based is the deep felt (italics are the author's) need within the people
for their particular religion. This need is what brought forth the religion.
There are various views on the causes this need arouse, but "Jungians have
espoused the Mother Goddess as an archetype, a loadstone in the collective
consciousness of both men and women to be minded of psychological wholeness."
Many men have expressed the need to return to the Goddess, indicating that this
is not only a woman's search or desire. "English therapist John Rowan believes
that every man in Western culture also needs this vital connection to the vital
female principle in nature and urges men to turn to the Goddess. In this way men
will be able to relate to human women on more equal terms, not fearful of
resentful of female power. Perhaps this is how it was in prehistoric times when
men and women coexisted peacefully under the hegemony of the Goddess."
~*~
The Feminine has thus been constrained,
by social conventions and often by real irons, to a life of silence, her Power
hidden from a Masculine World. Some people denounce biblical faith as hopelessly misogynous,
although this judgment usually fails to evaluate the evidence in terms of
Israelite culture. Some reprehensibly use these data to support anti-Semitic
sentiments. Some read the Bible as a historical document devoid of any
continuing authority and hence worthy of dismissal. The "Who cares?" question
often comes at this point. Others succumb to despair about the ever-present male
power that the Bible and its commentators hold over women. And still others,
unwilling to let the case against women be the determining word, insist that
text and interpreters provide more excellent ways. Discerning within Scripture a
critique of patriarchy, certain feminists concentrate upon discovering and
recovering traditions that challenge the culture. This task involves
highlighting neglected texts and reinterpreting familiar ones. Over centuries, however, translators and commentators have
ignored such female imagery, with disastrous results for God, man and woman. To
reclaim the image of God female is to become aware of the male idolatry that has
long infested faith. The Goddess Herself, who has survived in her many forms
outside Judaism in pagan spirituality, was ruthlessly hunted down by
Christianity in the form of the Catholic Church, possessed as it was of the
instrumental power of the Roman State from 325 A.D. onwards. Wherever found,
under whatever name, the Goddess was covered over by smashing Her images and
temples, or turning Her temples, sacred places and names into shrines and
"faces" of Mary, mother of Jesus. For this Mary, the chaste, retiring, modest
Mother of "the real God", was now all that was to be tolerated, even visible, of
the Feminine, in the Christian world. Only those who swore chastity and betook
themselves to convents and cloisters to tell their beads silently by the hour,
could be endured as the Face of Woman. Why is it that a woman can be seen as a Saint, a Doctor of the
Church, or even an Apostle but is still denied the priesthood? This is wrong.
The ordination to the priesthood is a fuller participation in baptism's
sacrificial and prophetic gifts. Christ replaced a priesthood based on the
sacred by a priesthood based on grace; a
universal priesthood shared by all the baptized. This priesthood is given
through the sacrament of baptism, and baptism is the same whether for a man or a
woman. We
have also seen that there is no moral or biblical reason to deny marriage in the
priesthood.
Christ never applied the word priest to his followers or himself. He would not
have wanted his followers to establish a celibate male priesthood. The subsequent growth of a
separate clergy class, with its sacred vestments, special status and
privileges would have troubled him. It is time to denounce those teachings.
We have clearly seen
evidence
in the Bible of stories and traditions about a Divine Feminine that have been
lost to us. Removing Her from the liturgy is not a victimless crime.
Biblically; The Holy Spirit,
'Spirit of God's wisdom', is our Holy and Divine Mother.
Our souls in communion are the Holy Church & 'Eclesia'; Bride of Christ, Daughter of Zion.
Virgin Mother Mary and Mary Magdalene personify a female Holy Spirit and the
Bride of Christ.
She is our Christian Goddess~!
The road we travel will take us into the battle to restore beauty in
all things;
And it will also take us home.
~*~
I have avoided references throughout the text.
Scholars may already know the sources of the material, others would
only be distracted from the real purpose of this book by a pretense of
scholarly documentation. Much of the information contained herein
represents collected data and in no way is to be construed as the
original work of one author. The goal in presenting this information was
to provide a single comprehensive source of theme material .
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