Barra

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Commanding God Not to Speak

If a religion decides there will be no more prophets. Are they commanding their God not to speak?

inAll, Catholicism, Islam, Religion

When a religion or community decides that God will no longer speak to them, this decision can lead to a spiritual stagnation, as new insights and understandings are viewed as disruptive.

An illustration of the confusion between the Second Coming of Christ and Armageddon

The confusion between The Second Coming and Armageddon

inAll, Armageddon, Christianity, Second Coming

While the Second Coming of Christ is clearly a spiritual event about salvation, it has been misunderstood or misrepresented by several Christian groups throughout history. In many of these teachings, Armageddon becomes synonymous with Christ’s return, emphasizing divine judgment and the defeat of evil rather than focusing on the message of love, grace, and salvation that Jesus brought.

The-Royal-Siren-of-Basil-Valentine

THE ROYAL SIREN OF BASIL VALENTINE

inCarl Jung, Mother Goddess, Neolithic, Palaeolithic

The enduring presence of the Mother Goddess and the subsequent shift toward a dominant divine masculine can be traced throughout history, from the earliest goddess figurines to modern esoteric traditions.

Mexican-mother-goddess-Panuco-River-Mexico-15th-10th-century-BC

The mother goddess in Mesoamerica

inAll, Archetypes, Mesoamerica, Mother Goddess, Spirituality

The concept of a global Mother Goddess cult that believed it was a Goddess that is the source of creation as we know it, seems a strong one. As is the notion that it used very similar iconography and conceptualisations, which started quite vague and simplistic, but developed in complexity over time, and existed from the Palaeolithic to at least the end of the Bronze Age. This came to be replaced, often by force, by a patriarchal focussed cult which has resulted in most of the worlds religions we see today.

The Waxing and Waning of the Divine Feminine Through Time

inAkkadian Mythology, All, Anunnaki, Archetypes, Babylonian mythology, Bronze Age, Celtic Mythology, Christianity, Creation, Egyptian mythology, Greek Mythology, Iron Age, Islam, Judaism, Mesolithic, Mesopotamian mythology, Mother Goddess, Neolithic, Paganism, Palaeolithic, Religion, Roman Mythology, Sumerian mythology, Vinca Culture

In this article, I want to highlight some of those feminine heroes, and the sacrifices they made, and how they became the feminine heroines of their time.

The Vinca Culture

inAll, Mother Goddess, Neolithic, Vinca Culture

The Vinca culture, (also known as the Vinča culture or Tordos-Vinca culture) was a Neolithic culture that flourished in the Balkans between approximately 5700 BCE and 4500 BCE. In this article, we will focus on the Vinca female figurines and ask if they were portable Mother Goddess idols used by semi nomadic priests and the ruling classes?

emancipate, liberation, liberate

Sovereignty and the Authority Problem

inAll, Aspiring Writers, Poets and Artists, English, Health and Healing, Intuition, Law of One, Mindfulness, psychology, Religion, Self-transcendence, Shamanism, Spirituality, Truth of Self Talk

You are a sovereign being. Sovereign essentially means “self-possessed”, or in other words, you own yourself. Nobody else is capable of directing or governing your body or your mind except yourself.

Marcion of Sinope

inAll, Christianity, English

Marcion of Sinope was an influential early Christian theologian who lived around 85-160 AD. He is best known for founding Marcionism, a belief system that distinguished between the vengeful God of the Old Testament and the loving God of the New Testament, whom he believed sent Jesus Christ.

 

The God Marduk

inAkkadian Mythology, All, Anunnaki, Archetypes, Assyrian Mythology, Babylonian mythology, Christianity, Creation, Mesopotamian mythology, Religion, Spirituality, Sumerian mythology

Marduk was a prominent god in ancient Mesopotamian religion, particularly revered in the city of Babylon. Initially, a god of thunderstorms, he rose to become the chief deity of Babylon and was later known simply as Bel, meaning “Lord”.

The Deified King Lugalbanda

inAkkadian Mythology, All, Mesopotamian mythology, Religion, Spirituality, Sumerian mythology

Lugalbanda was a legendary Sumerian king of Uruk, often considered a hero in Mesopotamian mythology. He is known for his adventures and heroic deeds, and is also notable for being the father of the famous hero Gilgamesh, as mentioned in the Epic of Gilgamesh. His consort was Ninsun, a goddess, and he was later deified and worshipped in various Mesopotamian cities.

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Awakening to the Truth of Self