Hello Everyone,
In  this ever-changing world we are in some things never change.  While I can not ever claim to be a  professional or even well trained theologian, I have studied a fair amount of  the pagan systems in contrast to true Christianity.  And from it I have learned a few important  things.  
It  would seem to me that more and more of the pagan symbolism and or beliefs creep  in all the time with what should be a Christian nation.  I for one grow weary of hearing those cry out  for “Mother Earth,” “Mother Nature,” the “spirits” (that supposedly want to help  us), or the “saints” that intervene on our behalf.  I expect things of this nature from the  pagans, but I should not be hearing such from those that desire to use the title  of Christian, which means a follower of Christ.   Not so hard to get it right really.   
This nonsense of accepting of  all religions and religious ideas means a possession of none at all really, if  that is the chosen route.  I used the  word accept instead of tolerate, because I may tolerate what another believes so  long as it does no harm to me or mine, but I sure don’t accept it.  I have a dental appointment next week.  So I will tolerate a minor tooth pain until I  can get it fixed.  
All religions do not lead to  the same God or place.  There is one real  God, one real Heaven, and for many, to hear a Christian say so is  offensive.  I am not bothered that others  want to hang out with Buddha, are looking for their 72 Mo virgins, hang a big  “G” on their porch, or think they are coming back again as an elevated being (or  perhaps a worm), and they should not be offended that I don’t follow any of  that.  I have looked at the evidence, and  Jesus Christ is the way.   
We  should be clear that I do not desire that any should perish in Hell, and I am  willing to do what I can to provide evidence on how to avoid the journey and  destination.  But at the same time don’t  expect me to wear a home-made utility belt that goes boom to make the  point.  That only makes people get to  Hell quicker, including the wearer of such belt.  
And for those that are  keeping score, when I say a pagan system or pagan belief, I do mean satanically  influenced.  
I  like the simple Biblical ideas.  Ideas  like, it is but appointed once for all of us to die, then comes the  judgment.  And that  there is but one mediator between God and man, Jesus Christ.  Of course we must not ever forget that there  is only one way to the Father in Heaven, Jesus Christ.  It keeps my life simple, and makes people  want to call me a fundamentalist (or other less pleasant names).  Works for me.  
Godspeed,
Gill Rapoza
Veritas Vos  Liberabit
The Allure of the  Goddess
By Carl Teichrib, Chief Editor
Forcing  Change, Volume 4, Issue 3, (April 2010)
“The Goddess has now emerged  from the dark moon phase of a long-term lunar cycle at a time when humanity is  collectively passing through a dark phase in the precessional age solar cycle.  With the rebirth of the Goddess, we are being given the opportunity to reclaim  her dark aspect.” 
Demetra George, Mysteries of the  Dark Moon: The Healing Power of the Dark Goddess, p. 266. 
Goddess worship is alive and well. Berit Kjos, a good  friend and author, relates numerous stories of goddess-inspiration making its  way into mainstream Christian culture. In her book, A Twist of Faith, she  describes a visit to her husband’s prairie hometown, 
“You probably wouldn’t expect to  find goddesses in a conservative farming community in North Dakota. I didn’t.  But one day when visiting my husbands rural hometown, a  neighbor told us that a new bookstore had just opened in the parsonage of the  old Lutheran Church. ‘You should go see it,’ she urged. 
“I agreed, so I drove to a  stately white church, walked to the parsonage next door, and rang the bell. The  pastor’s wife opened the door and led me into a large room she had changed into  a bookstore, leaving me to browse. Scanning the shelves along the walls, I  noticed familiar authors such as Lynn Andrews who freely blends witchcraft with  Native American rituals, New Age self-empowerment, and other occult traditions  to form her own spirituality. 
“Among the multicultural books  in the children’s section, one caught my attention. Called Many Faces of the  Great Goddess, it was a ‘coloring book for all ages.’ Page after page sported  voluptuous drawings of famed goddesses. Nude, bare-breasted, pregnant, or draped  in serpents, they would surely open the minds of young artists to the lure of  “sacred” sex and ancient myths. 
“Driving home, I pondered  today’s fast-spreading shift from Christianity to paganism. Apparently, myths  and spiritualized sensuality sound good to those who seek new revelations and  ‘higher’ truths. Many of the modern myths picture deities that fit somewhere  between a feminine version of God and the timeless goddesses pictured in  earth-centered stories and cultures.” (A Twist of Faith, pp. 10-11) 
While the New Age Movement has placed goddess worship into  a contemporary setting, it’s historical context  stretches back millennium. 
In the ancient Egyptian mystery religions, Isis was  venerated as a universal goddess. Barbara Watterson, author of Gods of Ancient  Egypt, notes that Isis was “known as ‘The Goddess of Many Names’ and indeed she  is found as a form of every great female deity from Nut  and Hathor to the Greek moon goddess Astarte.” [p. 72] 
Eminent author and historian, Will Durant, writes of this  Isis-goddess connection, 
“Profound, too, was the myth of  Isis, the Great Mother. She was not only the loyal sister and wife of Osiris; in  a sense she was greater than he, for – like woman in general – she had conquered  death through love. Nor was she merely the black soil of the Delta, fertilized  by the touch of Osiris-Nile, and making all Egypt rich with her fecundity. She  was, above all, the symbol of that mysterious creative power which had produced  the earth and every living thing….She represented in Egypt – as Kali, Ishtar and  Cyble represented in Asia, Demeter in Greece, and Ceres in Rome – the original  priority and independence of the female principle in creation...” (The Story of  Civilization, Volume 1, p. 200) 
“Great Mother,” “Queen of Heaven,”  “Mother of God.” All of these titles have been attached to Isis. Ishtar  too, the Babylonian goddess, had similar titles. Moreover, the lines between the  various goddesses of antiquity blur, with each mirroring the other in terms of  purpose, symbolism, and meaning.
Commenting on this universal goddess aspect, Professor  Cesar Vidal writes, 
“The importance of mother  goddesses in the various mythologies of paganism is so evident that even a  shallow description could easily fill entire volumes… The mother goddess  received different names and external appearances, but, in substance, she was  always the same. In Egypt, she was called Isis. 
“In Crete, she was represented  as a mother who made friendly contact with snakes. In Greece she was known as  Demeter, and in Rome she was worshiped as Cybele, the Magna Mater (Great  Mother), a mother goddess of Phrygian origin. There is practically no ancient  culture that did not worship this type of deity.” (The Myth of Mary, pp.74, 75)  
Even the ancient Hebrews succumbed to goddess worship. In  Jeremiah chapters 7 and 44, we find God chastising the Israelites for worshiping  “the Queen of Heaven,” baking cakes to her, offering sacrifices, and purposely  choosing to follow the Queen of Heaven rather than Himself. 
Our modern culture likewise has a propensity to following  the “Queen of Heaven.” The New Age Movement has been a real force in this,  bringing the Gaia concept to the forefront – the idea that the Earth is a living  organism, a “hypothesis” intrinsically linked to the goddess movement and  “Mother Earth.” 
Science writer Lawrence E. Joseph explains, 
“Gaia’s closest cousin is Terra,  the Roman Earth goddess; both are kin to Isis of the Egyptians, Kwan Yin of the  Chinese, Lakshmi of the Hindus, Yemanja of many African peoples, Shekinah of the  Jews from the days of the cabbalah, the Changing Woman of the Navajo, and many  others, including Mother Nature, who at one time or another has appeared or  occurred to almost everyone. All are sublime fem ale Earth deities, givers of  life, wisdom, pleasure, and death.” (Gaia: The Growth of an Idea, p. 224) 
As alluded to in the beginning of  this article, Christianity isn’t immune to the allure of the goddess. In 1993,  at the Re-Imaging  Conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota, 2000 women from a variety of  protestant denominations were introduced to Sophia, the goddess personification  of “Divine Wisdom.” Furthermore, this particular event, which included creating  a “sacred space” and Sophia invocations, received funding from a number of major  protestant/evangelical church bodies [for more on this event, see A Twist of  Faith]. 
“Mother Earth,” too, can be found in our modern church  culture – especially through Earth Day celebrations within the Christian  community (See Goddess Earth by Samantha Smith and Dave Hunt’s Occult Invasion:  The Subtle Seduction of the World and Church). 
But goddess influence within churches goes beyond Mother  Earth and Sophia. The biblical figure of Mary has been erroneously elevated to a  goddess status by Roman Catholic theologians. She is known as the Queen of  Heaven, Mother of God, Eternal Virgin, Queen of Peace, Our Mother, Lady of the  Good Death, Co-Mediatrix, and Blessed Mother. Thousands of shrines around the  world commemorate her. Visions, apparitions, visitations, and channeled messages  accompany the mystical experiences of her followers. 
Cesar Vidal elaborates, 
“The idea of the universal  motherhood of Mary, which does not appear historically until the 11th  century, has a much greater connection with paganism than with Scripture. The  same can be said of the representation of Mary with the divine child. This  concept was also unknown… in the first centuries of Christianity. 
“…it is especially significant  that Mary worship, which we find in Catholicism and in the Eastern churches,  does not stem at any point from biblical concepts, but from the absorption of  pagan theologies like those present in the myths of Isis, Demeter and Cybele.”  (The Myth of Mary, p. 86, 89) 
Concerning the pagan goddess influence within the Roman  concept of “Mary,” historian Will Durant draws a similar conclusion to that of  Vidal. Christian apologist Dave Hunt (see Occult Invasion), along with a host of  other historians and researchers, also recognize this basic linkage. Even occult  sources such as H.P. Blavatsky [Isis Unveiled, volume II] and Manly P. Hall [The  Secret Teachings of All Ages] attest to this goddess Roman-Mary interconnection.  Sadly, this Romanized-paganized Mary is now being embraced by some within  Protestant circles. 
Detailing the broader New Age-goddess/feminist influence  within church and society, Berit Kjos writes, 
“…This new spiritual movement is  transforming our churches as well as our culture. It touches every family that  reads newspapers, watches television, and sends children to community schools.  It is fast driving our society beyond Christianity, beyond humanism – even  beyond relativism – toward new global beliefs and values. No one is immune from  its subtle pressures and silent promptings. That it parallels other social  changes and global movements only speeds the transformation. Yet, most  Christians – like the proverbial frog – have barely noticed. 
“This feminist movement demands  new deities or, at least, a re-thinking of the old ones. The transformation  starts with self, some say, and women can’t re-invent themselves until they shed  the old shackles. So the search for a ‘more relevant’ religion requires new  visions of God: images that trade holiness for tolerance, the heavenly for the  earthly, and the God who is higher than us for a god who is us. 
“The most seductive images are  feminine. They may look like postcard angels, fairy godmothers, Greek earth  goddess, radiant New Age priestesses, or even a mythical Mary, but they all  promise unconditional love, peace, power, and personal transcendence. To many,  they seem too good to refuse.” [A Twist  of Faith, pp. 9-10] 
The point that Mrs. Kjos makes is essential to  understanding our times: Christianity is facing a paradigm shift of global  proportions, and the goddess thrust of the New Age Movement is an important  facet of this spiritual and societal-wide change. 
“In recognizing the impact that this alternative spiritual  reality has on our cultural makeup – including its bearing on churches and  Christianity – it behooves us to consider the words of Ephesians 6:10-13, 
“Finally, my brethren, be strong  in the Lord and in the power of His might. Put on the whole armor of God, that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the  devil. For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but  against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of  this age, against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places.  There take up the whole armor of God, that you may be  able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand.” [Ephesians  6:10-13, NKJV] 
Carl Teichrib is editor of Forcing Change (www.forcingchange.org), an online,  monthly intelligence journal on international trends and world  change.
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Gill  Rapoza
Veritas Vos  Liberabit

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