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Eloah:
Goddess of the Bible
By
David B. Clark
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.]
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]
David
Bruce Clark is a seer, naturopath, and speaker on hidden Biblical truths.
For more information or bookings, contact Aerianne@lionofgod.com.
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