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Hebrew Goddesses
Overview


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Introduction

Throughout their history, the Hebrews were scattered and immersed in other cultures, surrounded by nations who had extensive religious cults. Do you really think they could be surrounded by people who worshipped all those goddesses, and not have some of it rub off on them?

Male Noun = Male Gender?

The English language is somewhat of an oddity in the world of languages. In most languages, including Hebrew, nouns have a gender. The Hebrew name of God is a noun that just happens to have a masculine gender in Hebrew. But does the gender of a noun always imply that it represents a "male" entity?

Take the Spanish word for table, for example. El cajon is a masculine noun. But no one would claim that all tables have male characteristics. Could it be that the name of God falls in the same category? Could it be that it was never intended to represent a male deity? That it was simply a masculine noun? That it was misunderstood by the King James translators?

Form Your Own Opinion

I'm not saying that's the case, but simply asking you to think about it. Form your own opinion. Don't accept the conventional wisdom simply because it's what you've always heard. It might turn out that conventional wisdom is true, but take a moment and ponder it for yourself. Ask yourself some questions.

No Body = No Gender?

After all, as the medieval Jewish philosopher, Maimonides, put it, "God is not a body, nor can bodily attributes be ascribed to him, and He has no likeness at all." If he has no body and no likeness, how can we empirically say that he has any gender, whether male or female?

As a side note, that doesn't mean I'm ready to call God an It.

Summary

In this, the Goddess Department, I have barely scratched the surface of goddess worship among the ancient Hebrews.

By the early 1940s, archaeologists had unearthed in digs around Jerusalem over 300 terracotta figurines of nude goddesses. And more turn up every year. Goddess worship among the ancient Hebrews, it appears, was much more than a passing fancy. It was an integral part of their religion.

It's significant to note that it took a great deal of effort by the male-dominated priesthood to erase goddess worship among the common people. To deny that goddess worship ever existed among the Hebrews is to ignore history.


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