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MOTHER AND CHILD WORSHIP

MARY WORSHIP

ONE OF THE MOST outstanding examples of how Baby¬lonian paganism has continued to our day may be seen in the way Mary worship replaced the ancient worship of the mother goddess.

The story of the mother and child was widely known In ancient Babylon and developed into an established worship. Numerous monu¬ments of Babylon show the god¬dess mother Semiramis with her child Tanimuz in her arms.

When the people of Babylon were scattered to the various parts of the earth, they carried the wor¬ship of the divine mother and her child with them. This explains why many nations worshipped a mother and child—in one form or another—centuries before the true saviour, Jesus Christ, was born into this world. In the various countries where this worship spread, the mother and child were called by different names, for, we will recall, language was confused at Babel.

The Chinese had a mother goddess called Shingmoo or the ‘Holy Mother.” She is pictured with child in arms and rays of glory around her head.

The ancient Germans worshipped the virgin Hertha with child in arms. The Scandinavians called her Disa who was also pictured with a child. The Etruscans called her Nutria, and among the Druids the Virgo-Patitura was worshipped as the “Mother of God.” In India, she was known as Indrani, who was also represented with child in arms. The mother goddess was known as Aphodite or Ceres to the Greeks: Nana, to the Sumerians; and as Venus or Fortuna to her devotees in the olden days of Rome, and her child as Jupiter. In Asia, the mother was known as Cybele and the child as Deoius. “But regardless of her name or place,” says one writer, “she was the wife of Baal, the virgin queen of heaven, who bore fruit although she never conceived.”

The accompanying illustration below shows the mother and child as Devaki and Crishna. For ages, Is, the “Great Goddess” and her child Iswara, have been worshipped in In¬dia where temples were erected for their worship.

When the children of Israel fell into apostasy, they too were defiled with this mother goddess worship. As we read in Judges 2:13: “They forsook the Lord, and served Baal and Ashtaroth.” Ashtaroth or Ashtoreth was the name by which the goddess was known to the children of Israel. It is piti¬ful to think that those who had known the true God would depart from him and worship the heathen mother. Yet this is exactly what they did repeatedly (Judges 10:6; 1 Sam. 7:3,4:12:10: 1 Kings 11:5; 2 Kings 23:13). One of the titles by which the goddess was known among them was “the queen of heaven” (Jer. 44:17-19). The prophet Jeremiah rebuked them for worship¬ping her, but they rebelled against his warning.

In Ephesus, the great mother was known as Diana. The temple dedicated to her in that city was one of the seven wonders of the ancient world! Not only at Ephesus, but throughout all Asia and the world was the goddess wor¬shipped (Acts 19:27).

In Egypt. the mother was known as Isis and her child as Horns. It Is very common for the religious monuments of Egypt to show the infant Ho¬rus seated on the lap of his mother.

This false worship, having spread from Babylon to the various nations, in different names and forms, finally be¬came established at Rome and throughout the Roman Em¬pire. Says a noted writer concerning this period: “The wor¬ship of the Great Mother.. .was very popular under the Ro¬man Empire. Inscriptions prove that the two (the mother and the child) received divine honours.. .not only in Italy and especially at Rome, but also in the provinces, particularly in Africa, Spain, Portugal, France, Germany, and Bulgaria.”

It was during this period when the worship of the divine mother was very prominent that the saviour, Jesus Christ, founded the New Testament church. What a glorious church It was in those early days! By the third and fourth centuries, however, what was known as the “church” had in many ways departed from the original faith, falling into the apostasy about which the apostles had warned. When this “falling away” caine, much paganism was mixed with Christianity. Unconverted pagans were taken into the professing church and in numerous instances were allowed to continue many of their pagan rites and customs—usually with a few reser¬vations or changes to make their beliefs appear more similar to Christian doctrine.

One of the best examples of such a carry over from paganism may be seen in the way the worship of the great mother continued—only in a slightly different form and with a new name! You see, many pagans had been drawn to Christianity, but so strong was their adoration for the mother goddess, they did not want to forsake her. Compro¬mising church leaders saw that if they could find some similarity in Christianity with the worship of the mother goddess, they could greatly increase their numbers. But who could replace the great mother of paganism?

Mary, of course, was the most logical person for them to choose. Why couldn’t they allow the people to continue their prayers and devotion to a mother goddess, only call her by the name of Mary? Apparently this was the reasoning employed, for this Is exactly what happened! Little by little, the worship that had been associated with the pagan mother was transferred to Mary.

But Mary worship was no part of the original Christian faith! It is evident that Mary was a fine, dedicated, and godly woman—especially chosen to bear the body of our saviour—yet none of the apostles or Jesus himself ever hinted at the idea of Mary worship. As The Encyclopaedia Britannic states, during the first centuries of the church, no emphasis was placed upon Mary whatsoever. This point is admitted by The Catholic Encyclopaedia also: “Devotion to Our Blessed Lady in its ultimate analysis must be regarded as a practical application of the doctrine of the Communion of Saints. Seeing that this doctrine is not contained, at least explicitly, in the earlier forms of the Apostles’ Creed, there is perhaps no ground for surprise if we do not meet with any clear traces of the cultus of the Blessed Virgin in the first Christian centuries,” the worship of Mary being a later development.8

It was not until the time of Constantine—the early part of the fourth century—that anyone began to look to Mary as a goddess. Even at this period, such worship was frowned upon, as is evident by the words of Epiphanius who de¬nounced certain ones of Trace, Arabia, and elsewhere, for worshipping Mary as a goddess and offering cakes at her shrine. She should be held In honour, he said. “but let no one adore Maxy.” Yet, within just a few more years, Mary wor¬ship was not only con¬doned but became an offi¬cial doctrine at the Coun¬cil of Ephesus In 431 AD.!

At Ephesus? It was in this city that Diana had been worshipped as the goddess of virginity and motherhood from primi¬tive time! She was said to represent the genera¬tive powers of nature and so was pictured with many breasts. A tower-shaped crown, a symbol of the tower of Babel, adorned her head.

When beliefs are held by a people for centuries, they are not easily for¬saken. So church leaders at Ephesus—.as the fall¬ing away came—.also rea¬soned that If people would be allowed to hold their ideas about a mother goddess, if this could be mixed into Christianity and the name Mary substituted they could gain more converts. But this was not God’s method.

When Paul had come to Ephesus in earlier days, no compromise was made with paganism. People were truly converted and destroyed their idols of the goddess (Acts 19:24.27). How tragic that the church at Ephesus In later centuries compromised and adopted a form of mother god-dess worship, the Council of Ephesus finally making it an official doctrine! The pagan influence in this decision seems apparent.

A further indication that Mary worship developed out of the old worship of the mother goddess. may be seen in the titles that are ascribed to her. Mary is often called ‘The Madonna.” According to Hislop, this expression is the trans¬lation of one of the titles by which the Babylonian goddess was known. In deified form, Nimrod came to be known as Baal. The title of his wife, the female divinity, would be the equivalent of Baalti. In English, this word means, “My lady” in Latin, “Mea Domina,” and in Italian, it is corrupted into the well-known “Madonna”!”

Among the Phoenicians, the mother goddess was known as “The Lady of the Sea,” and even this title is applied to Mary—though there is no connection between Mary and the sea!

The scriptures make it plain that there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus (1 Tim. 2:5). Yet Roman Catholicism teaches that Mary is also a “media¬tor.” Prayers to her form a very important part of Catholic worship. There is no scriptural basis for this idea, yet this concept was not foreign to the ideas linked with the mother goddess. She bore as one of her names “Mylitta,” that Is, “The Medlatrix” or mediator.

Mary is often called “the queen of heaven.” But Mary the mother of Jesus is not the queen of heaven. ‘The queen of heaven” was a title of the mother goddess that was wor¬shipped centuries before Mary was ever born. Clear back in the days of Jeremiah, the people were worshipping “the queen of heaven” and practising rites that were sacred to her. As we read in Jeremiah 7:18-20: “The children gather wood, and the fathers kindle the fire, and the women knead their dough, to make cakes to the queen of heaven.”

One of the titles by which Isis was known was the “mother of God.” Later this same title was applied to Mary by the theologians of Alexandria Mary was, of course, the mother of Jesus, but only in the sense of his human nature, his humanity. The original meaning of “mother of God” went beyond this; it attached a glorified position to the mother, and in much the same way, Roman Catholics have been taught to think of Mary!

So firmly written in the paganistic mind was the image of the mother goddess with child in her arms, when the days of the falling away came, according to one writer, “the ancient portrait of Isis and the child Horns was ultimately accepted not only In popular opinion, but by formal episcopal sanc¬tion, as the portrait of the Virgin and her child.”13 Represen¬tations of Isis and her child were often enclosed in a framework of flowers. This practice too was applied to Mary, as those who have studied Medieval art well know.

Astarte, the Phoenician goddess of fertility, was associated with the cres¬cent moon, as seen on an old medal.

The Egyptian goddess of fertility, Isis, was represented as standing on the cres¬cent moon with stars surrounding her head.’4 In Roman Catholic churches all over Europe may be seen pictures of Mary exactly the same way. The accom¬panying illustration below (as seen in Catholic catechism booklets) pictures Mary with twelve stars circling her head and the crescent moon under her feet! In numerous ways, leaders of the falling away attempted to make Mary appear similar to the goddess of paganism and ex¬alt her to a divine plane. Even as the pagans had statues of the goddess, so statues were made of “Mary.” It is said that in some cases the very same statues that had been worshipped as Isis (with her child) were simply renamed as Maly and the Christ child.

“When Christianity triumphed.” says one writer, “these paintings and figures became those of the Madonna and child without any break In continuity: no archaeologist, In fact, can now tell whether some of these objects represent the one or the other.” Many of these renamed figures were crowned and adorned with jewels—In exactly the same way as the images of the Hindu and Egyptian virgins. But Mary. the mother of Jesus, was not rich (Lk.2:24: Lev. 12:8). From where, then, did these jewels and crowns come that are seen on these statues?

By compromises—some very obvious, others more hid¬den—the worship of the ancient mother continued within the church of the falling away, with the name of Mary being substituted in place of the older names.

MARY WORSHIP