Meanwhile, outside our monotheist bubble, female divinity is represented in our world, balance exists.
Abrahamic religions are truly an aberration, unnatural, with their sole focus on male divinity alone. They don’t match “nature” - the natural world around us.
The original Greek Septuagint was written by 70 rabbis, and the language in the original Greek talks about female rulers who were tyrant oppressors, so the whole basis of Old Testament is a political snuff-out to an entire gender based on politics of the day. Not some divine writing, but men pissed off.
Medea, Circe, Hekate, rulers of the Medes around 700BCE, were pharmakeía (φαρμακεία), translated to sorceresses, but the Greek here means druggist. Those who wield drugs were sorceresses. Scythian horse people, excellent with a bow, used arrow poisons based on snake venom to freeze people, their priestesses were the Medusea. The Medusae were contorted centuries later by Greek myth writers into Medusa.
pharmakeía (φαρμακεία). In ancient Greek, it had meanings related to the use of potions, drugs, or spells. Here's a breakdown:
Pharmakon (φάρμακον): This is the root word meaning "drug," "medicine," or "poison."
Pharmakeía (φαρμακεία): Refers to the practice of using drugs, potions, or spells. It could also imply "sorcery" or "witchcraft."
Pharmakeús (φαρμακεύς): A male practitioner, such as a "druggist" or "sorcerer."
Pharmakis (φαρμακίς): A female practitioner, often translated as "sorceress."
In later biblical contexts, "pharmakeía" took on a negative association, being linked to witchcraft or idolatry, often the meaning was washed of any drug connotation and replaced with more fantastical terms like charms and spells to mock the perjure the practice. This negativity was a Christian invention.
Medusae, a term often connected to warrior women or priestesses in Scythian culture who used poisons, such as snake venom, as part of their warfare or rituals. Are believed to be the Amazon women of Ancient Greek texts… Medea and Circe are some of the oldest known pharmakis. sorceresses, or witches in today’s language…
"The Damsel of Sanct Grael1857, Dante Gabriel Rossetti"
a thurible I see the dove holding?? hmm.. gimme a F..gimme a U...give me a M-I-G-A-T-I-O-N ....thats a lovely mudra she is throwing up...I wonder where I saw that before..oh Jesus paintings thats right? Also, those mudras do actually do something for/to us. I posted a link to the study a while back on here..anyway I love the painting so I wanted to share it. I also think its neat how it looks like night time and the moon behind her head. Unless that symbolizes enlightenment I'm not sure? Normally when Jesus is depicted, its not night and no moon.. its sunny and light lol