Nimrod
– Part 3
The
first book of the Bible introduces this wicked man and his kingdom – centered
in Babel. The last book of the Bible,
chapters 17 and 18, describes God’s utter destruction of Babylon in the last
days. The prophetic destruction includes
the wicked city itself, as well as the rebellious religion it generated. This article will focus initially on the
Nimrod’s wife, Semiramis, as she was instrumental in the formation of the
wicked ‘mystery religion of Babylon.’ It
will then explain how Nimrod’s father, Cush and ultimately Nimrod, himself,
were incorporated into this system of worship. Euhemerus was an ancient Greek
mythographer who lived around 300 BC. He
wrote that gods and their associated legends arose from the deification of dead
human heroes.[i]
One
legend of ancient history regarding Semiramis describes Nimrod meeting
Semiramis while she was a brother owner in Uruk.[ii] This probably occurred when Nimrod was
consolidating control over that city.
The history of queen/goddess as prostitute/brothel owner is not the
material of good legends. Therefore,
subsequent legends arose which portrayed her as a mythic fertility goddess and
mother of the gods. All attempts to
trace the origin of goddess worship lead ultimately to one single woman of
ancient history – Semiramis.[iii] She
promoted deification of Nimrod and herself after his death. God’s judgment and Nimrod’s execution forced
the ‘mystery religion’ underground for a while.
Its adherents realized the danger of practicing their religion in the public
domain. Hence, the name “mystery
religion of Babylon” refers to its secretive nature. However, Semiramis commanded total authority
over her subjects and clandestinely indoctrinated the priesthood with this
mystery religion. Priests and astrologers
obeyed her commands and aggressively marketed the mystery religion. Ancient Sumerians knew Semiramis as the
goddess Inanna. People adored her,
especially in her home city of Uruk.
They erected many temples to commemorate her as the goddess of sexual
love and fertility. This description of
her mythical duties was likely an exaggeration of her true life as a
prostitute. Historical truth often grows
to superhuman feats in mythology. Ancient mythology depicts Semiramis as
ascending to heaven as a dove, where she became the fertility and queen
goddess, Inanna.
Inanna’s
son and husband was Tammuz, the sun god.
Sumerians worshipped the mother/son duo.
After human dispersion at the Tower of Babel, worship of the fertility goddess
and mother/son duo continued across the ancient world, but the names changed in
different locations – due, of course to the different languages. Inanna (Semiramis) was known as Ishtar in Babylon,
Isis in Egypt and the son/husband was Osiris – the sun god. There is an inscription engraved in an
Egyptian temple of Isis that reads: “I am all that has been, or that is, or
that shall be. No mortal has removed my
veil. The fruit which I have brought forth
is the sun.”[iv] The sun was Osiris – deified Nimrod.
She
was worshipped as Venus in Rome (counterpart Cupid), and Aphrodite in
Greece. She was also called
Diana/Artemis – great fertility goddess of the Ephesians. Worship of this goddess became a roadblock in
the apostle Paul’s early mission to the city of Ephesus, as mentioned in the
book of Acts 19:23-41. The Old Testament
records the name of this fertility goddess of the Canaanites as Ashteroth
(Baal’s counterpart – Jdg. 2:12; 3:7, 1 Kings 18:19; 2 Kings 21:7). She became a stumbling block for the Jews and
their leaders who first settled this area for many generations. The prophet, Jeremiah, prophesied about the
worship of this goddess:
The
women added, ‘When we burned incense to the Queen of Heaven and poured out
drink offerings to her, did not our husbands know that we were making cakes
like her image and pouring out drink offerings to her?’ Then Jeremiah said to all the people, both
men and women, who were answering him, ‘Did not the Lord remember and think
about the incense burned in the towns of Judah and the streets of Jerusalem by
you and your fathers, your kings and your officials and the people of the land?
When the Lord could no longer endure your wicked actions and the detestable
things you did your land became an object of cursing and a desolate was without
inhabitants, as it is today. Because you
have burned incense and have sinned against the Lord and have not obeyed Him or
followed His law or His decrees or His stipulations, this disaster has come
upon you, as you now see.’ - Jeremiah
44:19-23
Semiramis
became a powerful ruler in Mesopotamia following the death of Nimrod. The Sumerian name Sammur-amat was the
original name of this woman.[v] This suggests the ancient civilization of
Sumeria may have taken their name from her. The name Sammur-amat is translated ‘Gift of
the Sea.’ The first part of this name,
Sammur, becomes Shinar when translated into Hebrew. The land of Shinar is the Biblical name for
the region of southern Mesopotamia. Both
the Sumerians and their land of Shinar (Sumer) were likely named after this
notorious woman! Most anthropologists
credit the Sumerians with the beginning of human civilization.
Semiramis
ruled for more than forty years after Nimrod’s death. Her son was likely Gilgamesh, and he ruled
after her. The famous Gilgamesh epic is
quite similar to the Biblical flood story, except he is the central figure.
The
‘mystery religion of Babylon’ probably originated in the evil mind of
Semiramis. Nimrod and Cush also
contributed significantly to its development. Many learned individuals have
taught polytheism was the evolutionary forerunner of monotheism. However, polytheism began in the minds of Cush,
Nimrod and Semiramis, who heavily suffused the mystery religion of Babylon with
human deification.
Deified
Cush was revered as several gods of ancient mythology. Canaanites worshipped him as Bel or Baal, and
he was their most important God. Baal
worship was an abomination to God and a major factor provoking His judgment on
the Canaanites and Israelites. The
prophet, Jeremiah, spoke the Word of God to the Israelites who had participated
in Baal worship.
Listen!
I am going to bring a disaster on this place that will make the ears of
everyone who hears of it tingle. For
they have forsaken me and made this a place of foreign gods; they have burned
sacrifices in it to gods that neither they nor their fathers nor the kings of
Judah ever knew, and they have filled this place with the blood of the
innocent. They have built the high
places of Baal to burn their sons in the fire as offerings to Baal—something I
did not command or mention, nor did it enter my mind.
God
executed that judgment shortly thereafter, when King Nebuchadnezzar’s
Babylonian army destroyed Jerusalem.
Many Jews who survived the onslaught were taken to Babylon to live the
rest of their lives in slavery.
Babel
means ‘the gate of god,’ but it can also mean “son of Bel.” Perhaps Nimrod named the city of Babel after
himself, as the son of Bel (Cush).
The
Egyptians commemorated Cush as the god Hermes, which means ‘son of Ham.’ Hermes was recognized as the author of
religious rites and the interpreter of the gods. Ancient mythology describes Hermes as the
interpreter of languages. Mercury was
another name for the god Hermes. Mercury
purportedly divided the speech of men.
The name, Bel, also means “the Confounder.”[vi] Cush likely assisted in the planning and
building of the Tower of Babel. He
initiated the rebellion against God. Indeed, he named his son Nimrod, which
means, ‘to rebel.’ The mythological
names of Cush suggest his sin was an inciting cause for God’s worldwide
judgment – the confusion of languages.
Cush was known as the ancient god Janus, and all gods supposedly
originated from him. People of antiquity
recorded a statement Janus reportedly made about himself: “The ancients….
called me Chaos.”[vii]
Chaos is the “god of confusion” and is
derived from the name Cush. The symbol connected
with Janus is a club, and its Babylonian name means ‘to break in pieces,’ or
‘to scatter abroad.’ The sin of Cush
broke the one language of mankind and caused the chaos of languages that
scattered men abroad. Janus and Vulcan
are names for the same god. Vulcan broke
and divided the world with a stroke of his well-known hammer.[viii]
Nimrod
forced his subjects to worship him as a military and political hero. He proclaimed himself high priest of the
‘mystery religion of Babylon.[ix]
Semiramis deified Nimrod after his
death.[x]
Nimrod’s
Babylonian followers worshiped him as Marduk – the god of war and
fortresses. The Sumerians built the
gigantic ziggurat of Etemenanki to honor their supreme god, Marduk. Many believe this ziggurat was the Tower of
Babel. The name, Marduk, was altered by various
civilizations of the ancient world due to the languages given at the Tower of
Babel. His Akkadian name was
Amarutuk. The Egyptians named him
Osiris, the Phoenicians referred to him as Tammuz, and in Canaan he became the
sun god of fire – Molech. Canaanite
parents often sacrificed their first born to this god by placing the child in
the outstretched hands of a large statue of Molech, while a blazing fire raged
beneath. This horrible form of idol
worship incited God’s judgment upon the Canaanite people and also upon the
Israelites, as they participated in this worship.
Leviticus
20:2 Say to the Israelites: Any Israelite or any alien living in Israel who
gives any of his children to Molech must be put to death. – Also refer to Jer
49:1 and Jer 32:33-35.
Should
people of this present age be concerned God might judge a world of people who have
murdered millions of their children on the altar of abortion? Indeed, clear scriptural references suggest
the detestable practice of child sacrifice incited God’s terrible wrath on
multiple occasions. God often judged His
own people, the Israelites, more severely than the pagans adhering to these
practices.
Nimrod
became the Roman god Bacchus, which means, ‘the son of Cush.’ Bacchus was god of wine and revelry. Marduk was also the Roman god Kronos, whose
name means, ‘the horned one.’ Ancient
artists often depicted Nimrod wearing a crown of bullhorns. Kronos was also the Roman god Saturn, who
devoured his own sons as soon as they were born.[xi] “The Phoenicians every year sacrificed their
beloved and only begotten children to Kronos, or Saturn; and the Rhodesians
often did the same.” [xii]
Nimrod’s
followers assigned him many mythical names that implicate works achieved only
by the true Son of God, Jesus Christ.
These counterfeit names deceptively attracted multitudes to worship
Nimrod. People north of Mesopotamia
commonly knew him as Ninus, “the son.”[xiii] Nimrod was called Zoraster, which means “the
seed of Aster” (Ishtar-Semiramis).
People revered Zoraster through the generations as the promised seed of
the woman, destined to bruise the head of the serpent in Genesis 3:15.[xiv] Zoroastrianism rests on this foundational
doctrine. Greeks deified Nimrod as the
god, Adonis.[xv]
Adonai means “The Lord.” Greeks also knew Nimrod as Dionysus, “the sin bearer,”[xvi]
and gave homage to him as Zeus, ‘the savior,[xvii]
and Mithras, “the mediator.”[xviii] The Babylonians worshiped Nimrod as El-Bar,
or “god, the son.” Archeologists in the
ancient city of Nineveh have unearthed sculptures inscribed with this name.
People
of ancient civilizations worshiped deified Nimrod in conjunction with snakes,
serpents, and dragons. Nimrod
appropriated the dragon and the snake as his personal emblems, and from this
association various myths about gods and serpents originated in antiquity. (www.1dolphin.org/Nimrod.html;
author Bryce Self). These likely
symbolized his satanic connection. Many
Scriptures in the Bible identify Satan as the great serpent. Greek and Roman mythology abound with serpent
lore, and their artisans frequently sculpted popular gods with serpent
representations. Many Hamitic
civilizations (Ethiopians, Hittites, Chinese, Japanese, and American Indians)
have favorably portrayed dragons and serpents.
The Egyptians depicted their sun god, Osiris, as the sun surrounded by a
serpent.[xix] Artists generally painted dragons and serpents
a fiery red color to suggest their association with the sun. Sun and serpent worship began simultaneously
in antiquity.[xx]
The Canaanites clearly understood the connection between sun god, Molech, and
serpent worship.[xxi] Even Roman mythology repeatedly illustrates
an affiliation between a serpent and the fire god and they were worshiped together.
The
Apostle Paul wrote in the Epistle of the Romans 1:21-23:
For although they knew God, they neither glorified Him as God, nor
gave thanks to Him; but their thinking became futile, and their foolish hearts
were darkened. Although they claimed to
be wise, they became fools, and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for
images made to look like mortal man,
and birds, and animals, and creeping
things.
Perhaps
the last word in this verse refers to the worship of serpents – even Satan,
himself.
A
very interesting Biblical reference describing a dragon is located in the
prophetic New Testament Book of Revelation (Rev. 12:1-5):
A great and wondrous sign appeared in heaven: a woman clothed with
the sun, with the moon under her feet and a crown of twelve stars on her
head. She was pregnant and cried out in
pain as she was about to give birth.
Then another sign appeared in heaven: an enormous red dragon with seven
heads and ten horns and seven crowns on his heads. His tail swept a third of the stars out of
the sky and flung them to the earth. The
dragon stood in front of the woman who was about to give birth, so that he
might devour her child who will rule all the nations with an iron scepter. And her child was snatched up to God and to
His throne.
The
pregnant woman described in this passage is God’s chosen nation, Israel. The infant represents the Seed of the woman,
prophesied thousands of years earlier in Genesis 3:15. The child awaits delivery by the laboring
woman (Israel). She is God’s chosen
nation through which His Seed – the Son of God – would come. The fearsome red dragon depicted here is the
same fiery red dragon portrayed with the sun god in the mystery religion of
Babylon. The dragon is none other that
Satan, himself. He is portrayed here,
eagerly awaiting the birth of the prophesied Seed so he can devour Him. Satan has feared the prophesied Seed since
God pronounced the curse in the Garden of Eden.
God has provided clues throughout Biblical history suggesting the
lineage of His Seed. From the beginning
of time, Satan has done everything in his power to destroy that lineage. Old Testament Scriptures record the history
of this momentous conflict over the millennia preceding the incarnation of
Jesus Christ. Satan’s multiple attempts
to destroy the Seed are chronicled in the pages of God’s Word. A thorough discussion of these attempts is
not within the scope of this article.
Nevertheless, the dragon did await the birth of that infant
(Jesus). When the woman (Israel – Mary)
bore the child, the fiery serpent finally had an opportunity to devour her
Seed. Herod’s massacre of infants in the
city of Bethlehem was a horrific attempt to accomplish that goal. Satan ultimately attempted to destroy God’s
promised Seed by crucifying the Christ.
The crucifixion initially appeared to accomplish his goal, but Satan
failed that attempt also – fortunately for mankind. He had not anticipated the resurrection of
God’s Son. Thereafter, Satan realized
his time was short, for the son’s destiny is to terminate Satan’s reign over
the world of mankind.
The
previous verse from the Book of Revelation explains the Child was taken up to
God’s throne. The resurrected Seed
ascended to sit at God’s right hand. The
Seed of God lives today, and one day He will deliver the mortal blow to the
dragon. That Seed is the Son of God,
Jesus Christ, who will rule the nations with an iron scepter, as illustrated in
this same verse.
[i] Diodorus of
Sicily: The Library of History – book VI.
[ii] http:www.onesimus
@ix.netcom; author Bryce Self
[iii] Alexander Hislop, The Two Babylons (Neptune, NJ: Loizeaux Brothers,
Inc., 1959), 5, 20-21, 30-31, 74-75, 141.
[iv] Alexander Hislop, The Two Babylons (Neptune, NJ: Loizeaux Brothers,
Inc., 1959), 77.
[v] http:www.assyriansocietycanada.org/legend_of_semiramis.htm;
http:www.onesimus @ix.netcom; author Bryce Self
[vii] ibid.
[viii] ibid., 26-28.
[ix] Henry M. Morris, The Genesis Record: A Scientific and Devotional Commentary On
the Book of Beginnings (San Diego: Creation-Life, ©1976),
265.
[x] Alexander
Hislop; The Two Babylons;
pp. 5, 69-70.
[xi] ibid. p. 231.
[xii] Eusebius;
“De Laud, Constantini;”
chapter 13; p. 267.
[xiii] Alexander Hislop, The Two Babylons (Neptune, NJ: Loizeaux Brothers,
Inc., 1959), 23-25.
[xiv] ibid., 59, 61-67,
71, 120-121, 170, 180.
[xv] ibid., 70.
[xvi] ibid., 71-72.
[xvii] ibid., 72.
[xviii] Ibid.,70.
[xix] ibid., 227-228.
[xx] ibid., 227.
Bibliography
11.
The Bible (NASB)
22.
Eusebius, De Laud, Constantini.
33.
Herodotus. The History of
Herodotus.
44.
Hislop, Alexander. The
Two Babylons. Neptune, NJ:
Loizeaux Brothers, Inc., 1959.
55.
The Jerusalem Tar-gum
66.
Josephus, Flavius. Antiquities of
the Jews.
77.
Merrill, Steven C. Nimrod:
Darkness in the Cradle of Civilization. United States of America: Xulon Press, 2004.The Book of Josher
88. Nibley, Hugh. Collected Works of
Hugh Nibley, Vol. 5, Part 2.Morris, Henry M. The
Genesis Record: A Scientific and Devotional Commentary On the Book of Beginnings. San Diego:
Creation- Life, ©1976.
9. Siculus, Diodorus. Library of History.
Wow I had worked and studied and found about 75% of this information, but you really pulled it all together in such an understandable and readable fashion.
ReplyDeleteI must ask if you might happen to be Dr William A Merrill, my former pastor at Country Estates Baptist Church in Midwest City, Oklahoma?