Guest Guest
| Subject: Molech in Peru? Wed May 07, 2014 8:53 am | |
| Molech in Peru?Posted by lamarzulli on May 7, 2014Commentary & AnalysisbyL. A. MarzulliMolech: “A detestable Semitic deity honored by the sacrifice of children, in which they were caused to pass through or into the fire. Palestinian excavations have uncovered evidences of infant skeletons in burial places around heathen shrines. Ammonites revered Molech as a protecting father. Worship of Molech was stringently prohibited by Hebrew law. (Lev. 18:21; 20:1-5) Solomon built an altar to Molech at Tophet in the Valley of Hinnon. Manasseh in his idolatrous orgy also honored this deity. Josiah desecrated the Hinnom Valley altar, but Jehoiakim revived the cult.” Unger’s Bible Dictionary Is there a connection between the Owl God worshipped by the Moche People in Peru and what we see in Bohemian Grove, and then leading back to the Levant? Is it really that much of a stretch?All over the globe a system of worship which was set up thousands of years ago remains. Supernatural events have been handed down from generation to generation often culminating in the worship of, with all due respect to other cultures, I would call false deities.At the Museum the card under the Moche Owl God read: This is one of the principal gods of the Moche culture and is associated with night, the occult and death.Notice the two serpents emanating from the top of the owl. In cultures throughout the world we see the serpent used to denote wisdom. I would ask why the serpent motif and what wisdom is the serpent dispensing? I believe this hails back to the Garden where we read in Genesis 3:1Now the serpent was more crafty than any of the wild animals the LORD God had made. He said to the woman, “Did God really say, ‘You must not eat from any tree in the garden’?”This challenge by the serpent: did God really say … is what then becomes the downfall of the human race. So there is knowledge which is given by the serpent, but it always comes with a price. I would posit that the knowledge and power that the serpent dispenses is a false one and eventually leads the practitioner on a path of destruction.In the Levant the worship of Molech, resulted in child sacrifice. While there doesn’t seem to be this connection in the case of the Moche in Peru, we do see human sacrifice practiced by the Mayan, at Chichen Itza.In closing todays post: Why is it we see the worship of the Owl, throughout the world and where does this worship originate from? Is there a connection to the Fallen One? I believe there is and we might find evidence of it in Peru.http://lamarzulli.wordpress.com/ |
|