The legend of Nimrod, Semiramis and Tammuz is the biggest con in the majority of Christian churches today. This teaching uses mythology and fables as authentic sources when they are anything but authentic. This bizarre teaching had literally caught fire in the online churches beginning sometime around 2012, but is now creeping into community churches throughout America.
This is an extremely dangerous teaching.
The myths are literally taught as historical events and Christian theology. These fables are presented as an alternative narrative to explain the mystery of the woman in Revelation 17, dating back to the time of Babel.
These fables replace a harlot city with a harlot religion that allegedly rose from Babel and consumed the earth with a mother-child mystery religion. The narrative suggests that the .02% rise of mother-child cults tied to the spread of fertility religions after Babel was scattered is the underlying factor that explains the 'mystery woman' of Revelation 17. The reality is: from the hundreds of fertility religions that saturated the Mesopotamia perhaps four actual mother-child cults spread to other regions of the world. That leaves 196 that did not. Not very good odds if you ask me. The mastermind behind these fabrications began with Scottish minister, Alexander Hislop.
History shows us that the spread in the occult, witchcraft and divination ran rampant after the flood, not mother-child religions.
If you are familiar with the Genesis story of Nimrod and the authentic histories of the ancient gods and goddesses of the Mesopotamia, reading the bizarre writings of Alexander Hislop will literally make your brain crawl.
As per Hislop, Nimrod (2500-2300 BC) was really Zoroaster, the Persian prophet who lived in the 5th C B.C. Hislop also claims that Zoroaster was really a Chaldean (9th century B.C.) who was a magician and sorcerer. Zoroaster (Nimrod) discovered the Chaldean Transmigration of Souls where he could reincarnate himself or possess humans throughout the ancient world and did so right up until the time of the Vikings.
By doing this little trick, he was able to establish himself throughout history as a god; many gods in fact. He was the Egyptian god Osiris, the Roman god Apollo, then Cupid son of Venus, Hercules, Vulcan (husband to Venus), Ninus, Kronos, the Norse god Odin among many others. Every ancient myth and pagan god or goddess that began in the new world was really the legacy of Tammuz / Nimrod and Semiramis passed down through the windmills of time for roughly 4000+ years.
The creator of this myth never claims that these various gods have a common origin or were prototypes of Nimrod. Instead, his research is based upon his direct claim that they are the same being, the same divinity or the same person. And he (Hislop) creates that illusion by reincarnation. Is reincarnation a Christian concept? Of course not. But it was a concept heavily referenced in Greek mythology that Hislop relies on for his hypothesis.
Here, we are told by Hislop that the members of the catholic church have worshiped her ever since, praying to Mary to hide the fact that they really pray to Semiramis. They are solely committed to concealing the Babylonian mystery religion that is deeply rooted to Catholicism. Even though there was never a primary mother-child religion centered in the city of Babylon or the Babylonian kingdom - the rumor mill is non-stop on this concept. There is no evidence that Nimrod had a wife named Semiramis or a child named Tammuz. I'm sure Nimrod being 'the mighty hunter before the Lord', was much desired by women; a real hunk of alpha male testosterone. But, still, no evidence exists from Babel to affirm this marriage. Also, Babel preceded Babylon by a thousand years, wouldn't that make her the Queen of Babel and not Babylon?
Semiramis inserted herself into ancient history as a goddess. She was the mother of a god-child who was the reincarnation of her loving husband Nimrod. This was only after she had him killed and promoted him to sun-god status. She became pregnant with Tammuz after Nimrod was reincarnated as the Sun god. As the sun-god, Nimrod shined upon her, bathing her in sun light, creating a halo impregnating her with the rays of the sun.
This mystery religion of Semiramis and her child-god went deep underground, shrouded in secrecy and secret rites that are still practiced today. The religion was so well guarded that it survived nearly 3000 years. This, as per Hislop, was how the 'mystery religion', the mother / child religion carried into the world after the scattering of Babel. We are told that this mystery religion is the religion found in the Catholic church.
But, history shows us another theory. The rise of fertility cults. Any god or goddess worth their salt had the power of fertility. There were roughly 200+ fertility gods and goddesses in ancient Mesopotamia after the flood. Perhaps four or five of these cults had a mother with child deity, a .02% ratio. Being idol worshipers, many idols and carvings were crafted so young woman could worship in the town square or carry fertility helpers with them where ever they went.
To be blessed with a family and a large one at that, was every woman's goal. A large family ensured the continuation of family lineage and was needed for hunting, farming, crop sharing and gathering. In the early days of civilization, temples were erected in the town square where idols of a fertility goddess were placed, available for worship. God said: go forth, multiply and fill the earth. And, that is exactly what they did. There were hundreds of fertility religions and cults that littered the plains.
But Alexander Hislop, thousands of years later decided there was another explanation to explain the explosion of fertility cults; Semiramis, Nimrod and Tammuz. He based his theory on church historian Eusebius who wrote about an Assyrian queen, Queen Shammu-Ramat in the 4th century A,D. The writings of Eusebius were based on the research of the Greek physician and historian Ctesias (5-4th C BC) who connected her to a mythological character, King Ninus. This work was further cited by Diodorus from the 1st century B.C., and the work of Abydenus who lived around 200 B.C.
Diodorus wrote of the legend of Queen Shammu-Ramat, an Assyrian queen who lived around 811 B.C. and the Greek mythological king of Assyria King Ninus who Greek mythology places into Assyria in 3,000 B.C. He claimed Queen Shammu-Ramat was also called Semiramis and transported her legacy back into time to meet and marry King Ninus. They fell madly in love and had a son named Ninyas. Based upon the writings of Eusebius and Diodorus, Alexander Hislop assigned Ninus as Nimrod based on his understanding of Greek mythology and the biblical legend of Nimrod. He then switched the mythological child Ninyas to Tammuz, an ancient Akkadian and Babylonian child-god of plants and pastures. Tammuz was known as Damuzid in the Sumerian culture - 4,000 B.C..
Not sure if you caught the date fluctuations?
This is literally how Hislop got his theory for The Two Babylons that he wrote in 1886 AD. Never mind the thousands of years that separate the two lives. According to Hislop's hypothesis, by the time Queen Shammu-Ramat (recreated as Semiramis) married King Shamshi-Adad V, she was already several thousands of years old. You see, Queen Shammu-Ramat was a real queen who reigned over Assyria after her husband died in battle 811 B.C. She ruled until their son was old enough for the throne. But, unlike the fictional Semiramis she never married her son. This Queen was an actual historical figure whose legacy was tarnished by Alexander Hislop. This is what the fictional story of Semiramis and Nimrod is based upon, a queen who lived thousands of years after the flood.
She was transported back into the time to marry Nimrod leaving her husband and son in the 8th century BC. Hislop based his interpretation entirely on Greek myths and fictional characters (king Ninus) created from mythology.
Hislop carried on the tradition conducted by Diodorus and Eusebius uniting mythology and history together, intertwining them, erasing the lines of time to focus on a specific outcome: the legend of Semiramis and Nimrod.
There is way more to this sordid love / hate relationship that Hislop wrote about. For example, without any proof at all, Hislop claimed that Semiramis was the wife of Cush and Nimrod was their biological son. Semiramis left Cush (who became the god Bel, the 'ringleader' of apostasy) to marry Nimrod. Since the god Bel was the mythological father of the fictional king Ninus, Cush had to be transformed into the father: god Bel. Once Hislop put it to paper, Nimrod 'logically' became king Ninus, son of the god Bel who is really Cush. Then Nimrod becomes Osiris, Vulcan, Odin, Hercules, Cupid, ect... Hislop became the master of switcherooism; weaving tales and fables of mythological figures into biblical history.
I mean really? I have never read more made up garbage passed off as reality in my life. This is what many pastors are teaching their flocks and this is literally ingrained deep within many teachings of the YouTube churches. There has been hundreds of sermons preached on Semiramis, Tammuz and Nimrod surrounding the Revelation 17 prophecy. But, no matter how much you twist it, the woman in Revelation 17 does not metaphorically describe a church.
Do not go beyond what is written... I Corinthians 4:6
I encourage you to read Hislop's theory on the Mother / Child religion that began with fertility cults in the land of Shinar. It gave me a headache each time but I got through it. Talk about bizarre mis-mapping and connecting Nimrod, Semiramis and Tammuz through every culture that ever existed in order to move them through history and tie them to the Catholic church.
And by the way, there is no mention of Semiramis or a wife of Nimrod in the Bible, nor in the writings of the Jewish historian, Josephus Flavius, nor on any ancient cuneiform tablets found to date. In fact, nothing has survived from Babel on which to base these stories. Instead, these stories are based upon the writings of one man: Alexander Hislop and his complex versions of mixing and matching Greek. Syrian, Latin and Roman mythologies.
I've been researching ancient Babylon, fertility cults, and the ancient god and goddess of the Mesopotamia since the 80's, and have never once come across this Nimrod, Semiramis, Tammuz 'mystery religion' that Hislop wrote about. (I truly believe he invented the entire narrative). What I did find were cultures deeply immersed in the occult, witchcraft, sorcery (drug induced spells) and divination scattered all through the Mesopotamia and Egyptian cultures. The practice of the dark arts was the common thread that dominated and spread throughout the world after Babel scattered, not a few mother-child mystery religions.
From over 200 fertility religions that dominated the Mesopotamia maybe four authentic mother-child religions sprung up after. That equals .02%, not a vast majority as Hislop would have you believe.
It wasn't until Bible teachers began preaching this as a historical narrative to explain this so-called mother / child religion that grew from the normal progression of fertility cults that I began to take notice. Having a background in authentic Mesopotamian history I began to question where they were getting this information from. (As I said, I've been researching Mesopotamian history and mythology for as long as I can remember, and this version of history never existed in any authentic historical setting. The only setting this is found is from the pulpit.) As much as I hate to admit it, it's true. :(
If you believe that Adam, the first man was really the goat / man Pan, or that Nimrod had the power of reincarnation, then Hislop is your guy. Before you make any decisions please read the twisted tale, The Two Babylons thoroughly - but grab your Tylenol first!!
The online PDF versions: -- https://ia800309.us.archive.org/6/items/theTwoBabylons/TheTwoBabylons.pdf
and also:
https://nazarenesoftheworld.info/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/THE-TWO-BABYLONS-HISLOP.pdf
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