Separating the Lie From the Truth
Where did the stories of the Abrahamic religions of Judaism and
Christianity originate? Ancient Egypt, India, in the ancient Sumerian tablets written
not by word of mouth 400 years after the supposed events like that of Jesus, but
written in STONE! Here are some. Keep in mind that the contradictions in the
Biblical text contradict because in, as in the flood story, they are taking two
god’s and trying poorly to make them one.
The land
extended, the people multiplied;
In the
land like wild bulls they lay.
The god
got disturbed by their conjugations;
The god
Enlil heard their pronouncements,
and said
the great gods:
“Oppressive
have become the pronouncements of Mankind;
Their
conjugations deprive me of sleep.”
Enlil - once again cast as the prosecutor of Mankind - then
ordered a punishment. We would expect to read now of the coming Deluge. But not
so. Surprisingly, Enlil did not even mention a Deluge or any similar watery
ordeal. Instead, he called for the decimation of Mankind through pestilence and illness. The Acadian and Assyrian versions of the epic speak of “aches,
dizziness, chills, fever” as well as “disease, sickness, plague, and
pestilence” afflicting Mankind and its livestock following Enlil’s call for
punishment. This method of operation is very similar to what Jehovah did to Moses, which I cannot believe they put in the Bible in the first place. It shows a god committing horrible murder and torture upon the one man who loved him the most!
Family Massacred, servants killed, just to prove a point |
But Enlil’s scheme did not work. The “one who was exceedingly wise”
- Atra-Hasis - happened to be especially close to the god Enki. Telling his own
story in some of the versions, he says,
“I am Atra-Hasis; I lived in the temple of Ea my
lord.” With “his mind alert to his Lord Enki,” Atra-Hasis appealed to him to
undo his brother Enlil’s plan:
“Ea, O Lord, Mankind groans; the anger of the gods consumes the
land. Yet it is thou who hast created us! Let there cease the aches, the
dizziness, the chills, and the fever!”
Until more pieces of the broken-off tablets are found, we will not know what Enki’s advice was. He said of something, “. . . let there appear
in the land.” Whatever it was, it worked. Soon thereafter, Enlil complained
bitterly to the gods that “the people have not diminished; they are more
numerous than before!”
He then proceeded to outline the extermination of Mankind through
starvation. "Let supplies be cut off from the people; in their bellies,
let fruit and vegetables be wanting!" The famine was to be achieved
through natural forces, by a lack of rain and failing irrigation. Let the rains
of the rain god be withheld from above; Below, let the waters not rise from
their sources. Let the wind blow and parch the ground; Let the clouds thicken,
but hold back the downpour. Even the sources of seafood were to disappear: Enki
was ordered to "draw the bolt, bar the sea," and "guard"
its food away from the people. Soon the drought began to spread devastation.
From above, the heat was not. . . . Below, the waters did not rise from their
sources. The womb of the earth did not bear; Vegetation did not sprout. . . .
The green fields turned white;
The broad plain was choked with salt. The resulting famine caused
havoc among the people. Conditions got worse as time went on. The Mesopotamian
texts speak of six increasingly devastating sha-at-tam - a term that some
translate as "years," but which literally means "passing’s,"
and, as the Assyrian version makes clear, "a year of Anu":
For one sha-at-tam they ate the earth's grass.
For the second sha-at-tam they suffered the vengeance.
The third sha-at-tam came; their features were altered by hunger,
their faces were encrusted . . . they were living on the verge of death.
When the fourth sha-at-tam arrived, their faces appeared green;
they walked hunched in the streets; their broad [shoulders?] became narrow. •
By the fifth "passing," human life began to deteriorate.
Mothers barred their doors to their own starving daughters. Daughters spied on
their mothers to see whether they had hidden any food. By the sixth
"passing," cannibalism was rampant.
When the sixth sha-at-tam arrived they prepared the daughter for a
meal; the child they prepared for food. . . . One house devoured the other.
The texts report the persistent intercession by Atra-Hasis with
his god Enki. "In the house of his god ... he set foot; . . . every day he
wept, bringing oblations in the morning ... he called by the name of his
god," seeking Enki's help to avert the famine.
Enki, however, must have felt bound by the decision of the other
deities, for at first he did not respond.
Quite possibly, he even hid from his faithful worshiper by leaving
the temple and sailing into his beloved marshlands. "When the people were
living on the edge of death," Atra-Hasis "placed his bed facing the
river." But there was no response.
The sight of a starving, disintegrating Mankind, of parents eating
their own children, finally brought about the unavoidable: another
confrontation between Enki and Enlil.
Now this is very important here because we see again where Enki "rebels" yet again to save mankind from an angry god... In the seventh "passing," when the remaining men and women were "like ghosts of the dead," they received a message from Enki. "Make a loud noise in the land," he said. Send out heralds to command all the people: "Do not revere your gods, do not pray to your goddesses." There was to be total disobedience! Here is an excellent example of how Enki was given the title "Satan" Not by a fallen angel rebelling against his creator, but one god: the creator god of man, fighting against one god's actions or inactions by the others, to intercede for man who was worshiping them all over the planet, yet being allowed to suffer at the hands of Enlil!
Had it not been for Ea/Enki, man would have been whipped out 12 times over. |
Under the cover of such turmoil, Enki planned more concrete
action. The texts, quite fragmented at this point, disclose that he convened a
secret assembly of "elders" in his temple. "They entered . . .
they took counsel in the House of Enki." First Enki exonerated himself,
telling them how he had opposed the acts of the other gods. Then he outlined a
plan of action; it somehow involved his command of the seas and the Lower
World. We can glean the clandestine details of the plan from the fragmentary
verses: "In the night . . . after he . . ." someone had to be
"by the bank of the river" at a certain time, perhaps to await the
return of Enki from the Lower World. From there Enki "brought the water
warriors" - perhaps also some of the Earthlings who were Primitive Workers
in the mines. At the appointed time, commands were shouted:
"Go! . . . the order . . ." In spite of missing lines,
we can gather what had happened from the reaction of Enlil. "He was filled
with anger." He summoned the Assembly of the Gods and sent his sergeant at
arms to fetch Enki. Then he stood up and accused his brother of breaking the
surveillance-and-containment plans:
All of us, Great Anunnaki, reached together a decision. ...
I commanded that in the Bird of Heaven
Adad should guard the upper regions; that Sin and Nergal should
guard the Earth's middle regions; that the bolt, the bar of the sea, you [Enki]
should guard with your rockets. But you let loose provisions for the people!
Enlil accused his brother of breaking the "bolt to the
sea." But Enki denied that it had happened with his consent: The bolt, the
bar of the sea, I did guard with my rockets. [But] when . . . escaped from me .
. . a myriad of fish ... it disappeared; they broke off the bolt. . . they had
killed the guards of the sea. He claimed that he had caught the culprits and
punished them, but Enlil was not satisfied. He demanded that Enki "stop
feeding his people," that he no longer "supply corn rations on which
the people thrive."
The reaction of Enki was astounding: The god Ea got fed up with
the sitting; in the Assembly of the Gods, laughter overcame him. We can imagine
the pandemonium. Enlil was furious. There were heated exchanges with Enki and shouting.
"There is slander in his hand!" When the Assembly was finally called
to order, Enlil took the floor again. He reminded his colleagues and
subordinates that it had been a unanimous decision. He reviewed the events that
led to the fashioning of the Primitive Worker and recalled the many times that
Enki "broke the rule." But, he said, there was still a chance to doom
Mankind. A "killing flood" was in the offing.
Enlil despised mankind and wanted them, and that includes you by the way, destroyed, period! Because of Enki ALONE does mankind live today! And that Enlil HAD to accept mankind after the flood because he was defeated!! In place of mankinds extermination, he (Enlil), created the 3 religions of the Abrahamic faiths to create an atmosphere of continual "religious wars", including the Inquisition, created all the plagues in the Old Testament, and has been the main cause of all religious atrocities, including his pedifilia possessed priests to destroy children, has people of Islam on their knees and their faces firmly planted in the ground, the punishments and treatment of women is beyond criminal!! He IS Yahweh, he IS Allah, and his religions are nothing less than controlled slavery! If I can't kill them, I'll enslave them!
He has manipulated history throughout time and twisted things so badly that these faith's of his look at their TRUE Creator as the enemy: Satan! HE has slaughtered entire civilizations to destroy these truths and keep mankind from the one who has fought continuously to keep them alive. Mankind lives today because of Satan's direct and non-stop intervention on behalf of mankind. So we actually have Enlil, i.e. Jehovah and Allah, calling good evil and evil good! He is the enemy of man, NOT Satan.
Is it so hard to believe that for millennia man has been lied to? A god who slaughters women and children, and that includes the Old Testament, Joshua was ordered to do some pretty nasty things. Has no problem watching his most devout suffer, like Job and Abraham when he told him to kill his only son. Waiting of course til the last second to stop him.
As rational people, we have to ask: What goes on inside this kind of mind? Very few people could do the things to their child that he has done to his.
Would you do to Job, what his god did to him? Killed his family, slaughtered his children (and what about the suffering they went through as the god they loved and served like no other family, was slaughtering them?) , infected him with boils and disease, burns his property to ash all for an "I told you so" opportunity? Could you do that? I only ask because he did. The kids were innocent, and his wife, but no one ever speaks about them because it is unjustifiable child murder. All for an "I told you so".
If you understand the psychology of Enlil and his hatred for mankind, you will come to understand the god of the Old Testament, because they are the same entity. To me, and for my own serious conclusion that I accept is that this is the case. I only research things because I love doing it and I only write because it's just what I do. The first 20 or so pages of my original site I already wrote months or even years before because I just wrote them for myself so I have researched deeply these things for my own 15 hours a day for 20 years.
The approaching catastrophe had to be kept a secret from the people. He called on the Assembly to swear themselves to secrecy and, most important, to "bind prince Enki by an oath." Enlil opened his mouth to speak and addressed the Assembly of all the gods: "Come, all of us, and take an oath regarding the Killing Flood!"
Anu swore first; Enlil swore; his sons swore with him.
At first, Enki refused to take the oath. "Why will you bind
me with an oath?" he asked. "Am I to raise my hands against my own
humans?" But he was finally forced to take the oath. One of the texts
specifically states: "Anu, Enlil, Enki, and Ninhursag, the gods of Heaven
and Earth, had taken the oath." The die was cast.
What was the oath he was bound by? As Enki chose to interpret it,
he swore not to reveal the secret of the coming Deluge to the people; but could
he not tell it to a wall? Calling Atra-Hasis to the temple, he made him stay
behind a screen. Then Enki pretended to speak not to his devout Earthling but
to the wall.
"Reed screen," he said,
Pay attention to my instructions.
On all the habitations, over the cities, a storm will sweep.
The destruction of Mankind's seed it will be. . . . This is the
final ruling, the word of the Assembly of the gods, the word spoken by Anu,
Enlil and Ninhursag.
(This subterfuge explains Enki's later contention, when the
survival of Noah/Utnupishtim was discovered, that he had not broken his oath -
that the "exceedingly wise" [Atra-Hasis] human had found out the
secret of the Deluge all by himself, by correctly interpreting the signs.)
Pertinent seal depictions show an attendant holding the screen while Ea - as
the Serpent God - reveals the secret to Atra-Hasis. For an excellent lesson about the Feathered Serpent as Enki was also known Crystalinks
Enki's advice to his faithful servant was to build a water-borne
vessel; but when the latter said, "I have never built a boat . . . draw
for me a design on the ground that I may see," Enki provided him with
precise instructions regarding the boat, its measurements, and its
construction. Steeped in Bible stories, we imagine this "ark" as a
very large boat, with decks and superstructures. But the biblical term - teba -
stems from the root "sunken," and it must be concluded that Enki
instructed his Noah to construct a submersible boat - a submarine.
The Acadian text quotes Enki as calling for a boat "roofed
over and below," hermetically sealed with "tough pitch." There
were to be no decks, no openings, "so that the sun shall not see
inside." It was to be a boat "like an Apsu boat," a sulili; it
is the very term used nowadays in Hebrew (soleleth) to denote a submarine.
"Let the boat," Enki said, "be a MA.GUR.GUR" -
"a boat that can turn and tumble." Indeed, only such a boat could
have survived an overpowering avalanche of waters.
The Atra-Hasis version, like the others, reiterates that although
the calamity was only seven days away, the people were unaware of its approach.
Atra-Hasis used the excuse that the "Apsu vessel" was being built so
that he could leave for Enki's abode and perhaps thereby avert Enlil's anger.
This was readily accepted, for things were really bad. Noah's father had hoped
that his birth signaled the end of a long time of suffering. The people's
problem was a drought - the absence of rain, the shortage of water. Who in his
right mind would have thought that they were about to perish in an avalanche of
water? Yet if the humans could not read the signs, the Nefilim could.
To them, the Deluge was not a sudden event; though it was unavoidable, they detected its coming. Their scheme to destroy Mankind rested not on an active but on a passive role by the gods. They did not cause the Deluge; they simply connived to withhold from the Earthlings the fact of its coming. Aware, however, of the impending calamity, and of its global impact, the Nefilim took steps to save their own skins.
With Earth about to be engulfed by water, they could go in only one direction for protection: skyward. When the storm that preceded the Deluge began to blow, the Nefilim took to their shuttlecraft, and remained in Earth orbit until the waters began to subside.
To them, the Deluge was not a sudden event; though it was unavoidable, they detected its coming. Their scheme to destroy Mankind rested not on an active but on a passive role by the gods. They did not cause the Deluge; they simply connived to withhold from the Earthlings the fact of its coming. Aware, however, of the impending calamity, and of its global impact, the Nefilim took steps to save their own skins.
With Earth about to be engulfed by water, they could go in only one direction for protection: skyward. When the storm that preceded the Deluge began to blow, the Nefilim took to their shuttlecraft, and remained in Earth orbit until the waters began to subside.
The day of the Deluge, I think, was the day the gods fled
from Earth.
The sign for which Utnupishtim had to watch, upon which he was to
join all other in the ark and seal it, was this:
When Shamash, who orders a trembling at dusk, will shower down a
rain of eruptions - board thou the ship, batten up the entrance!
Shamash, as we know, was in charge of the spaceport at Sippar.
There is no doubt in our mind that Enki instructed Utnupishtim to watch for the
first sign of space launchings at Sippar. Shuruppak, where Utnupishtim lived,
was only 18 beru (some 180 kilometers, or 112 miles) south of Sippar. Since the
launchings were to take place at dusk, there would be no problem in seeing the
"rain of eruptions" that the rising rocket ships would "shower
down."
Though the Nefilim were prepared for the Deluge, its coming was a frightening experience: "The noise of the Deluge ... set the gods trembling." But when the moment to leave Earth arrived, the gods, "shrinking back, ascended to the heavens of Ami." The Assyrian version of Atra-Hasis speaks of the gods using rukub ilani ("chariot of the gods") to escape from Earth. "The Anunnaki lifted up," their rocket ships, like torches, "setting the land ablaze with their glare." Orbiting Earth, the Nefilim saw a scene of destruction that affected them deeply. The Gilgamesh texts tell us that, as the storm grew in intensity, not only "could no one see his fellow," but "neither could the people be recognized from the heavens." Crammed into their spacecraft, the gods strained to see what was happening on the planet from which they had just blasted off.
Though the Nefilim were prepared for the Deluge, its coming was a frightening experience: "The noise of the Deluge ... set the gods trembling." But when the moment to leave Earth arrived, the gods, "shrinking back, ascended to the heavens of Ami." The Assyrian version of Atra-Hasis speaks of the gods using rukub ilani ("chariot of the gods") to escape from Earth. "The Anunnaki lifted up," their rocket ships, like torches, "setting the land ablaze with their glare." Orbiting Earth, the Nefilim saw a scene of destruction that affected them deeply. The Gilgamesh texts tell us that, as the storm grew in intensity, not only "could no one see his fellow," but "neither could the people be recognized from the heavens." Crammed into their spacecraft, the gods strained to see what was happening on the planet from which they had just blasted off.
The gods cowered like dogs, crouched against the outer wall.
Ishtar cried out like a woman in travail: "The olden days are
alas turned to clay." . . .
Ishtar is the goddess of love and war. Known as Inanna in Sumeria. |
The Anunnaki gods weep with her. The gods, all humbled, sit and weep; their lips drawn tight. . . one and all. The Atra-Hasis texts echo the same theme. The gods, fleeing, were watching the destruction at the same time. But the situation within their own vessels was not very encouraging, either. Apparently, they were divided among several spaceships; Tablet III of the Atra-Hasis epic describes the conditions on board one where some of the Anunnaki shared accommodations with the Mother Goddess.
The Anunnaki, great gods, were sitting in thirst, in hunger. . . .
Ninti wept and spent her emotion; she wept and eased her feelings. The goddess of life watching destruction and death.
The gods wept with her for the land.
The gods wept with her for the land.
She was overcome with grief, she thirsted for beer.
Where she sat, the gods sat weeping; crouching like sheep at a
trough.
Their lips were feverish of thirst; they were suffering cramp from
hunger.
The Mother Goddess herself, Ninhursag, was shocked by the utter
devastation. She bewailed what she was seeing: The Goddess saw and she wept . .
. her lips were covered with feverishness. . . . "My creatures have become
like flies - they filled the rivers like dragonflies, their fatherhood was
taken by the rolling sea."
Could she, indeed, save her own life while Mankind, which she
helped create, was dying? Could she really leave the Earth, she asked aloud -
"Shall I ascend up to Heaven, to reside in the House of Offerings, where
Anu, the Lord, had ordered to go?"
The orders to the Nefilim became clear: Abandon Earth,
"ascend up to Heaven." It was a time when the Twelfth Planet was
nearest Earth, within the asteroid belt ("Heaven"), as evidenced by
the fact that Anu was able to attend personally the crucial conferences shortly
before the Deluge. Enlil and Ninurta - accompanied perhaps by the elite of the
Anunnaki, those who had manned Nippur - were in one spacecraft, planning, no
doubt, to rejoin the main spaceship. But the other gods were not so determined.
Forced to abandon Earth, they suddenly realized how attached they had become to it and its inhabitants. In one craft, Ninhursag and her group of Anunnaki debated the merits of the orders given by Anu. In another, Ishtar cried out: "The olden days, alas, are turned into clay"; the Anunnaki who were in her craft "wept with her."
Forced to abandon Earth, they suddenly realized how attached they had become to it and its inhabitants. In one craft, Ninhursag and her group of Anunnaki debated the merits of the orders given by Anu. In another, Ishtar cried out: "The olden days, alas, are turned into clay"; the Anunnaki who were in her craft "wept with her."
Enki was obviously in yet another spacecraft, or else he would
have disclosed to the others that he had managed to save the seed of Mankind.
No doubt he had other reasons to feel less gloomy, for the evidence suggests
that he had also planned the encounter at Ararat.
The ancient versions appear to imply that the ark was simply carried to the region of Ararat by the torrential waves; and a "south-storm" would indeed drive the boat northward. But the Mesopotamian texts reiterate that Atra-Hasis/Utnupishtim took along with him a "Boatman" named Puzur-Amurri ("Westerner who knows the secrets"). To him the Mesopotamian Noah "handed over the structure, together with its contents," as soon as the storm started. Why was an experienced navigator needed, unless it was to bring the ark to a specific destination?
The ancient versions appear to imply that the ark was simply carried to the region of Ararat by the torrential waves; and a "south-storm" would indeed drive the boat northward. But the Mesopotamian texts reiterate that Atra-Hasis/Utnupishtim took along with him a "Boatman" named Puzur-Amurri ("Westerner who knows the secrets"). To him the Mesopotamian Noah "handed over the structure, together with its contents," as soon as the storm started. Why was an experienced navigator needed, unless it was to bring the ark to a specific destination?
The Nefilim, as we have shown, used the peaks of Ararat as
landmarks from the very beginning. As the highest peaks in that part of the
world, they could be expected to reappear first from under the mantle of water.
Since Enki, "The Wise One, the All-Knowing," certainly could figure
that much out, we can surmise that he had instructed his servant to guide the
ark toward Ararat, planning the encounter from the very beginning. Berossus
version of the Flood, as reported by the Greek Abydenus, relates: "Kronos
revealed to Sisithros that there would be a Deluge on the fifteenth day of Daisies
[the second month], and ordered him to conceal in Sippar, the city of Shamash,
every available writing. Sisithros accomplished all these things, sailed
immediately to Armenia, and thereupon what the god had announced did
happen."
Berossus repeats the details regarding the release of the birds. When Sisithros (which is Atra-Hasis
Mt. Ararat |
Berossus repeats the details regarding the release of the birds. When Sisithros (which is Atra-Hasis
reversed) was taken by the gods to their abode, he explained to
the other people in the ark that they were "in Armenia" and directed
them back (on foot) to Babylonia. We find in this version not only the tie-in
with Sippar, the spaceport, but also confirmation that Sisithros was instructed
to "sail immediately to Armenia" - to the land of Ararat.
As soon as Atra-Hasis had landed, he slaughtered some animals and
roasted them on a fire. No wonder that the exhausted and hungry gods
"gathered like flies over the offering." Suddenly they realized that
Man and the food he grew and the cattle he raised were essential. "When at
length Enlil arrived and saw the ark, he was wroth." But the logic of the
situation and Enki's persuasion prevailed; Enlil made his peace with the
remnants of Mankind and took Atra-Hasis/Utnupishtim in his craft up to the
Eternal Abode of the Gods.
Another factor in the quick decision to make peace with Mankind may have been the progressive abatement of the Flood and the reemergence of dry land and the vegetation upon it. We have already concluded that the Nefilim became aware ahead of time of the approaching calamity; but it was so unique in their experience that they feared that Earth would become uninhabitable forever. As they landed on Ararat, they saw that this was not so. Earth was still habitable, and to live on it, they needed man.
Text quoted was taken from:
(The 12th Planet, Sitchen, Chapter 13 “When the Gods Fled From Earth”)
Another factor in the quick decision to make peace with Mankind may have been the progressive abatement of the Flood and the reemergence of dry land and the vegetation upon it. We have already concluded that the Nefilim became aware ahead of time of the approaching calamity; but it was so unique in their experience that they feared that Earth would become uninhabitable forever. As they landed on Ararat, they saw that this was not so. Earth was still habitable, and to live on it, they needed man.
Text quoted was taken from:
(The 12th Planet, Sitchen, Chapter 13 “When the Gods Fled From Earth”)
Reference: Sitchen,
Z. “The Twelfth Planet” Harper Collins Publishing. Avon Books, New York, New
York. (1977)
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