Search Results
7/22/2025, 9:10:36 PM
>>511071538
>Alexandria was a central location in the formation of early Christianity and, more specifically, Gnostic Christianity. It was the crossroads of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Jewish culture. Of course, Jews would often boast about how great their god was and tell stories of how he turned the Nile red with blood, cast darkness over Egypt, and killed every first born Egyptian son. Naturally, the Egyptians would react to this and equate YHWH with Set, who was their donkey-headed god of evil and darkness. The Greeks of course equated Set with Typhon, and thus they equated YHWH with Typhon. Among the early Christian sects that were growing in Alexandria, this view caught on
>Alexandria was a central location in the formation of early Christianity and, more specifically, Gnostic Christianity. It was the crossroads of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Jewish culture. Of course, Jews would often boast about how great their god was and tell stories of how he turned the Nile red with blood, cast darkness over Egypt, and killed every first born Egyptian son. Naturally, the Egyptians would react to this and equate YHWH with Set, who was their donkey-headed god of evil and darkness. The Greeks of course equated Set with Typhon, and thus they equated YHWH with Typhon. Among the early Christian sects that were growing in Alexandria, this view caught on
7/22/2025, 9:56:54 AM
>>511030590
>Alexandria was a central location in the formation of early Christianity and, more specifically, Gnostic Christianity. It was the crossroads of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Jewish culture. Of course, Jews would often boast about how great their god was and tell stories of how he turned the Nile red with blood, cast darkness over Egypt, and killed every first born Egyptian son. Naturally, the Egyptians would react to this and equate YHWH with Set, who was their donkey-headed god of evil and darkness. The Greeks of course equated Set with Typhon, and thus they equated YHWH with Typhon. Among the early Christian sects that were growing in Alexandria, this view caught on
>Alexandria was a central location in the formation of early Christianity and, more specifically, Gnostic Christianity. It was the crossroads of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Jewish culture. Of course, Jews would often boast about how great their god was and tell stories of how he turned the Nile red with blood, cast darkness over Egypt, and killed every first born Egyptian son. Naturally, the Egyptians would react to this and equate YHWH with Set, who was their donkey-headed god of evil and darkness. The Greeks of course equated Set with Typhon, and thus they equated YHWH with Typhon. Among the early Christian sects that were growing in Alexandria, this view caught on
7/21/2025, 10:33:29 PM
>>510994838
>Alexandria was a central location in the formation of early Christianity and, more specifically, Gnostic Christianity. It was the crossroads of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Jewish culture. Of course, Jews would often boast about how great their god was and tell stories of how he turned the Nile red with blood, cast darkness over Egypt, and killed every first born Egyptian son. Naturally, the Egyptians would react to this and equate YHWH with Set, who was their donkey-headed god of evil and darkness. The Greeks of course equated Set with Typhon, and thus they equated YHWH with Typhon. Among the early Christian sects that were growing in Alexandria, this view caught on
>Alexandria was a central location in the formation of early Christianity and, more specifically, Gnostic Christianity. It was the crossroads of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Jewish culture. Of course, Jews would often boast about how great their god was and tell stories of how he turned the Nile red with blood, cast darkness over Egypt, and killed every first born Egyptian son. Naturally, the Egyptians would react to this and equate YHWH with Set, who was their donkey-headed god of evil and darkness. The Greeks of course equated Set with Typhon, and thus they equated YHWH with Typhon. Among the early Christian sects that were growing in Alexandria, this view caught on
7/20/2025, 11:18:01 PM
>>510915420
>Alexandria was a central location in the formation of early Christianity and, more specifically, Gnostic Christianity. It was the crossroads of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Jewish culture. Of course, Jews would often boast about how great their god was and tell stories of how he turned the Nile red with blood, cast darkness over Egypt, and killed every first born Egyptian son. Naturally, the Egyptians would react to this and equate YHWH with Set, who was their donkey-headed god of evil and darkness. The Greeks of course equated Set with Typhon, and thus they equated YHWH with Typhon. Among the early Christian sects that were growing in Alexandria, this view caught on
>Alexandria was a central location in the formation of early Christianity and, more specifically, Gnostic Christianity. It was the crossroads of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Jewish culture. Of course, Jews would often boast about how great their god was and tell stories of how he turned the Nile red with blood, cast darkness over Egypt, and killed every first born Egyptian son. Naturally, the Egyptians would react to this and equate YHWH with Set, who was their donkey-headed god of evil and darkness. The Greeks of course equated Set with Typhon, and thus they equated YHWH with Typhon. Among the early Christian sects that were growing in Alexandria, this view caught on
7/20/2025, 11:18:01 PM
>>22964769
>Alexandria was a central location in the formation of early Christianity and, more specifically, Gnostic Christianity. It was the crossroads of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Jewish culture. Of course, Jews would often boast about how great their god was and tell stories of how he turned the Nile red with blood, cast darkness over Egypt, and killed every first born Egyptian son. Naturally, the Egyptians would react to this and equate YHWH with Set, who was their donkey-headed god of evil and darkness. The Greeks of course equated Set with Typhon, and thus they equated YHWH with Typhon. Among the early Christian sects that were growing in Alexandria, this view caught on
>Alexandria was a central location in the formation of early Christianity and, more specifically, Gnostic Christianity. It was the crossroads of Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Jewish culture. Of course, Jews would often boast about how great their god was and tell stories of how he turned the Nile red with blood, cast darkness over Egypt, and killed every first born Egyptian son. Naturally, the Egyptians would react to this and equate YHWH with Set, who was their donkey-headed god of evil and darkness. The Greeks of course equated Set with Typhon, and thus they equated YHWH with Typhon. Among the early Christian sects that were growing in Alexandria, this view caught on
7/9/2025, 8:55:37 PM
>>17827250
>According to Manetho, Moses is an Egyptian, priest of Heliopolis. Strabo also says that Moses was an Egyptian priest; Apion says he is from Heliopolis, but does not say he is a priest; and Chaeremon says that he and Joseph are sacred scribes. This name attributed to Moses, Osarseph, appears only in Manetho, and only in this text, in all ancient literature. Perhaps Osarseph is an Egyptian form of Joseph, in Hebrew Yosef, in which the letters Jo (of Jahweh) are substituted for Osar (Osiris)
>Mnaseas is the first writer to mention a Jewish cult of an donkey/ass's head. Later, in the 1st century AD, Apion and Damocritus also do so. It seems that this story is born in Hellenistic Egypt. The donkey is an animal linked to Typhon-Seth, the enemy of Osiris. Seth is the god of the Hyksos (and, according to Manetho, Jews and Hyksos are the same...). The word Iao (of Iahweh) is, moreover, similar to the Egyptian word for ass (ⲓⲁⲱ, iaō), which certainly gives rise to the legend of the cult of an ass's head
>Set's negative aspects were emphasized during this period. Set was the killer of Osiris, having hacked Osiris' body into pieces and dispersed it so that he could not be resurrected. The Greeks would later associate Set with Typhon and Yahweh, a monstrous and evil force of raging nature (being the three of them depicted as donkey-like creatures, classifying their worshippers as onolatrists)
>According to Manetho, Moses is an Egyptian, priest of Heliopolis. Strabo also says that Moses was an Egyptian priest; Apion says he is from Heliopolis, but does not say he is a priest; and Chaeremon says that he and Joseph are sacred scribes. This name attributed to Moses, Osarseph, appears only in Manetho, and only in this text, in all ancient literature. Perhaps Osarseph is an Egyptian form of Joseph, in Hebrew Yosef, in which the letters Jo (of Jahweh) are substituted for Osar (Osiris)
>Mnaseas is the first writer to mention a Jewish cult of an donkey/ass's head. Later, in the 1st century AD, Apion and Damocritus also do so. It seems that this story is born in Hellenistic Egypt. The donkey is an animal linked to Typhon-Seth, the enemy of Osiris. Seth is the god of the Hyksos (and, according to Manetho, Jews and Hyksos are the same...). The word Iao (of Iahweh) is, moreover, similar to the Egyptian word for ass (ⲓⲁⲱ, iaō), which certainly gives rise to the legend of the cult of an ass's head
>Set's negative aspects were emphasized during this period. Set was the killer of Osiris, having hacked Osiris' body into pieces and dispersed it so that he could not be resurrected. The Greeks would later associate Set with Typhon and Yahweh, a monstrous and evil force of raging nature (being the three of them depicted as donkey-like creatures, classifying their worshippers as onolatrists)
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