Many spiritual scholars and historians identify the Biblical Nimrod with the Babylonian god Marduk. Nimrod was a idolized historical figure, formerly called the "great hunter" and founder of Babylonian cities specified as Babel, while Marduk became the chief god of Babylon, especially erstwhile the city gained power. This relation suggests that Nimrod, the boy of whom Kush was the father, making him Noah’s great-grandson, was a powerful ruler and possibly the first widely known king after the large Flood. any believe that Nimrod's legend evolved from "God's" Marduk, who was an highly impudent "rebel" against God's command and the chief architect/builder of Babylon and the Tower of Babel.
Key links and theories:
In fact, Marduk acts as a Babylonian divine figure in Anunnaki’s legend, which is besides described in Genesis as Bible king Nimrod. In another words, they are 1 and the same individual and both are known rebels against God. While Marduk rebelled against the ancestral regulation of the Anu-king god of Anunnaki, ancient aliens of Anunnaki, Nimrod rebelled against the alleged only actual Hebrew god YAHWE, who was the warring ancient alien military leader of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah and the ancient Semitic deity of Judaism.
The mediocre Nimrod was immortalized by carrying an eternal green tree that never dies (now known as Christmas tree), and on the another side of the deer (now reindeer), symbolizing his hunting skills.
Nimrod's symbols, evergreen trees and deer are primarily linked by any extra - Biblical fairy tales and circumstantial interpretations linking them to the beginning of Christmas traditions. These interpretations are popular in any Christian and alternate traditions, but are not widely accepted historical or biblical facts.
Nimrod and the tree always green.
Nimrod and deer
The relation with deer or deer derives from ancient artistic interpretations or descriptions related to tree mythology:
General meaning
In these circumstantial interpretations the combined images represent a set pagan spiritual practices and idol worship, which allegedly existed even before Christianity, and were later incorporated into the Christmas traditions.
December 25th is Nimrod's birthday. The rebellious King Babel, who gained power with the intention of killing the Creator, so that mankind might live independently of the Devil and under his earthly rule. The Babel Tower was built as a immense temple evidence in the form of a ziggeraut for Nimrod's blasphemous mission.
Nimrod’s biological mother, Semiramis, whom he actually married, planted a tree on his grave after his burial, showing that the spirit of the boy lives in that tree (and on the grave), indicating that he is not dead, and encouraged all believers/subjects to a joyful celebration of his rebirth and immortality all year on December 25.
This Babylonian belief strategy and pagan practices were yet taken over by the Roman Empire, practiced as a spiritual tradition of Christianity and promoted by the Roman Catholic Church.
In fact, the Christmas tree and its various decorations are actually the festival of Nimrod and no other!
Published by Michael Boateng
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