Table of Contents

  1. Attributes
  2. AKA’s and Intercultural Connections
  3. Stories of The Queen of Heaven

Attributes

  • The Mother Goddess
  • Goddess of Sex
  • Goddess of Fertility
  • Goddess of War
  • A Member of the Unholy Trinity
  • Mother Mary to the Catholics

Perhaps the beginning of the Queen of Heaven is with Semiramis, who becomes pregnant through adultery.  Nimrod comes back to life after death (blasphemy of Jesus’ resurrection), impregnates Semiramis and she gives birth to Tammuz, the “miracle child.”  She declares herself a “virgin,” standing with the “child-savior,” a counterfeit of the true Messiah.  The Semiramis Spirit masks herself as the Blessed Virgin Mary to Catholics and receives worship in that establishment.  Jezebel, a Sidonian, is a descendant of Semiramis and marries Ahab from the Bible, placing herself (indirectly) into the royal bloodline which produces the Christ.

The Queen of Heaven is spoken about by the prophet Jeremiah, to whom the men of Jerusalem and Judah build a fire to for the women to bake cakes for sacrifice, provoking the Lord. This Queen rides the scarlet beast in Revelation 17 and sits on the beast dressed in scarlet and purple (colors of royalty).  She is self-adorned with gold, precious stones, and pearls.  She holds a golden cup filled with detestable things from her sexual immorality.  On her head is written a name, a mystery, “Babylon the Great, Mother of all Prostitutes.”  She says to herself, “I rule as a queen and I am not a widow; I will never experience grief.” In the Bible this character appears as Ancient Mesopotamian “The Queen of Heaven” (Jer. 7:18), although she is mainly written as Ashtoreth in the Old Testament because it’s Hebraic text (Judges 2:13; Judges 10:6, 1 Sam. 7:3; 12:10; 1 Kings 11:4-5; 11:33; 2 Kings 23:13, etc.). 

She is the one of whom Apuleius writes, “I am she who is the natural mother of all things, mistress and governess of all the elements, the initial progeny of worlds, chief of powers divine, Queen of heaven! I am the principal of the celestial Gods, the light of the goddesses. At my will, the planets of the air, the wholesome winds of the seas, and the silences of hell are disposed. My name, my divinity is adored throughout the world in diverse ways, through various customs and under many names. The Phrygians call me the Mother of the Gods; the Athenians, Minerva; the Cyprians, Venus; the Candians, Diana; the Sicilians, Proserpina; the Eleusians, Ceres. Some Juno, others Bellona, others Hecate. And principally, the Ethiopians in the East, and the Egyptians who are excellent in all manner of ancient doctrine and who worship me by their proper ceremonies and customs, call me Queen Isis.”

AKA’s and Intercultural Connections

  • Semiramis – Lydian/Babylonian
  • Inanna – Sumerian
  • Asherah – Canaanite
  • Anat (Anath) – Canaanite
  • ISIS – Egypt
  • Ashtoreth – Israel
  • Ishtar – Mesopotamia/Phoenician
  • Astarte – Greece  
  • Easter – Proto Germanic
  • Frigg/Freya/Nao – Old Norse
  • Aurora – Latin
  • Diana – Rome
  • Juno – Rome
  • Mother Mary – Modern Catholicism
  • The Black Madonna – Modern Catholicism
  • Italian Madonna (Madonna mean “My Lady”) – Modern Catholicism
  • Queen of the Coast/Sea – Modern Africa

Stories of The Queen of Heaven