#3: Gods and Goddesses
The story of gods and goddesses always involve strife. There’s always a few gods (and goddesses) to start the party, then they have kids, and their kids generally succeed them in gruesome fashions because of power, greed, etc. Or, a group of gods finds another group of gods from another land… and war ensues.
This is the general story of gods and goddesses in mythology. In the Greek mythology, the Titans were the ruling gods of the land with the leader being Kronos. Well, in general, you don’t hear about the Titans as much because they were quickly overthrown by Kronos’ own son, Zeus. In Norse, there were the Aesir and the Vanir (oh, and humans). They didn’t get along… so much so that the Aesir is pretty much all you hear about. I’m sure you’ve heard of Odin… or maybe his son, Thor? (Especially since the comic book line of Thor comics, is actually fairly decent to the terms from the myth itself.)
The Bible has different versions of gods in it too. There the most popular Baal (although, upon further examination, this name actually just means “god”), there were others too though. One of which, Molech, I found while perusing the concordance in my Bible who people sacrificed children to in the Valley of Ben Hinnom, which the word Gehenna comes from…
I’ve always had a fascination with other cultures’ gods and always took note of the ways that they related to each other, never broke away from where they were, and some of the ways that mimicked the story of Jesus.
Think about it, the Greek gods of Mt. Olympus stayed, for the most part, on Mt. Olympus, and when they weren’t there, they were messing with human life, direct interaction-style. One place at a time. Zeus, the top-dog, had a son. His son was powerful, stong. The strength of a god, all the flaws of a human. A hero.
The Aesir stayed in Asgard. If they wanted to war or go somewhere else, they had to go there, one place at a time. Odin, had a son. Also powerful, also strong. A fearless warrior, completely flawed. A hero.
The Bible calls God the Lord of Lords. Why would it need to do that? The Almighty God. Why?
If the other “gods” weren’t real, then why call God the One True God? It would seem redundant. Right?
Well, I think that the gods and goddesses of other cultures are imposters! I think that they are regional fallen angels set up to try to achieve the greatness of God by “ruling” their own people group. Think about it. Remember in Genesis 6, where the “sons of God” were hooking up with the “daughters of men” they were creating Nephilim. The Bible says this about the Nephilim: ”They were the heroes of old, men of renown.”
So, we have multiple stories of Zeus seducing the ladies all over Greece, and producing a son that becomes a hero of old. Same story, no?
In another part of the Bible, Daniel 10, Daniel sees an angel of the Lord, and this angel says something I find very interesting: ” …the prince of the Persian kingdom resisted me twenty-one days. Then Michael, one of the chief princes, came to help me, because I was detained there with the king of Persia.”
The prince of the Persian kingdom? I truly do not believe this to be a literal prince, and I don’t think it’s referring to the videogame series. I believe that it’s referring to a fallen principality that has dominion over that area of Persia. In Ephesians 6, Paul warns that “we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.”
I think these princes, powers, and rulers of darkness have been trying to mimic God for a long time, and it’s been working for a long time. I believe that nowadays, they take different shapes in order to achieve the same affect, but I believe they’re still out there, deceiving people and keeping them from the truth of the Lord of Lords, the One True God who brought forth his son who committed no sins, was powerful but did not fight, and sacrificed himself for every single one of us. It’s the only story of the son of a god out there where that happens.
So, I guess the question is, what shape do they take nowadays?



