THE OCCULTIC ORIGINS OF THE STATUE OF LIBERTY

ALL PRAISES TO THE MOST HIGH.

When it comes to symbols, always remember, nothing is ever a coincidence.

The Statue of liberty is widely hailed as a symbol of liberation and democracy, but very few people know about the occultic and masonic origins of this widely celebrated monument. The Statue of Liberty was a brainchild of the Freemasons who oversaw its development from conception all the way till its installation in Liberty Island, New York (Bedloe's Island at the time).





The maker of the statue of liberty was Frederic - Auguste Bartholdi, a well-known Freemason who joined the Freemasons Lodge Alsace-Lorraine in Paris in 1875.

Bartholdi displaying the Sign of the Master of the Second Veil, a Masonic hand gesture used in Freemasonry’s “Royal Arch Degree”.




In 1871, he made his first trip to the United States, where he pitched the idea of a massive statue which was to be a gift from the French to the Americans in honor of the centennial of American independence. After making his proposal for the monument, he returned to France and managed to raise funding for the project, the sum of 3,500, 000 French francs, a very large figure in the 1870s. On Washington's birthday in 1877 the Congress accepted the statue as a "gift" from the people of France.

Libertas

Libertas is a name ascribed to a goddess of ancient Rome who was viewed as the goddess of liberty and freedom. However, it is important to understand that this idea of freedom and liberty goes in much deeper than your conventional understanding.

We know that the worship of Libertas was prevalent because she was referred to as the "Mother of Harlots" by the Roman historian and philosopher, Cicero. In ancient times the term "liberty" was associated with sexual freedom and temple prostitution in the Libertas Cult.

According to the historian R.A. Coombes writes, “Harlots were social outcasts, so she was referred to as the Mother of Exiles.” From this Libertas became known as the Mother of immigrants. A deeper investigation actually reveals that the Greeks acquired knowledge of this goddess from their previous empire Egypt. Libertas was essentially a modern adaptation of the goddess often referred in the scriptures as Ashtoreth (also known as Ishtar, Astarte). This goddess was referred to as the "the goddess of the Sidonians" (1 Kings 11 verse 33).

Babylonian Goddess Ishtar (Astarte) and Lady Liberty

In the most ancient times she was referred to by the Sumerians as "Inanna" which meant queen of heaven. This queen of heaven is mentioned in the book of Jeremiah 7 verse 18 where it is stated that "The children gather wood, and the fathers kindle the fire, and the women knead their dough, to make cakes to the queen of heaven, and to pour out drink offerings unto other gods, that they may provoke me to anger"

The statue of Isis at the International Museum of Nubia.

The early Greek name of the goddess was Astarte which was later changed to Aphrodite. The Greeks adopted this same goddess from the Egyptian god known as Isis. The Romans subsequently adopted her as Libertas and later on she was known as Venus. A common theme you will notice is that all these "goddesses" were associated with the planet Venus and they were all just an incarnation of one entity adopted in different cultural and historical contexts.


Columbia another reincarnation of the same entity

We see the exaltation of these gods all throughout pop culture, here is for example a picture of Beyonce's outfit during the 2017 Grammys wearing a 7-pointed star crown which is similar to the historical representation of Libertas. 

The spikes are sun rays and the circle is “simply a halo or what in art is called a nimbus, showing she is divine.” The number seven is a highly symbolic number, and it’s symbolism can’t be confined to just one interpretation. So the interpretation people have given to the lady of the statue: Juno-wife of Zeus; Babylonian Ishtar, Imperial Rome’s Libertas. The seven spikes also represent the seven continents of the world and they are meant to connote "enlightenment" to the world which is part and parcel of "the great deception" (2 Thessalonians 2:11) mentioned in the Bible. 

Remember, there is nothing new is under the sun (Ecclesiastes 1 verse 9)


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