Symbol 40:11

40:11 ·
The Virgin Mary is a remnant of a
divinity much worshipped in antiquity in the countries of the Middle
East and the shores of the Mediterranean. Named Ishtar or Astarte,
and later Aphrodite, she was a fertility and activity goddess, and not
in the least chaste. This goddess was related to the planet Venus. Christianity took her over and made
her a virgin. Many of the holy days, or holidays, in the West are
related to this fertility goddess. This was the case during the Middle
Ages in Sweden before a ruler imposed the Lutheran teaching at the beginning of
the sixteenth century.
These teachings (and their acceptance) represented in a way the
final rejection of female divinity, and the total acceptance of male
superiority, patriarchalism, and, yes, stupidity, for lack of
psychological balance in the ideological system.
This entry sign was one of the signs for Virgin Mary used on clog almanacs (see
in Group 5) to denote
holidays such as
the Annunciation Day,
etc.
The sign is structurally similar to
, which
means mountain in
the earliest Chinese system of writing.



