Upon this Rock I will build my Congress

From SaveTheWorld - a project of The Partnership Machine, Inc. (Sponsor: Family Music Center)

Revision as of 22:28, 16 February 2020 by DaveLeach (talk | contribs) (Part One: the Original Gates of Hell)

Forum (Articles) Offer Partners Rules Tips FAQ Begin! Donate

This article was started by Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa (talk) 22:13, 16 February 2020 (UTC). Interaction from other writers will be distinguished from my writing with horizontal lines above and below. Your response to anything you read here is most welcome. Please add your response next to what you are responding to. If your reaction is not to any specific part of this article, please add general comments on the "Discussion" page. To read the original version of this article in a .pdf document, see www.Saltshaker.US/Salt/UponThisRockIwillbuildmyCongress.pdf.

Part One: the Original Gates of Hell

They weren’t supposed to go there. Not Jews. Not there.

It was bad enough heading South to Samaria. But North, to this place?

This place where so many pagan temples were built into a cliff that it was called the “Rock of the gods”? These cruel “gods” with their orgies with children, slaves, goats, and babies left to die?

GatesOfHell.jpg

By the early first century, Caesarea Philippi (named in 2 AD by Herod Philip in honor of Caesar Augustus) was reviled by orthodox rabbis, and it was taught that no good Jew would ever visit there.

In the center of the Rock of the Gods is a huge cave, from which a stream flowed (after 19th century earthquakes, the stream began flowing out from the rock beneath the mouth of the cave). ... In the open-air Pan Shrine, next to the cave mouth, there was a large niche, in which a statue of Pan (a half-goat, half-human creature) stood, with a large erect phallus, worshipped for its fertility properties. Surrounding him in the wall were many smaller niches, in which were statues of his attending nymphs. On the shrine in front of these niches, worshippers of Pan would congregate and partake in bizarre sexual rites, including copulation with goats – worshipped for their relationship to Pan. - (“Why context is important – the lesson of Caesarea Philippi”