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Passages similar to: Secret Teachings of All Ages — Fishes, Insects, Animals, Reptiles and Birds
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Secret Teachings of All Ages
Fishes, Insects, Animals, Reptiles and Birds (31)
The worship of the bull was not confined to Egypt, but was prevalent in many nations of the ancient world. In India, Nandi--the sacred white bull of Siva--is still the object of much veneration; and both the Persians and the Jews accepted the bull as an important religious symbol. The Assyrians, Phœnicians, Chaldeans, and even the Greeks reverenced this animal, and Jupiter turned himself into a white bull to abduct Europa. The bull was a powerful phallic emblem signifying the paternal creative power of the Demiurgus. At his death he was frequently mummified and buried with the pomp and dignity of a god in a specially prepared sarcophagus. Excavations in the Serapeum at Memphis have uncovered the tombs of more than sixty of these sacred animals.
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter VII: The Egyptian Symbols and Enigmas of Sacred Things. (2)
Besides, the lion is with them the symbol of strength and prowess, as the ox clearly is of the earth itself, and husbandry and food, and the horse of ...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLIII B (26)
The bull of Amenta, Osiris, as he is called in the first Chapter (see note 5, Chapter 1
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXII (14)
The vignette generally consists of a cow, having between her horns a solar disk, with two plumes. Occasionally behind her there is a goddess with a...
Book of Enoch
Chapter XC (37)
And I saw that a white bull was born, with large horns and all the beasts of the field and all the birds of the air feared him and made petition to hi...
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter VII: The Egyptian Symbols and Enigmas of Sacred Things. (1)
Whence also the Egyptians did not entrust the mysteries they possessed to all and sundry, and did not divulge the knowledge of divine things to the...
Asclepius
Section XXXVII (5)
It is because of this, Asclepius, those [animals] which are considered by some states deserving of their worship, in others are thought otherwise; and...