then there might be none.
People have made gods of just about everything and everything because of a need to believe in something.
Some things I found googling and check the last one!!!!



>Zoroastrianism is an ancient Persian religion that may have originated as early as 4,000 years ago.
Some scholars say that tenets of Zoroastrianism helped to shape the major religions—including Jewish , Christian and Islam
Zoroastrian concepts, including the idea of a single god, heaven, hell and a day of judgment, may have been first introduced to the Jewish community of Babylon , where people from the Kingdom of Judea had been living in captivity for decades.
When the Persia King Cyrus conquered Babylon in 539 B.C., he liberated the Babylonian Jews. Many went to Jerusalem where their descendants helped to create the Hebrew Bible.<
In which some, like me feel that the 10 Commandments came from Babylon's Hammurabi's Code and not part of a burning bush scene
Then there was the Cathars >(The Cathars were a religious group who appeared in Europe in the eleventh century)who believed there were two gods: the evil God of Creation spoken of in the Old Testament, and the good God of the New Testament. Essentially, the Cathars believed that the Yahweh of the Old Testament was really Satan, who had created every single physical thing in the world, including people. They believed that humans were essentially genderless, angelic spirits trapped within a body made by the Devil, and that only knowledge of the truth could relieve the angelic spirit of its constant reincarnation into evil flesh.
Catholic theologians have debated with themselves for centuries whether Cathars were Christian heretics or whether they were not Christians at all. The question is apparently still open. Roman Catholics still refer to Cathar belief as "the Great Heresy" though the official Catholic position is that Catharism is not Christian at all.
By 1209, the Catholic Church had mercilessly wiped this entire group of "heretics" off the face of the Earth. Only the Black Death killed more Europeans than the Catholics during this genocidal purge. Today, we remember the Cathars on one specific date, the day on which the last Cathar fortress fell. The Church burned over 200 Cathars alive at the foot of that castle. Cathars called this day "The Massacre of Montsegur" - today we simply know it as Friday the 13th.
At the end of the extermination of the Cathars, the Roman Church had proof that a sustained campaign of genocide can work. It also had the precedent of an internal Crusade within Christendom, and the machinery of the first modern police state that could be reconstructed for the Spanish Inquisition, and again for later Inquisitions and genocides<
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Fans of the Old Testament know all about Baal and the Canaanites, but what fewer people know is that "Baal" wasn't a single god. It was just a title, meaning "Lord" or "God." There were many Baals worshipped in this area, the highest of whom was called El. As in "El Elohim," "Yahweh," or "the exact same god of the Old Testament."
The Old Testament also mentions other gods. Example: "Thou shalt have no other gods before me." See, originally, the Hebrew god El was a Canaanite Baal - the father of all other gods, like Asherah (also mentioned in the Old Testament), Astarte, Dagon, and many others. Think of El as equivalent to Zeus, Apollo, or Odin; not a singular god, but an all-powerful father to the others.
When the ancient Hebrews came through, they were flying the banner of the "god of all gods." Effectively, the Hebrews just cut out the middlemen and decided to worship the Baal El directly. Likely under the assumption that whatever Dad says goes among his kids, too.
This means two things. First: Baal worship is still alive and well in every church, synagogue, and mosque on Earth. Second: Judaism was not purely monotheistic. It was simply a version of pantheist Baal worship that places emphasis directly on the most powerful god. If that's your measure of "monotheism," then any temple devoted to Zeus, Apollo, or Odin could say the same. <
>This dead religion is incredibly interesting mostly because it isn't exactly "dead." It just became Christianity.
Mithras was a very popular god worshipped by Romans during the 1st to 4th Century BC, during the initial formation of Christianity. Mithras was a demi-god who was born of a virgin on December 25th. He was a great teacher who traveled the land spreading wisdom, had 12 disciples, and was identified with both the lion and the lamb. Romans called him "Good Shepherd," "Redeemer," "Savior," and "the Way, the Truth and the Light." All of which you may recognize from the New Testament - most of which was written well after worship of Mithras had already begun.
Mithras was even buried in a tomb, and resurrected after three days. The Romans celebrated his resurrection on the feast day of the female goddess of fertility. Depending on the specific region, that would be Aphrodite, Ishtar, or Astarte, from which we get the word "Easter." Sounds like a pretty solid case that Jesus was really Mithras, right?
Maybe - or maybe not. Because Mithras himself was based entirely on the Egyptian demi-god
Horus. Every single thing said here applies as much to Horus as Mithras and Jesus. In addition, Horus was born under an Eastern star, was attended by three wise men, walked on water, healed the sick, was baptized at 20 years old by "Anup the Baptizer," and was later represented by the ichthys fish symbol adopted by Christians.
Care to guess Horus's birthday? Here's a hint: You celebrate it every year... on Christmas. <