ALLAH IS A PAGAN
MOON GOD
THE MUSLIMS ARE
PAGANS
WORSHIPPING A PAGAN
GOD
The
religion of Islam has as its focus of worship a deity by the name of "Allah." The Muslims
claim that Allah in pre-Islamic times was the biblical God of the Patriarchs,
prophets, and apostles. The issue is thus one of continuity. Was "Allah" the biblical God
or a pagan god in Arabia during pre-Islamic times? The Muslim's claim of
continuity is essential to their attempt to convert Jews and Christians for
if "Allah" is part
of the flow of divine revelation in Scripture, then it is the next step in
biblical religion. Thus we should all become Muslims. But, on the other hand,
if Allah was a pre-Islamic pagan deity, then its core claim is refuted.
Religious claims often fall before the results of hard sciences such as
archeology. We can endlessly speculate about the past or go and dig it up and
see what the evidence reveals. This is the only way to find out the truth
concerning the origins of Allah. As we shall see, the hard evidence
demonstrates that the god Allah was a pagan deity. In fact, he was the
Moon-god who was married to the sun goddess and the stars were his daughters.
Archaeologists
have uncovered temples to the Moon-god throughout the Middle East. From the
mountains of Turkey to the banks of the Nile, the most wide-spread religion
of the ancient world was the worship of the Moon-god. In the first literate
civilization, the Sumerians have left us thousands of clay tablets in which
they described their religious beliefs. As demonstrated by Sjoberg and Hall,
the ancient Sumerians worshipped a Moon-god who was called many different
names. The most popular names were Nanna, Suen and Asimbabbar. His symbol was
the crescent moon. Given the amount of artifacts concerning the worship of
this Moon-god, it is clear that this was the dominant religion in Sumeria.
The cult of the Moon-god was the most popular religion throughout ancient
Mesopotamia. The Assyrians, Babylonians, and the Akkadians took the word Suen
and transformed it into the word Sin as their favorite name for the Moon-God.
As Prof. Potts pointed out, "Sin
is a name essentially Sumerian in origin which had been borrowed by the
Semites. "
In ancient Syria and Canna, the Moon-god Sin was usually represented by the moon
in its crescent phase. At times the full moon was placed inside the crescent
moon to emphasize all the phases of the moon. The sun-goddess was the wife of
Sin and the stars were their daughters. For example, Istar was a daughter of
Sin. Sacrifices to the Moon-god are described in the Pas Shamra texts. In the
Ugaritic texts, the Moon-god was sometimes called Kusuh. In Persia, as well
as in Egypt, the Moon-god is depicted on wall murals and on the heads of
statues. He was the Judge of men and gods. The Old Testament constantly
rebuked the worship of the Moon-god (see: Deut. 4:19;17:3; II Kngs. 21:3,5;
23:5; Jer. 8:2; 19:13; Zeph. 1:5, etc.) When Israel fell into idolatry, it
was usually the cult of the Moon-god. As a matter of fact, everywhere in the
ancient world, the symbol of the crescent moon can be found on seal
impressions, steles, pottery, amulets, clay tablets, cylinders, weights,
earrings, necklaces, wall murals, etc. In Tell-el-Obeid, a copper calf was
found with a crescent moon on its forehead. An idol with the body of a bull
and the head of man has a crescent moon inlaid on its forehead with shells.
In Ur, the Stela of Ur-Nammu has the crescent symbol placed at the top of the
register of gods because the Moon-god was the head of the gods. Even bread
was baked in the form of a crescent as an act of devotion to the Moon-god.
The Ur of the Chaldees was so devoted to the Moon-god that it was sometimes
called Nannar in tablets from that time period.
A temple of the Moon-god has been excavated in Ur by Sir Leonard Woolley. He
dug up many examples of moon worship in Ur and these are displayed in the
British Museum to this day. Harran was likewise noted for its devotion to the
Moon-god. In the 1950's a major temple to the Moon-god was excavated at Hazer
in Palestine. Two idols of the moon god were found. Each was a stature of a
man sitting upon a throne with a crescent moon carved on his chest. The
accompanying inscriptions make it clear that these were idols of the
Moon-god. Several smaller statues were also found which were identified by
their inscriptions as the "daughters" of the Moon-god. What about
Arabia? As pointed out by Prof. Coon, "Muslims
are notoriously loath to preserve traditions of earlier paganism and like to
garble what pre-Islamic history they permit to survive in anachronistic
terms."
During the nineteenth century, Amaud, Halevy and Glaser went to Southern
Arabia and dug up thousands of Sabean, Minaean, and Qatabanian inscriptions
which were subsequently translated. In the 1940's, the archeologists G. Caton
Thompson and Carleton S. Coon made some amazing discoveries in Arabia. During
the 1950's, Wendell Phillips, W.F. Albright, Richard Bower and others
excavated sites at Qataban, Timna, and Marib (the ancient capital of Sheba).
Thousands of inscriptions from walls and rocks in Northern Arabia have also
been collected. Reliefs and votive bowls used in worship of the
"daughters of Allah" have also been discovered. The three
daughters, al-Lat, al-Uzza and Manat are sometimes depicted together with
Allah the Moon-god represented by a crescent moon above them. The
archeological evidence demonstrates that the dominant religion of Arabia was
the cult of the Moon-god.
In Old Testament times, Nabonidus (555-539 BC), the last king of Babylon,
built Tayma, Arabia as a center of Moon-god worship. Segall stated, "South Arabia's stellar religion has
always been dominated by the Moon-god in various variations."
Many scholars have also noticed that the Moon-god's name "Sin" is a part of such
Arabic words as "Sinai,"
the "wilderness of Sin,"
etc. When the popularity of the Moon-god waned elsewhere, the Arabs remained
true to their conviction that the Moon-god was the greatest of all gods.
While they worshipped 360 gods at the Kabah in Mecca, the Moon-god was the
chief deity. Mecca was in fact built as a shrine for the Moon-god.
This is what made it the most sacred site of Arabian paganism. In 1944, G.
Caton Thompson revealed in her book, The Tombs and Moon Temple of Hureidha,
that she had uncovered a temple of the Moon-god in southern Arabia. The
symbols of the crescent moon and no less than twenty-one inscriptions with
the name Sin were found in this temple. An idol which may be the Moon-god
himself was also discovered. This was later confirmed by other well-known
archeologists.
The evidence reveals that the temple of the Moon-god was active even in the
Christian era. Evidence gathered from both North and South Arabia demonstrate
that Moon-god worship was clearly active even in Muhammad's day and was still
the dominant cult. According to numerous inscriptions, while the name of the
Moon-god was Sin, his title was al-ilah, i.e. "the deity," meaning that he was the chief or high
god among the gods. As Coon pointed out, "The god Il or Ilah was originally a phase of the Moon
God." The Moon-god was called al- ilah, i.e. the god, which was
shortened to Allah in pre-Islamic times. The pagan Arabs even used Allah in
the names they gave to their children. For example, both Muhammad's father
and uncle had Allah as part of their names.
The fact that they were given such names by their pagan parents proves that
Allah was the title for the Moon-god even in Muhammad's day. Prof. Coon goes
on to say, "Similarly, under
Mohammed's tutelage, the relatively anonymous Ilah, became Al-Ilah, The God,
or Allah, the Supreme Being."
This fact answers the questions, "Why
is Allah never defined in the Qur'an? Why did Muhammad assume that the pagan
Arabs already knew who Allah was?" Muhammad was raised in the
religion of the Moon-god Allah. But he went one step further than his fellow
pagan Arabs. While they believed that Allah, i.e. the Moon-god, was the
greatest of all gods and the supreme deity in a pantheon of deities, Muhammad
decided that Allah was not only the greatest god but the only god.
In effect he said, "Look, you
already believe that the Moon-god Allah is the greatest of all gods. All I
want you to do is to accept that the idea that he is the only god. I am not
taking away the Allah you already worship. I am only taking away his wife and
his daughters and all the other gods." This is seen from the fact
that the first point of the Muslim creed is not, "Allah is great" but "Allah is the greatest," i.e., he is the greatest
among the gods. Why would Muhammad say that Allah is the "greatest" except in a
polytheistic context? The Arabic word is used to contrast the greater from
the lesser. That this is true is seen from the fact that the pagan Arabs
never accused Muhammad of preaching a different Allah than the one they
already worshipped. This "Allah"
was the Moon-god according to the archeological evidence. Muhammad thus
attempted to have it both ways. To the pagans, he said that he still believed
in the Moon-god Allah. To the Jews and the Christians, he said that Allah was
their God too. But both the Jews and the Christians knew better and that is
why they rejected his god Allah as a false god.
Al-Kindi, one of the early Christian apologists against Islam, pointed out
that Islam and its god Allah did not come from the Bible but from the
paganism of the Sabeans. They did not worship the God of the Bible but the
Moon-god and his daughters al-Uzza, al-Lat and Manat. Dr. Newman concludes
his study of the early Christian-Muslim debates by stating, "Islam proved itself to be...a separate
and antagonistic religion which had sprung up from idolatry."
Islamic scholar Caesar Farah concluded "There
is no reason, therefore, to accept the idea that Allah passed to the Muslims
from the Christians and Jews." The Arabs worshipped the Moon-god as
a supreme deity. But this was not biblical monotheism. While the Moon-god was
greater than all other gods and goddesses, this was still a polytheistic
pantheon of deities. Now that we have the actual idols of the Moon-god, it is
no longer possible to avoid the fact that Allah was a pagan god in
pre-Islamic times. Is it any wonder then that the symbol of Islam is the
crescent moon? That a crescent moon sits on top of their mosques and
minarets? That a crescent moon is found on the flags of Islamic nations? That
the Muslims fast during the month which begins and ends with the appearance
of the crescent moon in the sky?
CONCLUSION
The
pagan Arabs worshipped the Moon-god Allah by praying toward Mecca several
times a day; making a pilgrimage to Mecca; running around the temple of the
Moon-god called the Kabah; kissing the black stone; killing an animal in
sacrifice to the Moon-god; throwing stones at the devil; fasting for the
month which begins and ends with the crescent moon; giving alms to the poor,
etc.,
The Muslim's claim that Allah is the God of the Bible and that Islam arose
from the religion of the prophets and apostles is refuted by solid,
overwhelming archeological evidence. Islam is nothing more than a revival of
the ancient Moon-god cult. It has taken the symbols, the rites, the
ceremonies, and even the name of its god from the ancient pagan religion of
the Moon-god. As such, it is sheer idolatry and must be rejected by all those
who follow the Torah and Gospel.
The religion of ancient Israel was based on revelation; the Old Testament
says that God appeared in diverse places and spoke to the Patriarchs; there
they raised altars of undressed stones, called Beth-el—or House of God. Man's
sensual imagination soon led him "to collect his gods in the dust and
fashion them as he pleased," imagining that God resided in these Stones.
Thus it became Beth-aven or House of Vanity. Beth-el abounded in Chaldea,
Asia, Egypt, Africa, Greece, in remote parts of Europe, among the Druids,
Gauls, and Celto-Scythians, and in North and South America.
In the Hebrew language, stones fallen from the sky are called Bethel (Heb.
"House of God"). After dreaming of a ladder reaching to heaven,
Jacob called his stone pillow a Bethel-stone (Genesis 28:10-22).
"The Pagans imitated the Beth-el of Jacob and consecrated them with oil
and blood, making them gods, calling them Betyles (betylus, baetyl, betyles).
In classical antiquity a stone, either natural or artificially shaped,
venerated as of divine origin, or as a symbol of divinity. There were a
number of these sacred stones in Greece, the most famous being on the
omphalos at Delphi. Likewise there were the so-called animated or oracular
stones. "Strabo, Pliny, Helancius (Hellanicus) or Beth-al-Jupiter,
Cybele, Venus, Mithras). The greater part of the natural Betyles were the
black meteorites or fire-balls fallen from the heavens and regarded by the
Sabeists as heavenly divinities. These meteorites were the Cabiri, and the
Pelasgi—whose most noted worshippers were wandering or dispersed men"
(The Trail of the Serpent, by Inquire Within, Boswell Publishing Co.,
Limited, London (1936) p. 10).
Meteorites-cults are common in Greco-Roman civilizations. According to the
religious historian Mircea Eliade, the Temple of Artemis (Diana) at Ephesus
contained a squat statue of the mother-goddess, carved from a meteorite that
fell from Jupiter (Acts 19:26-35). The Palladium of Troy and the conic black
stone of Elagabal in Emesa, Syria, are believed to be of meteoric origin.
Likewise, the Phrygian mother goddess Cybele worshipped in Pessinus (later
Rome) was a stone; doubtless a meteorite. A further example is the meteorite
of Pessinunt in Phrygia, which was worshipped as "the needle of
Cybele," brought to Rome in a powerful procession after the Punic war on
advice from the Delphic oracle; there the meteorite was worshipped as a
fertility goddess for further 500 years.
"The most famous of all of the stone fetishes of Arabia was, of course,
the black stone in the sanctuary of Mecca. The Kabah was, and still is, a
rectangular stone structure. Built into its Eastern corner is the black stone
which had been an object of worship for many centuries before Mohammed
appropriated the Kabah for his new religion, and made the pilgrimage to this
holy place one of the pillars of Islam" (Mohammed: The man and his
faith, Tor Andrae, 1936, Translated by Theophil Menzel, 1960, p. 13-30;
Britannica, Arabian Religions, p. 1059, 1979). The "Hadschar al
Aswad" in the Kabah is the most well known example of meteorite worship
in newer times. Despite the prohibition of portraying God and adoration of
objects, pilgrims to Mecca kiss this "Hadschar al Aswad" (black
stone) which, according to the prophet is "Yamin Allah" (the right
hand of God), supposedly a divine meteorite or Bethel-stone predating
creation that fell at the feet of Adam and Eve. It is presently embedded in
the southeastern corner of the Kabah. Muslims touch and kiss the black stone
during Hajj.
HISTORY OF THE PAGAN
MOON GOD
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-82PT90T28
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