Tag Archives: goddess Isis

Artemis, Cybele, Isis and the Black Stone from Heaven

The “stone that fell from heaven” in Ephesus, as mentioned in the Book of Acts (Acts 19:35), is likely referring to the sacred image or stone of Artemis, which has strong parallels with the Black Stone of Cybele in Rome and Phrygia.

Black Stone of Artemis, Cybele, Isis, the Kaaba, and the original Shiva Linga

Here’s how they’re connected:


📖 Acts 19:35 (Ephesus)

“Men of Ephesus, who is there that does not know that the city of the Ephesians is the temple keeper of the great Artemis and of the image which fell from heaven?”
— This “image” is believed by scholars to be a meteoric stone or aniconic idol (not shaped like a human form) associated with Artemis of Ephesus, whose cult was immense in the ancient world.


🪨 The Black Stone of Cybele

  • The goddess Cybele was also worshipped with a black meteoric stone, believed to have fallen from the sky.
  • The most famous event was in 204 BCE, when the Romans imported the sacred black stone of Cybele from Pessinus (Phrygia) to Rome during a crisis, believing it would help them defeat Hannibal.
  • It was installed in the Temple of Magna Mater (Great Mother) on the Palatine Hill.

🔁 Parallels and Syncretism

  • Both Artemis of Ephesus and Cybele were Great Mother goddesses associated with fertility, protection, and sacred stones.
  • The “stone from heaven” tradition points to a meteoric origin — often a sign of divine power or heavenly sanction in the ancient world.
  • The Artemis of Ephesus, especially with her non-Greek, multi-breasted or egg-covered image, resembles eastern fertility goddesses like Cybele, showing clear syncretism between their cults.
Artemis of Ephesus

🔮 The Same Stone?

The “image that fell from heaven” in Ephesus is likely conceptually the same as the Black Stone of Cybele — both being sacred meteorites representing powerful mother goddesses, and both deeply tied to mystery cults, fertility, and protection of cities.


The Stone of Heaven: One Mystery, Many Faces

Across the sacred traditions of the ancient world, there are stories of a stone that fell from heaven — a mysterious black stone revered not for its shape, but for its cosmic origin and divine presence. Though it appears in many cultures under different names and guises, its essence is the same: a symbol of the womb of the cosmos, a gateway to the divine, and a touchstone of eternity.


🕋 The Black Stone of the Kaaba

In Mecca, encased in the eastern corner of the Kaaba, lies the Black Stone (al-Ḥajar al-Aswad) — a revered object in Islamic tradition believed to have been sent down from Paradise. Pilgrims touch or kiss it during the Hajj, reenacting ancient rites said to date back to Abraham and Ishmael. The stone is not worshipped, but venerated as a sacred sign — a point of contact between heaven and earth.


🔱 The Shiva Linga: The Cosmic Pillar

In India, the Shiva Linga — often black and cylindrical — represents the formless creative power of Shiva, the unmanifested totality of being. In many temples, it is a stone, sometimes a naturally occurring meteorite, placed in sanctums to be bathed, anointed, and worshipped. The Linga is not merely a phallic symbol; it is the axis mundi, the pillar of light that unites earth, heaven, and the underworld.


🪨 The Stone of Artemis and Cybele

In Ephesus, the people worshipped a mysterious image of Artemis said to have fallen from the sky. Similarly, the Phrygian Mother Cybele was represented by a black meteorite brought to Rome during wartime, a symbol of divine protection and earthly fertility. These stones, like the others, were not carved by human hands — they were gifts from the heavens, representing the primordial goddess.


🌌 A Shared Mystery

What links the Kaaba, the Shiva Linga, and the stones of the goddesses is not doctrinal sameness, but symbolic unity:

  • All are black stones, often meteorites — heavenly material that carries the scent of the cosmos.
  • All serve as centers of pilgrimage and ritual devotion.
  • All are aniconic — not literal images of the divine, but embodiments of mystery, pointing beyond form.
  • All are axis points, connecting the earthly with the celestial, the seen with the unseen.
Goddess Cybele and Elegbal Stone of Heaven

🧭 The Philosophical Core

To the mystic, these stones are not idols but portals — silent witnesses to the eternal, standing outside time. Whether one stands before the Kaaba, offers libation to the Linga, or beholds the stone of the Mother, one is standing before the same mystery, spoken in different tongues:
the mystery of the Divine Presence manifesting in the heart of matter.


Artemis, Isis, and Cybele are not the same goddess, but they share similar attributes and have been associated with each other in various syncretic religious traditions, especially during the Greco-Roman period. Here’s a breakdown:

Artemis

  • Origin: Greek
  • Role: Virgin goddess of the hunt, wilderness, childbirth, and protector of young women.
  • Symbols: Bow and arrow, deer, moon.
  • Associations: Twin sister of Apollo, daughter of Zeus and Leto.

Isis

  • Origin: Egyptian
  • Role: Goddess of magic, motherhood, healing, and protector of the dead.
  • Symbols: Throne-shaped crown, wings, ankh.
  • Associations: Wife of Osiris, mother of Horus. Her worship spread widely through the Greco-Roman world.

Cybele

  • Origin: Anatolian (Phrygian)
  • Role: Great Mother of the Gods, associated with fertility, wild nature, mountains, and protection.
  • Symbols: Lions, throne, mural crown, drum (tympanum).
  • Associations: Often syncretized with Rhea (Greek mother of the gods) and sometimes Artemis or Demeter.

Syncretism

In the Hellenistic and Roman periods, religious syncretism often blended these goddesses:

  • Isis was identified with many goddesses including Artemis, Demeter, and Aphrodite.
  • Artemis of Ephesus (with many breasts or eggs) was particularly associated with Isis and Cybele, reflecting a mother/fertility aspect very different from the virgin huntress Artemis of classical Greece.
  • Cybele was viewed by Romans as a powerful mother goddess and was linked with Rhea, Artemis, and Isis in the sense of being a protectress and source of life.

They are distinct in origin and mythology, but in late antiquity, especially in mystery cults and esoteric practices, their identities and functions often merged symbolically.

Elegabal Stone of Heaven

The Stone That Fell from Heaven

— A poem of the eternal shrine

I wandered far, with dust upon my face,
Through desert night and jungle’s dreaming grace.
In Mecca’s heart I kissed the star-born stone,
And heard it whisper truths I’ve always known.

I saw the blackness burn with holy fire,
A silent witness to the soul’s desire.
No shape it wore, yet all forms it became —
The womb, the seed, the rootless, formless Name.

In India, where sacred rivers flow,
I bowed before the Linga’s ageless glow.
No idol there — just Presence, still and deep,
Where Shiva stirs in meditation’s sleep.

The priests would bathe it, flowers in their hands,
While silence hummed like thunder through the lands.
I touched the stone — it pulsed like beating skin,
And drew me to the Source that lies within.

In Ephesus, I found another face:
A goddess clothed in stars and mother’s grace.
They said her image fell from skies above —
A stone of power, womb of cosmic love.

And Cybele — wild lions at her feet —
With meteoric heart, both fierce and sweet.
In Rome they raised her stone with sacred songs,
To heal their war and right ancestral wrongs.

One stone, one flame, one uncreated fire —
The form the formless takes when hearts aspire.
It falls through space but rises in the soul,
The silent axis turning cosmos whole.

O pilgrim, do not bind it with a name,
For Shiva, Isis, Allah are the same.
Not in the stone, but through it shines the Light —
The Hidden Face the mystics seek at night.

So walk the path, and let your heart be still —
The Stone of Heaven waits on every hill.
Not carved by hands, nor born of dust and clay —
But breathed from stars to guide your feet today.


𓋹 𓋹 𓋹

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Shiva Linga

Goddess Sophia

Goddess Sophia is a key figure in the Bible, appearing in both the Book of Proverbs and the Gnostic tradition. In Proverbs, she is portrayed as a “divine figure of wisdom, a master craftsman who has come to teach the earth’s people.” (Proverbs 8:1). She is said to bring understanding, discernment and insight to all who seek her out. In the Gnostic tradition, Sophia is a divine goddess of spiritual understanding, inspiring the growth of knowledge and enlightenment. She is represented as a female figure of light, eternal youth and beauty. Her divine power enables her to create and share both material and spiritual wealth with all humanity. Through Sophia, the divine creates and maintains its balanced and harmonious universal order. She is also seen as a maternal figure for her protection and nurturing of all life.

The biblical scripture “Wisdom hath builded her house” is commonly interpreted to refer to the goddess Sophia. This interpretation is based on the ancient Jewish belief that wisdom was a divine figure, personified as a female. Philosophical reflections in the Ancient Near East and Greco-Roman traditions often associated wisdom with a female figure, and Sophia (Greek for “wisdom”) is the most famous of these figures. The early Christian Church also adopted this belief, and eventually, by the 5th century, Sophia was commonly referred to as a “goddess” in the Church’s writings. Because of this long history of associating wisdom with a female deity, the “Wisdom hath builded her house” verse is widely believed to refer to Sophia.

Sophia is often represented as the Dove, the Holy Spirit, the AUM/Amen, Mary Magdalene, Isis, the Queen of Sheba, the Queen of Heaven, the Goddess.. the Divine Presence of Wisdom.

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Cryptic Poem for Queen Cleopatra

Queen Cleopatra VII

Ruler of time and space,
Her gaze beholden with grace,
A timeless queen, a pharoah clear,
The ancestor of the Nasarene so near.
Her mysteries and secrets unearthed,
Her beloved Egypt on river rust,
Ancestor of a crucified King,
Her legend flows like a Spring.

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