First Paradigm Revolution - Lordification and Dualism 500 BCE to 300 CE

The classic example of lordification is the change in Egyptian deities from animals and symbols, to animals with human heads or humans with animals heads, to fully human with identification done by their hats and what they held in their hands.
Modern symbol of the divine feminine. Lordification suppressed the traits ancient culture associated with the feminine including its deities.

First Paradigm Revolution: Lordification and Downgrading the Divine Feminine

(March 24, 2023, March 4, 2025) The earliest texts show the Druid deities were mainly labels for clusters of divine powers found in nature which were occasionally and optionally be personified. This is  perceptheism. Lordification was the historical process in which the perception of these deities changed from being clusters of powers to being human-like royalty. Deities became “living gods.” Other divine powers were then lumped together as "winds/spirits." 

The cultural pressure towards lordification started with the rise of nation states. Distant kings came to be seen as just as powerful and just as capricious as nature powers. Because rulers tended to be male the important deities also started to become male downgrading the importance of the divine feminine.

Perceptheism makes sense. In the absence of  identifying visual information people are identified by their personality, that is, their unique cluster of powers.  Sumerian and Akkadian even used the noun possessive suffix to represent deity powers. Since a deity cannot be owned they used the noun possessive suffix (the dual-use letter he) to indicate that a deity's powers were meant.  

This perceptheistic principle continued to exist in Greek philosophy. For example, powers such as “wisdom” (“sophia”) could be personified as the goddess “Sophia” or seen as the power of wisdom. Ancient people originally had no division between gods and spirits. 

Lordification advanced at different rates in different parts of the world as centralized, aggressive nation states were formed. It was first seen in Sumeria with its city-states. The Sumerian word for lord and lady was “Nin.” After lordification most deities were called by their royal names. For example Nin.lil meaning "Lord of Breath" was the epithet for the original Mu’ulil (one who sprouts breath, probably equivalent to Druid Su), and Nin.gal meaning "Lady of the Chalice" for the original goddess Erishkigal (Druid Kate or Hekate). The classic example of lordification is found in Egyptian deity art which started out as representing deities as animals, then as people with animal heads, then completely as people.

Lordification changed deities into capricious human beings with all the emotional defects of humans. This caused lordified deities to be feared because they could be jealous, petty, and greedy. In order to please a deity in order to get something, priests and rulers had to plead, cajole, beg, and bribe. The ultimate bribe was child sacrifice. The greatest fear was that some deity somewhere would be offended by actions people did not even know tehy were doing. This fear of the deities is why the idea of a savior and easy forgiveness of sins became popular during the classical era.

Map of Persian Achaemenid Empire at its greatest extent(550-330 BCE
Persian Achaemenid Empire at its greatest extant under the rule of Darius I (522 BC–486 BC). It was ended by Alexander the Great in 333 BCE. This empire spread dualism both east and west. In the east this caused the invention of Buddhism. In the west it led to the popularity of the apocalyptic idea in Judaism and split ancient nature philosophy into Stoicism, Epicureanism, and Skepticism. (image from Wikimedia Commons)
Illustration of good versus evil
Dualism consists of two classes of powers at war with each other. One class is good while another is bad or inferior. Dualism is based on the false assumption "good" can be absolutely defined independent of context. Its falseness is demonstrated by the observation that rain on my garden is good while rain on my parade is bad. So is rain inherently good or bad?

Core Historical Event: Rise of Dualism

(March 3, 2025)  While dualism started innocently enough it has become one of the great curses of humanity amplifying the "us versus them" mentality. Dualism was an idea by a Pagan Persian priest called Zoroaster (by the Greeks). He observed that conscious experiences like smells were inherently good or bad. Therefore the divine realm was also inherently good or bad. (this assumption of inherent valuation of conscious experiences was only proved false in modern times by neuroscience). 

Zoroastrianism claimed these two realms were at war with each other until the end times when they would be united once again. Zoroastrianism was adopted as the religion of the Persian Achaemenid Empire (550-330 BCE) because this ideology ended up supporting empires. Their kings could portray themselves as the good guys fighting the evil other. The resulting empire spread dualism far and wide. This is also why Roman Emperor Constantine (306 to 337 CE) adopted it in its Christian form and why his successors forced it onto the Roman empire.

In the west, idea was inserted into Judaism and from there into Christianity and Islam. In the east it triggered the debates which led to the founding of Buddhism as a dualist religion whose followers seek to escape the imperfect material world. Buddhism in turn led to the counter ideology of Hinduism seen in the Bhagavad Gita which is a statement against the impossibility of defining absolute evil.

Mainstream classical culture also became dualist with its traditional nature based spirituality (Pythagorean, Orcus in classical times) being replaced by Stoicism. The anti-dualist reaction against Stoicism was Epicureanism and Skepticism (305 BCE and after) with its teaching that pleasure is not evil.

Zoroastrian Gathas definition

Dualism in Zoroastrianism

(July 3, 2022, updated March 17, 2025) Dualism within its conscious feeling context is first detected in the earliest Zoroastrian scriptures (Yasnas) known as the Gathas where Spenta Manyu (community supporter) is at odds with the Angra Manyu meaning “Anger supporter.” Anger is a conscious feeling. Also notice the perceptheism here in which divine powers are personified. 

(Yasna 30, verses 4-5) Once those two Manyus join battle, a man adopts life or non-life, the way of existence that will be his at the last; that of the wrongful - the worst kind, but for the righteous one - Vohu Manah [Good Support]. 5 Of those two manyus, the Angra Manyu chooses to do the worst things. The Spenta Manyu chooses Right, he who clothes himself in adamant (“the hardest stones”); as do those also who committedly please the Lord with genuine actions, Ahura Mazda. (West 2010)

Yet Zoroaster did not really like the consequences of his dualism because it meant splitting the Divine realm into Good and Evil halves at war with each other. Thus he came up with the end times idea which would reunite the two halves into an eternal whole:​

(Yasna 43, verse 6) At that bend (the end times) where thou comest with Thy Spenta Manyu, mindful in dominion, there, with Vohu Manah [Good Support], by whose actions the flock prospers with Asha [Rightful Order], Armati [Honor] announces to them the verdicts of Thy wisdom which no one deceives. (West 2010)

Because Zoroastrianism was lordified it separated divine powers into spirits and personified gods and goddesses. The spirits of nature, the daevas now became evil because they could not discern between Good and Evil. The religious culture of Zoroaster was fully lordified with the result that Divine powers were now thought of as impersonal spirits instead of as deity which could be optionally personified. This word became “devils” in English. As shown below, all those who follow Evil powers (druj) were to be killed and those doing the killing will be favored by lord Mazda.

(Yasna 30, verse 6) Between these two (Good and Evil) the very Daevas fail to discriminate rightly, because of delusion comes over them as the deliberate when they choose worst thought; they scurry together to the violence with which mortals blight the world. (West 2010)
(Yasna 31, verse 18) Let none of you listen to the wrongful one’s [the druj, the evil spirits] prescripts and teachings, for he will give house or manor or district or region into chaos and ruin; so cut them down with the axe. (West 2010)
(Yasna 33, verse 2) He that does evil to the wrongful one, whether by word or thought; or hands or instructs his comrade in goodness, such men will be prompt to His will, in Ahura Mazda’s favor. (West 2010)
At the apocalyptic end times the evil will be punished because those in the service of Good Thoughts will be given the power to deliver the evil into the power of the Good:
(Yasna 30, verse 8). And when the requital [that is, the end times] comes for their misdeeds, for Thee, Ahura Mazda, together with Vohu Manah [Right Support] will be found dominion to proclaim to those, Lord, who deliver Wrong into the hands of Right. (West 2010)

Yet Good thoughts can also lead to the kingdom (dominion) of God (Ahura Mazda) on earth. Jesus seems to adopted this idea without the dualism:

(Yasna 31, verse 6) It will go best for him who knows and speaks my truth, the prescript of health, right, and continuing life, what he increases for Him through Vohu Manah [Good Support, that is dominion for Ahura Mazda. (West 2010)​

References ​

West, M.L. (2010) The Hymns of Zoroaster. I.B. Tauris and Co. London & New York ​
Day of Pentecost
Day of Pentecost in which many became filled with spiritual power (Acts 2:1-4).
At the first Pentecost held 50 days after Jesus was crucified, the mystery of the empty tomb of Jesus was linked to the prevailing idea that the end times were near. A rumor spread through the crowd claiming the Jesus' empty tomb meant that Jesus had risen from the dead in bodily form. This was a sign to the crowd that the end times were starting! This caused a great excitement among many which was interpreted as them being filled with the spirit of God.
Pentecost became the first and most important early Christian holiday. The importance of Pentecost to Paul is evidenced by his continued desire to attend Jerusalem during Pentecost in what seems to be an annual remembrance event (1 Corinthians 16:6-9, NIV). On Paul’s last trip to Jerusalem, he did not want to be delayed in Ephesus so could attend the Pentecost celebration according to a first person report preserved in Acts 20:15-17. Paul was never anxious to attend Jerusalem for any other Jewish holiday.

Pentecost Gave Birth to Apocalyptic Christianity ~33 CE

(July 9, 2022) One of the great ironies of history is that Christianity became apocalyptic while Jesus's authentic teachings show he was anti-apocalyptic. But, this shows the power of paradigms. This betrayal of Jesus began at the festival which Christians call Pentecost but which Jews call the Feast of Weeks or the Feast of the Leavened Bread held in July/August. It celebrated the wheat harvest and it was observed 50 days after Passover (Feast of the Unleavened Barley Bread) when Jesus was crucified. 

This linkage of the end times with the dead rising began in a section of the Hebrew Scripture book of Isaiah known to scholars as the "Little Apocalypse." It dates to shortly after the destruction of Jerusalem in 587 BCE (Millar 1992). This section sought to explain why God allowed the destruction of Jerusalem by the Babylonians. The conclusion was that God's chosen people had not lived up to their purpose by bringing a fuller, more spiritual life to the world: 

(Isaiah 26:19, NIV) We have not brought salvation to the earth, and the people of the world have not come to life. 19 But your dead will live, Lord; their bodies will rise— let those who dwell in the dust wake up and shout for joy—

This high ideal of universal salvation started to be replaced by vengeful end times judgment after the dualist Zoroastrian Persians conquered Babylon in 539 BCE. This replacement was accelerated and amplified by the trials the Jews experienced under Hellenistic rule after the Persian defeat by Alexander in 332 BCE.

These Hellenistic induced tensions became apparent during the rule of the Hellenistic king Antiochus Epiphanes (ruled 175 to 164 BCE) who tried to Hellenize the Jews and in so doing eventually lead to the Maccabean revolt. During the troubles of his reign the Biblical book of Daniel was written 

(Daniel 12:1-2, NIV) “At that time Michael, the great prince who protects your people, will arise. There will be a time of distress such as has not happened from the beginning of nations until then. But at that time your people—everyone whose name is found written in the book—will be delivered. 2 Multitudes who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake: some to everlasting life, others to shame and everlasting contempt.

The book of Daniel makes the first mention of an “anointed prince” (“christ” in Greek) yet this mention references a real historical event surrounding a prince commander of Antiochus Epiphanes. His “anointed prince,” Apollonius, attacked Jerusalem in 167 BCE killing most of its men and enslaving most of its women. 

After this victory Apollonius ordered the destruction of the outer city walls which was accomplished in seven weeks according to the Daniel text below. After that, he rebuilt the smaller and older center of Jerusalem for use as a base by his army. This fortification was completed in just over a year. About sixty-two weeks after his victory (the time interval again according to Daniel) Apollonius was killed in battle by a revolting Jewish army (Whitehorne 1992). The remnants of Apollonius’ army then destroyed their Jerusalem fortification before retreating. This event is described in the Daniel passage below:

(Daniel 9:25-26, KJV) 25 Know therefore and understand, that from the going forth of the commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem unto the Messiah (Anointed) Prince shall be seven weeks, and threescore and two weeks: the street shall be built again, and the wall, even in troublous times. 26 And after threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off (killed), but not for himself: and the people of the prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary; and the end thereof shall be with a flood, and unto the end of the war desolations are determined.

A few generations later when the Maccabean revolt did not turn out to be as perfect as some expected, the historical “anointed one” (Hebrew “messiah”) in the above passage came to be interpreted as THE apocalyptic “Anointed One” or “Elect One” (capital letters) by those not knowing their history.

The end time idea became a part of Jewish culture during the times between the Biblical New and Old Testaments as evidenced by the books of the Pseudoepigraphia (2 Macc. 7:9, 14, 23; 12:44; 14:46, 2 Esdr. 7:32-44, 1 Enoch 51:1-5). Significantly, this Jewish apocalyptic literature was not included in the Bible because it shows the Jewish people coming out on top instead of the Christians.

What happened at Pentecost was recorded with some embellishments fifty years after the event in the book of Acts:

(Acts 2:1-4, NIV) When the day of Pentecost came, they were all together in one place. 2 Suddenly a sound like the blowing of a violent wind came from heaven and filled the whole house where they were sitting. 3 They saw what seemed to be tongues of fire that separated and came to rest on each of them. 4 All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them.

What is clear is that a mass emotional event occurred in those who believed that Jesus arose from the dead. This was interpreted as the coming down of divine spirits (collectively, the Holy Spirit). Thus was formed the core statement of faith of Christianity. If you believe that Jesus arose from the dead then you would receive the gift of the spirit and be saved from the coming apocalypse.

The observation that Gentiles could receive the Spirit like this was the main reason for admitting them into early Christianity as mentioned in Paul’s letter to the Galatians in chapters 2 and 3:1-5. Acts very explicitly records this justification:

(Acts 10:44-47, NIV) 44 While Peter was still speaking these words, the Holy Spirit came on all who heard the message. 45 The circumcised believers who had come with Peter were astonished that the gift of the Holy Spirit had been poured out even on Gentiles. 46 For they heard them speaking in tongues and praising God. Then Peter said, 47 “Surely no one can stand in the way of their being baptized with water. They have received the Holy Spirit just as we have.” 48 So he ordered that they be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ.

References

Millar, William, R (1992)   Isaiah 24-26 Little Apocalypse . In Anchor Bible Dictionary (vol. 3),  Editor-in-Chief David Noel Freedman. Doubleday