donnann,
 
Really?  Your reply has little if anything to do with Theology ("what is the nature of the D!vine").
		
		
	 
 	    Asherah, the Shekinah, consort and beloved of Yahweh. God-the-Mother.  Her 	    sacred pillars or poles once stood right beside Yahweh's altar, embracing 	    it.  Moses and Aaron both carried one of these Asherah "poles" as a 	    sacred staff of 
power.  The Children of Israel were once dramatically 	    healed simply by gazing at the staff with serpents suspended from it. 	       This symbol, the snakes and the staff, has become the modern 	    universal symbol for 
doctors and healers.*  Asherah was also widely 	    known in the Middle Eastern ancient world as a Goddess of Healing.  Then 	    She was removed forcibly from the Old Testament Hebrew Scriptures around 	    400 or 500 B.C.  Her priestesses & priests, known by the headbands 	    they wore,  worshiped 	    o
		
		
	
	
n hill-tops, such as Zion, Mount of Olives, Har Megiddo 	    and countless others. Daughter of Zion, a term found numerous times in the 	    Old Testament, was perhaps a term for a priestess of Asherah. It later came 	    to mean the "City of God," or Jerusalem herself.  As the "official" 	    state worship became increasingly male oriented, and the establishment became 	    hostile toward all forms of Asherah worship, a time of conflict and bloodshed 	    lasting over a hundred years began.  Those that still clung to Her worship 	    paid the price with their lives at the hands of King Josiah and other rabid 	    Yahwists. (Story in the 2nd Kings ).  But She could not be torn from 	    the hearts and souls of Her people. 	    
 	    
	    Here is an excerpt from one of our 	    
Mystery School lessons: 	    
 	    
Exercise 5: (Extra Credit) If you're 	    really brave, not worried about being called a "heretic Jezebel," try making 	    some Asherah cakes.  Add raisins if you can!  "Even as the LORD 	    loves the people of Israel, though they turn to other gods and are fond of 	    raisin cakes." 	    Hosea 	    3:1  The 	    commentary 	    for that verse says:  "Raisin cakes: offerings to the fertility goddess 	    Ashera, the female counterpart of Baal; cf Jer 7:18; 44:19."  The name 	    Baal means simply Lord or husband.  In modern hebrew, the word for husband 	    is baal, used by millions of Israel wives to refer to their hubbies. 	    
 	    *A word about snakes:  The Serpent, though a frightening symbol because 	    of its ability to bring death, stood also for ancient wisdom and immortality. 	     (Note that it hung out in the Tree of Knowledge and preached a doctrine 	    of immortality, "ye shall NOT surely die.") Many early societies revered 	    the snake and used it to symbolize 	    different
 ideas.  In much 	    the same way, today we revere the Lion or other ferocious big-cats even though 	    they're dangerous.  An early American symbol used the snake as a statement 	    of power, a warning, saying, "Don't tread on me!" 	    
 	    
Asherah from the 	    
Religion 	    of the Canaanites 	    
 	    She was the wife of El in Ugaritic mythology, and is the goddess who is also 	    called Athirau-Yammi: "She Who Walks on (or in) the Sea." She was the chief 	    goddess of 
Tyre in the 15th century BC, and bore the appellation qudshu, 	    "holiness." In the OT Asherah appears as a goddess by the side of Baal, whose 	    consort she evidently became, at least among the Canaanites of the south. 	    However, most biblical references to the name point obviously to some cult 	    object of wood, which might be cut down and burned, possibly the goddesses' 	    image (1 Kings 15:13, 2 King 21:7). Her prophets are mentioned (1 Kings 18:19), 	    and the vessels used in her service referred to (2 Kings 23:4). The existence 	    of numerous symbols, in each of which the goddess was believed to be immanent, 	    led to the creation of numerous forms of her person, which were described 	    as Asherim. The cult object itself, whatever it was, was utterly detestible 	    to faithful worshippers of Yahweh (1 Kings 15:13), and was set up on the 	    high places beside the "altars of incense" (hammanim) and the "stone pillars" 	    (masseboth). The translation of asherah by "grove" in some translations follows 	    a singular tradition preserved in the LXX and the Vulgate which apparently 	    connects the goddess' image with the usual place of its adoration. 	    
 	    A Hebrew inscription on a broken storage jar, found in Kuntillet 'Ajrud in 	    north-eastern Sinai and dated from the beginning of the eighth century BCE 	    has three primitive figures: a standing male figure in the foreground; a 	    female figure just behind him; and a seated musician in the background. The 	    Hebrew inscription above the drawing reads: 'I bless you by Yhwh of Samaria 	    and his Asherah' (Dever, 1984; King, 1989). Furthermore, a tomb inscription 	    from el-Qom in Judea, dated to the eighth century BCE too, concludes with 	    the words: 'to Yhwh and his Asherah' (Margalit, 1989, 1990 and further references 	    there). 	    
 	    Asherah, like Anat, is a well-documented goddess of the northwest Semitic 	    pantheon. We remember that, according to the Bible itself, in the ninth century 	    BCE Asherah was officially worshipped in Israel; her cult was matronized 	    by Jezebel who, supposedly, imported it from her native Phoenician homeland. 	    Other traces in the Bible either angrily acknowledge her worship as goddess 	    (2 Kings 14.13, for instance, where another royal lady is involved), or else 	    demote her from goddess to a sacred tree or pole set up near an altar (2 	    Kings 13.6, 17.16; Deuteronomy 16.21 and more). The apparent need for the 	    hostile and widely distributed polemics against her worship constitutes evidence 	    for its continued popularity. Linguistically, Margalit claims (1989), 'Asherah' 	    signifies '[she] who walks behind', displaying a prototypic if divine attitude 	    that befits a wife (and is reflected in the Kuntillet Ajrud drawing). Thus 	    both the partially suppressed and distorted biblical evidence and the 	    archaeological evidence combine to suggest one conclusion. The cult of a 	    goddess, considered the spouse of Yhwh, was celebrated throughout the First 	    Temple era in the land, and beyond this period at the Jewish settlement in 	    Elephantine (in Egypt).
	    Above two paragraphs are an excerpt from longer 	    
Article	    by a Hebrew professor.  NOTE:  "She who walks behind" is not 	    considered the usual way to translate Asherah.  Encyclopedia Mythica's 	    
Asherah 	    entry states: Etymology: She who walks in the Sea. 	    
 	    
If you are researching Her, searching for Her in 	    the Bible, in the Torah, in Kabbala, there is one book you gotta 	    read... 	    
 	    The Hebrew Goddess, by Raphael 	    Patai 	    
 	    
Was the Hebrew God also a Woman?  	    
 	    The Bible gives the impression that all ancient Jews shared a common belief 	    system ... with only an occasional group straying from the fold. But the 	    evidence paints a different picture. As Dr. Patai states, "... it would be 	    strange if the Hebrew-Jewish religion, which flourished for centuries in 	    a region of intensive goddess cults, had remained immune to them." Archaeologists 	    have uncovered Hebrew settlements where the goddesses Asherah and Astarte-Anath 	    were routinely worshipped. And in fact, we find that for about 3,000 years, 	    the Hebrews worshipped female deities which were later eradicated only by 	    extreme pressure of the male-dominated priesthood. 	    
 	    And then there's the matter of the Cherubim that sat atop the Ark of the 	    Covenant in the Holy of Holies. Fashioned by Phoenician craftsmen for Solomon 	    and Ahab, an ivory tablet shows two winged females facing each other. And 	    one tablet shows male and female members of the Cherubim embracing in an 	    explicitly sexual position that embarrassed later Jewish historians ... and 	    even the pagans were shocked when they saw it for the first time.  [The 	    Star of David, two triangles "embracing" became the coded symbol for God 	    & Goddess locked in a "creating" posture....!] 	    
 	    
This cult of the feminine goddess, though often repressed, 	    remained a part of the faith of the Jewish people. Goddesses answered the 	    need for mother, lover, queen, intercessor ... and even today, lingers 	    cryptically in the traditional Hebrew Sabbath invocation. [Written for Amazon.com 	    by "Utnapishtim": Mhttp://www.northernway.org/hgoddess.html
This is theology as well as history. Notice that is says even today is lingers CRYPTICALLY in the traditional Sabbath invocation. After reading the history I hope you understand why the female counterpart has been hidden in scripture when it originally was not. As a female and being the total anatomical opposite of a male where do you think we came from? Whose image are we in? The answer is clear. The goddess.