The Midian-Egyptian connection to the origin of Yahweh Yah Moon-god. Asherah is generally considered identical with the Ugaritic goddess ʾAṯiratu. By the 11th century B.C.E. "YHWH", can NEVER mean "I AM" or "I EXIST" or "I BE". This volcano GOD is interesting because Yahweh is clearly, and entirely of Pagan origin.. Yahweh didn’t have vowels to which was … The evolution of the moon god. Yarikh (also written as Jerah, Jarah, or Jorah, Hebrew spelling ירח) is a moon god in Canaanite religion whose epithets are "illuminator of the heavens"', "illuminator of the myriads of stars" and "lord of the sickle". it had become the capital of the pagan Kingdom of Geshur, which coexisted with the kingdoms of Israel and Judah to its south.
The latter epithet may come from the appearance of the crescent moon. YAHWEH derives from YAH or JAH, the Egyptian name for MOON is YAH, so the YAH came out of Egypt, because our people learn this God when they were under the Egyptian Rules. The settlement at e-Tell goes back thousands of years, before Jews were a glint in Yahweh’s eye. "In its earliest attestations the name Yah refers to the moon as satellite of the earth. His name is composed of four Hebrew consonants (YHWH, known as the Tetragrammaton) which the prophet Moses is said to have revealed to his people. The Egyptian god Ptah is given the title ḏū gitti 'Lord of Gath' in a prism from Tel Lachish which has on its opposite face the name of Amenhotep II (c. 1435–1420 BCE). Exodus seems to be where Yahweh comes into the Canaan Pantheon and takes the Egyptian Moon GOD’s Yah and the Sumerian moon god Sin over, combines them and then equates them to being the “God of the mountains”, or “Chief of the mountains”..
Asherah / ə ˈ ʃ ɪər ə /, in ancient Semitic religion, is a mother goddess who appears in a number of ancient sources. She appears in Akkadian writings by the name of Ašratu(m), and in Hittite as Aserdu(s) or Asertu(s). Yahweh is the name of the state god of the ancient Kingdom of Israel and, later, the Kingdom of Judah. In fact, the depictions of the moon-god in Ancient Egyptian text is Osiris, Thoth and Khonsu, any depictions or mentions of Iah or Aah as a moon-god did not arrive until the middle/new kingdom; during the reign of Semitic peoples, who to the Egyptians … Now, the term "Yah" or "Iah" is the noun moon. “The moon was a god, perhaps the oldest of all that were worshiped in Egypt; but in the official theology the greatest of the gods was the sun. The title ḏū gitti is also found in Serābitṭ text 353.