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HOW THEY INVENTED YOUR WORLD:
CAMOUFLAGED PAGANISM “Doctrine” means teaching. It’s a Latin word, related to “document” (written instruction) and
“doctor”, meaning “teacher”. We have all been trained or programmed from birth with various traditions, rituals,
and customs; all paganism is targeted at children.
How we keep track of time is a world-wide type of programming. Here we will look into how we came to be trained to
think of and organize time ~ in our days, months, and years.
One of the first things we do when we awake each day is check the time. Originally, the hours of
daylight were measured using a sundial, and the shadow of the sun marked off 12 “hours” until it set.
The marked hours on the dial pass more quickly in the winter months, and slower in the summer months. The variance
in the length of an hour is less important than knowing where you are in time relative to the whole day, so this
system worked fine. There was no “daylight-saving-time” trick to deal with! However crazy the sundial seems to us,
the gaining and losing of an hour is at least as weird. There were always 12 hours in every “daytime”. “Noon”,
Latin nones (9), was the 9th hour from sunrise, or 3 p.m. in the ancient world.
Each day of the week was originally referred to by a number. The 7th day also had a name:
Shabbat, meaning rest. Yes, even Adam and Chuwah, the first man and woman, observed the 7-day week. (There is no
one named “Eve” in the Hebrew; this name was embraced to appease pagans because one of the names for their Earth
Mother was “Eve”. The name Chuwah is derived from the Hebrew word chai, meaning “life” ~ thus her name means mother
of the living. The ending –ah renders it feminine, similar to the ending in Sarah. Sar means prince, orruler; Sarah
means princess). If you check your “calendar”, you will notice the days of the week have been given names. The
names were taken from among pagan peoples who honored their deities by calling the days by the names of their
idols.