Mendes

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Mendes
(Gr.)
The name of the demon‐goat, alleged by the Church of Rome to have been worshipped by the Templars and other Masons. But this goat was a myth created by the evil fancy of the odium theologicum. There never was such a creature, nor was its worship known among Templars or their predecessors, the Gnostics. The god of Mendes, or the Greek Mendesius, a name given to Lower Egypt in pre‐Christian days, was the ram‐headed god Ammon, the living and holy spirit of Ra, the life‐giving sun; and this led certain Greek authors into the error of affirming that the Egyptians called the “goat” (or the ram‐ headed god) himself, Mendes. Ammon was for ages the chief deity of Egypt, the supreme god; Amoun‐Ra the “hidden god”, or Amen (the concealed) the Selfengendered who is “his own father and his own son”. Esoterically, he was Pan, the god of nature or nature personified, and probably the cloven foot of Pan the goat‐footed, helped to produce the error of this god being a goat. As Ammon’s shrine was at Pa‐bi‐neb‐tat, “the dwelling of Tat or Spirit, Lord of Tat” (Bindedi in the Assyrian inscriptions), the Greeks first corrupted the name into Bendes and then into Mendes from “Mendesius”. The “error” served ecclesiastical purposes too well to be made away with, even when recognized (TG).


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Shortly: The name of the demon‐goat, alleged by the Church of Rome to have been worshipped by the Tem...