Belial/is: Difference between revisions

From TSL Encyclopedia
(Created page with "Varmenni")
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
(No difference)

Revision as of 08:37, 11 July 2024

Other languages:
Part of a series of articles on the
False Hierarchy



   Main articles   
False hierarchy
Fallen angels
Antichrist



   Individual fallen angels   
Beelzebub
Belial
Lucifer
Samael
Satan
Serpent
—————
Peshu Alga



   Bands of fallen angels   
Nephilim
Watchers
Luciferians
Serpents
Satanists
Satans
Sons of Belial



   Branches of the   
   False Hierarchy   
Illuminati
Indian Black Brotherhood
Brotherhood of the Black Raven
False gurus
 

Belial,” taken from the Hebrew bĕlīya’al, meaning “worthlessness,” is a term used interchangeably with Satan. Actually, it is the name of another fallen angel whose sons took embodiment after the fall of Lucifer.

In the Old Testament, belial is usually interpreted as a common noun meaning worthlessness, ungodliness, or wickedness. (Deut. 13:13; Judges 19:22; 20:13; I Samuel 2:12; 10:27; 25:17; II Samuel 23:6; I Kings 21:10, 13; II Chronicles 13:7). In II Cor. 6:15, Belial is used as a proper name for a prince of demons.

Belial is described in Milton’s Paradise Lost as one of the fallen angels.

See also

Sources

Pearls of Wisdom, vol. 14, no. 5, January 31, 1971.

Mark L. Prophet and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, Lost Teachings on Finding God Within