part 18, Baal allies with Dagon

The war between the false Gods begins to escalate when Baal makes a move on the Israelites independent of Ashtaroth, which ends their 2,000-year partnership. Baal allies with another false God in the region, named Dagon, to take advantage of Dagon’s heavenly kingdom and “six earthly oracle-houses”.

Together, Baal and Dagon inspired the Babylonians to conquer and occupy the last remaining Israelite kingdom, the southern kingdom of Judah, highlighted below in Table 3. This enabled Baal, who was known as the “God of the Idolators”, to take advantage of the Israelites’ increased idolatry, assume the position of their “Lord and God”, inspire them to war, and turn the casualties into his “spiritual slaves” in his heavenly kingdom.

Table 3: Baal’s independent move on Israelites


Eskra, Ebeneezer, & Jerub save mortals: When the war between the false Gods began to escalate, the true God, Eskra, put a plan into place to take advantage of the time in which “Baal and Ashtaroth are in conflict and neglectful of their temples and oracles”. Eskra employed the aforementioned “angel captain”, Ebeneezer, the “protecting host” of the mortal Israelites, for his plan. Eskra also sent a high-raised angel named Jerub, who had 20,000 “assistant angel strategists”, to help Ebeneezer. Their angel strategists possessed the very temples and oracles that the false Gods neglected, which saved many mortals from the false Gods. They also guarded the colleges of prophecy, run by the few remaining Oralites, “against the emissaries of these false Gods” so that even in a time of darkness, many prophets were born.

Mainstream history:
This occupation of the southern kingdom of Judah is called the “Babylonian Captivity”, which lasted between 48 and 70 years and included the destruction of the first temple, Solomon’s Temple, in Jerusalem. Several deportations of Israelites occurred, some Israelites remained, and some eventually returned.

Interestingly, while Oahspe states that the attacks on the northern and southern Israelite kingdoms were inspired by the false Gods, Baal and Ashtaroth, biblical history simply states: “God sent the Assyrians to the House of Israel and the Babylonians to the House of Judah14“.







Interestingly, the biblical scriptures also mention a “Jerub-baal” and an “Ebenezer” and both stories are about discouraging the increasing level of idolatry within the Israelites. The overlay, Jerub-baal in the Bible, describes how a man named Gideon was renamed “Jerub-Baal” after he was visited by an angel that instructed him to tear down alters to both Baal and Ashteroth16. The overlay, Ebenezer in the Bible, describes how Samuel set a simple stone upright, named it “Ebenezer”, and it was to remind the Israelites about their Lord and to let go of idols and immoral ways18.