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Divine Feminine and The Temple of Asherah

There are places where the veil between worlds is thin—a hush before the storm, the scent of rain on ancient stones, a pulse beneath the sand that remembers every footstep.
Such is the Temple of Asherah, eternal and yet always being reborn.

The Forgotten Queen

Asherah. Some call her the “Queen of Heaven,” others the lost Mother whose name was almost erased from every holy book. She was there before the ink dried, before gods went to war and stories were rewritten. In her temple, there was no shame in the feminine, no apology for power, hunger, or the full bloom of desire.

Men and women alike came to her sanctuaries—not with bowed heads and guilt, but with hearts hungry for healing, for truth, for the blessing of being seen. The pillars of her temple were carved not just with symbols, but with secrets—each one a promise, a memory, a whispered spell to call the lost and the longing back home.
6 months ago. Sunday, July 27, 2025 at 7:41 PM

But temples crumble, and history is written by those who fear wild women and men who dare worship them.

So the stones were scattered, the goddess’ name whispered only in secret, and her altars left to gather dust.

 


Yet the Temple of Asherah survives—in the eyes of every woman who claims her own body, in the voice of every man who kneels before something greater than pride. It endures in every act of radical tenderness, every vow made not in shame but in truth.

 


You don’t need ruins or relics to find this temple.

You build it with every honest word, every sacred touch, every time you choose devotion over domination, creation over control.


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