Birth of the name Lucifer

in #bible7 years ago

The name Lucifer, was awarded to Venus when it rises as a morning star.
The word Lucifer means simply Carrier of Light.
At the end of the fourth century (which is when the Luciferians were established), Lucifer was an accepted name (almost normal), not only the Christians used it as their own name, but even a Bishop of the Roman Church was called that (Bishop Lucifer ).

The translator of the Latin Vulgate, that is, the old testament, St. Jerome, had a serious difference of opinion with Bishop Lucifer and had nothing better than to devise a way to discredit this bishop and his supporters by placing a weak translation of the name of a Babylonian King in the Vulgate (old testament) as "Lucifer".
It appears in Isaiah 14:12, where the verse is translated variously as: "How have you fallen from the firmament, oh star?
morning, son of dawn! ", or" How have you fallen from heaven, oh morning star, son of the morning! ", and" How have you fallen, Lucifer, son of the morning! ", well, this one The last variation is the one used by the Vulgate, the Bible of Saint Jerome.
Lucifer is not in the Hebrew or Greek translations.
The use made by Saint Jerome is a poor translation, and the context in which it is written transforms this term (Lucifer) referred to King Nebuchadnezzar, not the Christian Devil.
The experts have not been able to explain why it was committed and accepted such an error.

In short, Lucifer became a nickname for the Christian devil as a product of a stupid fight between two these ecclesiastics, one called Lucifer and the other who abused his power as a translator of the Bible.

Lucifer does not appear in any of the texts of the Bible, neither in the Hebrew nor in the Greek. That is, the name does not even appear in the originals. That name was voluntarily introduced into the Latin version, known as Vulgate.