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The BI-Gendered God-She-male Gods & The Roots of Christianity

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The BI-Gendered God-She-male Gods & The Roots of Christianity

The"gynomorph" was a bi-gendered god with both masculine and feminine attributes. The word itself is just a pairing pf gyno-" woman with morph "shape".

Literally, a gynomorph is a god with female-like shape .

Traditionally, the gynomorph was a developed or evolved state of a feminine divinity or "daimon" ( demon in English). Gynomorphs were portrayed as effeminate young males, like Dionysus, a masculine god who possessed distinctly feminine features.

Gynomorphs retained the creative capacity of female divinities-they had cosmic wombs-but they also possessed the inseminating abilities attributed to more-masculine gods.

Gynomorphs were special because they stood in the gender gap between male and female gods. Gynomorphs formed a bridge between the sexes.

They were a combination, or the sum, of both genders.In this way, gynomorphs were hermaphroditic, and could appear sometimes as predominantly masculine, and other times as predominantly feminine.

The gynomorp was an important figure in the ancient culture because the Greco-Roman world possessed no word for "gender".

They viewed sex not as a binary proposition, but as a natural sum of two cooperative potentials; that is, masculinity and femininity were measurements of a sexual scale.

In their view, sexual attributes were a combination of both. masculine and feminine qualities.

There were no absolutes; sexual characteristics were combinations of gender. For this reason, their closest word to English "gender" was "kind." 

Reference: Hermaphrodites - Gynomorphs & Jesus; Dr. David C. A. Hillman PH.D. 

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