Adoniy-Tsedeq
The Tsedeq root means justice.
Entry 139 in Strong's Hebrew Dictionary is Adoniy Tsedeq, which is the name of a king of Canaan. The word means lord of justice.
The name for Deity, Adoni,
probably was a form of the Deity Aton. The Egyptian name Aton is usually
associated with the sun. However, most deities who have been worshipped
over a period of time have various attributes and are connected with numerous
animals. Many ancient deities are connected with primal serpents. So the
connection made by various scholars, regarding the
tribe of Levi or the Levites, and Aton,
in the word Leviathan, meaning sea serpent, is quite logical. In fact,
the fact that Adoni is a Canaanite term, and that the Canaanites were worshippers
of Kannan or Krishna, suggests that Leviathan is a form of the sea serpent
Vishnu, an incarnation of Krishna. And, like the term Asura, Asherah
among the Hebrews, the term Leviathan is seen in a positive manner in the
Book of Enoch and the Book of Job, but in a negative manner in other parts
of the Old Testament. We shall see in another chapter that the land
of Canaan underwent the same sort of transformation, being seen first as
a sanctuary, a refuge away from the afflictions of Egypt, then as a land
where hostile tribes had to be conquered. This is more evidence of the
fact that the scriptures were revised by the carnivorous cattleman cult,
who found it necessary to portray elements that pointed to the vegetarianism
of the earliest Jews in a negative manner. In reality, Moses was headed
to Canaan because vegetarian affinity groups existed there. That was the
same reason that Essenes and Ebionites and Nazarenes headed towards India
and its environs, where vegetarianism was practiced and respected.
The emerald
tablets which are associated with Hermes and the Egyptian tradition, portray
a deity who rests in the coils of a serpent between incarnations. In the
Hindu Vaishnava tradition this Deity is known as Sesha Anante.