They died along with the Baal worshipers.
Baal was a Canaanite deity which was commonly worshiped throughout the Levant region. According to Jewish Tradition (and the traditions of the other Abrahamic Faiths), Baal was exclusively a Canaanite deity that Israelites only worshiped because they had been seduced by the local idolatry of the Canaanites. Secular Historians argue that Baal was both part of the Canaanite and Israelite traditions. In the Israelite pantheon, he was the enemy of Yahweh and eventually sublimated out of worship.
The word "baalim" is plural. The baal was a Middle-Eastern pagan deity with local variations (baal, baal-peor, baal zebub, baal beq, baal berith, baal me'on, baal gad, baal hermon, baal peratzim, etc.). It was worshiped by idolaters as a deity of weather and fertility.
I think it is either the Buddhists or the Hindus. Not positive though......
Today? None. This form of idolatry is defunct, just like the gods of the Greeks, Romans and Druids, as predicted by Isaiah (2:18). In ancient times, baal-worship was found in the Levant.And among the Israelites?Throughout the period of the Judges and Kings, there were individuals who permitted themselves the aberration of dabbling in the idolatry of the neighboring countries, including the worship of the various baalim, with local their local variations (Baal, baal-peor, baal zebub, baal beq, baal berith, baal me'on, baal gad, baal hermon, baal peratzim, etc.).More specifically, it was Jezebel, the wife of Ahab, who introduced larger-scale baal-worship into the land of the Ten Tribes (Israel; as opposed to Judah). This deviation was soon stamped out by Elijah (1 Kings ch.18).
in the Bible, the name Baal was the name of a god worshiped by the original inhabitants of the land of Canaan. Baal was seen as the god of fertility and was thought to be responsible for the crops as well as the ability to have offspring.
Baal was a god of the Philistines. It made the Israelites stray away from following the one and true God. It was an idol. Many times the kings tried to reform Israel and take Baal out of the picture, but the nation had a hard time with that. Other times, the kings were the ones who encouraged the nation to worship Baal.
Once the Israelites worshiped idols the serpents appeared.
When the prophets of Baal prayed for Baal to send fire, nothing happened. Despite their fervent pleas and efforts, Baal remained silent and did not respond to their prayers. This event is described in the Bible in the story of Elijah and the prophets of Baal in 1 Kings 18.
The real one: God, who created the universe (Genesis 1:1). The others: the rest are mere gods (small "g"), all false; all invented. Names of the falsely-worshiped gods include baal, baal-zebub, baal-berith, baal-peor, cemosh, milcom, ashtoreth, nivchaz, tartak, anamelech (and others).See also:How_did_polytheism_develop
A:Not true. Baal was a male god worshipped by the Philistines, but also by the Edomites, Israelites, Aramaeans and Phoenicians. There is very little evidence that Baal was worshipped in the southern Hebrew kingdom of Judah, but he was worshipped everywhere else around the Levant in ancient times.
it will
No one, since the Hebrews (Israelites) did not have gods. They worshiped One God and still do.