The Romans did not have a specific god of terror. Every god had his dark side though. For example, Jupiter had his thunderbolts and Vulcan had his fire. Mars gave the glory of victory but also the terror of defeat. They did have a belief in the Furies. These were harpie-like creatures with whips that were supposed to haunt and beat wrongdoers in their dreams.
the god of fear is Phobos and the god of terror is Deimos.
Terror is not an act. it is not a verb. it is a feeling. get it right.
God is the god of all life - does he not make - a gospel promise - you will not know terror? the answer is yes, yes!?
Hades, god of the underworld
Yea and terror too
The Romans did not have a specific god of terror. Every god had his dark side though. For example, Jupiter had his thunderbolts and Vulcan had his fire. Mars gave the glory of victory but also the terror of defeat. They did have a belief in the Furies. These were harpie-like creatures with whips that were supposed to haunt and beat wrongdoers in their dreams.
No Phobos is the son of Ares and Aphrodite and the god of Terror.
Mephisto, who is the God of Hatred, is the oldest, Baal, God of Destruction, is middle, Diablo, God of Terror, is youngest.
Will Campbell has written: 'God on Earth' '1996: China's terror'
Deimos is less a god and more a personified concept. The concepts weren't really worshiped, though they were acknowledged as immortal and powerful. Deimos was the personification of terror. He represented the idea of the sheer terror and dread brought on by war.
Diemos was a Greek god, i believe the god of terror, fear, etc. The word itself is the Greek word for dread.
In the physical Churches on Sunday for an hour and a half with no holy terror of God and could care less whether they offend him or even provoke him. We need to worship him, Deut.6:13 for starters, with a holy terror, the antithesis of the secure - once saved, always saved.