If you're referring to the God of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, this God (the only God) has no birthday. A birthday requires and refers to a point in time, but God does not exist within time, as everything within our universe does. If you exist in a dimension/place where there's no such thing as time, then you have always been, and you always will be. (Hence when Moses asked God, "What is your name? Who shall I say sent me?" God answers " tell them 'I AM' sent you", indicating mere existence based on nothing except himself.) By definition, God is uncreated, independent, uncontentious on any per-existing matter or energy. All matter in the observable universe (atoms, galaxies, human babies) was formed by and contingent upon some already existing matter, energy and force. God preceded these things, and is the creator and maintainer of matter, energy and the four forces which govern them. He is the eternal Fact from which all else springs.
Of course Christians believe God was born into time on Earth temporarily in human form. That birthday's been narrowed down to sometime around 12-25-00.
Nobody knows God's birthday.
In Greek mythology, chthonic gods were associated with the earth and the underworld. Some examples include Hades, Persephone, Hecate, and Demeter in their roles as deities of the Underworld, death, darkness, and fertility. These gods were often worshipped through mysterious and secret rites.
In Mesopotamian society, gods were an integral part of daily life and were believed to control various aspects of the world. They were both feared and revered, with rituals and offerings conducted to appease them. The relationship between the people of Mesopotamia and their gods was one of dependency and devotion, where the gods were seen as both protectors and punishers.
Asgard was the home of the Norse gods worshipped by the Viking warriors. Vikings believed in a pantheon of gods that lived in Asgard and influenced their lives and battles.
The parent gods in the Enuma Elish are Apsu (the personification of fresh water) and Tiamat (the personification of salt water). They were the primordial deities who gave birth to the gods and other beings in the Babylonian creation myth.
I assume you mean "Zeus". That's one of the Olympians, one of the gods of Ancient Greece (though there are still some people who believe in the Olympians). Ancient Greeks believed in several gods; Zeus was the ruler over these gods - according to the ancient beliefs.
Gods are not in our chronology.
No, it is Jesus's birthday. [Although there is no proof, years later there will be no proof that your birthday was when it is......]
a gods birthday is never credited because it is not important information.
The birthday cake originated in Greece as a yearly sacrifice to the gods.
The ancient Greeks believed that gods have been around since the beginning of time, and also Greek gods don't exist, so Ares did not have a birthday.
Gods don't have birthdays
Sorry, Greek gods did not have birthdays, since they were born or created outside our chronology.Gods do not exist in time, in our sense of the word.
That depends what religion you are talking about, in Christianity the belief is that God was not born, but he was always there and thus he never had a birthday. Unless you're talking about Jesus, in which case it is commonly accepted for his birthday to be 17th of April, even though we celebrate it in December.
It is Gods son birthday
a gods birthday is never credited because it is not important information.
birthday holiday celebrations for their gods mairrage and having a baby
Mythology does not give us the birthdays of gods and goddesses.