Atheism < Theism < Theo < θεός (theos) < देव (deva) < *daywás (proto-Indo-Iranian) < deva (pali - vedic)
Like many terms we use daily, atheism, has appropriated the term Deva which originally meant "from the sky and light or shining". Example one of the brightest planets is Venus who is known as the "morning star" or the light bearer (Lucifer). We get the term Friday from Venus who is also Freya (Odin's Daughter).
In the context of primordial man and now modern man. The primordial man practiced three religions of the desert cults. Astrotheology. The sky was the source of their wisdom because they could determine when to hunt, fish, forage and eventually cultivate and farm.
The sky cults graduated from
- Lunar Stellar cult
- Stellar Lunar cult
- Solar, Lunar and Stellar cult
These cults exoterically are
- Friday / Islam (Venus and Moon symbol) Kaaba (the cube in the center)
- Saturday / El / Judaism (Saturn) Kabbalah and the cube on the head
- Sunday / Sun / Christos (black [cube?]) (Sun god Horis /Ra / Zues / Eschatology )
Esoterically these cults are mnemonics to remember harvest, winter, summer, solstice, hours, minutes, seconds and various agriculture and mind control techniques. Religion is to "bind again".
Then there is the forth religion of the desert cults: Luciferianism which is the control of the light. In Hebrew the opposition is as Satan, in Arabic as Shaiton and in Sanskrit and Pali as Mara.
The forth religion is the oldest and this one is meant to sell the darkness as light. Hence the term atheism is a construct of sky denial. "There is no sky", to the atheist, "everything is relative. It's just opinion." This moral relativism is sold in popular music, art, literature and "science" that is "peer reviewed". Peer review is authoritarian dogma, no different than going to the priest to talk to God.
God, incidentally means, "to ask" which is an invocation to the sky. It all seems superstitions and it is until you realize that exoteric is for clowns and esoteric is for controllers. In between are the skillful navigators who use the sky to go places.