12. You Can’t Kill What Won’t Die
It's not uncommon for different deities of diverse cultures and periods to share the same individual spirit. Frequently it's the same person just named and clothed differently, while others seem to be resurrecting themselves inside contrasting bodies. We've all heard rumors that Jesus was previously incarnated as Joseph, then David, until he perfected his work as Christ; but how deep does this river run? Although not entirely accurate, films like Zeitgeist exposed us to how the ancient Egyptian god Horus has a remarkably similar story. Then I found several reference beings sharing a similar path, including the Zoroaster, Attis, Dionysus-Bacchus, and the Mesopotamian god Tammuz. Mormons believe Jesus and the winged god Quetzalcoatl are the same dudes.
Interestingly, most of these cultures view the sun as Jesus' galactic counterpart. Since the Antichrist is said to be in "the lord's image," you may interpret this Antichrist character not to be a deity but possibly the event of our sun exploding. This also reinforces my belief that all the stars and planets have been manifesting on Earth as humans. I heard that from someone else, and it seems to stick; I regretfully forget where I first heard it. I'm open to the idea these reference beings are nothing more than historical fiction, as I've yet to encounter one physically. Not addressing this possibility in the text does not evade the issue, but it may be read as an admission of the truth of the opportunity. Perhaps the gods are expressions of our personalities? Nevertheless, the Antichrist argument is worth studying further.
I advise you to note that this relates to phi's mathematical correspondence to 666. For those who speak the language (666 = 7^3 pi (phi - 1) = 7^3 pi phi or 666 = (6/5) 7^3 phi with pi = 3.141593 phi = 1.618034 phi = phi - 1 = 0.618034 and 7^3 = cubic of 7). This is deeply rooted in polarity-based or yin and yang belief systems. I think associating the yin and yang with polarity is somewhat unfair, so I take it back. Yin and yang do not posit pure binary duality; it is important to remember that each half of the yin/yang symbol has a circle of the opposite color in its midst. We must first understand polarity so that we can let it go. Distinctions help us do that. By now, we've found that we can connect everything to anything with a little ingenuity. So this data doesn't surprise nor alarm me. Critics assert that the claim to connect everything to anything is equivalent to saying nothing. At that point, all distinctions and no knowledge can be secured. Still, critics have yet to see how everything connects to everything in lawful (predictable) ways, as I'll continue to demonstrate.
My research suggests the Greek god Apollo may be another earlier version of this same Christ entity that the West Africans called Liza. The Aztecs dubbed him Huitzilopochtli, while the Persians referred to him as Mithra. His earliest beginnings seem to be as the Sumerian sun god Utu. Egyptologist Gerald Massey said this "Seven-Rayed Sun God" is also "the Second Beast in the Book of Revelations." Asclepius, the son of Apollo and the deity of Bloodletting, uses the template of sacrifice and rebirth. It's found all over the place, just in different scenarios. Hainuwele's dismembered body is used to fertilize the land of New Guinea. Vedic lore refers to a being known as Purusha, who meets a similar fate. In China, they depict this pattern in Pangu. The Norse shares a story about a celestial being murdered to facilitate human existence. Then in terms of posthumanism and how humans may very well be giving birth to intelligence that eventually offs us.
Are they the same entities coming back to refine themselves and our world, or are these beings merely symbolic metaphors of universal law in sync with the cosmos? Then ask yourself this: why can't both perceptions exist simultaneously? These gods don't share exact likenesses, yet there are similarities. I'm not entirely convinced that this represents multiple incarnations of the same being. The speculation is simply a reflection of coincidences. The human experience of both stability (the Earth itself) and change (as all of the vegetation of the Earth particularly, but also animals and humans that die and reappear) can explain the vast number of vegetative deities (like Adonis, Tammuz, Dionysus, to name some of the most famous) all around the world. Such figures are ubiquitous (see Mircea Eliade's Patterns in Comparative Religion, for example) because the human experience of stability and change is quite universal. Nonetheless, I can't rule out the idea that some of these gods (provided they even exist) shared the same immortal spirit generations apart.
This chapter is more than another attempt to rectify conflicted spiritual beliefs; we're on the search for answers. Now we realize most religions have a common ancestral lineage, yet where did we deviate and why? I'm sure a lot of this interrelated history was chiseled in by force. Yet, I can believe many of these deities did reincarnate as gods from other parts of the globe, bringing about similar events aligned with their life's purpose. For example, the Aztecs, Hindus, and almost every other ancient civilization refer to a great flood—from the Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh to the Greek myth of Deucalion. I then ask myself, has there been someone or a group of people predisposing us to such events? Maybe the Earth (as a deity in its own right) is revamping itself through these catastrophes, or perhaps we humans are forcing her hand. These cultures all seem to recall a pattern whereby updated gods incarnated themselves to remove the older corrupted deities. We can see this cycle displayed in our governments in that the once righteous men and women who took office in their younger years often fall victim to the malice politics promotes. If justice is rendered, they're replaced by someone similar to what they once were—minus the policies that failed their predecessor. This sequence is replicated in more ways than I have time to write about.
However, it ties into Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection in that only the organisms that adapt to their environment grow the biological tools needed to survive. This theme of reincarnation among gods and reference beings crops up everywhere. Many Shinto gods returned as Buddhists as their energy evolved to conform to a newer belief system than the one they practiced in their previous lifetime. Easter, Halloween, and Christmas are celebrated in churches worldwide, reflecting the Pagan influence on Christianity. In truth, many Pagan gods from the ancient Germanic and Celtic periods reincarnated in a Catholic format. Jamaican Rastafari represents a fusion of the Judeo-Christian faith with Hinduism. Santeria, Candomblé, and Voodoo have all long synced up with Christ's grid. We also found the Roman Catholic saints to possess a direct correspondence with the seven African powers. Caodaism blends elements of Buddhism and Christianity over there in Vietnam. Many believe the Trinity concept of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost is represented by the Hindus as (1) Brahma, (2) Vishnu, and (3) Shiva, but those familiar with Hinduism will feel this is likely not the case.
Whatever the roles of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, they do not correspond with the roles of Brahma as creator, Vishnu as sustainer of the present world, and Shiva as the destroyer of the current world (while also setting up its re-creation). In particular, the relationship between the three deities is very different. Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva are all avatars of Brahma, whereas it would be more correct to speak of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost as different aspects of the Father. Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva are absolute and independent, while the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are interdependent and not necessarily conclusive. I see this relationship more as what the Buddhists label (1) Dharmakaya, (2) Sambhogakaya, and (3) Nirmanakaya. Were such similarities the work of the same forces? It may be useless to speak of correspondences between the Greek and Roman gods. Before we hit puberty, our teachers taught us how the Romans adopted the Greek pantheon wholesale and then modified it (keeping around some of their deities). We grew up being taught about the correspondences between the Roman and Greek gods, yet it seems we looked past India's role in this universal pantheon—and Egypt's. See Martin Bernal's Black Athena (particularly volume three). There are common threads among gods like Osiris in Egypt, Hades in Greece, and Yama in India—not to mention Athena and Saraswati, Ares and Kartika, Varuna and Poseidon, Mahakala and Kronos, and Zeus, Jupiter, Dyauṣ Pitṛ, and Indra are all the same. The saga continues with Hercules as Thor. His proper name is Heracles. A scribe miscopied his name as Hercules, and the typo persisted for centuries.
It won't take long before you start pondering whether there may very well be a group(s) of individuals out there constantly zipping in and out of different forms. Earlier, I talked about reincarnation as not exclusive to the gods. Many humans are starting to remember who they once were. Super-minds Patrick Flanagan and Alex Putney displayed a great deal of evidence pointing toward the possibility that he may be an updated version of Nikola Tesla. David Wilcock also presents a strong case for the debate of whether or not he is the reincarnation of Edgar Cayce. The elusive Christian Rosenkreuz was said to be the rebirth of St Germaine, Plato, and possibly the entire class of wizards known as Merlin. Granted, this is all hearsay, yet I do try to bulletproof my references before putting stuff of this nature out there. Each one of Earth's reference beings has presented critical messages that are distinct and very specific. The idea is to embrace them to get what the Source is trying to teach us.
The most profound resemblances existed between Pharaoh Akhenaton, Moses, and Muhammad. The unveiling of stories like this will begin to foster a global appreciation and acceptance for one another—even though many have made it their life's work to mutate it into a nightmare. It's more and more evident our most sacred manuscripts have been altered throughout the ages, many to facilitate peace among nations, while some seem to want to steer us away from the truth for one reason or another. Rumor has it the serpent of Eden was Seraphim, God's highest order of angels, yet given that a part of the Eden story concerns discrediting goddess worship (the serpent is a significant figure in goddess worship), it seems unlikely that the serpent would also be the one Yahweh left to guard Eden after the expulsion of Adam and Eve. On the other hand, I've been taught that our bodies and the planet's energetic matrix (the kundalini) are dually known as serpent energy for its snakelike movement. Keep in mind that the significant exposition of kundalini (particularly as serpent energy) arises in the Tantric writings, which date from approximately the eighth century AD in India. In that symbology, the sun is female, the moon is male, and much of the Tantric technique involves protecting male power (primarily semen) from the desiccating power of female solar energy as it rises the spine in the form of kundalini. The book, The Alchemical Body, by David Gordon White, is an exhaustively thorough survey of much of this material.
Was this a suppression of knowledge or a simple misconception? Who did this, and why did they have structures built in their likenesses? We must address this ambiguity. We can't talk about subjects like sacred sites without paying tribute to one of the most influential beings in their design. His earliest beginnings are still a mystery, yet we know that Chiquetet Arlich Vomalites completed his ascension around 52,000 years ago. With that taken into account, there's a slim chance he started human, much less domestic. As an ascended master, he ruled Atlantis for over 16,000 years. Once it sank, he settled in Egypt. He now went by the name Thoth. Thoth is one of the most important deities in history. According to Scandinavian records, the Norse knew him as Odin, while the Romans named him Mercury—if you're questioning this relationship, just read his innovation. He supposedly went by the Biblical names of Enoch and Archangel Metatron, which might ring more of a bell to you. Many presidents have summoned him for our nation's protection and guidance. He is that angel in the whirlwind they reference in their speeches.
It's easy to get carried away, sure at the core of all this, we are one singular being, yet when we go as far as to say Thoth is Santa Claus, we take away from what these cosmic travelers stand for. Often depicted as a dude with an ibis or baboon head, he has several other names: Mehi, Hab, A'an, Asten, Khenti, Lord of Khemenu, and Three times great, great. His knowledge about self-resurrection enabled him to live many lives and have many names. Much debate surrounds his significance, like any other reference being. People like Sir Flinders Petrie thought Egyptian society was predominantly polytheistic.
In contrast, other educated people like E. A. Wallis Budge thought them monotheistic, with all gods reflecting Ra, the one Supreme Being. This belief is promoted to coincide with the devas in Hinduism and the Christian Trinity, yet I may find this collapsing of distinctions here problematic. There are significant differences between a polytheism that acknowledges other deities in the pantheon while worshiping one as supreme (the Greek and Norse pantheons are examples) versus other forms of polytheism where other gods are not honored in any significant way relative to a central deity (some Polynesian pantheons may reflect this). Both of these are in marked distinction to the Christian Trinity, where the dominant monotheism denies any polytheism (even if the very presence of a Trinity suggests polytheism).
Some believe Thoth is Ra's heart and tongue. Interestingly, in our earliest stages, we start as tiny little hearts with a language sticking out of them. From there, we essentially hatch the rest of ourselves out of it. This is why many gurus talk about how pressing the tongue to the roof of the mouth while in the heart equals creation; it's said to be the pathway to all knowledge. You may be thinking—In the heart of what? I am referring to suspending our analytical side with trust we are advanced enough for our emotions to guide us. Most of us aren't ready for this. Others believe that Thoth, while in ibis form, thoroughly hatched Ra from an egg he laid. Even though Egyptologists disagree on Thoth's nature, several things match up. By now, you know I will co-sign only that which matches multiple viewpoints. Thoth typically holds an ankh in his hand, which symbolizes eternal life and memory (the key). I want to point out that many clairvoyants have stated that there is an electromagnetic energy field surrounding some of our bodies in the form of an ankh. Remember, we all develop out of an energy field in the shape of a tube torus. Then there are the more advanced energy fields like the ankh or the counter-rotating tetrahedrons, octahedrons, and so on. In short, we want to solicit all the good ones I mentioned throughout this book—just as the first few cells of an organism assume vesicle, tetrahedral, and star (double) forms before the diversification of tissues for different physiological functions.
It seems like Thoth was one of three, being a superpower, with Ma'at, his female consort, and Ra, his homeboy, essentially governing Earth through geomancy. Other scholars give these three energy systems different names. Historians have dubbed him the mind of God. He is closely associated with writing and science. Chiquetet/ Thoth also moonlighted as the Judge of the Dead. Other gods went to Thoth when they needed arbitration when they disagreed. He refused to pick sides. Balancing the polarities was a significant thing for him. When an evil god got fucked up by a good one, Thoth would come around and heal the vulnerable entity to prevent one side's domination over the other. Thoth firmly believed in maintaining the universe's equilibrium, thus gearing it toward a singularity. Chaos and evolution both developed from these opposing forces. The desire to mediate also lead him to govern weights and scales. Labeled the scribe of the gods for his knowledge of shape and proportion, he is attributed with creating all numbers, letters, and more effective forms of communication like language. Some would even say he is responsible for all godlike knowledge that has entered humanity. He gave us astrology by teaching us to gauge what is above us. He is also credited with developing the 365-day calendar.
Finally, we can't leave out how critical Thoth was in the whole world of botany. His form of intelligence had yet to grace our planet before his existence; through numbers, he created mathematics, an effective form of communication among higher life forms. He is also the force that brought us organized government and land surveying. Thoth is the ultimate wise counsel and persuader. He is not good or bad but impartial. He is the epitome of life as we know it. Thoth returned as Hermes, born in a cave on Mount Cyllene in Arcadia. It has been recorded that Zeus, the one supreme entity, knocked up Maia, daughter of Atlas, who is labeled one of the Pleiadians. While the other gods were sleeping overnight, Thoth's spirit was transmuted into a Greek leader. Thus, Hermes was conceived of the physical.
Hermes exchanged the sum of his inventions with his brother Apollo. One, in particular, is the golden wand that would serve as the platform for his coiled staff. Some sides feel Zeus directly gave Hermes the staff. According to legend, while touring the land to pass on enlightened messages, Hermes saw two snakes fighting. He placed the wand between the snakes, and they wrapped themselves around the staff in shape, replicating the sum of creation. There is also a direct relationship between our chakras and this coiled proportion, which we covered in the first few chapters. Known for superior physical strength and appetite for athletics, Hermes is credited with developing organized running and fighting. Statues of him were riddled throughout Greece, especially in Olympia. Because of his bodybuilder physique, artists would use him as a focal point in most of their work. His primary style included winged sandals, a broad-brimmed or winged hat, and his trademark staff. That started as a wand with two white ribbons and evolved into the snake-wrapped rod. He would generally dress sloppily to avoid listeners who weren't ready for his messages. You'll find that many deities who followed him adopted Hermes' swagger. Once again, this entity came back to convey messages. His purpose is to deliver information. This is a significant reason we are all here: to pass down knowledge and build on it—allowing each generation to come closer and closer to the truth.
Note that Greek post offices intentionally incorporate Hermes' image as their icon. In addition, seventeenth-century printers were branded with the coiled caduceus staff. We've all seen EMS trucks barreling through the streets; some decided to remove one of the snakes, so it's a single serpent around a wand. He's also known for delivering energy systems from one dimension to the next. This can also be interpreted as the Grim Reaper. From what we know, several entities control the underworld, but because Chiquetet was the herald, he directed other entities to their next transitional state. He was given the title of patron of thieves based on his primal desires. This correlation between trickery and material accumulation has turned many people off to this Supreme Being. We've been around long enough to know the longer we stick around, the less pure we become.
Thoth/Hermes/Chiquetet is a giver. The contributions he brought to the physical realm have been epic. He had three known children, who would grow to leave their unique marks on Earth. Rumors exist that his bloodline resides within modern-day humans. Chiquetet controlled a lot of what occurred on Earth. Again, control was the ancient word for angels. He, to this day, echoes poetry and artwork from indigenous caves in Chile to main street USA. Celebratory festivals in his honor still go down in Greece every year. Known as a phallic god, everything with which he came in contact would flourish. Giant land markers in his likeness were used as community boundary points. Ancient bridges would have herms (either phallic representations of Hermes or simply phalluses themselves) at both ends to protect against the danger of crossing the bridge, recognized as an interstitial place. Hence, Hermes was the god of travelers as well. The stone architectural elements (bollards) are still visible on many modern and older stone bridges. Some houses would even have their idol of him to ward off evil spirits. He is also accredited with passing down the knowledge of our chakras, which, as you have read, is the nexus of biophysical studies. I believe this entity accomplished so much due to his uncanny ability to resurrect himself so many times consciously. Remembering everything. "I am thy writing palette, O Thoth, and I have brought unto thee thine ink-jar. I am not of those who work iniquity in their secret places; let not evil happen unto me." —Thoth, Book of the Dead.
