
Originally Posted by
tenet nosce on bring4th.org
this brings us to the times of the eighteenth dynasty in egypt. around 1333 bce, akhenaten proclaims the first truly monistic religion which proclaims the oneness of all creation. he also proclaims the first co-regency with a woman, his wife nefertiti. based on my reading of the law of one, i understand this to be the time of the ra contact.
as recounted in the law of one, what ra perceived to be a loving intervention had massive unforeseen ramifications, essentially creating a wrinkle in time. their communication to us is part of an attempt to reduce the distortion brought about by their intervention. even this latest attempt in 1981 which we know as the ra material struggles immensely with a mental inertia which tends toward a particular distortion.
following the death/disappearance..? (two mysterious personalities emerge over a millenium later as the progenitors of inca civilization). we'll just say death for now... akhenaten, nefertiti and their monistic religion become buried and quickly forgotten from history, until their reemergence in the late 19th century. most people vaguely remember this as the discovery of "king tut's tomb" in the time of lord bulwer-lytton.
but their legacy lived on. for though akhnaten came to perceive the law of one by his own accord, the ra contact was channeled through a filter with a certain distortion toward self-righteousness. and so ahknaten attempted to convert the whole of egypt in one fell swoop, after a thousand years of polytheism, to monism. without passing through the natural intermediate stages. this backfired, big time.
some of the hebrew tribes, notably judah, had by then been living comfortably among the egyptians for many generations under the eighteenth dynasty. now, within just a couple of quick generations, the climate has completely and violently reversed, and the hebrew people become enslaved where they had once been guests. truly through no fault of their own. if only akhenaten would have guessed that from his eternally youthful exuberance, would be birthed history's greatest folly. he placed the mountain over water and tried to force his view upon others.
it is around this time of exodus that jehovah emerges as the one god of a reforged monotheistic religion. not monistic, as in all is one, but monotheistic, as in thou shalt not have other gods before me. i think this is the twist that ra did not foresee! here we have the example of why loving action taken without wisdom can lead to great sorrow. this is a gift from the mid 6th density, and we would be wise to take notice.
jehovah steps up and offers to rescue the tribes if they swear to forgo all gods but him. they forge a covenant with god whereby they secure jehovah's protection in exchange for doing his will. god's will is expressed as the ten commandments. ten statements which make for pretty good ethical guidelines... but in the newly forming jewish mind, was understood as an absolute standard by which to conduct one's life.
to me, this is jehovah's ninja move because he knew all along that his chosen ones ("elect") would ignore the hidden meaning, and never be able to live up to their end of the covenant. therefore he didn't have to live up to his own.
now fast forward to the babylonian exile of the jews around the 6th-5th century bce. these are the events recounted in the book of daniel, which was written hundreds of years later.
this is also the time of zoroaster, mahavira, pythagoras, siddharta gautama, laozi, and confucius. they all lived in this very short period of time together. now i don't know about anybody else, but i don't think this was clearly pointed out to me when i learned about these people in school.
all of these guys forwarded a philosophical doctrine that was in some way an admonition to let go of the golden age of the gods, and embrace the coming age of man. now it is true that, in their mental thrust away from the gods, they each spoke out in varying ways about animal sacrifice.
mahavira, the founder of jainism, happened to take a very extremist view toward not conducting oneself with any behavior that may cause harm to other living things. they of course, were vegetarians. the buddha, however, declared all things in moderation, and his non-vegetarianism is immortalized in the myth of his death from having eaten poisoned pig.
...
now we are are in jesus' time. judaism is now one of a whole cadre of new religious movements, when previously it only had various flavors of polytheism to contend with. (one possible exception being the progenitor of zoroastrianism.. the enigmatic melchizedek "king of righteousness" whom abraham paid tribute to. jesus' birth was also visited by the three magi (now wise men dodgy ) which is another throwback to the iranian version of monotheism, not the israeli kind.
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