06-04-2014, 06:09 PM
(This post was last modified: 07-04-2014, 05:09 PM by Lauren Johnson.)
As much as I would like to take credit for this post, it is actually David Guyatt's who thought he was Responding when in fact he was Editing my post. (Moderators can do that.) So I re-created my original post further down.
A really interesting find Lauren. In regard to the fertility/phallic aspect of the Obelisk, there is an ancient Egyptian deity that, for me, may prove to be even more interesting than Osiris.
Almost 20 years ago, when I first began trying to gather information on this Egyptian god, there was nothing on the Internet about him. Zero. AS recently as 5 years ago, there were only one or two passing references to him, but nothing descriptive.
His name is Min, and here he is:
[ATTACH=CONFIG]5857[/ATTACH]
One of his titles is "He who's arm is raised in the east". Obviously he does have two arms and hands so this is also an allusion to duality, and therefore, his arm raising in the east signifies him as the "east Min". It is also noted that the "star" of the east Min" is the Sun, making him a Sun god. In part.
Min was also associated with the Syrian love goddess Kadesh, the goddess of sacred ecstasy and sexual pleasure. The word "sacred" means holy or sanctified etc. The human body has a matching "sacred" bone - the sacrum, situated at the base of the spine and at the upper and back part of the pelvic cavity.
Moving on.
What Min's eclipsed hand is doing in the west, you'll have to figure out for yourselves, but a glimpse of the image above provides quite a compelling clue. Anyway, "west Min's" star is not actually a star but the Moon - always the symbol of femininity and the feminine principle.
So we now know what west min's star is.
Why is this significant? Is it significant?
The answer is that I'm not sure. All those 20 years ago I was simply given a lot of clues - mostly occult but not entirely so, some deep political ones too - and it was suggested I acquaint myself with another meaning of Westminster - home of the mother of all Parliaments, and home of a Cathedral and an Abbey.
Of course, the clue was "West Min's Star".
A "minster" by the way, is an honorific title that derives from "monastery" and Christian monasteries, back in the day, largely derived from ascetic's living in the desert in what were called Skete's - or prototype monasteries - that are said to have arisen in a region of Egypt known as the Scetis valley. Indeed, it is said that this region actually gave birth to the word ascetic.
A curious thing about monastic life is that it is a community where monks used to vote on candidates seeking to become their Abbot, where "Abbot" is a word that derives from the Aramaic language word "Abba", meaning father. Following the Cluniac Reforms of the Benedictine Rule, communities of monks were given even more voting rights to make important decisions on monastic life. The Abbot would propose ideas and thoughts, there cud would be chewed and a consensus reached. It was an early form of democracy that existed many hundreds of years before "democracy" became a political reality. Back then Anglo-Saxon kings still ruled, and they built the Palace of Westminster - now the home of Parliament.
And just across the road is Westminster Cathedral, built but masons, on a site that previously housed a community of Benedictine monks, who were installed there in the 960's or early 970's AD by St. Dunstan.
Quote: Obelisk
This is the Dorothy de Rothschild grove. The obelisk is the most commonly used and the most blatant occult symbol used throughout the world. In ancient Egypt, the cult of this phallic symbol was associated with the god Osiris, who was cut in 13 pieces by Seth. Isis traveled far and beyond to retrieve all of Osiris' body parts and was successful, except for one body part, the penis, which was swallowed by a fish. "The lost phallus" is thus representative of male energy, and is almost always placed (as in this case) inside a circle, which represents female genitalia and energy. The obelisk in the middle of a circle represents the sexual act and the union of opposite forces. In our modern world, obelisks are found on nearly all important landmarks, and thus became and symbol of the occult elite's power.
takably reveals to the initates who possesses real power in the world.
A really interesting find Lauren. In regard to the fertility/phallic aspect of the Obelisk, there is an ancient Egyptian deity that, for me, may prove to be even more interesting than Osiris.
Almost 20 years ago, when I first began trying to gather information on this Egyptian god, there was nothing on the Internet about him. Zero. AS recently as 5 years ago, there were only one or two passing references to him, but nothing descriptive.
His name is Min, and here he is:
[ATTACH=CONFIG]5857[/ATTACH]
One of his titles is "He who's arm is raised in the east". Obviously he does have two arms and hands so this is also an allusion to duality, and therefore, his arm raising in the east signifies him as the "east Min". It is also noted that the "star" of the east Min" is the Sun, making him a Sun god. In part.
Min was also associated with the Syrian love goddess Kadesh, the goddess of sacred ecstasy and sexual pleasure. The word "sacred" means holy or sanctified etc. The human body has a matching "sacred" bone - the sacrum, situated at the base of the spine and at the upper and back part of the pelvic cavity.
Moving on.
What Min's eclipsed hand is doing in the west, you'll have to figure out for yourselves, but a glimpse of the image above provides quite a compelling clue. Anyway, "west Min's" star is not actually a star but the Moon - always the symbol of femininity and the feminine principle.
So we now know what west min's star is.
Why is this significant? Is it significant?
The answer is that I'm not sure. All those 20 years ago I was simply given a lot of clues - mostly occult but not entirely so, some deep political ones too - and it was suggested I acquaint myself with another meaning of Westminster - home of the mother of all Parliaments, and home of a Cathedral and an Abbey.
Of course, the clue was "West Min's Star".
A "minster" by the way, is an honorific title that derives from "monastery" and Christian monasteries, back in the day, largely derived from ascetic's living in the desert in what were called Skete's - or prototype monasteries - that are said to have arisen in a region of Egypt known as the Scetis valley. Indeed, it is said that this region actually gave birth to the word ascetic.
A curious thing about monastic life is that it is a community where monks used to vote on candidates seeking to become their Abbot, where "Abbot" is a word that derives from the Aramaic language word "Abba", meaning father. Following the Cluniac Reforms of the Benedictine Rule, communities of monks were given even more voting rights to make important decisions on monastic life. The Abbot would propose ideas and thoughts, there cud would be chewed and a consensus reached. It was an early form of democracy that existed many hundreds of years before "democracy" became a political reality. Back then Anglo-Saxon kings still ruled, and they built the Palace of Westminster - now the home of Parliament.
And just across the road is Westminster Cathedral, built but masons, on a site that previously housed a community of Benedictine monks, who were installed there in the 960's or early 970's AD by St. Dunstan.
"We'll know our disinformation campaign is complete when everything the American public believes is false." --William J. Casey, D.C.I
"We will lead every revolution against us." --Theodore Herzl
"We will lead every revolution against us." --Theodore Herzl


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