A video containing illustration of Jesus travel to Egypt, India and how his teachings transformed into a religion by Roman Emperor.
I feel they could have left out the “extra-terrestrial hybrid with connections to the Annunaki”…
Because once again he’s painted as “other than our other selves” as Ra would say.
He simply achieved union with God, as hundreds before him and hundreds after him did.
The elder race members (Teresa of Avila, saint Augustine and saint Francis of Asisi…among others…) achieved this at the end of the 2nd cycle, roughly 23 000 years before Jesus…
The big deception is exactly this, creating the impression that he was somehow unique and special, which this video perpetuates in a way, robbing people of the realisation that this experience (union with God) is possible for them too.
I honestly laughed when they mentioned this too…
But I like the “more middle eastern look” of Jesus, totally transformed my childhood indoctrination imagery of pale skinned and blue eyed Jesus.
Ah yes, absolutely!
A wonderful book on the Egyptian initiation and what it entailed, is this one:
One thing in the video that ‘did’ catch my eye was Jesus being referred to as “The Egyptian”, because many, many, many moons ago I read a…strange…and…wonderful…book, and in the book two “past” earthlings who are now in “higher realms” are still referred to as “the Egyptian” and “the Chaldean”.
I always kind of assumed that Jesus must have been “the Chaldean”… because Chaldeans were Aramaic-speaking people (Jesus’ mother tongue), but now I’m thinking he may have been “the Egyptian”…
It’s just a strange coincidence, that’s all…
Here’s the book:
It can be said that Jesus had a colossal experience of what is called “cosmic consciousness”.
In the book Cosmic Consciousness by Richard Maurice Bucke, such an experience is described thusly:
Jesus was unique and special just like any entity (you, me, anyone) is unique and special.
The ‘side effect’ of ‘pedestalizing’ is that one shall have the needs to feel superior to others or see others as inferior to balanced it out.
By ‘pedestalizing’ it means seeing Jesus (or any other concept which the entity has identified with) as ‘superior’.
This then formed a ‘hierarchy’ of superiority (and inferiority).
And such is how “Service To Self” tried to realize as such hierarchy will be beneficial to create a sense of ‘separation’ between entities.
- Jesus is superior than me. me #inferior
- Jesus is my savior/God/Idol. me #assocatiing to something superior / pedestalized
- As thus I am superior in comparation to those who do not see Jesus as his/her savior. me #superior in order to balanced out the sense of me #inferior on step 1.
The understanding of the above mechanism is beneficial when one faced / encountered somebody with superiority / inferiority complex.
For sure!
Well the way I see the formation of Christianity and the shenanigans of the Catholic church is very similar to the 5th density entity trying to end the Ra contact.
An immense amount of light came into the planetary sphere, and the darkness got to work. And hierarchy is of course the hallmark of negativity.
Carla called the Ra contact a “blinding cynosure” attracting immediate attention from the dark side, and Jesus would have been the same, becoming a high priority target.
Buddha as well, he had the demon Mara to contend with on a regular basis.
…
Staying on the theme of the opposites…
How will you appreciate and enjoy that moment, without the foregoing suffering to compare it with? It would be completely meaningless.
When Buddha was asked “what is Nirvana?” he answered “the end of suffering”.
Without suffering, there can be no Nirvana (cessation of suffering).
Without dukkha, there can be no sukha.
Pope Francis reminded listeners that practices like yoga aren’t capable of opening our hearts up to God. “You can take a million catechetical courses, a million courses in spirituality, a million courses in yoga, Zen and all these things. But all of this will never be able to give you.freedom”, he explained.
If only he knew what Yeshua did as part of his own spiritual journey
You know what I sometimes think of…my mind goes all over the show. I truly admire anyone who has awakened in a Catholic “environment”, they did so “in spite of” it, not “because of” it.
But of course they had to become renegades. Meister Eckhart was excommunicated by the Catholic church…
And you know what’s also interesting, so you know Teresa of Avila was known for her spontaneous levitation, about 1.5 feet above the ground, sometimes lasting more than an hour…
And when D. T. Suzuki was asked what it was like to have experienced satori (enlightenment), he said “it’s just like everyday ordinary experience but about two inches off the ground”.
And of course, if gravity is diminished for these people, then walking on water is not so unusual.
St. Francis of Asisi also levitated. He was often found floating in the air during spiritual ecstasies. Reports from later writers echoed and expanded on these claims, saying that St. Francis would soar to the treetops and sometimes into the sky, where he could barely be seen.
And Joseph of Cupertino, these people were known as the “flying saints”.
…
Very well stated! My slant, so to speak, is exactly this. There IS no separation. We create that when we compartmentalise and perpetuate the us’es and them’s.
The only thing I can say about Christianity as it stands today, and I can only say this in hindsight, because back then as a teenager the only thing I knew was that “I didn’t want to be there”.
Now all these decades later, I know what it was; it felt heavy.
I believe there’s a spiritual principal with these so-called flying saints … and these tales of levitation and “flying” can be found across all the wisdom traditions.
Lieh-tzu (c. 398 B.C.), a famous Daoist, was celebrated for his mysterious power of being able to ride upon the wind. He said “I know not whether the wind was riding on me or I on the wind.”
In his book Autobiography of a Yogi, Paramahamsa Yogananda discusses Nagendranath Bhaduri, a saint said to levitate in India.
In the words of G. K. Chesterton; “angels fly because they take themselves lightly”.