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Pastimes : Ask God -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jamey who wrote (27550)10/7/1999 7:13:00 AM
From: Sam Ferguson  Respond to of 39621
 
James please read this post very slowly and carefully. Do you agree with it? It is not of your usual ilk and mostly what I post. What does it say about sin and God punishing you and forgiveness for asking? The laws written in your heart? Pain? "There" is no better than "here"? You will find it to be the same. Reincarnation hunh?

I couldn't preach a better sermon and reading my posts you know you have been hearing this from me for a long time. Not verbatim but acceptable from an unknown author where I am heretic when I post these messages and called an anti-Christ.

There is much to learn here if one has an open mind.



To: Jamey who wrote (27550)10/7/1999 11:31:00 AM
From: Sam Ferguson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 39621
 
The mythical Messiah was always born of a Virgin Mother--a factor unknown in natural phenomena, and one that cannot be historical, one that can only be explained by means of the Mythos, and those conditions of primitive sociology which are mirrored in mythology and preserved in theology. The
virgin mother has been represented in Egypt by the maiden Queen, Mut-em-ua, the future mother of Amenhept III.some 16 centuries B.C., who impersonated the eternal virgin that produced the eternal child.

Four consecutive scenes portrayed upon the innermost walls of the Holy of Holies in the Temple of Luxor, which was built by Amenhept III., a Pharaoh of the 17th dynasty. The first scene on the left hand shows the God Taht, the Lunar Mercury, the Annunciator of the Gods, in the act of hailing the Virgin Queen, and announcing to her that she is to give birth to the coming Son. In the next scene the God Kneph (in conjunction with Hathor) gives the new life. This is the Holy Ghost or Spirit that causes the Immaculate Conception, Kneph being the spirit by name in Egyptian. The natural effects are made apparent in the virgin's swelling form.

Next the mother is seated on the mid-wife's stool, and the newborn child is supported in the hands of
one of the nurses. The fourth scene is that of the Adoration. Here the child is enthroned, receiving
homage from the Gods and gifts from men. Behind the deity Kneph, on the right, three spirits--the
Three Magi, or Kings of the Legend, are kneeling and offering presents with their right hand, and life
with their left. The child thus announced, incarnated, born, and worshipped, was the Pharaonic
representative of the Aten Sun in Egypt, the God Adon of Syria, and Hebrew Adonai; the
child-Christ of the Aten Cult; the miraculous conception of the ever-virgin mother, personated by
Mut-em-ua, as mother of the "only one," and representative of the divine mother of the youthful
Sun-God.

These scenes, which were mythical in Egypt, have been copied or reproduced as historical in the
Canonical Gospels, where they stand like four corner-stones to the Historic Structure, and prove
that the foundations are mythical.

Jesus was not only born of the mythical motherhood; his descent on the maternal side is traced in
accordance with this origin of the mythical Christ. The virgin was also called the harlot, because she
represented the pre-monogamic stage of intercourse; and Jesus descends from four forms of the
harlot--Thamar, Rahab, Ruth and Bathsheba--each of whom is a form of the "stranger in Israel," and
is not a Hebrew woman. Such history, however, does not show that illicit intercourse was the natural
mode of the divine descent; nor does it imply unparalleled human profligacy. It only proves the
Mythos.

In human sociology the son of the mother preceded the father, as son of the woman who was a
mother, but not a wife. This character is likewise claimed for Jesus, who is made to declare that he
was earlier than Abraham, who was the typical Great Father of the Jews; whether considered to be
mythical or historical. Jesus states emphatically that he existed before Abraham was. This is only
possible to the mythical Christ, who preceded the father as son of the virgin mother; and we shall
find it so throughout. All that is non-natural and impossible as human history, is possible, natural and
explicable as Mythos.