DECODING ANCIENT EGYPT’S STORY OF THE SNAKE
A SNAKE BORN IN THE SUN
As everyone knows, the Ancient Egyptians absolutely venerated the sun. So much so, that they had several sun gods, and some that were combinations of the sun and other gods. So why the obsession?. Well there was actually two very different opposing reasons. Atum the original creator god, embodied both of these two reasons.
For the Ancient Egyptians, life literally came from the sun. Life also began with Atum, and he was the sun. Ancient Egyptians venerated the sun because they believed that it was the source from which everything and all life originated. And equally important, they also venerated the sun, because they knew that it had the power to return what it had created, back to a state of chaos.
In short, the Ancient Egyptian’s veneration of the Sun, was the result of a mixture of fear and respect.
So the fact that Ancient Egypt was a sun worshipping civilization, had nothing to do with the facile presumptive reasoning about the sun, being essential to growing crops, that archeologists and other scholars have attributed as the cause.
The Ancient Egyptians knew that it was the sun that gave birth to the two important snakes that they highlighted in their belief system and iconography. These were the Uraeus the cobra symbol on the pharaoh’s head dress, and Apophis the giant evil serpent who lived in the ground. The story of the snake, explains the cyclical warming and Ice Age periods that overtakes Earth, when these two interact, along with the changes that Earth is subject to, during Precession of The Equinoxes.
ANCIENT EGYPT’S HIDDEN TEMPLATE
The Rosetta Stone’s translation and the focus thats been placed on it, has caused us to miss an important story that the Ancient Egyptians recorded. That is theStory of The Snake, which is about a potential disaster.for Earth and humanity.
the limitations of the rosetta stone
The Rosetta stone has revealed some, just not all, or even the most important information that Ancient Egyptians recorded. The Stone’s limitations is due to the fact that Egyptians used metaphors in their paintings sculptures &wall reliefs, and in the creation of their gods, to tell their most important storyl; the story of the snake.
NUT: THE MILKY WAY GODDESS
In Ancient Egyptian astronomy, the Goddess Nut was Egypt’s symbol for the Milky Way. The overall milky appearance of the arms of our galaxy, with the golden bar at its center, is the Biblical so-called Land of Milk and Honey. Because after the Exodus, the Israelites appropriated this metaphor for their own use.
ATUM: ANCIENT EGYPT’S SELF CREATED GOD
The meaning of the name of the Ancient Egyptian God Atum, is another one of those unexpected, yet so-obvious-once-you-hear-it. secret, about Ancient Egypt hiding in plain sight. In Genesis Atum was the muse to describe how God’s created light. And specifically how he created Eve from Adam’s rib. Atum is the arom.
THE URAEUS: A SNAKE BORN IN THE SUN
The Ancient Egyptians used the symbol of the rearing cobra to represent CMEs from the sun’s corona towards earth. The unmistakable danger that is apparent in a cobra who has reared up just before spitting venom at its target, creates a vivid picture in which no words are needed.
GODS OF CHAOS: APOPHIS & SET
These two gods and devout enemies were two of Egypt’s best metaphors. Apohis the giant snake represents the electric telluric currents in the ground which interfere with the functioning of the field. Set represents the after effects of a strike from a CME on the weakened field. Which means that Both are different aspects of Earth’s magnetic field. — READ MORE →
MAAT: ANCIENT EGYPT’S MOST MYSTERIOUS GODDESS
The ceremony of weighing the heart of the dead against Maat’s feather of truth, was Ancient Egypt’s religious propaganda; nothing to do with the real meaning of Maat. Apart from the ceremony of the dead, the Egyptians did also regard Maat as being responsible for maintaining balance in the stars and the cosmos. That is closer to the truth.