|
imported post -
02-05-05, 06:56 PM
Hotep,
What inspired me to write this is the fact that I've seen medu neter figures of people with green hue. Someone explained to me that before the fall (death)of man, we had green hue and then went through a process of oxidation.
Being that we are one with creation and there are seasonal changes (or cycles) in nature, perhaps we as people under go the same changes. For example, in nature we have two seasons that signify death (autumn and winter). We call autumn the fall which marks the beginning of the cycle of death in nature. After the fall of nature, we enter the final blow of death called winter. Now in winter, depending on the regionin which youlive, we have white rain called snow. By doing a play on words, rain can be switched with reign. We know that reign means to rule.
How does that relate to us?
According to scripture, we had a fall. In order to confirm that, all we have to do is compare our glorious history with our state of being today. Now we have a reign on this planet by a people who are white. Making the connection? Now white rain, or snow, doesn't produce life unlike the rain of spring. Under the white reign ofCaucasions we have not experienced life. Everything they produce brings about death and destruction. Now in the autumn the leaves fall which serves as a sign of a fall that's occuring. The leaves on trees begin to oxidize then turn from green to the various colors that people with hue exhibit in this current cycle. When the leaves oxidize, the final color it changes to is brown. Brown is the color of the leaves in their last or furthest stage of oxidation (death). This could explain why the brown and dark brown people of the planet exhibit the greatest degree of mental death. There's one tree, however, that remains green (green signifies life). This tree is the evergreen or pine tree.
How does that relate to us? The third-eye (which is called the seat of the soul by the ancients) is called, in medical terminology, the pineal gland. The word pineal is french for pine cone. They call the third-eye pineal because it's shaped like a pine cone. What's the shape of a pine cone? Is it not the shape ofthepine/evergreen tree? Again, being that we are one with nature, perhaps the pine tree not dying in the autumn and winter is a reminder to us that you cannot kill the soul.
Shem Hotep
|