Fundamentalist Christians and its Wrong Approach to Spiritual Teachings (04):

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Christianity as a Doomsday Cult:


It’s an Apocalypse [Originally posted on 6th May 2018]: Fundamentalist Christianity and, to a lesser extent, mainstream Christianity have an offset base or a counterpoint in their beliefs, predominately about the anti-Christ and the second coming. It could be shocking to hear that it’s a lie perpetrated by the Jesuits 400 years ago. Modern terminology for this kind of scenario is called Futurism. The second coming isn’t mentioned in scripture and the Bible. The power of people believing in that notion has a consequence: fundamentalism; it becomes a tool to invalidate a fear-based program.         

For some, the notion of an anti-Christ is like Atheism, a passé afterthought, which means you have broken away from the shackles of mind control. Human-directed evils often led by the elites and their magic(k) perpetuating the outcome result in many upheavals that people must face and overcome even though they’re inherently part of the game or play, whether conscious or unconscious. When they’re aware of it, their suppressed guilt creates a scapegoat to deflect their manifestations of culture that in many ways can be evil – to a Lucifer and Satan figurehead. Perhaps being stuck between the polarities of an existing mythical figurehead and something that’s been made up – is a new type of demoralization. And working on your individuation is the key to being free from it because to say that such a mythical figurehead cannot exist is too easy. There is the notion in Gnosticism of a divine experiment, and maybe this is all a means to obstruct you from reaching the divine experiment. 

Those in that mental frame are still demoralized; in The Matrix, Morpheus says, “a prison for your mind”, or another way to describe it is that people live in the cave, from the Greek myth allegory of the cave. So often, those managers of perception that keep you in the cave’s sole purpose is to come up with ideas to control your thoughts in the cave. When there is so much more outside the cave, their ideas are to instil anti-enlightenment and anti-science (not science for the betterment of humanity, but science through scientism, which advocates criminal capitalism). Also, futurism, technology, and seemingly (although unlikely) promote the entrapment of souls or consciousness to an artificial machine or a man’s version of a simulation. And promote the idea of loving your state and obeying its every whim when institutions like religion are a means to keep your spirit shackled.

And this is by no means an anti-Christian manifesto. Still, it is just a means of reporting what viewpoints are out there and that fundamentalism/evangelism and, to a lesser extent, mainstream Christianity can’t be excluded from the conspiracy they love to wield. No matter how much the Christian-Conspiracy-Groups want to believe in their solipsistic/inverse-solipsistic fantasy of exclusion. I aim to convey such exclusions do not exist. And to better understand why through one’s process. In much the same way as I described in the analogy of Shakespeare’s quote: “Love goes toward love, as schoolboys from their books; but love from love, toward school with heavy looks,” written in part two of this thesis.

Mysticisms go hand in hand with ”Myth” while Eschatology goes hand in hand with fundamentalism. And this is why esoteric or mystical Christianity has always been at odds with ecclesiastical authority. The Gnostics were one such group. So, this aspect of history is the template for Christians with a mystical fascination to exclude themselves from the churches instead of being excluded by them. This could explain the rise of esoteric Christianity. While fundamentalist conspiracy groups do the very opposite, they impose fear of knowledge and obedience to a (non-existent) Church of Christianity, whatever that may be. Why is there such a division between Christianity’s mystical and eschatological streams? The reasons are complex and varied – one aspect is that Eschatology, or ”the study of the last things,” deals with the end of time and the last judgement.

Most of these end-of-times mindsets came from John Nelson Darby, the founder of Plymouth Brethren, a small evangelical sect. He argued that when properly rearranged and reinterpreted, specific Bible verses revealed a system of seven ages of ‘dispensations’ and detailed predictions of the world’s end. The details in his 12-volume books, which circulated in the United States, resulted in a massive following. This gave way to fundamentalism, and soon, fundamentalist churches would become the core reactionary political movement.

The End of Times is also [exemplified by the verse in the Lord’s Prayer that says, “Thy kingdom come,” this view implies that the kingdom is not here (not here on earth, at any rate), but that it will be established here sometime in the (perhaps imminent) future. Much of early Christianity was preoccupied with this eschatology. Paul wrote 1 Thessalonians, the oldest text in the New Testament, to deal with his disciples’ concerns about their loved ones who died before the Lord’s return. Some scholars, most famously argued that Jesus himself belonged to this camp.
 
The Mystical Stream on the other hand, evokes a verse cited earlier “The kingdom of heaven is within you.” From this perspective, the End of Time is far less crucial. If the kingdom of heaven is truly within us, why do we need to wait for the last judgement to find it? This was the perspective of the Gnostics as well as many esoteric Christians ever since.
 
Seen from the perspective of two thousand years of history, the case for eschatological view is a weak one. The current din about the End of Times that we hear in best sellers an on TV programs is nothing new: Christ’s imminent return has been proclaimed unceasingly since his own time. And yet Christ has never returned. At this point we can suspect that he never will – at least not in any form that would be recognizable from popular imaginings.
 
Mystical experience, on the other hand, is verifiable. The encounter with the inner Christ has been described and discussed countless times over the last millennia. It has been granted to countless times over the last two millennia. It has been granted to devoted seekers as well as to many people who did not ask for it and did not want it. In fact, mystical experience is far common than is generally believed. If it is ignored or dismissed, it is largely because people often do not know what to do with it.
 
And yet, against all evidence and against all experience, the eschatological view has consistently triumphed, both institutionally and in the popular mind. Among the authorities, its appeal is obvious. Absent Christ himself, the priests and ministers remain as his vicars and stewards. They would not be nearly so necessary if everyone were aware of his or her own direct inner contact with the divine.
 
In the popular mind eschatology is attractive largely because it is easy to understand. Jesus will descend from the skies in cloud and majesty, to be joined by the raptured faithful. Resurrection is not the resurrection of a spiritual body but the resurrection of the flesh, the literal rising of corpse from their graves. (And yet, as we have seen, Paul explicitly says. “it is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body,” a curious instance in which a central teaching of a religion is explicitly denied by its own scriptures.) Esoteric Christianity, with its mysterious talk of subtle bodies and inner lights, seems baffling by contrast.
 
There is much talk now about the resurgence of evangelical Christianity – which is eschatological Christianity – in America today. But whatever the situation may look like in the short term, in the long run the tide may be turning against the eschatological perspective. Science is a Key factor. It is much harder to believe that the world will end tomorrow now that we know it has been around for several billion years. (No doubt this helps explain the antipathy many evangelical Christians feel toward science.) And while it may seem that conventional science detests nothing more thoroughly than mysticism, the two may prove to be allies in the end. In their different ways, they both rely on empirical investigation, certainly their methods vary – one relies on reproducible research, the other on meditation and introspection – but they may still find meeting point. We may even find, soon or in some remote time to come, that the long-sought grand unification theory somehow reconciles the two. -Richard Smoley, Jay Kinney, Hidden Wisdom                 

The Jesuits planned for a second coming of Christ, but this was thwarted by the event being centuries overdue. In the current century, a similar scenario is emerging, involving futuristic technology that aligns with our modern understanding of futurism. During the Watergate era, a proposal from the White House involved surfacing a submarine off the coast of Cuba and using holographic (Blue Beam) technology to create an illusion of the second coming of Christ. The aim was to disrupt communication channels long enough to facilitate a military invasion by the American forces. I suspect this mission was ultimately scrapped, but it could have played a role in the events surrounding 9/11.

This information remained secret until the attempt to use a hologram to simulate a plane during 9/11 failed to convince the public. While the Blue Beam theory is often dismissed as a hoax, the technology itself is accurate, making such scenarios plausible, especially among white Christians in the South American region. Many would likely believe it, as there are still individuals who insist that actual planes struck the towers on 9/11.

Of course, fundamentalist Christian conspiracy groups would be the first to figure out it is fake and make it known to mainstream Christians. And conveying the hoax of the second coming is based mainly on rituals financed by an oligarchy and is Orwellian in nature. There was some spiritual backlash, mainly towards anything open to spirit, presumably the New Age. Some may or may not believe it, but those that don’t believe in such a thing – will be cleverly truth-managed; fundamentalist conspiracy groups are in front of any dramatically changing worldview, which gives them a kind of safety net. It’s a vicious circle because the truth is always cornered and often profited when adequately marketed.

There is a doomsday, but a gradual one: This doomsday hides as an Altruistic program: fluoride in the water to help with teeth, Chemicals in the air to reduce global warming, GMA in foods to help with health, and mercury-filled vaccines to help us with flu. And propaganda, flags and hoaxes to establish a false evil (ISIS) conjured by them to promote false truths and obedience, increase militancy (both state and country) for protection, and so forth. Most of these agendas are well known among conspiracy circles but are also surface-layer stuff, and the deep-layered stuff is out there for you to realise.

Then there is the artificial doomsday scenario (as depicted in Watchman’s time clock illustration of a timer reading five minutes before 12) in which a nuclear disaster would become something real – between the superpowers of the United States and the Soviet Union. Then, of course, there are other doomsday upheavals presumably natural in origin, like the global warming hoax (melting ice caps, which are the effect of men’s progress to industry). Still, Global warming is about reaching a specific time in the Earth’s cycle. Other scientists claim there is a global cooling down – Teutonic earthquakes, the sinking of continents, meteor objects colliding with Earth from outer space, and so on.

There is also this attempt for one unifying religion to adhere to. Yet, at the same time, there is a new conditioning method to promote that believing in religion is the effect or cause of mental illness. And this is a gradual doomsday in the metaphysical sense where your faith and spirituality is under attack.

Christian fundamentalism and any minor agents of the oligarchy controllers are small factions of a bigger game from an even higher controller. As I said, truth is cornered, and nothing can grow positively. When religion is declared a mental illness, according to the American Psychological Association (APA), the APA is in the business of control and not so much in science.

Their reasoning is due to a five-year study from the APA about devout religious people who often suffer from anxiety, emotional distress, hallucinations, and paranoia. And those who perceived God as punitive were directly related to their health. In contrast, those who viewed God as benevolent did not suffer as many mental problems. It would also seem that the article in which this story comes from implies through their article photo that devoutly religious are disproportionately poor and non-white.

Furthermore, APA will lobby to legislate doctors the right to force life-saving treatment on those who refuse it for spiritual reasons because they are mentally incapable of making decisions about their health. This will open the door to numerous possibilities, and not the good kind; it will allow any religious/spiritual belief of any kind as an excuse to declare a patient unfit. And this seems ridiculous when it has been proven that religious/spiritual belief contributes to emotional and mental health. This aspect is accurate, and a whole article can be written about it, proving it legit.

Gregg Braden, often associated with the New Age movement, explains in his lectures about a field of energy that holds everything together and that humans are part of that field, with our bodies being the source that holds it together. He also outlines the importance of emotion being the language that translates quantum possibilities to realities of our physical world. This field is also known as the divine Matrix.

Gregg Braden exemplifies his explanation about focused thoughts and emotions by showcasing a video of a woman with cancer (a tumour in the abdomen) being healed in less than five minutes with focused thoughts and emotions. This incident was held in China. There was also a claim found in Christian channels of a woman who had leukaemia. She listened to the Gospels at the behest of her husband. She listened to it every day. The good news was that she eventually improved, and her cancer went into remission. This comes from Christian channels of whom other experiences are cleverly selected to set up bias. For example, a Buddhist who had a near-death experience and his vision came across the road on which he saw a pit, and in the pit, he saw Buddha grasping for help. What he is trying to infer is that Buddha was in damnation because he didn’t have Christ in his heart (it’s funny because Buddha died centuries before the appearance of Christ) – fundamentalist propaganda working as an agent to inflate the uncertainty of spirit. But I digress because it’s about positive thoughts and emotions; therefore, you won’t see the APA considering this aspect.      

Perhaps it’s a last-ditch effort by the seemingly dead (New) Atheist movement to spark a new ascendancy – [to speculate] align themselves with institutions like the APA. Because if mocking, attacking and insulting people’s beliefs (Dawkins comes to mind) don’t work – then let’s be more insidious about it.

The New Atheist movement is essentially the project of the cultural left; it’s their religious project. Religion doesn’t have to be theistic. [A religion is simply a system of belief that is used to bind a community together. Communism and Nazism were religions they were consciously designed to be as much].

The cultural left has been trying for decades to co-opt the old mainstream Protestant denominations and, in some cases, succeeded. At particular times, they seized power over various hierarchies of the Episcopal, Lutheran, and Presbyterian denominations. And in doing so, advocating explicit leftist reforms in the canon bylaws, the parishioners abandoned the churches in droves. This cause resulted in the Left ruling with no kingdom, and now the effect of all of these resulted in a radical polarization of American religion, with Fundamentalists, Evangelicals and Pentecostals on one side and secularists, agnostics and atheists on the other.

Fundamentalists, however, have a new focus – their energies are focused on the head hydra of the Roman Catholic Church. To seemingly make known their Pagan roots, it must be exercised by their Fundamentalist churches using fundamentalist conspiracy groups as their soldiers.

At times, the fundamentalist solipsistic mindset adheres to a form of inverse-solipsistic saviour figurehead. Can, at times, lean to the political right movement while ignoring myths/truths and mysticism along the way. Using them but warping the interpretation to control a naïve population can, at times, provoke a type of mental illness. However, this group and their ideology are small, similar to the size and scale of Atheist groups. Both are insignificantly small and yet the loudest – and believers of religion, in general, all have an inner strength and peace that even the hardest sceptic or (New)-Atheist may lack. This is more predominant in fundamentalist and ‘born-again’ types.

These small groups coincide with mainstream religion, especially fundamentalists. No one can identify the difference firsthand, and it can be regarded as part of the mainstream. Christianity as mainstream is where the focus is. And that focus is a sleight of hand – an illusion to set your focus on iconographic patsies that seem to align themselves as lifetime actors to play the role of a political leader or some other false hero. While this misdirection is happening, [anonymous armies of think-tank and NGO-fed drones mindlessly work day in and day out to create an endless index of insidious menaces like these]. To declare believing in religion is a state of mental illness is absurd.

The mythical doomsday: It’s written in the Septuagint, Isaiah 13, the judgment against Babylon, The vision, which is Esau’s son of Amos Assar against Babylon

23I beheld the earth, and, lo, it was without form, and void; and the heavens, and they had no light.
For the stars of Heaven and Orion and all the host of Heaven shall not give their light and shall be dark at sunrise and the moon should not give her light.
24I beheld the mountains, and, lo, they trembled, and all the hills moved lightly.
Rejoicing at the same time and insulting a voice of many nations on the mountains.
The earth shall be shaken from her foundation.
25I beheld, and, lo, there was no man, and all the birds of the heavens were fled.  
And day that is left shall be a flee in fon, and as a stray sheep, and there shall be none to gather them so that a man shall turn back to his people, and a man should flee to his own land.
26I beheld, and, lo, the fruitful place was a wilderness, and all the cities thereof were broken down at the presence of the Lord, and by his fierce anger.  
For the heaven shall be enraged and the earth shall be shaken from her foundation, because of the fierce anger of the lord of hosts.
27 For thus hath the Lord said, the whole land shall be desolate; yet will I not make a full end.  
For behold the day of the lord is coming, which cannot be escaped a day of wrath and anger to make the world desolate, and to destroy sinners out of it.
Therefore every hand should become powerless; every soul of Men should be dismayed.

Back then, they didn’t have motion pictures or cinematic universes to unload all their knowledge passed down through the centuries. Instead, they had monks in Babylon libraries conjuring mythological allegories – often from actual historical events and other times described through a fantastical setting. Then, revise it (or in the Matrix sequel – Reloaded) or give it a New 32 to coincide with its time. Even if you dismiss the symbolic meaning in these passages, their exoteric narratives often reveal common values entirely consonant with the Mystery traditions.

Richard Carrier, PhD, emphasizes in his lectures that the Gospels are fictional and that “fiction” can be synonymous with “myth.” His academic credentials are notable, highlighted by his PhD and numerous books discussing historical and religious inaccuracies. His perspective is overly simplistic and reductionist. Although I do not hold a PhD, Joseph Campbell would have provided a more nuanced examination of myth in his extensive work. Additionally, factual evidence, such as the discovery of giant human-like bones in archaeology, particularly in locations like Cydonia, challenges Carrier’s conclusions.

Moreover, many individuals report numerous UFO sightings and experiences that they interpret as prophetic dreams or encounters with spiritual entities, often described as night terrors, possession, or sleep paralysis. These experiences are supernatural or metaphysical and frequently intersect with our material reality. Therefore, categorizing myth entirely as fiction seems to reduce the complexity of truth and our world

Richard Carrier identifies several issues within the Gospels, using bullet points to outline their fallacies. These include a lack of proper historical structure, markers that suggest mythological elements, various improbabilities within the Gospels, and the absence of credible sources. At the same time, it is intriguing—and perhaps a humanist ideal—that anybody can study myths through criteria that connect with exegesis and align with modern myths and much older stories.

Militarism is a hallmark of the modern myth for the human and otherworldly figure: the Lord and his warriors are coming. The more you look back on historical myth, the more fantastical our world was once: Giants/Nephilim, Angels/Archons, a possible silicon world, giant trees and so forth. Most of those stories can’t be pigeonholed as fiction – so I’m convinced the Lord’s warriors are not just an allegory on war as a human story but something more literal: watchers/angels cast down becoming part of the human story. That resulted in a battle between the dark and the light. And this conflict spurred a polarity of hate throughout history, which never ends. 

In these narratives, myth writers convey the most incredible story ever told, while modern writers explore the facets of human life as potential extensions of that astonishing tale. War is one such aspect. From its inception to today, it involves soldiers or warriors who are part of something greater than mere patriotism—something more mythical. History recounts their stories and the moments that could have emerged or been thrust upon them.

The science fiction show Battlestar Galactica encapsulates this theme, which glorifies a militarized society engaged in an existential struggle against an entirely alien threat. The show introduces the concept of artificial intelligence, notably the Archons, understood around UFO circles as biological androids serving reptilian overlords. A central plot point of *Battlestar Galactica* is the idea that this cycle of events has occurred before and will happen again reiterated in several episodes. Interestingly, this concept aligns with Ecclesiastes 1:9: “What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun.”

If immortals/gods/goddesses exist, then myths cannot die; they get re-interpreted. The only way it dies off is through the end of a cycle or an age. A catastrophic event like a flood could reset the human story for the better. However, the self-proclaimed rulers of the world often go underground or make their way to Caucus Mountains – then the whole play starts again with the same outcome. Ideologies, conversely, can die off, and at times, ideologies can be initiated through myths.

Fiction is a projection of reality and is simply a conjuring of writers to express our deepest fears, visions, beliefs and ideas in tangible forms such as a book or a film. The art of the period is usually a reflection of the time itself. Writers routinely draw from real places and actual events. Within these retellings, some notice the patterns that seem too frequent and consistent to be a coincidence and too prevalent to ignore – these recurring themes through symbolism are often at the behest of secret societies. A symbol’s meaning is useless when analysing a single retelling without context, and the timeline window has been altered; it’s challenging to discover which retelling is literal to that of the symbolic. However, if one is only concerned with the overlapping concept, the meaning surrounding the symbol becomes clear. This has limitations as the idea of telling the same story on repeat becomes less inspirational. 

The Lord of Hosts parallels the Solar Saviour/Horus, and identifying the Solar Saviour is another hallmark in myth. It often defines modern mythology because this Lord of Host is bringing down destruction. People would also assume he parallels with Enki (and for some Christians, he is also known as Lucifer/anti-Christ); it’s not clear in the Septuagint passages. The name title Lucifer denotes the planet Venus – and the Vulgate describes it as “the light of the morning”. The title was also applied as a metaphor for the King of Babylon (Isaiah 14:12) to the high priest Simon, son of Onias (Ecclesiasticus 50:6), and also Jesus Christ himself (2 Peter 1:19; Apocalypse 22:16; the “Exulted” of Holy Saturday) the true light of our spiritual life.

 Thanos (a Marvel comic book character) alongside Mafista (a version of Satan in Marvel comics) seemingly resembles an infamous illustration of Satan and Christ on the mountain cliffside. It’s unsurprising to see dual/morphing archetypes in comic book characters. This questions the concept of Satan being Lucifer as more ambiguous or separate. 

In some circles, predominately fundamentalist Christians, the Anti-Christ already exists and has a Jewish name – and all left is Armageddon followed by the return of Christ. Then, the victory of the good forces over the Anti-Christ is followed by the millennium rule of Christ, followed by the last judgement, which entails the end of the world and time. And this is the paradigm of the extreme wing of Christendom.

The secular has a similar scenario in which the end of history begins; this is a 19th-century notion linked to evolutionists (Darwin), which establishes history moving towards something, and this something is the end of history because there is no more development. This approach sees history as a sort of evolution. First, it evolves to an inevitable end. It stops – much like Marxists view the ultimate rule of the proletarian being established in which millions have to be slaughtered, but never came, then it’s the end of history. When considering symbolic truths, the former has more merit than the latter.

When you view history through the matrix of time of not existing, history is not a consideration; it’s what Mercia Iliad calls the refusal of history or the myth of the eternal return. This myth is not Western and is more related to ancient southern India. The myth has two concepts: the first is about cosmic spiritual cycles (in Greek word cycles means Serpent). Therefore, cycles denote a circular concept of time, returning to your origins. The ancient Hindus discuss chronological cycles that are millions of years old, categorized as munvanta, culpas, yugas, etc. At the present moment, we are in the Kali cycle, the Dark Age. The Kaliyuga cycle entails an age of materialism. Eventually, these cycles pass and head towards a new vast cycle, a cosmic reincarnation of the world. The second concept is Karma (in San script, it means action), which is the cause of existential evils and slowly minimizes suffering within reincarnation. Mercia Iliad suggested that perhaps this concept was devised as a way to accept total liberation. So, when a person looks at these vast, incredible schemes, it forces them to change their worldview. And this is liberation, although liberation not within time, but from time, not curing suffering, but instead rising above it and out of it.

In talking about cycles and reincarnation, one must understand to get there, one must understand death. In the Avengers-Infinity-War case, it’s about death and sacrifice. I don’t know the conceptual artist for the film Avengers-Infinity-War; it seems they got inspiration from a painting by Manly P. Hall in his 1928 book “The Secret Teachings of All.” Manly P. Hall is an author/teacher of Alchemy. The language of Alchemy is the crux of Avengers-Infinity-War; more precisely, this scene combines Pagan ritual death sacrifice and an alchemical fermentation process. The fermentation process starts with the inspiration of spiritual power from above that re-animates, energises, and enlightens the alchemist. Then, out of the blackness of Putra-faction comes the yellow ferment, which appears like a golden wax flowing out of the bowel matter of the soul. 

In the film, a bright, shiny yellow stone (soul stone) appears in his hand as Thanos wakes up from a blackout after the ritual. Manly’s book cover illustrates a middle point between above and below (Heaven and Earth). A reinterpretation of the ferryman guides Thanos as not being an alchemist or maybe it hints more towards Anubis. Lastly, within the scene is a monolith akin to the 9-11 Twin Tower. Many conspirators also regard the 9-11 events as a Stargate – Gamora is sacrificed, depicting a fall that mirrors people falling from the Twin Tower buildings. The 9-11 event was transcribed in pop culture media decades before it happened–it seems it’s still being transcribed in the entertainment media post-9/11.   

The myth of Giants having had a hand in destroying the Earth has always been retold. Unfortunately, in our modern age, it acts as a retelling for entertainment, possibly propaganda, but often synch-masters will tell you those news/films/ TV shows as entertainment don’t tell the truth; instead, they tell a coded truth.    

In Genesis 6:4 – compared to Septuagint: Esaiah 13

   4There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of  God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown.
  Giants are coming to fulfill my wrath.

The Book of Enoch, excluded from the Biblical canon, references a group of heavenly beings known as the Watchers. Among these Watchers is a faction of fallen angels who occasionally descended to teach humans about arcane arts. However, Enoch is generally not regarded as canonical in most Jewish or Christian traditions. This lack of recognition is likely due to its reliance on Lebanese (or Phoenician) magic and folklore rather than authentic Jewish sources.

Many Christians today believe that the Watchers were interdimensional beings that entered our world through gates or portals. This phenomenon is said to be associated with Babylon, a city whose name means “Gateway of the Gods.” This perspective raises the possibility that interpretations of the Book of Genesis regarding the end times have fallen out of favour with both Jews and Christians. The Book of Enoch, discovered among the Essene literature hidden in the Qumran caves, reinforces Essene Literature made evident by the Dead Scrolls.

When Joshua and the nation of Israel entered the Land of Canaan, they were instructed to wipe out certain men, women and children of certain tribes. According to the story, the tribes they killed were non-human hybrids called the Nephilim – and their height was said to have reached between 10 to 30 feet. These were the offspring of spiritual beings and are said to be the primary reason God sent the flood. Satan knew about the prophecy that would defeat him. Before any of the prophets came to explain how it would occur, the only thing Satan knew was that the Messiah was going to be human. The Nephilim was an attempt to infiltrate the entire bloodline of humanity so that the Messiah could not be a full-blooded man. And this would have worked if not for Noah and his family. When Abraham found out from God that the land of Canaan was to be given to Abraham, Satan also found out, which resulted in the Nephilim being around for 400 years, attempting to thwart God’s plan of God. From the Genesis text, it would seem that they were around before and after the flood.

The New Age circles, who mainly abide by the notion of being ‘spiritual but not religious,’ see it through the evolution of consciousness. Between the fall of Atlantis and the dawn of the first civilization (Sumerians and Egypt 4,500 BC), there was a 6,500-year gap. During this time, it was about consciousness evolution (in scientific terms, waiting for codons to switch on in the human DNA – and DNA is described as the physical soul) – the wait in evolution had to happen to be ready for the next set of instalment (knowledge) of the Human play. Around this time, the flood occurred and is said to be caused by the hyperreal notions of pole shifts and the precession of the equinox. This incident would have caused an ice age, and afterwards, it would melt, causing floods. (I believe something happened to cause three-day darkness or a void, but I don’t think it was a polar shift).

Researchers were still trying to understand how ancient Sumerians and Egypt evolved rapidly during the dawn of the first civilizations. Therefore, they categorized that civilization’s evolution as a stair-step evolution. Other researchers who lean toward esotericism describe their leap in knowledge and technology as something otherworldly given to them by (some beings).

According to Thoth, every level of consciousness has its consciousness grid and chromosome chain. The higher level of consciousness correlates with height, which is the primary difference between those particular DNA factors (codons). The second level of consciousness has 44 and two chromosomes, which is where we are right now, with the average height for men 6-7 feet tall / women 5-6 feet tall. The third level has 46 and two chromosomes (the height in men is 14-16 feet tall, and women are 10-12 feet tall. The fourth level translates to 48 and two Chromosomes, which is 33-35 feet tall in women and 30-32 feet tall. A being named Metatron (a Hebrew Archangel) reached 55 feet tall – It’s written in the Book of Enoch – (Book 3. Chapter 1) that Enoch was transformed into an Arch Angel Metatron. The book describes Metatron spreading his wings. I guess what is being questioned here is whether Angels (Sons of God) came in unto female humans – an allegorical story for Gene’s manipulation.   

 The illustration on the left depicts Metatron with his wings; those wings are said to be accurate in a literal sense. The illustration on the right is a Celestial character (cosmic entity) from Marvel Comics – a creation from Jack Kirby specifically from ‘The Eternals’. In the film Guardians of the Galaxy, from which the image is taken, the collector describes,’ only beings with extraordinary strength can brandish the (power) stone’. (The stone is on top of Celestial Giant’s staff). While there is no significant aesthetic similarity, it’s about the relatability in archetypes, in this case, ‘Giants’- the Giant Metatron Archetype is the very peak of Giants. 

Thanos was said to be half an Eternal being, a mutation (a deviant among his people); his premise for domination or to make the universe perfectly balanced by destroying half the population in the universe was for Death, on her orders. (Death is a Marvel character – a sort of goddess of Death or time, representing Kronos in female form. Thanos becomes infatuated and falls in love with ‘Death’). He acquired the stones and the Gauntlet in the comics and the film. With it, he destroyed half the population with a finger click; however, some of the remaining half-remembered people had disappeared, a mandala effect scenario). In the film, the Celestials destroyed the planet Titan; in the comics, Thanos eventually destroyed the planet. The film outlines Thanos’s mission to persuade the leaders of his world, Titan, to destroy half the population and save it. His people denied him; now, his calling or mission is to destroy half the population in the universe – by acquiring all the infinity stones (which seems to be a symbolic concept of the Alchemical philosopher’s stone split into six). Thanos would then be known as the ‘Mad Titan.’

Thanos is a Giant, although not a peak Giant, but a Giant that stands around 14-16 feet tall (in the third level). Thanos is coming to destroy half the life of the world ordained by ‘Death,’ does that sound familiar? In Esoteric/Gnostic teachings, there is a triune story of IS(IS), RA, and EL: Israel; ISIS – the mother Goddess; RA – the Sun; El – the Demiurge. The Demiurge represents God, the construct of this world, and Saturn (rings) binds it together as Saturn represents (Father) Time. The God of this world is the Demiurge, not the True God, and he ultimately loves Blood. Blood represents the inner spirit coursing through our bodies. It constitutes the breath of life on all spiritual levels. ‘Death’ represents the Demiurge or Saturn (Cronus), Mafista represents Satan, Celestials are peak Giants, and Thanos is both […]

The retelling of Giants is nothing new and will most likely continue. From Cronos and Cyclops in Wrath of the Titans to the Giant in the hypersexual anime film ‘Urotsukidoji: Legend of the Overfield’. This seems to be a copy of the anime series Evangelian to the artificial celestial size of tech-Giant Pacific Rim. However, Evangelian thought pilots were spiritually linked with their Giants. And the Giants already had a sense of the spirit while also being mechanized. Pacific Rim stripped that away and made the giants more Machines, leaving only the pilots with a sense of spirit. Then, there is the Giant in ‘Jason and the Argonauts to the Giant Apollo in the original Star Trek episode ‘Who Mourns for Adonais.’ To children’s stories, Jack and Beanstalk, Spielberg’s BFG, and the cartoon Iron Giant. All repeated representation from myth and probably the Book of Giants, in which Giants are mentioned in the tale of ‘Gilgamesh’ and the list continues … Allegorically, it’s all still about Giants.

Scott Weiland (who died in 2015) was a prominent grunge singer in the 90s with the band Stone Temple Pilots. He sums up this exploration well with his last track from the first album ‘core’ – especially the Chorus; the song itself is open interpretation – I’m comparatively using it as an example in both a literal and ethereal sense.

I wanna be as big as a mountain

I wanna fly as high as the Sun

I wanna know what the rent is like in Heaven

I wanna know where the river goes

Michael Keefe.

… End of part three … to be continued.

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