Egyptian Pharaoh Akhenaton -
the CHRIST Consciousness being from Sirius
AKHENATON the CHRIST Consciousness being arriving from system of Sirius
changed Egypt in 17 years of his ruling, he disrupted all religions,
telling people that the priests were not necessary. That GOD was
within them, and that all they needed to do was learn how to breathe
and everything
would be fine.
Akhenaton gave initiates a 12 year advanced training of the missing
knowledge (Alienshift) this course produced 300 Christ consiousness
beings.
Akhenaton, the Heretic King, is in some respects, was the most remarkable
of the Pharaohs.
After the death of his father, he came into full power in Egypt and
took the name Akhenaton. He produced a profound effect on Egypt and
the entire world of his day.
Thirteen hundred years before Christ, he preached and lived a
gospel of perfect love, brotherhood, and truth. Two thousand
years before
Mohammed, he taught the doctrine of the "One God." Three
thousand years before Darwin, he sensed the unity that runs through
all living things.
The account of Akhenaton is not complete without the story of his beautiful
wife, Nefertiti. Some archaeologist have referred to Nefertiti as Akhenaton's
sister, some have said they were cousins. What is known is that the
relationship between Akhenaton and Nefertiti was one of history's first
well-known love stories.
At the prompting of Akhenaton and Nefertiti, the sculptors and the
artists began to recreate life in its natural state, instead of the
rigid and lifeless forms of early Egyptian art.
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Sayings of Akhenaton the Egyptian King Monotheist
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"True wisdom is less presuming than folly.
The wise man doubteth often, and changeth his mind; the fool is obstinate,
and doubteth
not; he knoweth all things but his own ignorance."
"Honor is the inner garment of the Soul;
the first thing put on by it with the flesh, and the last it layeth
down at its separation
from it."
"Be thou incapable of change in that
which is right, and men will rely upon thee. Establish unto thyself
principles of action;
and see that thou ever act according to them. First know that thy
principles are just, and then be thou."
" Say not that honor is the child of boldness, nor believe thou that
the hazard of life alone can pay the price of it: it is not to
the action that it is due, but to the manner of performing it."
" Labor not after riches first, and think thou afterwards wilt enjoy
them. He who neglecteth the present moment, throweth away all that
he hath. As the arrow passeth through the heart, while the warrior
knew not that it was."
" Indulge not thyself in the passion of anger; it is whetting a sword
to wound thine own breast, or murder thy friend."
" The ambitious will always be first in the crowd; he presseth forward,
he looketh not behind him. More anguish is it to his mind to see
one before him, than joy to leave thousands at a distance."
" As the ostrich when pursued hideth his head, but forgetteth his
body; so the fears of a coward expose him to danger."
" As a rock on the seashore he standeth firm, and the dashing of
the waves disturbeth him not. He raiseth his head like a tower
on a hill, and the arrows of fortune drop at his feet. In the instant
of danger, the courage of his heart here, and scorn to fly."
"As the whirlwind in its fury teareth
up trees, and deformeth the face of nature, or as an earthquake in
its convulsions overturneth
whole cities; so the rage of an angry man throweth mischief around
him."
~ Akhenaton ~
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Amenhotep IV
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This being the case it might be a good idea to look at the life
and work of one man in ancient Egypt whom many consider to be the
first revolutionary in history. He was a king, Amenhotep IV, who
lived in the 18th century before Christ. In most early societies
the land and people were considered to be the property of god,
and were controlled by him through his agents and priests.
The Egyptian monarch or pharaoh, however, was not simply a priest
mediating between god and man; the monarch was himself a god. He
was an aspect of the totality of power in society and in nature.
Early in the fourth millennium there are already indications that
the Egyptians apparently tried to preserve and protect the physical
remains of the dead and to provide them for use after death with
the food and furnishings that had been valuable during life. The
building of elaborate tombs and gigantic pyramids was an expression
of this belief in the afterlife. The mortuary arrangements of the
Egyptians provide insights into Egyptian attitudes toward religion
and philosophy, with the passing of time bringing even greater
refinements
Not only were as many objects of dress, equipment and furnishings
as the individual could afford, put into his tomb, but the walls
of the tomb were decorated with reliefs of paintings depicting
the individuals life in detail--his pleasures, his honors, his
business, the operations of his farm and household. Why did they
do it? The basic reason was to protect and preserve in as many
ways as could be devised the existence of the individual, together
with the environment which he regarded as necessary to the good
life.
The Egyptians therefore, from the earliest of times believed in
the immortality of the soul, the indestructibility of the human
personality. This in fact meant that they believed in god. Basically
Egyptian religion envisaged a host of powers in the universe constituting
the effective dynamic in every aspect of human experience. Many
of these powers were never dignified with the status of god; many,
such as the power of the sun, were recognized in various places
under different names. Ultimately, an intricate theological tangle
developed, resolved for the most part in a complicated but skillful
theological system of identifications and hierarchy.
The system held the sun, usually by the name of Ra, as the supreme
cosmic power. More closely involved in the daily life of man were
Osiris, Isis and Hours. This Trinity had to do originally with
the vital forces of generation in the Nile and the earth. Osiris
represented the fertilizing power of the Nile, Isis the reproductive
earth and Hours the vital force in the vegetation which was the
fruit of the union of the first two. This involved an annual rhythm.
Osiris was born and died with the rise and fall of the river; Hours
was born and died with the germination and harvest of the crop;
yet neither actually died, for both reappeared annually to repeat
the cycle. In a sense they were the same. It was Osiris who brought
Hours to life by coming into him, thus Hours was Osiris reappearing
as Osiris again in the rising river.
This seems to us to be excessively mysterious and figurative. But
to the Egyptians it made as much sense as the mathematics of biochemistry
and genetics make to us. It was a common-place belief that no one
questioned until Akhenaton came around. These same divine forces
active in the Nile, the earth and vegetation were considered active
in human life as well, at least in the life of the Pharaoh. Though
the king died, a living king survived in the person .f the human
son and heir and also in the immortal person (or mummy) of the
deceased monarch in another world. Osiris was the king; he reigned
and died. But there was after-all still a living being, the son
of Hours. But since the king was Osiris, Hours had become Osiris.
Thus the king was both, Osiris and Hours. Neither of them ever
really died, despite appearances. Osiris, Hours, the king--all
three-- were always living simultaneously in the world and the
next.
Thus physically the Pharaoh was the human embodiment of the divine
powers of the Nile and of vegetation, of life, death and resurrection
of Osiris and Hours. Later on this concept was applied to mankind
in general. Not everyman was truly Osiris-Hours as the pharaoh
was truly so, but every man lived and died by virtue of the same
divine vital forces and experienced the same renewal of life after
seeming death. Thus human life and immortality were merged in the
same process as natural and cosmic life and vitality. All other
religions which originated in the Middle East were eventually affected
and influenced by these beliefs.
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Background of Amenhotep IV
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By the l4th century B.C. the Egyptians had developed a large empire
and their religious beliefs were spread to other peoples. However,
it was back in Egypt itself were a dramatic revolution took place
with the accession of Amenhotep IV in the year 1379. This pharaoh
was the son of Amenhotep III, who was a kind of Louis XIV of his
world, and his queen was apparently not of royal blood and may
even have been a foreigner. The features in her portraits are of
a different cast from those of the portraits of native Egyptians.
She may have suffered from an ailment which affected her physical
structure. In any case, some of her physical peculiarities reappear
in portraits of her son and his children -- and even his wife,
the famous and beautiful Nefertiti. It has been suggested that,
for whatever reason, Amenhotep IV was of peculiar physique, and
thus set a kind of common fashion which influenced the portraits
of other members of the court. It is striking and possibly significant,
that he and other members of his family and court are often depicted
with bulging cranium, thin neck, sloping shoulders and paunchy
stomachs.
With these physical peculiarities, real or invented, went an equally
remarkable personality and policy. He tried to replace the traditional,
official Egyptian religion of Amarna by a new concept of god. Although
still embodied in the sun, this concept, called Aton, was understood
more abstractly and monotheistically. This meant that he had to
make a revolution. He had to attack and destroy the traditional
patterns of religion, which were thoroughly woven into every aspect
of Egyptian life. He had to change the theology, ritual and ecclesiastical
structure. To begin with he changed the capital from Thebes to
a new place in middle Egypt called Amarna. He also changed his
name to Akhenaton, which means "Aton is satisfied." He
reversed the entire foreign policy of Egypt by abandoning efforts
to extend or even maintain Egyptian power outside the Nile valley.
Egypt stopped being imperialistic and aggressive. It was something
like an immediate and unconditional withdrawal from Vietnam. The
immediate result was a powerful opposition within Egypt from those
who, for material interests or mere ideological reasons, resented
the changes. Every revolutionary has his opponents. Every revolution
spawns a counter-revolution. Chaos followed in Syria and Palestine,
where the principalities tried to take advantage of the situation
to re-establish their independence. The greater Asian powers tried
to win for themselves larger territories.
Akhenaton died after only fifteen years of rule. His successors
were young and ineffectual and hence victimized by the leaders
of the party of the old regime. The worship of the old god Amen
was shortly restored and the counterrevolution was victorious.
That was the revolution in capsule form. Now lets look at this
first revolution in history more closely to see what we can learn
from it. The First Revolutionary in History When Amenhotep became
pharaoh a sharp struggle began between the royal house and the
organized priests of Amon. Their position and wealth were challenged
by the new religious ideas of the new king. It is always that way.
The entrenched religious establishment, like the entrenched political
power structure resists new ideas because they threaten to reduce
their power and disrupt their cozy economic nests. At a time when
Egypts imperial possessions in Asia were being threatened, the
new pharaoh did not call for all out war against the enemy, but
instead devoted himself with absorbing zeal to the new Solar universalism
-- in other words, to domestic reform, Imperialistic war is frequently
used as a way to prevent revolution or reform at home. But Amenhotep
like most revolutionaries did the exact opposite.
The Sun-god was given a new name which freed the new faith from
the compromising polytheistic tradition of the old solar theology.
He was now called "Aton," an ancient name for the physical
sun, and probably designating his disk. Not only did the Sun-god
receive a new name, but the young king new gave him a new symbol
also. The most ancient symbol of the Sun-god was a pyramid or a
falcon. However these were intelligible only in Egypt, and Amenhotep
had a wider arena in view. The new symbol depicted the sun as a
disk from which diverging beams radiated downward, each ray terminating
in a human hand. It was a masterly symbol, suggesting a power issuing
from its celestial source, and putting its hand upon the world
and the affairs of man. Such a symbol was suited to be understood
throughout the world which the Pharaoh controlled. It is evident
that what the king was deifying was the force by which the Sun
made himself felt on earth. Religion was made more universal, more
spiritual and abstract. Thus all men could benefit by it. It was
no longer limited to a few who had used it for their own salvation
after death and enrichment while still on earth. The bitterest
enmities broke out, culminating finally in the determination on
the king's part to make Aton sole god of the Empire and to annihilate
Amon.
The king changed his name from "Amenhotep" (Amen is satisfied)
to "Akhenaton" (Aton is satisfied). The name of Amen,
wherever it occurred on the great monuments of Thebes, was expunged.
These erasures were not confined to the name of Amon. Even the
word "gods" as a compromising plural was expunged wherever
found, and the names of other gods, too, were treated like that
of Amon. The king built a new capital at Tell-el-Amarna and called
it Akhetaton (horizon of Aton) . The name of the Sun-god is the
only divine name found in the place, and it was evidently intended
as a center for the dissemination of Solar monotheism. Similar
centers were also built in other parts of the Empire, in Nubia
(Sudan) and Syria. He built up a strong following which propagated
the new faith. It was a faith in a God who had limitless power--a
God no longer of the Nile valley alone, but of all men and all
the world.
The obvious dependence of Egypt on the Nile made it impossible
to ignore this agency of life, and there is nothing which discloses
more clearly the surprising rationalism of Akhenaton than the fact
that he stripped off without hesitation the venerable body of myth
and tradition which deified the Nile as Osiris, and attributed
the flooding to natural forces controlled by his god, who in like
solicitude for other lands made a Nile for them in the sky. It
is evident that, in spite of the political origin of this movement
the deepest sources of power in this remarkable revolution lay
in this appeal to nature, in this admonition to "consider
the lilies of the field." Akhenaton was a "God-intoxicated
man," whose mind responded with marvelous sensitiveness and
discernment to the visible evidences of God about him. He was absolutely
ecstatic in his sense of the beauty of the eternal and universal
light.
In this respect Akhenaton's revolution consists of the gospel of
beauty and beneficence of the natural order, a recognition of the
message of nature to the soul of man. The breath of nature had
touched life and art at the same time and quickened them with a
new vision. Even the king's relations with his family became natural
and unrestrained. Like all true revolutions it affected all aspects
of man's life. He was determined to establish a world of things
as they are, in wholesome naturalness. Such fundamental changes
as these, on a moment's reflection, suggest what an overwhelming
tide of inherited thought, custom, and tradition had been diverted
from its channel by the young king who was guiding this revolution.
It is only as this aspect of his movement is clearly discerned
that we begin to appreciate the power of his remarkable personality.
Before his time religious documents were usually attributed to
ancient kings and wise men, and the power of a belief lay chiefly
in its claim to remote antiquity and the sanctity of immemorial
custom. Until Akhenaton the history of the world had been but the
irresistible drift of tradition. All men had been but drops of
water in the great current. Akhenaton was the first individual
in history. Consciously and deliberately, by intellectual process
he gained his position, and then placed himself squarely in the
face of tradition and swept it aside.
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The Meaning of Akhenaton's Revolution
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What did this revolution mean to the Egyptian people? How did it
affect their daily life? The whole environment of existence had been
changed suddenly. Their holy places had been desecrated, the shrines
sacred with the memories of thousands of years had been closed up,
the priests driven away, the offerings and temple incomes confiscated,
and the old order blotted out. Groups of muttering priests, nursing
implacable hatred, must have mingled their curses with the execration
of whole communities of discontented tradesmen -- those who had made
a comfortable living out of the old religion. Bakers no longer made
a living from the sale of ceremonial cakes at the temple feasts.
Craftsmen no longer sold holy trinkets of the old gods at the temple
gateway. Statues of Osiris lay under piles of dust in the tumbledown
studios of hack sculptors. Tombstone makers and scribes who had sold
their cheap wares to a gullible public were bankrupt.
Actors and priestly mimes were driven away from the sacred groves
of Osiris by the police. Normally they would have presented the
''passion play, reenacting the drama of the life, death and resurrection
of Osiris. Physicians so-called, no longer collected money for
expelling evil spirits. Shepherds no longer placed a loaf of bread
and jar of water under a tree in order to placate the goddess of
the tree who might otherwise bring sickness to the household. Peasants
no longer erected crude images of the gods in the field to drive
away terrible demons sf drought and famine. Mothers no longer dared
to pray with their little ones at bedtime to shield them from the
demons of darkness. In the midst of a whole land thus darkened
by clouds of smouldering discontent, this marvelous young king,
and the group of sympathizers who served under him set up their
tabernacle to the daily light, in serene unconsciousness of the
total darkness that enveloped all around and grew daily darker
and more threatening.
When we place the revolutionary movement of Akhenaton against this
background of popular discontent and then add to it the secret
opposition of a powerful priesthood, a powerful army which disliked
the king's peace policy, we begin to appreciate the powerful individuality
of this first intellectual leader in history. His reign was the
earliest age of the rule of ideas. Akhenaton was the world's first
revolutionary, and he was fully convinced that he might entirely
recast the world of religion, thought, and life by the invincible
purpose he held. Like all true revolutionaries at all times Akhenaton
was fully persuaded that his ideas were right and that all men
would eventually benefit by them.
(Author Unknown)
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