Summary
Transcript
So how the death process was symbolized and even like with the different Egyptian mummies when when they have their axed, their crossed, and they have the hook and the flail, it’s a reference to winnowing, to harvesting and sowing. And a lot of the agriculture symbology is spiritual symbology. It’s not necessarily actually about like sowing seeds in agriculture. It’s really talking about the spirit. It’s a metaphor. So the idea is separating the wheat from the chaff, which is winnowing, harvest, which is really just alchemy. The more spiritual fire that is applied to the human soul as it is released, the more the separation occurs, which is pure alchemy, right? Only the resurrection body survives that.
Only the immortal body survives these processes, right? And that immortal body is created from a life of right living, of nobility, of true nobility, in the sense of of being loving, of being kind, of everything we know to do. That’s what creates that body and establishes that in the fires of heaven as we pass through. That passing through all those trials is literally what solidifies and constitutes your resurrection, but that’s what creates it, right? That’s the fires that forge it, life after life. Regarding agricultural symbolism associated with death, with the death process, is this why so many cultures associated the goddess Venus with grain, a hint at death and resurrection relating to the development of Venus body.
Exactly, exactly, exactly. You got it, Leonine Venus. So it’s always interesting to go back and read the different scholarly approaches to reading funerary texts, reading occult books, these old 2000, 3000, 4000 year old texts that are all speaking in metaphor and symbology. And they’re Egyptians, they love to talk about crops. Oh my God, the Mayans were so into agriculture. It’s like, well, they’re actually speaking a metaphorical language of symbols, because that’s how their consciousness works. That’s how our consciousness works. That’s why, you know, how many people love to just watch shows before they go to bed? How many people love stories? How much of our life is dedicated to story? How many times have we had cathartic experiences through story, right? So we operate as, you know, a huge portion of our own conscious minds, subconscious mind operates through symbolism.
And there was a period the earlier back we go, that’s pretty much the only way it worked. We didn’t have this literal, like, if you go back thousands and thousands of years, humanity didn’t actually have the organs, the cognitive organs to objectively perceive the spiritual world. Everything was through an inner experience, and also everything was through symbols. Only recently has humanity been able to objectively understand the spiritual world, which is what has driven the, you know, natural science as well. Right? Is that to objectively understand? So so many spiritual processes are disguised, for example, in agricultural symbolism, like the hook and the flail.
We really think that that Osiris and the Pharaoh was talking about planting seeds, that he’s talking about farming. So that’s the danger of materialism is taking it literally taking these things literally. Also in the you’ll find in the Mayan culture or in South America, it’s corn. So people are like, Oh, my God, gosh, the Mayans ever love maize. They loved corn. It’s like the idea of corn is the same idea of the harvest. It’s the resurrection body. It’s the golden sun resurrection body. That’s corn. The golden wheat, that’s the resurrection body. That is what gets separated from the husk.
The husk is the dross of material life that gets pulled away. And eventually, life after life, as you begin to spiritually grow and develop your resurrection body or your Venus body, right, you have less and less of that husk. So when the harvest when the harvest happens, which is death, the corn is pulled from the husk or the wheat is pulled from the chaff. And that rises whole and intact into the heavenly planes. This is why people use it. They’re not obsessed with plants and agriculture, although I’m sure it was very important to them.
You know, this is this is a metaphor for passing through the gates of death, having your dross pulled away and being left in a kind of elemental amalgamate dross and you passing further and further with whatever kernel of a resurrection body you built, you pass with that as far as you can in the process of winnowing or the process of separating the wheat from the chaff. That’s the harvest. It’s all about resurrection. Whether it be a kernel of corn or kernel of wheat, that’s the resurrection body. [tr:trw].