My personal take.
Write it down and then proceed. It could just as well be a part of a longer message wich later on will reveal itself as a personal gnosis later on.
Just worrying about it to much will lock you up.
My personal take.
Write it down and then proceed. It could just as well be a part of a longer message wich later on will reveal itself as a personal gnosis later on.
Just worrying about it to much will lock you up.
“Take a trip to the world under the sun”. With that wording it wouldn’t be the sun itself, it would be something else.
However, if things were mistranslated there are three aspects of the sun:
These three aspects can be explored in every ancient culture. Through observation, Conner’s workings are a bit scattered. For an easier time, I would try to stick to one pantheon for smoother transitioning within the three phases. Here are two examples that come to mind currently:
In Egypt you have Khepri, Ra (along with the goddesses linked to the Eye of Ra), and Atum.
In Mesopotamia you have Ningishzida or Ningirsu, Nergal or Ninib, and Shamash (Shamash is fitting for all the aspects, for the other deities are usually seen as parts of him).
With all the aspects of the sun aside, I do want to mention that the sun as we know it today isn’t considered to be the same sun according to the ancients. They believed that Saturn was their sun which is another thing to take into account when trying to unpack what Azazel might be trying to say. His connection is not only to the black sun, but the first sun as well.
Either way I wish you luck. Whether you are lead to explore the solar associations within the Saturnian current itself, or to experience the three main aspects of the sun within the solar current. I highly suggest doing a lot of preparation for this and to take your time, these paths are far from easy.
If only any of the shit literally anyone else said would correlate to my bullshit.
Thank you!
Jupiter is made of the same elements as the sun (hydrogen 71% and helium 24%) but, in short, it’s not big enough in size to ignite like the sun does. The proportions of hydrogen and helium are close to composition of the primordial solar nebula.