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For the Ones of Understanding

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BarKhela
 
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For the Ones of Understanding

Feb-02-2002 at 11:59 PM (UTC+3 Nineveh, Assyria)


"I. YHVH and the Nature of Messianic Appearance

In all mystical traditions, the concept of Messiah and messianic appearances in the Lower Worlds is the pinnacle of all mysteries, unparalleled in its sublimeness, inscrutability, and controversy. Reflecting the apparently conflicting perspectives of dualism, qualified non-dualism, and pure non-dualism discussed in the Chapter One, there are three distinct and seemingly incompatible views of the mystery of Messiah. Some unquestioningly embrace the idea that the immutable Divine Essence spontaneously manifests and sports in human form while retaining full power, omniscience, and omnipresence, and yet remaining unfettered by the laws of mazal and the limitations of relativistic illusion. From this perspective, such singularly exalted beings are said to appear from time to time throughout human history to deliver fresh dispensations of the universal mystical spirituality at the root of all religions. Another perspective regards such extraordinary souls as the rarest Masters i.e. the "Friends" or "Rasools" of G-d who lead demonstrative lives and perfectly reflect the divine attributes. This second view also embraces the idea that the active aspect of the Ancient One manifests, sustains, and dissolves the Small Face universe through the "Heads" of the Celestial Messiah in the Sefiroth of the Inner Court of the Tree. And finally, there are those who reject both the ideas of a corporeal and a Celestial Messiah outright, regarding all Name and Form as illusory and only the negatively existent Ayn as real.

The reader should not find it surprising that the proponents of these three different views of Messiah are prone to argue for the veracity of their perspective over the others. Previously, it was mentioned that the three different approaches to the mystical worldview are not in conflict, but represent gradations of distinction that exist only in human intellect. The three views of Messiah are likewise such gradations of perspective, all of which are relatively valid and reflect different spiritual constitutions. The Lord of All does appear to sport in human forms. And, the dream of the Small Face universe is projected and withdrawn through the action of the Celestial Messiah. And, all Name and Form are finite illusory manifestations, or shadows, of infinite undifferentiated Being.

Messiahs come as World Teachers when righteousness fades, and the message of the absolute unity of existence and the primacy of unconditional love, discrimination, and renunciation as a means to intimately know G-d becomes obscurated by the conditioned impressions of conventional religions. Such extraordinary beings remind us in a lively way of our innate divinity and of the spiritual awakening that is our birthright.

"Whenever there is a decay of righteousness (dharma) and an ascendancy of unrighteousness, I manifest Myself; and for the protection of the virtuous, the destruction of the vicious and for the establishment of righteousness, I manifest Myself in age after age." (Bhagavad Gita 4:7-8)

By appearing in a human form, Messiahs are able to perfectly portray divine qualities through the medium of human life in a way that can be comprehended by the finite consciousness of humans. In this way, it is said that the message of a Messiah is their divine life. Messiahs also perform other important functions. The deterioration of righteousness is often paralleled by deterioration in the gatekeepers, who have the responsibility of echoing the message of the Messiahs and pointing humanity to the "Open Gate."

Sometimes, Messiahs "wind the clocks" i.e. lead the transition from one Age to another, or vanquish powerful demons that threaten the stability of the Small Face universe. Some Messiahs appear to be completely or partially veiled from awareness of their true identity until awakened to it by a Perfect Master who has incarnated to do so, or through a supra-conscious experience of the Divine. Master Mosheh was dramatically changed by his experience of the "Burning Bush." The Qur'an also tells us that Master Mosheh was "guided" by Al Khidr, often referred to as the "Green One" or "The Jew." The Perfect Master John baptized Master Yeshuvah in the Holy Spirit. The monk Tota Puri struck the Bengali avatar Sri Ramakrishna in the center of his forehead with a sharp rock. It immediately sent him into a nirvikalpa samadhi that lasted for six months and culminated twelve years of intense spiritual practices, after which Ramakrishna commenced his activity as a World Teacher.

The mystery of Messiah (Heb. mashiach) has been an important component of the Hebrew faith since ancient times. Yet, in the mainstream of modern Judaism, "Messiah" is a concept rarely referred to or discussed, except among the Chasidim. Most Jews are skeptical (if not cynical) that the Lord YHVH takes human form. Many religious Jews unequivocally deny such a possibility, even though there are a number of instances in the Torah where there is a strong inference that the Lord YHVH did so. As an example, the eighteenth chapter of Torah B'reshith begins with:

"The Lord YHVH appeared to him by the terebinths of Mamre... three men standing near him." (Torah B'reshith 18:1)

Sometimes we find all of these mysterious strangers popularly portrayed as angels. However, later on, after Sarah laughs at hearing she would conceive, we read that one of the three speaks to Abraham:

"Then the Lord YHVH said to Abraham, "...is anything too wondrous for the Lord YHVH? I will return to you at the same season next year, and Sarah shall have a son." (Torah B'reshith 18:14)

And the Lord YHVH, through the form of this man, also goes on shortly thereafter to describe the fate of Sodom and Gemorrah. It then says that the other two men went on from there while Abraham remained standing before and conversing with the Lord YHVH in the form of the third man. At the end of the conversation, in which Abraham pleads for mercy for Sodom, it says:

"When the Lord YHVH had finished speaking to Abraham, He departed..." (Torah B'reshith 18:33)

The Shemite qabalistic tradition teaches that the Lord YHVH, as the Celestial Messiah, has a four-fold nature and function. All four aspects are mentioned and alluded to in numerous ways and places in the Tanakh, the Peshitta, and the Qur'an. In the Qabalah, the four aspects of Celestial Messiah are described as four "Heads." The four Heads correspond respectively to the four Sefiroth of the Inner Court of the Tree and to the three Mother Letters Alef, Mem, and Shin, and the letter of the Holy Temple, Tav. The four Heads emanate in pairs and represent the differentiated action of Small Face in manifesting, sustaining, and dissolving the Creation. In the Sefer Yetzirah, the Celestial Heads of Messiah are:

"Depth of First" (Omehq Reshith), corresponding to the letter Alef. Also simply called "The First," active in creating.
"Depth of Last" (Omehq Acharit), corresponding to the letter Tav. Also simply called "The Last," active in dissolving.
"Depth of Good" (Omehq Tov), corresponding to the letter Mem, active in sustaining, manifested in the Lower Worlds as Master Mosheh.
"Depth of Evil" (Omehq Ra'a), corresponding to the letter Shin, active in sustaining, manifested in the Lower Worlds as Master Yeshuvah.

The four letters are also said to be the filters through which the Lord YHVH incarnates. The Name Reshith is contained in the first word of the first line of Torah B'reshith, which could be translated "By the First." The Hebrew formulae for the names Reshith (Resh Alef Shin Yod Tav) and Acharit (Alef Chet Resh Yod Tav) contain many letters in common. The letter formula of Master Yeshuvah's (Yod Heh Shin Vav Heh) name clearly displays the filter of the Shin in the middle of the Name YHVH (see Diagram). The Hebrew formula for the Name Mosheh is Mem (Water), Shin (Fire), Heh (Shekhinah). The reverse of Master Mosheh's Name, Heh Shin Mem, is HaShem (lit. "The Name," an epitaph of YHVH). It is also interesting to note that in the Sinatic Hebrew alphabet, the letterform of the Shin is contained in the letterform of the Mem.

The full implications of the Lord YHVH manifesting in human form as Master Mosheh have faded into esoteric obscurity. The penultimate storytellers of Torah Shmoth have relayed to us: the spectacular story of the liberation of the Hebrews from Egyptian slavery and the High Magic of Pesach (Passover), the attempt to make Israel a "nation of prophets and priests," the ultimate drama on Sinai, and the meticulous construction of the Tabernacle containing the Ark. Many wonderful teachings about the nature and significance of Messiah in the Hebrew and Jewish traditions have been lost, suppressed, distorted, or watered down. Hence, Jews generally regard Master Mosheh as a kind of "holy magician," and have lost almost all awareness of the significance of Master Yeshuvah having come to renew the core mystical teaching of the Jews within the context of Judaism. Considering that many Christians themselves are confused by contradictions, inter-sect differences, and fundamentalist rigidity in Church dogma, it is not surprising that most Jews refute any credibility for Master Yeshuvah as being a messianic appearance of the Lord YHVH.

When Master Yeshuvah came, the Jews were waiting for the messianic advent of the Lord YHVH as Acharit (The Last), who was expected to liberate them from Roman control and give the Jews dominion in Palestine. Acharit has been described as riding a white horse and wielding a fiery sword (see Diagram). When Master Yeshuvah's actions did not match the characteristics of Acharit, he was rejected by the pundits and religious politicians (but not by many of the people). Furthermore, Master Yeshuvah threatened to undermine the spiritual authority of the Pharisees and the economic authority of the corrupt Sadducees, at a time when the Temple of Jerusalem was the biggest "bank" in the trade-rich Middle East.
In the Gospels of Matthew 11:14 and Mark 9:11-13, Master Yeshuvah specifically identifies his cousin, John the Baptist, as the reincarnation of Eliyahu HaNabi (Elijah the Prophet). In Tanakh, it is said that Eliyahu will again incarnate to announce the final messianic advent of the Lord YHVH. In the Qabalah, Eliyahu is said to be the incarnate form of the letter Tzade (letter-gate on the Column of the Right). The Tzade is "at war with" the letter Zayin (letter-gate on the Column of the Left). The Zayin incarnated as Jezebel, who was subsequently vanquished by Eliyahu; and then as Salome, whose infamous nude dance resulted in the beheading of John the Baptist.

So, the mainstream of religious Jews deny Master Yeshuvah as a messianic appearance of the Lord YHVH within the context of Judaism. They greatly revere, but do not generally ascribe messianic stature to Master Mosheh, ignore the massive commonalties with Islam, and wait for Acharit who will bring the Jews to the Great Sabbath. Mainstream religious Christians politely respect Master Mosheh, but certainly have no sense of him as a Messiah. They feel no connection with the Prophet Mohammed and Islam, regard Master Yeshuvah as the exclusive and only incarnation of the Lord YHVH, and are waiting for "The Last" to appear as the "Second Coming of Master Yeshuvah" who will vanquish Satan (Samael) and take (only) twice born Christians to Heaven. Mainstream religious Muslims, who officially don't believe in the possibility of Messiah (notwithstanding their tradition of the "Hidden Maghdi," and the messianic beliefs of some Sufis), have an ambiguous respect for Master Mosheh and the "People of the Book." They regard Master Yeshuvah (called Isa in the Qur'an) as an "immaculately conceived" master of the highest rung. They are waiting for "The Last" to take action on the "Day of Judgment" (Yom Ah-Din), when Allah will resurrect the souls of the faithful in Paradise.

Many details found in the Torah, Peshitta (Gospels), and Apocrypha regarding the nature, lives, experiences, powers, and teachings of Master Mosheh and Master Yeshuvah find parallels in those of Messiahs in other traditions. Messianic appearances are called avatara in Sanskrit. The Hindu tradition contains beautiful and profound descriptions of the life dramas and teachings of the ten incarnations of Vishnu, including Rama, Krishna, Narasimha (lit. Man-Lion), and Matsya (the Fish, who is said to have appeared to Noah during the Flood). Hindus also ascribe messianic stature to Chaitanya (sixteenth century CE), Ramakrishna (1836-1886), Shirdi Sai Baba (d.1918) and Satya Sai Baba (1925-present). They assign such status as well as to incarnations of the Divine Mother i.e. the Goddess, such as Saradamani Devi (1853-1920), Anandamayi Ma (1896-1982), Amritanandamayi Ma (1953-present, known widely as "Ammachi"), and others. Buddhism provides detailed descriptions of the incarnations of the Buddha, and of the one to come called Maitreya. The sage Lao Tze, to whom is ascribed the Tao-Te Ching, was the revered divine incarnation who sired the development of Taoism. And Zoroaster was the messianic wellspring who transmitted the Zend Avesta and originated the tradition passed down through the Farsis.

In studying the lives of these many diverse Messiahs, one notices the many instances where they persevered through challenges and travails. Master Mosheh suffered at the hands of the Egyptians and was excommunicated and sent into the desert. Master Yeshuvah was ridiculed by those in authority, and eventually tortured and apparently crucified. Master Mohammed was forced to prevail in tribal warfare, and at one point had to escape from Mecca to Medina. Master Rama was banished to the forest for fourteen years and forced to battle the demon Ravana to win back his kidnapped wife Sita. Master Zoroaster was poisoned. Master Ramakrishna, Master Satya Sai, and Devi Ammachi were all thought to be crazy by their families. Master Satya Sai was taken to a false healer who poured acid on his head. Devi Ammachi was sent away from her home as a youth to survive alone without support. And in every instance, these exalted beings demonstrated by the way they lived and responded to these challenges the very teachings they were trying to impart-their lives were their messages!"


I thought this commentary would stimulate thoughts within your brains because the Tanakh and Peshitta are mentioned a couple of times. So for the sake of an interesting conversation, I would like to know what you guys think about it.

Thanking you in advance...

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Andrew Gabriel Roth
 
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1. RE: For the Ones of Understanding

Feb-03-2002 at 01:24 AM (UTC+3 Nineveh, Assyria)

In reply to message #0
 
Akhi Bar Khela:

It's very simple. There is ONLY ONE MESSIAH and ONLY ONE GOD. This author, had he read the Peshitta, would realize that is the case and not attempt to synthesize paganism into the purity of the only begotten Son of God. For example, Luke 2:12 has the phrase MARYAH MESHIKHA. MARYAH is the Aramaic cognate for YHWH and can mean NOTHING ELSE EVER. That plus Y'shua's use of ENA NA which is a form of I AM that only applies to YHWH and other statements like 1 Corinthians 12:3 MARYAH HAW ESHOA (YHWH is Y'shua), make this very clear.

I am dead set against reincarnation (Hebrews 9:27)and the topic of how the texts about the Baptist as well as the phrase "born again" have been twisted by new-agers is too lengthy for me to get into here comprehensively. I will treat the major thrust of it briefly though to give you an idea where I am coming from.

Suffice to say, I was redeemed at the cross--myself and this life. If I simply keep popping up in future lives, then I was not redeemed in this one. Similarly, if I am reincarnated in the next one then I am not judged by my Master at the end of this one. Most people do not understand the fact that as many as four Hebrew and Aramaic words are translated as the one "soul" in English.

The two major ones are RUKHA and NAPHSHAH (Heb. "ruach" and "nefesh"). Turn to Genesis 2. Notice that God is referred to as RUKHA, eternal spirit. There is a RUKHA in man also, but it returns to God who gave it. Now in Genesis 2:7, we are told that the RUKHA of God breathes His spirit into man, and man becomes a NAPHSHAH, that is to say, a living soul. He does not have a NAPHSHAH, he IS a NAPHSHAH. I sometimes think of NAPHSHAH as "life force" rather than soul because as Y'shua said, "NAPHSHI" (my soul, my self) is troubled to the point of death."

The NAPHSHAH that sins (Romans 6:23, and in Ezekiel as well) WILL DIE. The RUKHA does not die with the body. In Y'shua's case, his resurrection meant that his NAPSHAH is also eternal. He did not sin, therefore he cannot stay dead.

NAPHSHAHs are not recyclable. The Baptist went forth in the RUKHA and POWER of Elijah. Elijah's RUKHA returned to God who gave it and it rested on the Baptist. Elijah's POWER was passed on to Elisha and then also rested on the Baptist, probably brought to him by the Holy Spirit when the revelation first hit him.

Just my two cents. There's a lot more to this than I want to get into at present.

Shlama w'burkate
Andrew Gabriel Roth

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2. Reincarnation

Feb-03-2002 at 11:45 AM (UTC+3 Nineveh, Assyria)

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Shlama,

Thank you for responding to my post as quickly as you did, Akhi Andrew. This subject is of great concern to me because the topic of reincarnation is deeply embedded into "The Holy Kabbalah-A Mystical Interpretion of the Scriptures" by A.E. Waite.

Here he says:

Reincarnation is not,however,an universal law, or at least it is contingent in other cases than the particular case which has been just specified. Those who have accomplished their mission during a single sojourn on earth rest near to the Holy One; those who return are those who have not finished their work, whether it be that of parentage or otherwise.It is rather obvious that the perfect fulfilment of the Law was a matter of great difficulty, and we know that St.Paul regarded it as an intolerable burden; we know also that failure in certain points voided the entire fulfilment. It is rather obvious that the perfect fulfilment;and the inference whould seem to be that reincarnation for the doing of that which had been previously left undone and for the undoing of that which was amiss formerly must, by the hypothesis, have been the rule rather than the exception. Hence it is said in one place that the words "seeing that he also is flesh" " signify that the spirit of man, meaning his soul will be many times reclothed in flesh, until the time comes when the soul shall be susceptible of receiving the spirit of G-d. In order the the significence of the expression should not remian doubtful, it is added that the Holy One will some day random the world and will grant the spirit in question to men generally, so that they many live eternally. This is said to be shewn by the words: "For as the days of a tree are the days of my people," and also: "He will swallow up death in victory: and the Lord G-d will wipe away all tears from off all faces; and the rebuke of His people shall He take away from off all the earth: for the Lord hath spoken it." Reincarnation or transmigration would seem also to be the invariable fate of the Gentiles. The souls of Pagans who deliver up their bodies in the Holy Land are not received in heaven: they wander about in the universe, transmigrate many times and finally return to the unclean place whence they came (OUCH!). The souls of Israel which leave the body outside Palestine have also transmigrations and wandering before reaching the region assigned them. Seth, for example,was animated by the soul of Abel, which thus returned to earth. At the birth of Benjamin, however his soul left the body of his mother, which it had animated previously. At the death of Rachel, her soul animated the son of Benjamin. Rabbi Simeon testifies that this is a mystery, meaning that their souls did not find refuge under the wings of Shekinah, because they left no children and had thus diminished the figure of the King. But it is said also that there will come a time when old souls, meaning souls in migration, will be renewed for the renewal of the world. Each of these souls who have been incarnated previously will be united to a new created soul, as it is written: "And it shall come to pass that he that is left in Zion, and he that remaineth in Jerusalem, shall be called holy, even every one that is written among the living of Jerusalem. Now, the Sacred Name is never attached to an incomplete man, being one who is umarried, or one who dies without issue. Such a person does not penetrate after death into the vestibule of Paradise, on account of his incompleteness. He is like a tree that is rooted up, and he must be planted anew, that is to say, he must suffer rebirth, as we have seen, in order that the Sacred Name may be complete in all directions. The command to increase and multiply, which means the procreation and engendering of children, is to spread the radiance of the Sacred Name in every direction, by collecting spirits and souls which constitute the glory of the Holy One-above and below. Whosoever fails to apply himself to the fulfilment of this command diminishes the figure of his Master and prevents it descending here below."

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3. RE: Reincarnation

Feb-03-2002 at 11:36 PM (UTC+3 Nineveh, Assyria)

In reply to message #2
 
AKhi Bar Khela:

This guy is no Kabballah scholar. "Waite" is not exactly a Jewish name, either. He may be drawing from the counterfeit we call "Hermetic Cabbalah" not the original Jewish one.

The first rule of mystical understanding is that high level interpretation can not overturn the plain meaning of the text. It can add insight and depth, but nothing more. So, if someone "mystically" comes to the conclusion that say Abraham did not sacrifice Isaac, that interpretation is wrong.

Now there have been some Hasidic Jews who have looked at a few verses in Ecclesiastes ("there is nothing new under the sun", "that which is, was before, that which was, will be again") and look at reincarnation as a possibility, but that is far from saying reincarnation is a precept of Torah. And these verses, as with the whole Baptist thing, have other explanations that agree with the rest of Torah. Also, the whole "sow and reap" thing is instructive and against reincarnation, because that which is reaped is not sown again.

In my opinion reincarnation is often confused as being in Torah, when in fact what is being talked about is resurrection or the going forth of the ruach.

Shlama w'burkate
Andrew Gabriel Roth

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Assyria \ã-'sir-é-ä\ n (1998)   1:  an ancient empire of Ashur   2:  a democratic state in Bet-Nahren, Assyria (northern Iraq, northwestern Iran, southeastern Turkey and eastern Syria.)   3:  a democratic state that fosters the social and political rights to all of its inhabitants irrespective of their religion, race, or gender   4:  a democratic state that believes in the freedom of religion, conscience, language, education and culture in faithfulness to the principles of the United Nations Charter — Atour synonym

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Assyrian \ã-'sir-é-an\ adj or n (1998)   1:  descendants of the ancient empire of Ashur   2:  the Assyrians, although representing but one single nation as the direct heirs of the ancient Assyrian Empire, are now doctrinally divided, inter sese, into five principle ecclesiastically designated religious sects with their corresponding hierarchies and distinct church governments, namely, Church of the East, Chaldean, Maronite, Syriac Orthodox and Syriac Catholic.  These formal divisions had their origin in the 5th century of the Christian Era.  No one can coherently understand the Assyrians as a whole until he can distinguish that which is religion or church from that which is nation -- a matter which is particularly difficult for the people from the western world to understand; for in the East, by force of circumstances beyond their control, religion has been made, from time immemorial, virtually into a criterion of nationality.   3:  the Assyrians have been referred to as Aramaean, Aramaye, Ashuraya, Ashureen, Ashuri, Ashuroyo, Assyrio-Chaldean, Aturaya, Chaldean, Chaldo, ChaldoAssyrian, ChaldoAssyrio, Jacobite, Kaldany, Kaldu, Kasdu, Malabar, Maronite, Maronaya, Nestorian, Nestornaye, Oromoye, Suraya, Syriac, Syrian, Syriani, Suryoye, Suryoyo and Telkeffee. — Assyrianism verb

Aramaic \ar-é-'máik\ n (1998)   1:  a Semitic language which became the lingua franca of the Middle East during the ancient Assyrian empire.   2:  has been referred to as Neo-Aramaic, Neo-Syriac, Classical Syriac, Syriac, Suryoyo, Swadaya and Turoyo.

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