The Sanhedrin: An Ancient Cult of Death

Previously, we spoke of ancient symbols and their meanings, and how some of these symbols can be traced to more familiar historical examples, i.e. the Nazis’ use of the swastika. We also talked about some of the deeper meanings of these symbols, such as how the arms of the swastika refer to the arms of a galaxy, which turn in either the direction of life or the direction of death. 

We mentioned that the arms of the Nazi swastika turn in the direction of death, because, as most are familiar with, the Nazi party was a cult of death.

What exactly is this cult of death?

Before we dig a little deeper into defining the cult of death, we need to consider why someone would want to bring about death – because as a human species, as a race, as a collective group of people… we probably wouldn’t want to destroy ourselves. 

Who would want to perpetuate something like that? 

It’s unfortunate that some have taken this on, but fortunately for us we’re aware of who is doing that. We can put the brakes on it. 

To get a closer look at the cult of death, let’s turn to the Sanhedrin.  Now, we know that later the Sanhedrin becomes the fake Brahmans, but they are also worshipers of Kali – notice, they only wear black.  In the Hasidic and Orthodox traditions, the men only wear black, and that is for a reason. 

The names Abraham and Sarah really mean “father Abraham” and “Saraswathi,” – but these names do not refer to specific people.  These names are actually titles.  In the Bible, they seem to refer to real and specific people, but these biblical figures are paganizations.  Think about this and learn about the Sanhedrin, and it will all connect. 

Remember, Krishna or Christ had a problem with the Sanhedrin.  Throughout the whole text of the New Testament, Christ or Krishna has a problem with the fake Jews or the fake Brahmans – the ones that are playing like they understand the spiritual tradition.  They hold the story of the New Testament together, but the altercations show them to be the ones who are doing justice, instead of the ones who are causing the atrocities.

Jesus’ trial before the Sanhedrin” 

Again, I am NOT painting all Jews with a broad brush. 

Now, terms like “Caucasian” and “Jew” don’t really have much credibility, as far as where they come from and what they mean.  The word “Jew” is a little bit easier to break down – but the word “Caucasian” was not originally assigned to white, black, or Indian people.  It became a word because one man saw a skull at the base of the Caucasus mountains and said, “This skull is beautiful; this must be where we came from because it’s white” — but all skulls are white.  Go to Wikipedia and see where the term “Caucasian” came from to find out that it doesn’t denote that the people in the Caucasus Mountains were white.  

If you’re in an area that doesn’t get a large amount of sunlight, then there is no need to have a lot of melanin – which is a Sun modulator.  Melanin modulates the Sun, so you can cool yourself down or you can gain more warmth, depending upon the fluctuations of the environment.  When the environment is always cold, there is no need for fluctuation. Thus, the melanin will be bred out of the beings in that environment in order to allow them to adjust to it. 

This is the same thing that happened to the grizzly bear and the polar bear, who belong to the same species – except the grizzly bear lives in a climate where it is hotter, so it needs a modulator. That’s why its skin and fur are a dark color.  The polar bear, on the other hand, is up in the Arctic where the temperatures are always the same – it doesn’t need that modulator.  Thus, the difference in colors. These examples show you how much organisms are affected by their environments (which we will talk more about in other episodes about the yugas and how they’re governed by environments). 

To return to the Sanhedrin, here is what Wikipedia says about them:

  “There were two classes of rabbinical courts called Sanhedrin, the Great Sanhedrin and the Lesser Sanhedrin.  A lesser Sanhedrin of 23 judges was appointed to each city, but there was to be only one Great Sanhedrin of 71 judges, which among other roles acted as the Supreme Court, taking appeals from cases decided by lesser courts.  In general usage, ‘The Sanhedrin’ without qualifier normally refers to the Great Sanhedrin, which was composed of the Nasi, who functioned as head or representing president, and was a member of the court; the Av Beit Din or chief of the court, who was second to the Nasi; and sixty-nine general members (Mufla).”

In the Wikipedia article, we see the term “Nasi.”  The sheer fact that the Jewish Sanhedrin would have their highest representative named “Nasi,” with an S instead of a Z, is appalling.  If the atrocities attributed to the Nazis really happened to the degree that they seemed to, you would think that the leaders of the Jewish people would want to totally disassociate themselves from anything that sounds like their conqueror or the people who despoiled their community. 

“There were two classes of rabbinical courts called the Sanhedrin, the Great Sanhedrin, and the Lesser Sanhedrin.”  The lesser Sanhedrin are 23 judges.  Again, we have judges.  What was Moses?  Moses was a judge; he’s the one who appointed more judges — 12 judges.  All the Old Testament stories about Moses are really about Brahma and the constellations of the zodiac.  

However, the authors of the Bible wanted to make them seem like stories with actual characters -and so Moses, who was an elder, was supposedly had a part in the invention of the Sanhedrin initially.  These 71 judges – which, among other roles acted, as the Supreme Court — they took appeals and decided cases taken from lesser courts.  By the way, this is the exact system that exists today.  This is why the words “judge” and “judicial” have “ju-”/“Jew” in front of them – that is the Judean system. This idea of judgment is coming from this culture. 

Wikipedia says, “‘The Sanhedrin’ without qualifier normally refers to the Great Sanhedrin, which was composed of the Nasi, who functioned as head or representing president, and was a member of the court; the Av Beit Din or chief of the court, who was second to the Nasi; and sixty-nine general members (Mufla)” — which probably just means “mafia.”  So, this is a group that is specifically representing itself not only in black, as the worshipers of Kali and death, but also as Nazis themselves – even though they say the Nazis are the ones that gave them the most problems.  

Furthermore, they are also representing themselves as judges of the world, and they are even erecting courts in which to judge people, just as the Bible ends with a Judgement Day.

 

 

 

Kali and the Perfect Black

We’re going to get into the misinterpretations of Kali or the Kali Yuga.

Krishna called it “the Kali Yuga” because it is an age of ignorance, darkness, and wildness.

First, we need to define certain commonly-used words, like “solemn” … “Salaam” (“alaikum”) … “Jeru-SALEM.”  – These words mean “darkness,” contrary to what they’re commonly thought to mean.  They mean the Sun is setting or going down over the ocean, and darkness is about to ensue.

The word Jerusalem doesn’t mean “the city of peace.”  Unless “peace” is innerstood according to my original etymology (piece) – meaning not whole, divided, and split.

Jerusalem is called “the city of peace”, but there’s never been peace.  Never… because it’s not the city of peace.  It’s actually the city of darkness.  The city was constructed by people, given grants abroad, who were part of other cultures but could claim they were Jewish people… i.e. Russian Jews, Polish Jews, etc.  They were given an opportunity to come live in the desert so they could create this new nation.

This new nation started getting a lot of spiritual connections tied to it that are completely false.  As we go continue further, we see the falsehood.  All the ideas of peace never actually occur.  All the ideas of connection and unity are not what that city really embodies.

If you live in a land, and you bring about hatred, anger, and envy, it will become dry.  Same as if you’re around a woman, and you bring hatred, anger, and envy out of a harmonic woman, she will leave — you will find your place barren.  If she engages in it, her womb will become barren.  It’s important to remember the physical conditions behind these mental and spiritual conceptions, which you can see in our world today.  

The worshipers of Kali wear black, and pretend they’re about peace – really, they’re about darkness and death.  

That’s our entry point into innerstanding Kali – the side of Kali that’s about inversion.  We also need to interpret the difference between the perfect black versus darkness/distortion.

Remember Osiris, who is actually Murugan?  It’s said that he’s “the lord of the perfect black.”

The Perfect Black is like the consciousness of a child in the stage where it knows nothing… which is akin to ignorance.  If the word “ignorance” didn’t have so many bad connotations associated with it (that we’ve created through our linguistic system), we would innerstand more balanced.

When a person is in a stage of not knowing, they’re in a stage of darkness – as if they have not exited the womb yet.  Because of this, they are wild – meaning they don’t consider what they’re doing while they’re doing it… and this is the ignorance signified with the symbol of Kali.

Kali is also The Eye of Ra in the Kemetian system.

This eye was developed because Ra thought the Egyptians were plotting, and he needed to create something to spy on them.

In the traditional sense, this is the beginning phase or the base pillar of creating anything.  It must be wild and ignorant.  The reason why it’s called perfect is that anything it does that we as enlightened beings consider wrong… it didn’t do intentionally.

It’s without thought, and that’s why it’s “perfect black.”

For clarity, to be perfect black is to be like a child who is not aware of anything they’re doing… there’s nothing premeditated going on.  Even if they kick another person off the roof and laugh – it’s because they’re so innocent.  They don’t know whether they’re doing right or wrong; that is the only way you can maintain perfect black and is the real state of Kali.

Now, the corruption or what I call “the distortion”, is actually what you see when an imitator comes through the system of Kali-worship — in this case, Miley Cyrus, who is trying to emulate Kali.  In many pictures, her tongue is hanging out, and this is because she is a devout worshiper of Kali.

MILEY CYRUS

In addition, Madonna is a devout worshiper of Kali under the symbol of the black dog.  Those who have seen the Frozen video know — it is her initiation video. 

She is a Kabbalist… but what kind and under who?  Well, now we know. 

She is under the Shaguni system or the Sanhedrin nasi — those are the only ones still in place and in power in those positions.  

To break down the symbolism, we see the Cult of the Black Dog.

When you understand missing languages like Tamil, you understand the origin of words like naga, which has a lot to do with specific deities.  Words like “nigga,” and “negro” all come from naga or negus — which was mistaken to mean a snake or serpent later.

Originally it meant “the dog’s tongue,” – because the Tamil people thought the tongue of the dog was actually very beautiful, and it was the only animal whose tongue hung out like that.  This is how Kali became directly connected to the black dog in theology – which we’ll break down later at the proper moment. 

It’s important to realize this connection because everything else we’ve been talking about begins to connect after that – but we still need to cover a couple things before we can dive into the code of Kali as it stands today… Stay tuned.

7 Important Differences Between Religion & Spirituality

“It is not that the Way broadens humans; it is that humans broaden the Way.” ~ Confucius

There are roughly 4,200 religions in the world today.  Most people believe in only one of them and renounce the other 4,199, while a small minority renounces all of them. 

There are roughly 7.3 billion people on the planet today, and every single one of us has a different psycho-physiological interpretation and perception of what spirituality and religion mean.  But, and here’s the rub, spirituality is inherent within the human condition and is as unique as our own fingerprint. 

Religion, not so much.  Religion is dictated, while spirituality is intuited.  Religion preaches while spirituality inspires.  Religion pretends to be “the Way” that broadens humanity.  Spirituality frees humanity to broaden “the Way.”

Religion is the parochial dead-end path of our ignorant forefathers, whereas spirituality up-ends that dead-end path and allows for a personal journey with the numinous.  Indeed, as Hingori said, “Spirituality begins where religion ends.”

Here are seven differences between religion and spirituality:

1) Spirituality is flexible; religion is dogmatic: “Mystery is a place where religion and science meet.  Dogma is a place where they part.  Awe-based psychology is a place where they can evolve and reunite.” ~ Kirk Schneider, PhD

Dogma has been a serious psychological hang-up for our species for thousands of years.  Our tendency to become rigid and inflexible in our thinking is an all-too-common problem.  We are a young species, after all.  There is still so much for us to figure out, and it can be daunting as hell (pun intended).

The problem is we tend to avoid an intimidating cosmos by closing ourselves off into the overly comfortable and placating nutshells of religion.  We shut down the sacred quest.  We close off the search.  We place all our eggs into a particular “basket,” swearing off all baskets, even at the risk of forsaking the baskets that have the potential to help us flourish.  In short: we become dogmatic and closed-off from the numinous.

But there is newfound hope when we are able to transform dogmatic religiosity into flexible spirituality.  True spirituality up-ends the baskets that we cling to.  It shatters the all-too-precious eggs on the tough-love concrete of an interconnected reality, revealing that flexibility and the ability to adapt and overcome are the way to move forward when facing a vastly unknown and astonishingly mysterious universe.

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2) Spirituality is liberating (courage-based); religion is authoritative (fear-based): “That which can be destroyed by the truth should be.” ~ P.C. Hodgell

It’s so easy for the majority of us to allow an authority to do our thinking for us.  Most of us were raised in authoritative cultures and conditioned by biased indoctrination, after all.  Unless at some point we are taught to question things, it’s all too easy to get caught up in authoritative jargon.

No matter how outdated or nonsensical that jargon is, if we don’t learn a courage-based disposition we’ll always be caught in the fear-based indoctrination of authority, mostly due to the power of cognitive dissonance.  Spirituality is the courage-based liberation of the soul from the fear-based prison of church and state.  It frees compassion, empathy, and morality from the fallible stranglehold of human-made laws.

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If, as H. L. Mencken surmised, “[m]orality is doing right, no matter what you are told.  Religion is doing what you are told, no matter what is right,” then spirituality is tapping into the forces behind what makes things “right” or “wrong” (a universal healthy/unhealthy dynamic) and acting on those forces in a moral way, despite the declarations of church and state.

Spirituality courageously questions power; religion cowardly kowtows to it.  Jesus and Buddha were spiritual rebels who challenged dogmatic orthodoxy, not religious zealots obsequious to it.  Where religion is taking a leap of faith because of fear, spirituality is taking a leap of courage despite fear.

3) Spirituality is a painful growth; religion is comfortable stagnation: “The path of the spiritual warrior is not soft and sweet.  It is not artificially blissful and pretends forgiving.  It is not fearful of divisiveness.  It is not afraid of its own shadow.  It is not afraid of losing popularity when it speaks its truth.  It will not beat around the bush where directness is essential.  It has no regard for vested interests that cause suffering.  It is benevolent and it is fiery and it is cuttingly honest in its efforts to liberate itself and humanity from the egoic ties that bind.” ~ Jeff Brown.

Religion keeps us pampered and contented.  We feel nice and cozy in the teachings passed down by the authority of our forefathers.  And why not?  It’s so much easier to just lean on the laws created by other men.

No matter how outdated or ridiculous those laws are, and no matter how fallible and imperfect those men were.  There’s no thinking involved.  All we have to do is obey and not question any of it lest we appear blasphemous in the eyes of our peers.  Easy!

True spirituality flips the tables on blind obedience.  No fear, only fearlessness.  It questions outdated laws.  It upsets all dogmatic apple carts.  But it is not without pain.  It is not without existential angst.  As Eckhart Tolle says, “the fire of suffering becomes the light of consciousness.”

A spiritual person is a beacon fully lit, brightening an uncertain shoreline where waves of doubt crush the beaches of certainty.  Those who are spiritual dip in and out of all religions, ideologies, mythologies, and philosophies, taking the healthy with them and leaving the unhealthy behind.  They are existential alchemists, transforming religious lead into spiritual gold.  And such gold shines all the brighter in dark times.

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4) Spirituality is open-minded; religion is close-minded: “To conceive of ourselves as fragmentary matter cohering for a millisecond between two eternities of darkness is very difficult.” ~ Sebastian Faulks

A religious person stubbornly believes; a spiritual person takes things into consideration and lets things go.  If “belief is a wound that knowledge heals,” as Ursula K. Le Guin states, then open-mindedness is the scar left behind: flexible and robust from the harsh lessons of vicissitude.  In spiritual circles, curiosity is allowed to be foremost; in religious circles, curiosity is atrophied by the reliance on outdated “answers”.

Where religion blindly clings to what it believes is right, spirituality openly surrenders to what could be healthy.  Those who are spiritual tend to be more open-minded precisely because they are free to question everything, to practice probability, to embrace being wrong, and to remain curious and skeptical in the face of parochial authorities grown uncouth through the passage of time.

5) Spirituality is interdependent; religion is codependent: “Stop acting so small. You are the universe in ecstatic motion.” ~ Rumi

Religion is codependent upon the establishment of church and state.  Spirituality is interdependent despite establishments.  Where the religious person submits to the authority of religion and politics, the spiritual person subsumes all religious and political strongholds through flexible inter-connectedness, thus transcending entrenched power constructs.

Spirituality is a force of nature, and the spiritual person becomes a fountainhead for an ecstatic universe, a mighty conduit, an existential pivot where the cosmic dance between an independent observer and observed interdependence is free to take place.  There is a music in this sacred space that doesn’t use words, and the spiritual person has the ears with which to listen.

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6) Spirituality speaks a language older than words; religion speaks a language limited by words: “The poet and the musician together speak a natural and universal language… The original language that all creators spoke before the fall of man. This language is, of course, the language of the birds.  And, what does it mean?  What does the shape of a tree mean?  What do clouds mean?  What is the meaning of the way the stars are scattered through the sky?  Both poetry and music lead us to the understanding of what this world is all about. Which is: It’s a dance.  A rhythm.” ~ Alan Watts

Within the mysterious rhythm of the cosmic orchestra playing itself out, the spiritual person dances in full glory.  While the religious person cowers in fear of God, the spiritual person pirouettes through the fear and dances with God.  For those who are spiritual have tapped into the interconnected Mecca.  They are milking the essence of all things, the language of birds and sky, fire and ice, life and death, permanence and impermanence –the voice of God and the song of Infinity.

The Truth is a gamboling gamble, and those who are truly spiritual are gamblers par excellence, knowing that the human condition is fallible and flawed, but having the ontological wherewithal to rise above it with an act of Promethean courage that topples outdated godheads.

They rise up with a full heart, with audacious love, with a throat Chakra in full flutter speaking fluently A Language Older Than Words.  But they are still not afraid to speak their experienced truth.  For as Gustave Flaubert observed, “Human speech is like a cracked kettle on which we tap crude rhythms for bears to dance to, while we long to make music that will melt the stars.”

7) Spirituality allows the Great Mystery (God) to be truly infinite:  “How is it that hardly any major religion has looked at science and concluded, ‘This is better than we thought! The Universe is much bigger than our prophets said, grander, subtler, more elegant?’  Instead, they say, ‘No, no, no! My God is a little God, and I want him to stay that way.'” ~ Carl Sagan

Spirituality is vulnerable intimacy with the Infinite.  Religion is veiled invulnerability pretending to be intimate.  A spiritual person understands that Infinity cannot be pigeonholed into finite constructs.

God cannot be crammed into human-made models.  Through such understanding, the spiritual person transcends the finite game of religion in order to play the infinite game of spirituality.

The mirror through which we reflect the Great Mystery is the same mirror through which the Great Mystery reflects us.  The spiritual person has intuited this, shed the middleman, and become the mirror.

Where the religious person is desperately looking for his/her own reflection, the spiritual person has become Reflection itself, understanding that there is no duality, only the illusion of duality.

There is no finitude, only the illusion of finitude.  They are walking, talking, meditating Mirrors dancing as Reflection between micro and macro, flesh and spirit, man and God, order and chaos, entropy and life.  They have risen above the empty placation’s and petty platitudes of religion and have embraced the open explication and flexible interpretation of the Great Mystery through spirituality.

The spiritually robust have moved on from the shackles of someone else’s experience in order to feel their own experience, understanding, as Angeles Arrien did that “we are all unique medicine“.

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