Tmu
-
Tmu = Tem = Tum
-
@Jim Eshelman said
"Tmu = Tem = Tum"
Also I've seen "Atum" and sometimes even "Atom" (but not Aton, which is the depersonalized sun-disk).
This is the only one of the four solar God-names in Liber Resh that "makes sense" to me - i.e., jives with what I knew about Egyptology before learning about Thelema. Atum/Tum is specifically the setting sun.
Does anyone know what source Crowley used to assign Khephra to "midnight" and Ra to "rising?" (In Budge and many others, Khephra is the rising/dawn aspect, and Ra seems to be the noontime "max power" aspect.)
Of course, as we all know, Thelema isn't just a re-imagined neo-Egyptian religion. Hadit ain't Heru-Behedet!
Steve
-
@Steven Cranmer said
"Does anyone know what source Crowley used to assign Khephra to "midnight" and Ra to "rising?" (In Budge and many others, Khephra is the rising/dawn aspect, and Ra seems to be the noontime "max power" aspect.)"
Khephra has a very ancient association with the whole of the night and especially midnight - the scarabs in tombs are due to its role in bearing the Sun or soul through the night to a new dawn.
-
@Steven Cranmer said
"Does anyone know what source Crowley used to assign Khephra to "midnight" and Ra to "rising?" (In Budge and many others, Khephra is the rising/dawn aspect, and Ra seems to be the noontime "max power" aspect.)"
When working through Budge and a few others to understand the different gods, I found that the attributions of all of them seemed to change, depending on the time period or place, or that other gods appeared in the various prayers to represent the different phases of the Sun's travels. Like you suggested, however, Tum seemed to have the most consistent position, though I think I recall at least one reference to him at midnight. So I quit looking for THE authentic Egyptian attribution.
I need to go back and reread this, but I found it useful at the time I began to study Liber Resh:
www.goldenlotus-oto.org/whoAndWhat.htm -
@sasha said
"I need to go back and reread this, but I found it useful at the time I began to study Liber Resh:
www.goldenlotus-oto.org/whoAndWhat.htm"Nice article; answers many of my questions.
I'm really going to have to start doing Resh regularly...
Steve