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93 million miles

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Qabbalah
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  • O Offline
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    Ophion280
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    93 All,

    Something struck me earlier and peeked my interest in this. The distance of the planets from the Sun. This is common knowledge but I wonder if anyone has ever analyzed it in any magickal sense. Keep in mind this is a very brief first look at this for me.

    Mercury is approximately 43.4 million miles from the sun.
    43 is among other things, LVV-Hazel,almond=the Wand=Chockmah, the highest aspect of mercury.

    Venus is 67.2 million miles from the sun which is BINH-Understanding, the highest aspect of of Venus.

    Earth is approx 93 million miles from the sun and I think every one here knows the significance of that.

    Mars is approx. 142 million miles from the sun. This is the number of all four names in the LBRP. Pentagram=5=mars=all the things that the word banishing implies.

    Jupiter is about 391 million miles from the sun. 391 is IShVOH-salvation, help which is obviously traits of Jupiter and also RVM MOLH-inscrutable height, a name of kether, but which could refer to the highest aspect of 'kingly Jupiter'.

    Saturn is approx. 937 million miles from the sun but I do not know off hand any thing for this number and Sepher sepheroth is silent on this one.

    I would also like to check out these numbers in Greek gematria but have no good source for it.

    Has anyone else ever looked into this?
    Anyway, I thought it was interesting and fun. What do you guys think?

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    Flight93
    replied to Ophion280 on last edited by
    #2

    93

    Love the title of your post, while the inaccuracy inherit in interplanetary measurement, kind of ruins the point though.

    JimmyD, 93 million miles from home.

    93 93/93

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    Ophion280
    replied to Ophion280 on last edited by
    #3

    @Flight93 said

    "93

    Love the title of your post, while the inaccuracy inherit in interplanetary measurement, kind of ruins the point though.

    JimmyD, 93 million miles from home.

    93 93/93"

    93 flight93

    Thanks. Thats why the word Approximately or its abbreviation continually resurfaces, there approxiamations that are generally excepted.

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    Njal
    replied to Ophion280 on last edited by
    #4

    Planets follow elliptical orbits, so that the distance is an average throughout the year.
    The real sun-earth distance varies from second to second.

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    Jim Eshelman
    replied to Ophion280 on last edited by
    #5

    @Flight93 said

    "Love the title of your post, while the inaccuracy inherit in interplanetary measurement, kind of ruins the point though. "

    Inaccuracy or imprecision? Which do you mean?

    Planetary average distances from the Sun are known with extreme accuracy.

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    Steven Cranmer
    replied to Ophion280 on last edited by
    #6

    @phoinix93 said

    "I would also like to check out these numbers in Greek gematria but have no good source for it."

    Try Liber 1264 for a start.

    For a while, asicath had a nice online database of Greek gematria (which included various versions of words with different grammatical endings), but apparently his server crashed a little while ago, and it's taking a while to get everything back online.

    Steve

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    Ophion280
    replied to Ophion280 on last edited by
    #7

    @Steven Cranmer said

    "
    @phoinix93 said
    "I would also like to check out these numbers in Greek gematria but have no good source for it."

    Try Liber 1264 for a start.

    For a while, asicath had a nice online database of Greek gematria (which included various versions of words with different grammatical endings), but apparently his server crashed a little while ago, and it's taking a while to get everything back online.

    Steve"

    Thank you Steve,
    but unfortunately these references is silent to. 😕

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    Flight93
    replied to Ophion280 on last edited by
    #8

    93

    Extreme accuracy? True?

    Well, rejoice then, at the distance from here to the Sun!

    I thought we where speaking of rough estimates, pardon.

    (God, I really DO need to get laid)

    93 93/93

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    Wizardiaoan
    replied to Ophion280 on last edited by
    #9

    I don't really see what you guys are driving at, but let me note the fact that Mercury takes 88 days to orbit the sun. That to me is a real indication of magickality of the universe in standard measures, not that the magick of NV is not everywhere else apparent haha! Also anyone naming theirselves "Flight 93" deserves to crash & burn. ThANATOS to the Dead.

    Frauline Sledgehammer,

    H.H.H.H.H.
    4774

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    Edward Mason
    replied to Ophion280 on last edited by
    #10

    93,

    "I don't really see what you guys are driving at, but let me note the fact that Mercury takes 88 days to orbit the sun."

    As a matter of fact, Mercury takes just one day - one <i>Mercurial</i> day - to orbit the Sun. The 88-days is solely calculated from an Earth-in-Assiah perspective.

    "Also anyone naming theirselves "Flight 93" deserves to crash & burn. ThANATOS to the Dead.
    "

    People have tried to create an atmosphere on this forum of "This might be the Aeon of the Child, but we think and speak like grown-ups." This way of expressing yourself that you're using simply screams "I'm insecure, and I compensate by being childishly rude." Okay - but it also means that people aren't going to take your points seriously, such as your argument in another thread about Tzaddi and the Star.

    "If thou drink, drink by the eight and ninety rules of art" can apply in more areas than just knocking back a few cold ones.

    93 93/93,

    EM

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