23 June (Water) Liber LXV, 3:30
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30. Thou art Sebek the crocodile against Asar; thou art Mati, the Slayer in the Deep. Thou art Typhon, the Wrath of the Elements, O Thou who transcendest the Forces in their Concourse and Cohesion, in their Death and their Disruption. Thou art Python, the terrible serpent about the end of all things!
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30. Thou art Sebek the crocodile against Asar; thou art Mati, the Slayer in the Deep. Thou art Typhon, the Wrath of the Elements, O Thou who transcendest the Forces in their Concourse and Cohesion, in their Death and their Disruption. Thou art Python, the terrible serpent about the end of all things!
The only practical limitation is our ability to see. And yet I baulk at the consequences of this notion—I'm not an academic. As such, I defend my blindness as an honest blindness; at the same time I pray to have my eyes open, as I seek to open them myself; because pretending that I see more than I really do is the worst blindness.
Love and Will
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Ok I get the main idea behind this
Sebek or Sobek is a creative God, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sobek against Asar or Osiris, a god of death or of the afterlife en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osiris, Mati is the earth mother Goddess www.godchecker.com/pantheon/slavic_baltic-mythology.php?deity=MATI-SYRA-ZEMLYA and Typhon a god of destruction en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhon and finally Python, the snake that encircles all things or the serpent eating its tail.
" O Thou who transcendest the Forces in their Concourse and Cohesion, in their Death and their Disruption "
When a person understands that a concourse is a place where paths or roads meet and can be considered a meeting place, that a person gets the idea behind this.
In essence there is one god or goddess to represent each of the forces or essences in life.
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@Jim Eshelman said
"30. Thou art Sebek the crocodile against Asar; thou art Mati, the Slayer in the Deep. Thou art Typhon, the Wrath of the Elements, O Thou who transcendest the Forces in their Concourse and Cohesion, in their Death and their Disruption. Thou art Python, the terrible serpent about the end of all things!"
Lest I forget, THOU is** the Infinite Circle of Emerald that encloseth the Universe.** Even blindness is divine.
The great glut of Prakriti—the mother of cosmos, who is the waters of chaos that birthed Khephra in the dawn of time. And yet, for all her divinity and apparent absoluteness, she is still blindness. Do not pretend she is light.
The earth is harvested.
The airy images of the mind finally end, undoing themselves by virtue of their own internal contradictions.
The waters are death itself, consuming itself even as the serpent who swallows its own tail.Will Fire, Spirit, or both also self-destruct?
Love and Will