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Set and Hoor-paar-kraat

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Thelema
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  • D Offline
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    DavidH
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Does Crowley ever equate Hoor-paar-kraat with SET, or is this purely a Grant concept?

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  • J Offline
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    Jim Eshelman
    replied to DavidH on last edited by
    #2

    Ever? I'd have to dig to rule out every reference but, in general, he didn't equate them and, in general, it's a Grant thing.

    There is a sense, of course, in which all gods are the same god and, in the broadest sense, any gods relating to the HGA are variations on a theme.

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  • H Offline
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    Heru
    replied to DavidH on last edited by
    #3

    The Equinox of the Gods, p.134:

    "This child Horus is a twin, two in one. Horus and Harpocrates are one, and they are also one with Set or Apophis, the destroyer of Osiris. It is by destruction of the principle of death that they are born."

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    Jim Eshelman
    replied to DavidH on last edited by
    #4

    @Her said

    "The Equinox of the Gods, p.134:

    "This child Horus is a twin, two in one. Horus and Harpocrates are one, and they are also one with Set or Apophis, the destroyer of Osiris. It is by destruction of the principle of death that they are born."
    "

    Great quote. Thanks. This is akin to what I was saying.

    It's not that Harpocrates and Set are one. It's that RHK and Harpocrates are opposite sides of the same coin, and Set and Apophis are two sides of the same coin, and (as many Egyptian illustrations show) RHK and Set are two sides of the same coin.

    And, as the A.'.A.'. 2=9 learns in his or her initiation, RHK, Harpocrates, and Set are three sides of the same coin.

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    Gnosomai Emauton
    replied to DavidH on last edited by
    #5

    If I had a three-sided coin for every time I heard that...
    😉

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  • D Offline
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    DavidH
    replied to DavidH on last edited by
    #6

    Thanks!

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    AliceKnewIt
    replied to DavidH on last edited by
    #7

    Here is an image of a composite God - Set and Horus with two heads - from the tomb of Ramses VI, valley of the kings.
    (I wish I had a good photo of it.)

    www.truthcontrol.com/files/truthcontrol/styles/large/public/images/horset.gif

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