Nexus - 0223 - New Times Magazine-pages

Page 64 of 85

Page 64 of 85
Nexus - 0223 - New Times Magazine-pages

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the landing of many "sons of god” to whom portions of the Earth had been assigned by the "God of gods". They descended to vari- ous regions all over the Earth and attended to their respective terri- tories, which were centred around what is today Saudi Arabia, Traq, Iran, the Persian Gulf, Oman and Kuwait. Although there were stories told of “sons of god" in the Americas, Australia, Asia and in central Africa, the best-docu- mented of these regional rulers seems to have been the one who ruled the region called Atlantis. He was called "Poseidon" in the Greek account of Atlantis, and it was he who settled the Mesopotamian Valley.’ Remember, the oldest known legends of the Sumerian gods came from this very region. In agreement with the Egyptian writings, it was probably Poseidon's hybrid descendants and the genetically pure humans whom the Genesis account called, respectively, the fallen sons of god (Nephilim) and the good sons of God (Bene Elohim). They were gigantic and powerful men who bred into the human race to produce hybrid humans whom the most ancient of legends called "heroes" or “supermen". Also according to the Egyptian account, it was Poseidon’s descendants who became so corrupt and chaotic that they over- shadowed the minds of the humans at that time. And it was even- tually they who were destroyed by the tectonic catastrophe that precipitated the Great Flood of the Noahic passage in Genesis. The resulting chaos on Earth has been used as a testimony to the entire assemblage of beings in the Heavens. The rebellion could not have been allowed to proceed in the Heavens or it would have destroyed them in the same manner it has destroyed us. In the Hebrew account, the rebel leader* exceeded the bounds of his free will by trying to seize power as the ultimate dictator rather than as the ultimate servant of the Creation. And, about one-third of the sentient beings in the federation of beings out there joined the rebel leader in a war in the heavens which is soon to finish here on Earth. In the beginning, the rebel leader's intentions were not so obvi- ously evil as those of Darth Vader or of the Emperor in the Star Wars trilogy, but nonetheless they have eventually proved just as bad. The rebel leader was and still is very cunning—and, as the writings say, he is a beautiful being to look upon, as he shines like a rainbow with a subtle serpent-like skin which is prismatic in the light. It seems the rebel leader challenged the Elohim by saying free will should allow a sentient being to do whatever he wishes. In his case, he had begun to think this meant that he could take power from the Elohim and hoard it at his pleasure. As the guardian of the ‘throne’, the rebel had risen to such a lofty rank that he felt he could invert the system as his right. This was in direct conflict with the order the Elohim had estab- lished, for under the Elohim power was to be exchanged from one system to another—not hoarded. For any fair exchange of energy, both the donor and the recipient had to receive equal amounts of energy in some form or another. Anything short of this would cre- NEXUS ¢ 63 DECEMBER 1994 - JANUARY 1995