Chapter 187: Jewish Esoteric Kabbalah (2)

PS: The Kabbalistic view is that the whole of God's self-contained ideas and the contradictions of things is based on mystical opposites and the law of unity. Pen × fun × Pavilion www. biquge。 These two laws are based on theoretical assumptions (assuming that all thoughts and general health situations contain one side to another), for example, black and white, top and bottom, left and right. The essence of every thing also contains the essence of its relative things. Some are very clear and understandable, while others are very mysterious. Just as drawing with a black ink pen on a black or dark background is not a good representation, it needs a white or bright background to show the dark nature of the painting. Here, there is the contrast between the opposite things when writing or drawing.

The Kabbalistic view is that the whole of God's self-contained ideas and the contradictions of things is based on mystical opposites and the law of unity. These two laws are based on theoretical assumptions (assuming that all thoughts and general health situations contain one side to the other), for example, black and white, top and bottom, left and right. The essence of every thing also contains the essence of its relative things. Some are very clear and understandable, while others are very mysterious. Just as drawing with a black ink pen on a black or dark background is not a good representation, it needs a white or bright background to show the dark nature of the painting. Here, there is the contrast between the opposite things when writing or drawing.

In the Kabbalah Esoteric Interpretation, evil is constantly defined as separate things, because we cannot receive the evil side of God, so we must flow evil out of the oneness of God. Adamkadmon (theprimordialman) is the name of the Kabbalah for the perfect good spiritual life of the first man. They are about to incarnate as saviors, but in contrast to the evil spirits of the separated class, they use the word adambeliyya '''al''.

1. Evil spirits

1. Beliel

and beliar, berial, and blil. It is an angel created by Milton. Probably the earliest deity of Jewish legend in Palestine. Literally, it means worthless, cheap, and not worth mentioning. Deuteronomy 13:13 is an adjective used only for "worthless." The New Testament of the Bible, 2 Corinthians 6:14, begins with "The Son of Darkness (Belial?)" The identity of Jesus Christ is the opposite of that, and is commented as another name for Satan. In the "War between the Children of Light and the Children of Darkness" in the Dead Sea Papers, it is alleged that the Despicable is the vice-monarch of the heavens, the commander of the Dark Army, and the leader of the rebellion against the heavens. Claiming to be the original name of Satanail, he is the most dangerous and vicious of all the fallen angels, and he is conceited that he is the first angel to be born. One of his most successful counterattacks after the Fall was to incite the kingdom of Judah to rebel against God again and to worship his sorcery. so that they were forsaken from God and destroyed by Babylon.

2. Abaddon + (Abadon)

"The Messenger of the Bottomless Pit", "The King of Plagues", "The Dark Angel of Death", "The Demon God of Hell". The book of Revelation records that the "fallen angel" who appears when the fifth angel blows the trumpet, the trumpet sounds. A star in the sky will descend on the earth and open the door to the bottomless pit of black smoke, and then the demon army of locusts, led by Abaddon, will come out and torture mankind for five months. Abadon is the Hebrew word abad, which is produced by killing people. Greek translated as apollyon. It's the 'saboteur'. The name Abaddon means destruction, destruction, ruins, tombs, underworld, death in Judaism.

In the ninth chapter of the Bible's book of Revelation, Abaddon's angel is mentioned: "Abaddon, the fallen angel who dwells in the deepest part of hell, unleashed a demon at the coming of the Last Judgment to make mankind suffer even more: like a horse ready for battle, with a golden crown on its head, a man's face, a woman's hair, a woman's face, and a lion's teeth." The tail of a scorpion, dressed in iron armor. The sound of the wings vibrating is like that of a speeding carriage, attacking humans with poisonous needles, and although it does not inflict fatal injuries, the living will live for five months, and they will experience the pain of death.

Later demonic beliefs have more detailed descriptions of his appearance, and it is said that he has scythe-like wings, like a man with green scales all over his body, an eagle's hooked nose, bear-like feet, and thick red hair, and spits smoke and fire from his mouth next to his nose from time to time, and there are not a few people who have been struck and killed by the sight of his terrible appearance

3. Astarte

It is one of the Phoenician gods of fertility, the god of love, the sister of the god of Baal and his wife, and the god of the sun of Baal, who is the god of the moon and therefore the goddess of the underworld, who uses destruction to restore order on earth. In Phoenicia, Baal and Astarte are the two main gods that symbolize man and woman. Although the order of introduction is unknown, he became known as Apolloda in Babylon and Syria, and even in Greece and Rome as Apulaudius. The reason for Ashtaroth's fall may have come from Canaan, as the goddess Ishanda even had the image of the god of war in Babylon, and he is mentioned in mythology as a bloodthirsty goddess in the form of a demon. This image may be a fusion of Ashtreth, the goddess of war who was introduced to Egypt, and Ashtar, another male god of war in Palestine (or Ethiopia) who is similar to the name of Shuda, who is also known as the "other fearor", is also a lion-headed god. The great demon Ashtaroth of the Middle Ages may have come to the fore from this. First seen as a fallen angel in Paradise Lost.

English legends also mention Ashtaroth, one of the Seven Gentlemen of Hell who visited Faust, and is narrated as a short-tailed, short-legged, white-bellied demon.

The twenty-ninth of King Solomon's seventy-two pillar demon gods, the rank of duke, commanding forty legions. The corners of his mouth were bloody, his whole body was black and emitting a foul-smelling poisonous gas, and he held a hell dragon in his right hand. His ability to travel through time and space is to talk about the doctrine of freedom, but in fact he teaches people to be lazy, and thus to be sent from the angels to hell.

4. Baal

It can be said that he is known as the most popular fallen god! Jehovah's greatest enemy. One of the Seventy-Two Pillars of King Solomon, this deity dates back to more than 1,400 B.C., and the Semitic tribe has a record of worshipping it. Noah's son, the heir of the Semitic progenitor, is considered the highest god among the Semitic people, and many documents can find records of the Semitic worship of his glory. 'ba'''al', sometimes 'bel' or 'bael' ('baalim' in the plural, 'baalath' in women), literally means "lord" in Semitic; At that time, the meaning of "owner" was equivalent to the meaning of the sun or god. Later, Baal was like God, representing 'God'. Baal is not a unique god name, it represents a different local god depending on the time and place. Such as the Babylonian god Belmarduk and the Phoenician god Baalshamen. In the Old Testament there is the name Baal, and in the New Testament it becomes Beelzebub, the king of demons. This supreme god is probably the most declining thing in his life is to confront the Lord, originally not only the god of fertility agriculture, the god of the sun, and even the god of war, Baal-Hadad is said to be the image of the right hand holding a giant hammer, the left hand with a thunder ball, wearing a conical crown with two horns on his head, and riding a thunder under his feet. The word Hada originally meant 'thunder'. In later Greek mythology, Baal was transformed into Belos, representing the main god Zeus. After the Fall, he became the demon god of King Solomon's seventy-two pillars. Baal, who is described as a demon god, has three heads, namely a man, a cat and a big frog, the body is a human or a spider, and the tail and claws of a cat, the spider's eight legs, quite ugly, hoarse, can make people invisible, and is proficient in ** and the knowledge of law. Baal became demons in Milton's pen recorded by his Phoenician wife, Yas, and both had both male and female personalities. In the Middle Ages, there were 60,000 ghost kings in hell. (To be continued......)

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