Post by linus on Nov 8, 2012 16:09:23 GMT -5
Remember that the photo used here is flipped. You can tell by the shirt buttons & pockets, and John’s hair-part, which is always on his left.
Note, Paul’s hair parted from his right this day. (not the only time before 1967).
The "butcher cover" being an allusion to Osiris cut into 14 pieces, and the "Paul in chest cover" alluding to the "Osiris found in a box" legend, coupled with this, is quite interesting.
(from Puzzled)
Another interesting thing about Yesterday And Today
Aker (Akeru, Akerui) [similar phonetically to Eger/Aegir/Agur]
The double lion god
Symbols: akhet
Depiction: Depictions showed Aker as a double-headed lion or two lions sitting back-to-back with the sun and sky appearing between them. The two lions form the Egyptian symbol for the sky, akhet. The lions were named Sef (Yesterday) and Duau (Today).
Mythology: The Egyptian believed that Aker, an earth-god, guarded the gates of dawn and sunset through which the sun rose every morning and set every evening. The ancient Egyptians placed statues of Aker at the doors of palaces and tombs to ward off evil spirits and malicious entities. Statues of Aker often were given the heads of men and women, which the ancient Greeks referred to as sphinxes.
ablemedia.com/ctcweb/consortium/ancientegyptiangodsaker.html
The Lost Scriptures of Giza
by Jason Breshears
Pg 132-35
The original tradition associated with the Sphinx was that it was a Watcher. These angelic beings were of an order of heavenly guardians entrusted with protecting the interests of God on earth, but some of them fell and induced mankind to worship them through their forbidden knowledges as opposed to the Creator. Arabic beliefs seem to be linked to these traditions for the name by which they called the Sphinx was Abu 'l hol, meaning Father of Terror. This epithet alludes to the duty of cherubim to terrify men from entering the holy places consecrated to God. The Arabic title derives from the Egyptian word for guardian (hu).
The word sphinx is not at all an Egyptian word but was the Grecian title given to the monument that was in itself based off of a false etymology in reference to an old story about the statue strangling a man for not being able to answer a riddle. These people thought the status bestowed secrets of great importance to travelers in the forms of riddles, which are images of truth artistically concealed within puns, allegories and metaphors. Thus, the Greeks of later times believed the meaning of the Sphinx was "throttler," when in fact, the word actually means to bind closely together. This meaning identifies the Sphinx as a Watcher, for in occult writings based off of ancient traditions the Watcher guardian was to protect portals "...that link worlds together." [Come Together...]
In the Egyptian Book of the Dead are torturous guardians of portals in the world of the dead that attempt to keep disembodied spirits from passing through into the Other World. Such protectors were used in Egypt's temple complexes also and were called Aker lions, which were sphinxes placed before doors and gates. The Aker statues were "keepers who open and shut the gates," into the worlds of "yesterday, today and tomorrow." Remarkably, the ancient title of the Sphinx given by Egyptians was Aker because it was believed by them that the gigantic statue stood atop the underworld which was also called Akar. Gerald Massey in his Ancient Egypt Light of the World wrote that the Sphinx protected the secret of earth's beginning from the Abyss (the Deep) and that it was carved "...out of the rock at the center of the earth to commemorate that sacred place of creation."
Note, Paul’s hair parted from his right this day. (not the only time before 1967).
The "butcher cover" being an allusion to Osiris cut into 14 pieces, and the "Paul in chest cover" alluding to the "Osiris found in a box" legend, coupled with this, is quite interesting.
(from Puzzled)
Another interesting thing about Yesterday And Today
Aker (Akeru, Akerui) [similar phonetically to Eger/Aegir/Agur]
The double lion god
Symbols: akhet
Depiction: Depictions showed Aker as a double-headed lion or two lions sitting back-to-back with the sun and sky appearing between them. The two lions form the Egyptian symbol for the sky, akhet. The lions were named Sef (Yesterday) and Duau (Today).
Mythology: The Egyptian believed that Aker, an earth-god, guarded the gates of dawn and sunset through which the sun rose every morning and set every evening. The ancient Egyptians placed statues of Aker at the doors of palaces and tombs to ward off evil spirits and malicious entities. Statues of Aker often were given the heads of men and women, which the ancient Greeks referred to as sphinxes.
ablemedia.com/ctcweb/consortium/ancientegyptiangodsaker.html
The Lost Scriptures of Giza
by Jason Breshears
Pg 132-35
The original tradition associated with the Sphinx was that it was a Watcher. These angelic beings were of an order of heavenly guardians entrusted with protecting the interests of God on earth, but some of them fell and induced mankind to worship them through their forbidden knowledges as opposed to the Creator. Arabic beliefs seem to be linked to these traditions for the name by which they called the Sphinx was Abu 'l hol, meaning Father of Terror. This epithet alludes to the duty of cherubim to terrify men from entering the holy places consecrated to God. The Arabic title derives from the Egyptian word for guardian (hu).
The word sphinx is not at all an Egyptian word but was the Grecian title given to the monument that was in itself based off of a false etymology in reference to an old story about the statue strangling a man for not being able to answer a riddle. These people thought the status bestowed secrets of great importance to travelers in the forms of riddles, which are images of truth artistically concealed within puns, allegories and metaphors. Thus, the Greeks of later times believed the meaning of the Sphinx was "throttler," when in fact, the word actually means to bind closely together. This meaning identifies the Sphinx as a Watcher, for in occult writings based off of ancient traditions the Watcher guardian was to protect portals "...that link worlds together." [Come Together...]
In the Egyptian Book of the Dead are torturous guardians of portals in the world of the dead that attempt to keep disembodied spirits from passing through into the Other World. Such protectors were used in Egypt's temple complexes also and were called Aker lions, which were sphinxes placed before doors and gates. The Aker statues were "keepers who open and shut the gates," into the worlds of "yesterday, today and tomorrow." Remarkably, the ancient title of the Sphinx given by Egyptians was Aker because it was believed by them that the gigantic statue stood atop the underworld which was also called Akar. Gerald Massey in his Ancient Egypt Light of the World wrote that the Sphinx protected the secret of earth's beginning from the Abyss (the Deep) and that it was carved "...out of the rock at the center of the earth to commemorate that sacred place of creation."