cladking Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Hermione Wrote:
> -------------------------------------------------------
> > Could you just answer this question, Cladking:
> >
> > That second phrase: "he is the pyramid". What
> > citation do you have for that?
>
>
> My favorite is this;
>
> 414a. N. is as that which dawns, which dawns,
> which endures, which endures.
> 414b. The doers of evil shall not be able to
> destroy
> 414c. the favourite place of N. among the living
> in this land for ever and ever.
>
> But this is open to interpretation so the most
> direct literal "statement" that the kink is the
> pyramid is here;
>
> 1932 (Nt. 763). He, he is a pyramid, he protects;
> from ritual # 666
>
> But this is the same theme throughout the entire
> PT;
>
> 1654a. O Atum, put thy protection upon N.,
> 1654b. upon this his pyramid, (upon) this temple
> of N.;
>
> The dead king (N) and the pyramid are the exact
> same thing. It is not a "tomb", it is the house
> of life where the dead king can live forever as a
> reminder of his existence. This IS the afterlife
> for a king.
You said, "Yet the builders repeatedly said the king is both a pyramid and a star ("he, he is the pyramid") ("he is a star")."
So how many times was it said?
As noted can you explain why none of these phrases are in the oldest copy of the PT? Shouldn't it be or is it they made this up later as the religion evolved?
Oh and what is the context - why not show us the entire sentence and utterance it is in?
So, how many of these are there in PT?
[
www.ganino.com]
Remember Cladking we had this talk before you making claims not showing the context nor a link...."he protects", HMMM so what does that mean?
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 02/25/2023 08:58PM by Hans_lune.