Sol Om On's Temple & the Mystery Schools; an analysis

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PostSat Oct 23, 2010 6:52 pm » by Phaeton


A somewhat lengthy analysis of the history of the wellknown SolOmOn's Temple and Osirianism.. Its worth the trouble though, check it out..


The Temple of Jerusalem, which all archeologists have shown to be a structure with nothing like the pretended antiquity of its erection, and incorrectly called after a fictitious monarch, whose name proves his mystical character. The name of Solomon is made up of the three ancient Sun names: The Roman SOL, the Hindu OM, and the Chaldeo-Egyptian ON.

The architecture and the inside arrangements of the allegorical Solomon Temple were undoubtedly borrowed from the Egyptians and described it in the Hebrew scriptural book. His "Holy Temple" has gone down in history as one of the greatest of all buildings, yet according to specifications it was small indeed, only about 40 x 120 feet. Compared to other ancient Temples, this one was insignificant.

Consider Nagkon-Wat in Cambodia, for instance. It is 769 x 588 x 250 feet, elaborately carved and columned. In the stonework there are approximately 100,000 figures, one picture occupying 240 feet. King Solomon's Temple was a poor imitation of the Great Sandstone Temple of "Horus" near Edfu in Upper Egypt. According to the Old Testament, Solomon's Temple was surrounded with spacious courts.

In the court of the priests was an altar. From this court 12 steps ascended to the Temple, which was divided into three parts: the Porch; the Sanctuary and the Holy of Holies. The Temple of Edfu has the same arrangement. King Solomon's Temple was 120 ft. long and 40 ft. wide and it was completed in 957 BC.

The Temple of Edfu is 450 ft. long and 150 ft. wide and it was built around 1,300 BC. It has two tall obelisks at the Porch. King Solomon's Temple had two pillars at the Porch. The right pillar was "Jachin", which means: "to establish" and the left one was "Boaz", which means: "in strength" and also transliteration of word BACCHUS AND BACCHUS IS OSIRIS.

The Hypostyle Hall of the Temple of "Osiris" in Abydos, Upper Egypt has two pillars at the en- trance. The right pillar is "Tattu", which means: "to establish", and the left one is "Tat", which means: "in strength". The Temple and the Hall were built around 2,500 BC. The Ark of the Covenant in King Solomon's Temple had exactly the same dimensions as the baptismal font in the King's chamber of Khufu or Cheops pyramid at Gizeh, near Cairo. The pyramid was supposedly built between 3,733 and 3,700 BC.

According to the Old Testament, King Solomon's Temple originally was built on very hard rock on Mt. Moriah. Its foundation was laid very deep. The Temple was destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylonia in 586 BC.

The archeologists dug out cities and ruins of the ancient civilizations, but they didn't find the ruins of King Solomon's Temple in spite of fact, that they knew that the Temple location was on Mt. Moriah, and that it was built on very hard rock, and that the foundations were very deep in the ground.


The historical facts are:

1) The founders of Jerusalem were the Turanian Hurrians. The Bible calls them Jebusites. Manetho the Egyptian priest (300 BC.) called them Royal Shepherds (Hyksos), he also called them Royal Scythians and Phoenices. The city which they founded was called Solyma. Alexander the Great put the world "Iero" or "Hiero" (Holy) in front of the city's name and pronounced it "Hiero-solyma". The city was called Solyma or Hierosolyma for many years. Josephus Flavius the Hebrew historian (37-100 AD.)

In his writings always uses the name Solyma instead of Jerusalem. In 70 AD when the Roman Titus destroyed the Temple and demolishing the city, the soldiers were shouting "Hierosolyma est perdita!" meaning "Hierosolyma (Jerusalem) is destroyed!"

This name:"Templum Hiero-Solyma" carved onto the "Triple Tau" column of the Knights Templar's shrine at Rosslyn, Scotland. The chapel construction and stone work completed in 1480 AD. The Hebrews written down the name of Solyma like this: SLM (no vowels). We can pronounce it S(o)L(y)M(a), or S(a)L(e)M. Later the city called "Uru-Salem". The word "Iero" or "Hiero in front of the city's name remained and pronounced it "Iero Uru-Salem", "Ierusalem", finally "Jerusalem."


2) In 1,015 BC. the alleged David purchased a small part of the city of Uru-Salem from Urukhi or Uriah, king of the Jebusites. The Bible says: "and the children of Benjamin did not drive out the Jebusites that inhabited Jerusalem; but the Jebusites dwell with the children of Benjamin in Jerusalem unto this day" (Judges 1:21).

So, the Jebusites still dwelled Jerusalem in the 7th century AD in the period when the Masoretic Bible was constructed. The Jebusites shared their Sun-God Temple with the Hebrews, who were worshipped Tammuz Moloch and other gods. This Temple was built on Mt .Moriah to the Jebusites' Sun-God "Nib-Utu" (Shamash). It was built by the pattern of the Egyptian Temples of Osiris and the Egyptian sacred number "3" governed the exterior proportion of the building (width x 3 = length), and its interior design (porch, sanctuary and the Holy of Holies).

In 1130 AD the Scotch Templars were excavated a place at Mt. Moriah (Temple Mount) on the spot where the alleged temple of Solomon had stood. During their work they found two stones which were the cornerstones of the Jebusites Temple. In the foundation stones of the Temple had Phoenician cuneiform epigraph and a Crux Gammata (Swastika), the symbol of the Sun-God (note: to be correct the symbol of the Milky Way, - even freemasons often dont know this, since almost everything they practice is borrowed from Vedic Aryan teachings - even to the highest-ranking of them not everything was revealed).

The Scotch Knights took the stones with them, and used one of the stone as a cornerstone of the first temple at Edinburg. The second stone was preserved at the Rosslyn Chapel at South Scotland. Dome of the Rock at the Temple Mount was built upon the other two cornerstones.


3) In the early 6th century BC the Jebusites' city Uru-Salem and the Sun-God Temple were destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar II, The King of Babylon, and the alleged captivity of the Hebrews began.


4) In 538 BC. Cyrus II of Babylonia let the Hebrews return to their homeland. For the adopted new religion and the glory of "YHWH" (Jehovah), in 515 BC Nehemiah and his companions built the first Hebrew Temple, over the foundation of the Jebusites' Sun-God Temple on Mt. Moriah. In 333 BC Alexander the Great destroyed the walls around it, but not the Temple. In 54 BC this Temple was plundered and destroyed by the Roman Crassus.


5) The second Hebrew Temple was built by Herod, King of Judea over the remains of Nehemiah's Temple. This Temple was larger than the previous Temples, and to accommodate its expanded foundations and the greatly increased size of the Temple Mount, a massive retaining wall was built on the southwest side of the Temple Mount. Herod was of Edomite descent, though of Hebrew (Judaic) face. In 40 BC he was appointed as King of Judea and governor of Galilee by the Roman Senate.

When the Roman Titus crushed the Hebrew Revolt and destroyed Jerusalem in 70 AD they razed the temple to the ground. While nothing remains of the temple itself, large portions of the enclosure (retaining) walls still remain. The most famous remnants are the lower portions of the Western Wall, known as the Wailing Wall. Modern archeological research confirms that the alleged Solomon Temple, as it described in the Old Testament, bears unmistakable resemblance to the actual Temple in Uru-Salem (Jerusalem) built by the Phoenicians for the Jebusites' Sun God.


6) In 638 AD the Muslim caliph Omar I entered Jerusalem and during the period from 685 to 691 the 10th Caliph Abd-el-Malik ibn Marwan built the Dome of the Rock right over the foundation of the ancient Jebusites' Temple. Other Islamic shrine on the Temple Mount is the al-Aqsa Mosque (one of Islam's largest and holiest mosques) was built 715 AD on the southwest side of the Temple Mount. The Great Constantine (306 to 337 AD.) and his mother built a few churches there.

A few churches remained intact, also a few ruins can be found there. The present Western Wall or Wailing Wall formed no part any of the previous temples. All that remains of the elaborate structure is part of the retaining wall. Then as now, it was merely a retaining structure for Temple Mount. Where are the ruins of King Solomon's Temple?
"Those who danced were thought to be quite insane by those who could not hear the music"

"All our science measured against reality, is primitive and childlike - and yet, in contemporary consensus,
its the most precious thing we have
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PostSun Oct 24, 2010 3:39 pm » by Phaeton


unbelievable...

bump
"Those who danced were thought to be quite insane by those who could not hear the music"

"All our science measured against reality, is primitive and childlike - and yet, in contemporary consensus,
its the most precious thing we have
"

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Joined: Mon Feb 22, 2010 4:23 am

PostSun Oct 24, 2010 3:58 pm » by Edgarrothstein


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