12-10-2010, 07:24 AM
(12-09-2010, 11:03 PM)Nabil Naser Wrote: Why is it possible to explain Adam and Eve, Mary, Joseph, G-d, and God, among others, within the geometry?
That is a question that I have no answer to, except to believe that it was the product of communications with some higher consciousness, that all humans seem to do, mostly unconsciously.
Perhaps the authors of those books (consciously or subconsciously) chose those particular names for their characters, to convey specific archetypal energies, which might not necessarily indicate anything about the real people depicted in those stories.
We know from the Law of One that Jesus was a real person. According to Edgar Cayce, the other Biblical characters were real too. But that doesn't preclude embellishments added for the sake of the creation of the myth.
Myth as in, the story itself took on a life of its own, so to speak, regardless of how much resemblance it bore to real events. A good example of a mythological character is King Arthur, who hasn't been proven to have really existed; yet the myth of King Arthur lives on and seems to have more importance than whether or not he really existed.
In this context, Bible stories are myths. The term myth doesn't necessarily mean they didn't happen; only that the stories have become entities unto themselves, regardless of the real events.
Archetypal themes from myths repeat again and again. So it's not surprising to find numerological and geometrical patterns in those myths that have been enduring to societies.