(03-14-2018, 07:55 AM)Spaced Wrote: Depends on the definition of the word god
Yes I agree. How are you defining a god? From my understanding of the gods, Ra would not properly be considered one. For the gods are archetypal forces clothed in a humanly created image as a means of making contact with that force. The four worlds of the Tree of Life show us this: Atziluth- archetypal world, Briah- Creative World, Yetzirah- Formative world, Assiah- Material world.
Ra the Egyptian hawk-headed Sun-god would be considered a true god. Ra, the sixth density social memory complex would not be considered a god. Ra themselves told the ancient Egyptians that there were not gods, “we are the same as you.”
From the naive perspective of the ancient Egyptians, Ra was too much “other” than they were, so they considered them gods. Which is why Ra had to leave. Ra did not come to Egypt to be worshipped.