08-10-2019, 08:59 AM
(08-09-2019, 10:26 PM)Kaaron Wrote: The One Lord?
This statement, is the source of my query.
All that is?
All that is and is not?
Does in the name of the One/Lord, infer the all has a name? Is it a way of adding power to the entity Yahweh? Helping the being who visited in the recent past, undo the distortions of the Orion Group?
Why would they infer the nameless, has a name? When they have already called it the one infinite creator?
Is it one of many names?
The One is a name for the Creator, the Lord is as well. Adonai properly comes from Hebrew. In Hebrew, God is spoken of with different names. These names denote various aspects of God. Adonai is related to the earth, the sphere of Malkuth. In other mythologies we have gods named Adonis and Attis. There are similarities in the names.
When L/L and Ra use this greeting its as Kristina said, it’s like a sealing of the working. In magical workings one needs to seal the working after one is finished so that energy does not dissipate and drain. The way Adonai is being used it like a blessing. When I read it in this context, I see Adonai as meaning “may our allegiance to the One never be broken.” That is a beautiful, and positive way to end a working. It’s like a protection.
The Creator is known in various aspects. The Lord of the earth is Adonai. Hebrew also has a name of God that is unutterable, unspeakable, and mysterious. YHVH יהוה
You are correct to notice that the Creator properly cannot be Named. These names denote the various aspects of his being, no one name is meant to totally encompass the Creator. Because that would be delimiting to it’s very nature!
It is one of many Names. In the context of the Law of One, I would view Adonai as a greeting that says “In the Name of the One” Or “May our allegiance never be broken to the One.”
It had taken me years to understand this. I was confused with Adonai being used as a greeting. So asking questions about it is a good thing.