Re: [evola_as_he_is] Evola's identification of Typhon with Jehovah
Jehovah forbade Moses, probably an Egyptian follower of Akhenaton, to enter the Promised Land because of an obscure fault. So, it looks the Christianity the result of the arcane élite transmission of the Egyptian religion (Moses as an occult head-bridge). Even if Christianity comes naturally from a Jewish environment, we can perhaps see in them the subtle difference between the cult of Osiris and the one of Set.
In "Revolt Against the Modern World", Evola refers to unnamed Gnostic authors theorizing the Hebrew God's descent from Typhon. Would anyone know what specific...
The earliest representational image of Christ In the entire historical record Is on the wall of an ancient house On the Palatine Hill in Rome It shows a...
I don’t know specifically what ‘groups’ Evola was referring to, however I would imagine that the prime example of Gnosticism being associated with Typhon...
To the best of our knowledge, Paschal Beverly Randolph was born in New York City of an American father and of a Franco-Madagascan mother ; in 1850, he was...
We don't know either what Gnostic sects Evola referred to in this respect, both in 'Revolt against the Modern World' and in 'Three Aspects of the Jewish...
I don't see how P B Randolph can have been initiated into the H B of L in 1860. It wasn't founded until 1881. In fact, according to John P Deveney, the...
It seems that we are not better at chronology than Mr Jennings was. This being said, very few of those who have studied the H.B.L. agree on its year of...
The complete sentence of Evola was: "According to some ancient traditions, Typhon, the entity hostile to the solar God, would have been the father of the Jews,...
I'm afraid it may just be the case that Evola, Doresse, Tacitus, and Jerome, were all wrong about the relationship between the Jewish God and the God Set...
It may be the case. On the other hand, an Egyptologist of the old school may be wrong on a particular point ; a Roman historian may be wrong on a particular...
Jehovah forbade Moses, probably an Egyptian follower of Akhenaton, to enter the Promised Land because of an obscure fault. So, it looks the Christianity the...
I would like to read the Doresse book, if I can find it - the theory that the Israelite religion is a demonic inversion of the Egyptian one is certainly...
A source for the definition by Evola (about the Typhon-Jehovah identification) has been probably also Plutarch, who says that Set, the name of Typhon in...
Christianity certainly owes a lot to the myth of Osiris as told in Plutarch ('Isis and Osiris', 12-20) and elaborated by Diodorus Siculus ('Library of...
He does - in 'Three Aspects of the Jewish Problem'. Please read message 249. Doesn't our 'welcome message' state that it is not worth joining this group if one...
well that's very informative. I wonder whether you feel that what you say about the perishable nature of Osiris applies equally to Horus? On the one hand,...
It's Schwaller de Lubicz, who also saw what the "pharaonic Great Work" and the Christian revelation had in common from a symbolic point of view, to whom we may...
That is an absolutely wonderful piece of analysis. I am a bit amazed though to see you starting from René Schwaller, surely as eclectic as any member of the...