User:Unicorn144

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[edit] The Beginning of the Creation of God

This is, of course, a direct reference to a specific moment before God created anything; it refers to the fact that he "thought" of what He was going to before He "did" anything. In the Babylonian Talmud and in it's redaction in "Everyman's Talmud" by A. Boaz God felt sorry for the the living waters's which reflected His Image because "darkness" was upon her "face"; she reflected Him so He could see "Himself"; but she could see nothing of Him. In His Mercy He "enlightened" her; the act of "moving" on the waters is a euphemism for the first Holy Act of Love which God originated and then performed. It is for this reason that human beings out of the entire animal kingdom make love "face to face".

[edit] Christian view of Muhammed

I moved the following sections from the article Christian view of Muhammad to its Talk page because they are of insufficient quality, clarity or independence to be included in any encyclopedia. - Fayenatic london (talk) 22:17, 25 March 2007 (UTC)

I can only hope that now that I have found this I can edit it down to size with all the sources included and you will then put it back in the article. I am the originator of this information in an attempt to balance the rather one-sided views I found here: I thought it was like an "invitation to share my research for my book with you; quoting the sources I myself used: is this considered objective? St. Francis certainly shared none of these sentiments; and it should be in this article as well as the rest of the "Illuminated Ones" who knew the "wine" was the Wrath of God upon Israel for the betrayal and murder of Jesus: it came in the form of the Qu'ran. Is not it about time that someone actually reveals the true nature of Muhammed's book in light of the Providence of God?

I welcome any and all comments.Unicorn144 02:13, 5 April 2007 (UTC)

The material below cites one only one source and refers in the most general terms to another. Even though Idries Shah's teachings and Abraham Cohen's introduction to the Talmud have a place in this encyclopedia, it is not relevant to cite either of them under the title "Christian view...", as neither of them identified themselves as Christian. The rest of the material below is highly speculative and way off-topic. Practically none of it will ever belong in this article "Christian view of Muhammad". - Fayenatic london (talk) 12:34, 5 April 2007 (UTC)

What a shame! The fact that Islam and Christianity agree on the existence of the 7 heavens is exactly where the ascension of Muhammed from Mt. Moriah or Zion as a parallel to another ascension which happened not far from there: at the Mt. of Olives; by Jesus. The understanding of these "two flights" is actually where any real understanding of Islam by christianity must start: the 7 heavens where the Lamb went up to the Throne of God as seen in the Revelation of John. Issac was "replaced" by Ishmael on the Altar of Abraham at Moriah: that was the sign and the signifigance of Muhammed meeting with God above Jerusalem: the inheritence had reverted to the "elder son"; the "firstborn"; Ishmael. Until 1967. - Unicorn144 02:11, 9 April 2007

I've moved it again to your user page. Feel free to work on it here. Please only add it to Wikipedia articles when it makes sense on its own; at the moment, to anyone who has not read the same books as you have, it reads like a series of riddles. - Fayenatic london (talk) 08:40, 9 April 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Late Middle Ages to Current Times

[edit] Late Middle Ages to Chaucer

For those open-minded christians who have investigated the true status of Muhammed and the rise of Islam some notable information about this period can be found in Idries Shah's book's "The Sufis" and "The Way of the Sufi". Further studies of Parsifal in the Grail corpus of writings show that because the Lamb was killed by the "stewards of the vineyard" to keep it for themselves it was God who took away the kingdom from the Jews who were entrusted with the inheritence of Abraham and gave it to the desert tribes who, (once Muhammed cleansed the Courtyard of the Kaa'ba), were given the status of Israel's 12 "tribes". This is in fact the reason Muhammed ascended the 7 heavens[1] over Jerusalem from Mount Moriah or the Temple Mount is because that is where Abraham originally offered Issac as a living sacrifice. The meaning for this ascension (see: "Night of Power" ref, Qu'ran[citation needed]) would seem to be the fact that as Jesus was killed as the Bridegroom or the mythical "Issac" it was Muhammed who then was given this position as the reborn "Ishmael" as God restoring the position of the elder son of Abraham in His punishment upon Jerusalem by replacing it with Mecca as the "new" House of God. The 7-10 Crusades can then be seen as the futile resistance of a "Canaan" to the "New Israel" or "Bani-Israel" now given the Holy Land. For those who began to wonder during the Crusades why Christinanity could not prevail over Islam it was the gradual "Illumination" of enlightened mystics like St. Francis that the world was witnessing God's Judgment upon Israel by God apparently having now given that "name" to Muhammed and the accompanying status of the 12 tribes to the desert tribes who he now no longer had face Jerusalem during the daily prayers: now they faced Mecca. This was further proof of God's wrath in that Jerusalem was now "tributary" who had once been the center of worship and yearly pilgrimmages for the tribes lest they "have no rain".

[edit] Chaucer to Columbus

The rapid expansion of Islam was seen as the result of the rise of Mecca due to Muhammed's removal of the 360 idols from the Courtyard and enforcing a strict and iconoclastic form of worship that recognized only one God: alone. How this had happened was actually seen in the Gospel where Jesus himself had told the scribes ("lawyers") and Pharisees ("businessmen") that God would take the kingdom away from them and "give it to a Nation bringing forth the fruits of it." This "Nation" was obviously Islam, as the Dome of the Rock built on the Temple Mount over Mt. Moriah substantially showed. It is for this reason that the Templars built their church in London in the round shape of the "Dome of the Rock" because they as members of a persecuted inner elect knew of the historic "shift" in God's Providence. They also knew in Christianity's tradition of celibacy in relation to Islam's archaic institution of polygamy Christianity actually represented the position of the priestly tribe of Levi to the "12 princes of Ishmael"[2] who now occupied the position of the 12 sons of Jacob or Israel, who had lost their position as God's Elect due to their rulers sacrificing of the "heir" to the throne of David. That the Qu'ran seemed to fulfill the prophecy of Malachi (Israel's "last prophet" in the 430 years before Jesus arrived) as being the "Curse of God" threatened upon "Jacob" or Israel if they failed the providence of God's Messiah and his Messenger Elijah the Qu'ran conversely seemed to be the "Blessing of God" upon Muhammed as the new "Israel". Ishmael now supplanted Issac as the apparent revenge of Esau upon Jacob for stealing the birthright from him and Issac's blessing Issac with his mother's help; Issac being blind. This was not lost on the Jews themselves who now had the sad fulfillment of the prophets called down on them of the "sword" of Jehovh being drawn out after them as they were dispersed to the 4 quarters of the earth: this "sword" was "anti-Semitism"; not seen since the days of the animosity of "Egypt" (Hamitic race descended from "Ham") to its Israelities (Semitic race descended from "Shem") going back to the 430 years of captivity before the Exodus.

[edit] Columbus to Current

With the current division of the "House of God" between Sunni and Sh'ia the old saying that "a House divided against itself cannot stand" the stage is now set for the final test of the "3 Faiths" which are rerepresentations the "3 Sons of Noah": Ham, Japeth and Shem; as is written in Isaiah,[citation needed] "Egypt my people; Assyria the Work of my hands; and Israel mine inheritence". These three monotheistic "Faiths" of the "Inner Courtyard" face their unification or "final test" with Iraq and Iran in the prophetical position of "Gog and Magog". The fact that Russia is now over half Muslim in population is further evidence of the global shift in this final conflict: the false "Jihad" of World War III as a Holy War in our "Last Days" can be seen in the ominous advent by default if you will of the "Antichrist" in the person of "Osama bin Laden"; the "Man of Lawlessness" or "global terrorist" who decided to "judge" the West as if he were God; spiritually "sitting" on the Saudi Arabian throne in the Meccan "House of God" as St. Paul wrote long ago[citation needed]. As the Unificationists known as the Sufis it is now the gradually surfacing Sufic point of view that all three monotheistic religions have an intimate relation to the 7 trumpets of Revelation in that each trumpet seems to strike only one-third of the things each one mentions; bringing some observers of scripture to conclude that the trumpets strike Islam at some points; Christianity at some points and Judaism at others. This Sufic point of view is that the Revelation of St. John the Divine applies to all 3 monotheistic religions; as also the three out of the four "sheepfolds" Jesus mentioned when describing himself as "the Way; the Truth and the Life"; (ie; the mystic "Way" of Taoism; the philosophic "Life" of Socrates; the psychological "Path" of Buddha and the psychic "Truth" of Quetzacoatl). The mythic "Resurrection" of Elijah was supposed to have been initiated by John the Baptist by admitting he was Elijah: which he denied; thus stopping the Resurrection from beginning; it was for this reason that Jesus did not baptize John even when John pointedly asked him to. Obviously the "Resurrection" was to have started with Elijah himself as the prophet Malachi wrote when he said that the "Great and Terrible Day of Jehovah"[citation needed] would not come until after Elijah "returned".

  1. ^ Cohen, A. (1975) 'Everyman's Talmud'; page 30 line 10; Schocken Books. ISBN 0-8052-0497-0
  2. ^ Bible Genesis 17:20