Scientific
Idealism
William
Kingsland 1909
Page
321
"...Yet
nothing in time - nothing even in infinite time -
is eternal; nothing outside of the One Absolute
Noumenon.
In
the Hindu cosmogony it is taught that even Brahman is not
eternal. Brahman himself must be absorbed in the
Absolute
(Parabrahm),When
the great cosmic cycle or Mahamanvantura has run its
course
RA
ATUM
I A M
A
D A M
ABRAM
BRAHMA
PARABRAH-M
ABRAHAM
ABRAM
SARAI
ABRAHAM
SARAH
RA ATUM
I A M
A
BRA M
A BRAH AM
BRAH MA
PARA
BRAH M
A
BRAH AM
SARAH
ABRAM
SARAI
ABRA M
ARAB
ARA
AR
ARABAH
Taking an A,
from out the in of yonder mixture, and then the finding of
an M
,
may I introduce -
ABRAHAM
ARABIA
A RAM Surely
that bEE's a bEE, and that be a ram, writ the
scribe.
ABRAM
ARAH
Holy
Bible
Scofield
References
Cyclopedic
Concordance
Page
15
"Ar,
ar,
city, Num 21. 15."
"Ara,
ar-a 'lion' (?). 1 Chr.7.38."
"Arab,
'ambush' Jos. 15. 52."
"Arabah,
ar-a bah, the deep valley extending from Mt. Hor to the
eastern arm of the Red Sea...."
"Arabia,
a-ra-bi-a. Ps. 72. 10. 15..."
"Arabian,
a-ra-bi-an, a person from Arabia. Neh. 2. 19; Isa. 13. 20;
Acts2. 11."
"Arah,
ar-ah, 'traveller.' 1 Chr.7.39"
"Aram,
ar-am,a name of certain districts in Syria and Mesopotamia.
Gen. 10. 22
Reight,
said the wah good brother, to the Zed Aliz Zed, and far
yonder scribe, shall you continue the tolling of that bell
or shall I. On hearing this, the Alizzed sounded again that
note of notes.
So
frond shadow, whosever , and wheresoever thou art, in the
deliberation of thy day to day dreaming, within
the very depths of that mountain climb that is thine alone
to make, hear thee the sound of the
THAT ricochet, ring around thy
sensibilities.
I
AM THAT I AM
Their
changing cards at looking glass Alice said Zed Aliz,
shuffling the magic atwixt letters and
numbers.
I AM THAT I
AM
9
1
4
9 1 4
BRAHMA
2
9 1 8 4 1
A
B R A H A M
1
2 9 1 8 1 4
Holy
Bible
Scofield
References
Page
26
Genesis
Chapter 17
B.C.1911
1
x 9 x 1 x 1 = 9
1
+ 9 + 1 + 1
= 12
1
+ 2
= 3
"
Neither shall thy name anymore be called
Abram,
but thy name shall be Abraham;
"
Page
27
15
"And God said unto Abraham, As
for Sarai
thy
wife thou shalt not call her name
Sarai,
but Sarah"
A
B R A M A B R A H A
M
S A R A I S A R A H
1 2 9
1 4 1
2 9 1 8 1 4 1 1 9 1
9 1
1 9 1 8
A
B R A M A B R A
H
A
M
S A R A I S A R A H
1 2 9
1 4 1
2 9 1 8 1 4
1 1 9 1
9 1
1 9 1 8
Simple
sums for thi here wah yonder scribe said Alizzed, and you
being you added Zed Aliz don't forget to add and
deduce.
The
scribe tries a trick or three.
A
B R A M A B R A
H
A
M S A R
A I
S A R A H
H
A
I
x
H
8
1 72
8
+
1
7 + 2
9 9
A
B R A M A B R A
H
A
M S A R
A I
S A R A H
H
A
I H
H
x
A
9
x
8
8
72
7 + 2
8 x 9
72
7
+ 2
9
A
B R A M A B R A
H
A
M S A R
A I
S A R A H
8
1 9 8
9 x
9
x
8
72 72
A
B R A M A B R A
H
A
M S A R
A I
S A R A H
8
9 8
8 + 9 +
8
17
+ 17
34
Jupiter
hear, we come, said Zed Aliz, bringing the see at a glance
proceedings, to a premature close.
Astitch
in time, thought the scribe.
Having
decided to stay around the other man
continued.
Joseph
And His Brothers
Thomas
Mann
10
Page
30 continued
"
IN such wise are formed those beginnings, those
time-coulisses of the past, where memory may pause and find
a hold whereon to base its personal history - as
Joseph did on Ur, the city, and his forefather's exodus
therefrom. It was a tradition of spiritual unrest; he had it
in his blood, the world about him and his own life were
conditioned by it, and he paid it the tribute of recognition
when he recited aloud those verses from the tablets which
ran:
Why
ordainest thou unrest to my son
Gilgamesh,
Gave him a heart that knoweth not repose
?
Disquiet,
questioning, hearkening and seeking, wrestling for God, a
bitterly sceptical labouring over the true and the just, the
whence and the whither, his own name, his own nature, the
true meaning of the Highest - how all that, bequethed down
the generations from the man from Ur, found expression in
Jacob's look, in his lofty brow and the peering, careworn
gaze of his brown eyes; and how confid-ingly Joseph loved
this nature, of which his own was aware as nobility and a
distinction and which, precisely as a consciousness of
higher concerns and anxieties, lent to his father's person
all the dig-nity, reserve and solemnity which made it so
impressive. Unrest and dignity - that is the sign of the
spirit; and with childish unabashed fondness Joseph
recognized the seal of tradition upon his father's brow, so
different from that upon his own, which was so much blither
and freer, coming as it chiefly did from his lovely mother's
side, and making him the conversable, social, communicable
being he pre-eminently was. But why should he have felt a
bashed before that brooding and careworn father, knowing
himself so greatly beloved? The habitual knowledge that he
was loved and preferred conditioned and coloured his being;
it was dcisive likewise for his attitude to-wards the
Highest, to Whom, in his fancy, he ascribed a form,so far as
was permissible, precisely like Jacob's. A higher replica of
his fa-ther, by Whom, Joseph was naively convinced, he was
beloved even as he was beloved of his father. For the
moment, and still far off, Ishould like to characterize as
"bridelike" his relation to Adon the
/
Page
31 /
heavenly.
For Joseph knew that there were Babylonian women, sa-cred to
Ishtar or to Mylitta, unwedded but consecrated to pious
de-votion, who dwelt in cells within the temple, and were
called "pure" or "holy," also "brides of
God,"
"enitu"
Something of this feeling was in Joseph's own nature: a
sense of consecration, an austere bond, and with it a flow
of fantasy which may have been the decisive in-grediant in
his mental inheritance, and which will give us to think when
we are down below in the depths beside
him.
On
the other hand, despite all his own devotion, he did not
quite follow or accept the form it had taken in his father's
case: the care, the anxiousness, the unrest, which were
expressed in Jacob's uncon-querable dislike of a settled
existence such as would have befitted his dignity, and in
his temporary, improvised, half-nomad mode of
life.

TheHoly
Bible
Scofield
references
Page1162
Chapter
9
A.D.
38
The Acts
1+
1 + 6 +
2 3
+ 8
10 x 9 x
11 = 990
and 9
x 9 or 9 + 9 iz equal
to
the
Eight
and
Ra,or
Ra and
the
Eight
so
said Zed Aliz.
1
+
0 1+
1
1 x 9 x
2
1
8
1 + 8
9
Verse
36
3
x 6 =
18 1
+ 8
= 9
3
+ 6 +
18 1
+ 8 =
9
Tabitha
raised from the dead.
36 "Now
there was at Joppa a cer-tain disciple named Tabitha, which
by interpretation is called Dorcas: this woman was full of
good works and alms deeds which she
did.
37 And
it came to pass in those days, that she was sick, and died:
whom they had washed, they laid her in an upper
chamber.
38 And
forasmuch as Lydda was nigh to Joppa, and the disciples had
heard that Peter was there they sent unto him two men,
de-siring him that he would not delay to come to
them.
39 Then
Peter arose and went with them. When he was come, they
brought him into the upper chamber: and all the widows stood
by him weeping and shewing the coats and garments which
Dorcas made, while she was with
them.
40 But
Peter put them all forth' and kneeled down, and prayed; and
turning him to the body said Tabi-tha, arise. And
she opened her eyes: and when she saw Peter, she sat
up.
41
And
he gave her his hand, and lifted her up, and when he had
called the saints and widows, pre-sented her
alive.
42 And
it was known throughout all Joppa: and many believed in the
Lord.
43 And
it came to pass, that he tar-ried many days in Joppa with
one Simon a tanner.
Hereth
endeth, the 9
th
chapter of Acts
The
scribe then writ 36 + 37 + 38 + 39 + 40 + 41 + 42
+ 43 = 316
3
x 1 x 6 = 18 1 + 8 =
9
3
+ 1 + 6 = 10
1
+ 0
= 1
MAGIC
AND MYSTERY IN TIBET
Alexandra
David Neel 1931
Page185
"
there exists an immense literature in India devoted to the
explana-tion of the mystic word Aum. The latter has
exoteric, esoteric and mystic meanings. It may signify the
three persons of the Hindu Trinity: Brahma, Vishnou, Shiva.
It may signify the Brahman, the One without a second' of the
adwaita philosophy. It stands as a symbol of the
Inexpressible Absolute, the last word to be uttered in
mysticicism, after which there follows only silence. It is
according to
Shri
Sankarcharya, 9
'the
support of the meditation,' or, as declared in the
Mundakopanishad's text itself, ' it is the bow by the means
of which the individual self attains the universal self.'
10
Again
Aum is the creative sound whose vibrations build
the worlds. When the mystic is capable is capable of hearing
all in one the countless voices, cries, songs, and noises of
all beings and things that exist and move, it is the unique
sound Aum which reaches him. That same Aum
vibrates also in the utmost depth of his inner self. He
who can pronounce it with the right tone, is able to work
wonders, and he who knows how to utter it silently, attains
supreme emancipation."
"...Mani
padme are sanskrit terms that mean 'jewel in the
lotus.' Here we come, it seems, to an immediate intelligible
meaning, yet the current interpretation does not take any
account of that plain meaning.
9
In
his commentary on
Mundakopanishad
10
'The pranavana (that is the name of the sacred syllable
Aum is the bow, the Atman the individual
self) is the arrow and the Brahman (universal
self: the Absolute) is said to be the
mark.'
Page
186
"
Common folk believe that the recitations of Aum man
padme hum! Will assure them a happy rebirth in
Nub
Dewa chen, the Western Paradise of the Great
Bliss.
The
more 'learned' have been told that the six syllables of the
formula are connected with the six classes of sentient
beings and are related to one of the mystic colours as
follows :
Aum
is white and connected with gods
(Iha).
Ma
is
blue and connected with non-gods (Ihamayin).
11
Ni
is
yellow and connected with men
(mi)
Pad
is
green and connected with animals
(tudo).
Me
is red and connected with non-men (Yidag 12 or other mi-ma
yin 13).
Hum
is
black and connected with dwellers in
purgatories.
There
are several opinions regarding the effect of the recitation
of these six syllables. Popular tradition declares that
those who fre-quently repeat the formula will be reborn in
the Western Paradise of the Great Bliss. Others who deem
themselves more enlightened declare that the recitation of
Aum mani padme hum! may liberate from a rebirth in
any of the six realms.
Aum mani padme hum!is used as a support for a special
medita-ion which may, approximately, be described as
follows:
One
identifies the six kinds of beings with the six syllables
which are pictured in their respective colours, as mentioned
above. They form a kind of chain without end that circulates
through the body, carried on by the breath entering through
one nostril and going out through the
other.
As
the concentration of mind becomes more perfect, one sees
men-tally the length of the chain increasing. Now when they
go out with the expiration, the mystic syllables are carried
far away, before being absorbed again with the next
inspiration. Yet, the chain is not broken, it rather
elongates like a rubber strap and always remains in touch
with the man who meditates.
Gradually, also, the shape of the Tibetan letters vanishes
and those who 'obtain the fruit of the practice perceive the
six syllables as six realms in which arise, move, enjoy,
suffer, and pass away the innu-merable beings, belonging to
the six species.
And now it remains for the meditator to realize that the six
realms (the whole phenomenal world) are subjective: a mere
creation of the mind which imagines them and into which they
sink." /
Page
186
"Aum
mani padme hum!is
used as a support for a special medita-ion which may,
approximately, be described as
follows:
One
identifies the six
kinds
of beings with the six
syllables
which are pictured in their respective colours, as mentioned
above.
6
x 6 = 36 3
+ 6 = 9
Number
of letters in the word six = 3
x
six = 9 3 + six = 6
Number
of letters in the word six = 3
x
6 = 18 1 +
8 = 9
"...perceive
the six
syllables as six
realms in which arise, move, enjoy, suffer, and pass away
the innu-merable beings, belonging to the
six
species."
Six
x six x six
6 x 6
x 6
6
x 6 + 36 x 6
= 216 2 + 1 + 6 =
9
6
+ 6 + 6 =
18 Azin
Ra and
the
Eight said
AlizZed
Number
of letters
in 'Aum
mani padme hum'
3
4 5 3
3
x 4 x 5 x 3
180 Azin Ra
and
the
Eight
3
+ 4 + 5 + 3
3
+ 9 + 3
15
1
+ 5
sIX
Where
doesn't that sun get to if not to here, azin there remarked
the scribe
Holy
Bible
Scofield
References
Leviticus
B.C.
1490
1
x 4 x 9
= 36
3
+ 6
= 9
Page
158
Chapter 24
Verse
6
"And
thou shalt set them in two
rows,
six
on a row, upon the pure table before the
LORD.
6
x 6
=
36 3
+ 6 =
9
2
x 6
=
12 1
+ 2 =
3
Who
are you G asked the scribe, the voice
said
I
am the he az in she from out the land of Odd. That's odd
said Alizzed.
This
is all so very odd, writ the scribe oddly
enough.
Revelation.
Chapter 13
A.D.
96
Page 1342
Verse
18
1
+ 8
= 9
"Here
is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the num-ber
of the beast: for it is the number of a man and
his number is
Six
hundred
threescore
and six."
Six
hundred threescore
and six 600
x 60 =
36000 x
6
= 216000
6
x 6 x 6 =
216
6
+ 6 +
6 = 18
Six hundred
threescore
and six
6
x 3 x 6
= 108 Azin
Ra and
the
Eight said
ZedAliz
6
+ 3 + 6
=
15
NUMBERS
Chapter
10
B.C. 1490
1
x 4 x 9 =
36
3
+ 6
= 9
Page
181
1
+ 8 + 1 =10
Verse 33
3
x 3 = 9
"And
they departed from the mount of the Lord
three
days
journey: and the ark of the cove-nant
went before them in the
three
day
journey to search out a resting place for
them."
Three
days x three
day = 9
three
days + three
day = 6
"three
days" x 24 hours
= 72
7 + 2 = 9
"three
day" x 24 hours
= 72
7 + 2 = 9
= 144
1
+ 4 + 4 = 9
Just
and out of interest scribe there
are
9 letters
in
three days and
8 in
three
day
and 9 times,... the scribe writ
72
And
then writ 3 x 12 hours =
36 Just
a minute said AlizZed. After just a minute the scribe, writ
just a minute.
|