Q a Legend

And thou shalt observe the feast of weeks, of the firstfruits of wheat harvest, and the feast of ingathering at the year's end

Exodus 34.22

And God called the dry land Earth; and the gathering together of the waters called he Seas: and God saw that it was good.

Genesis 1.10

The prime Number 151 relates to the People of God who are gathered together by the Holy Spirit. This pattern first emerges from the Days of Creation where God gathers the Waters on the Third Day. The Waters represent "peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and tongues" (cf. Rev. 17.15). They were divided on the Second Day and gathered on the Third. This reveals the character of Christ who "came with a sword (image of division, cf. Matt. 10.34) and whose name divides all the peoples of the world, and the character of the Holy Spirit who gathers the people of God. The Number 3 - the fundamental Number of God's Spirit - is used of God to refer to the People of God gathered by His Spirit. Thus the first reference to the People of God in the Psalms is found in Psalm 3, and in Zechariah, God divides all the world into two thirds who perish and one third who will go through the fire and be tried and become His People.

The Gathering of Water spoken of on the Third Day is the Miqvah - which is also the Jewish word for Baptism. Thus we have an extremely deep integration of the symbols of Water as Spirit/People of God and Gathering/Baptism which then ultimately unites into the image of the People of God gathered and baptized by the Holy Spirit.

This number also manifests in the nominitive phrase "The Body of Jesus" = 2869 = 19 (Physical Manifestion) x 151 (The People of God).

Source

AF means first. RA is the sun. KA is the soul. AFRAKA.

The 42 accessors, the Principles of Ma'at, or the Negative Confessions. Interestingly, there are 8 other figures in the picture. I believe the figure at the top is Sekhmet, the original Eye of Ra. The other six are Isis, Nephthys, the scribe Ani with Osiris, Anubis, Ammit, and Thoth, for a total of 50.

Sekhmet - She is often represented as a woman wearing a red dress with the head of a lioness wearing a sun disc circled by a cobra on her head. She often holds the ankh – the symbol of life, when seated. When standing or striding, she is seen holding the papyrus specter symbolizing Lower Egypt. However, some scholars believe that she was a deity introduced to Egypt from Sudan because lions are plenty in that area.

As a sun goddess, she is connected with the scorching, searing and burning heat of the sun. In this aspect, she was known by another name, Nesert that literally means flame. This sealed her fate as a terrifying goddess. Her title as the Red Lady associated her with desert where the heat of the sun reigns.

It is my observation that this could be the taken as the lid of the ark: a winged sun goddess Sekhmet (the sun goddess) surrounded by the feathers (or wings) of truth (Ma'at) and that the 42 principles of Ma'at ARE the ark of the covenant - which contain the 10 commandments.

Laodicea on the Lycus

The Seven Churches of Revelation

Phyrigian caps

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