06 August 2023

Adam Kadmon

The first chapter in the book of Genesis mentions that Elohim created the earthly realm, as well as men & women in their image. Cuneiform tablets mention Enlil as separator of heaven & earth, as well as being creator of plant & animal life, but Enki is credited as the creator of mankind: Do these tablets confirm the polytheistic situation on the first pages of the Bible?

Those Anunnaki seem to have been interested in mining gold, which they mainly found in the far south of Africa, where the research of Michael Tellinger suggests the regional stone ruins to be remnants of the oldest known civilization, whose artwork seems to have been inherited by Sumer & Egypt. His conclusion corresponds with the research of Zecharia Sitchin, who claims those aliens arrived around that time. Being annoyed of working, a decision was made to create a terrestrial labor force:

  • Do cultural depictions of mixed creatures hint to genetic engineering in the quest for an optimal specie?
  • Is the noncoding DNA in Homo Sapiens actually desactivated divine genome?

The writers of Enuma Elish later adapted the story, wherein Marduk is portrayed as union of Enlil & Enki: He beats the Igigi, who look like Nāga & were led by Kingu, whose blood & brain were mixed with clay to create Adapa, what might be an attempt to explain the evil part present in people. As possible duplicate of Nimrod, he might have created the Tower of Babel in the Garden of Eden: Is he the monotheistic character on the following pages of the Bible?

The second chapter in the book of Genesis indeed mentions one God, who first created a man out of clay, followed by a woman out of one of his ribs. The confusion with its first chapter contributed to the emergence of the story of Lilith: Created out of loam, she disobeyed Adam & even married Ahriman. Disguised as a Nāgi, she revisited the so called paradise to offer the Forbidden Fruit. Although depicted as evil by Yahweh, her role mirrors Enki, but she rather resembles Inanna: Is she a possible duplicate of Ishtar?

The first chapter in the book of Genesis was interpreted by the philosophers of Kabbalah as God creating an androgynous being of light in the spiritual world, out of a vacuum He caused within the infinite light: Might the idea of a universe existing within a multiverse have originated here?