Master Teachers

Friday 8 May 2009

What did Kemetic people believe ?

Some of this stuff may seem similar to you, well that's because modern day religions have plagiarised, this is their source. If your religious, then in truth your really following watered down twisted versions of ancient Kemetic practices, don't forget you always end your prayers with Amen (Amen-Ra), and you also believe ISRAEL is God's chosen land... well IS-RA-EL = ISIS - Amen Ra - EL = The holy Mother - The Most High - The most high with us (Kemetic Concept) This is no coincident

It is about living a successful, glorious and peaceful life. They believe the purpose of our existence is to develop our Spiritual Selves, in ways that gives full expression to our Divine Power through the integration and balancing of all aspects of our Spiritual Selves, and the harmonizing of our relationships to the world and nature. The goal is to create "Unity Within Diversity". The statement "As Above; So Below" refers to the fact that the Objective (material world) is a reflection of the Subjective (inner world). It has been referred to as magic, and miracles in the Objective World, which are expressions of the Spiritual Power manifesting in the Objective World. When this power is misused, that is, not wielded with the idea of creating "Unity Within Diversity" then disease, war, discord occurs in the world.

We are all manifestations of a transcendent force: the Mother/Father God, and we are all connected, and powerful. The purpose of spiritual cultivation on all levels is to reveal the unity in diversity on all levels, and thus create peace within the individual, and in the world. The purpose also was to create Maat (balance, harmony, justice, righteousness, reciprocity, and order). These are the key concepts in any ethical system, and they emerged first within the ancient Nile Valley of Africa.
Ptah-Hotep & the Instruction of Ke'Gemni:

The Oldest Books in the World



6th Dynasty (2300 to 2150 BCE.) Ancient African Wisdom.

Ptah-hotep served during the reign of Izezi as a sage. His maxims are in the Prisse Papyrus which are in the Louvre. Another copy of these is in the British Museum. In these maxims, he has told his fellow Kemetian to conduct their affairs in a quiet and righteous manner. He encouraged them to be truthful and be kind and tolerant to their neighbors and fellow countrymen.

Kemetic Religion
Oldest religion in the world
Ankh : The Original Cross
Book of the Dead of Maiherperi

The Judgment of the Dead



(1427-1392 BCE)



The "Declaration of Innocence" had to be said by the deceased in the "Hall of Justice" descending to the broad "Hall of Two Truths", purging all the forbidden things he/she has done in order to be purified, and be allowed Rebirth. If the heart failed the test it was thrown to the Ammut "the Eater of Souls".



There were forty-two Confessions with forty-two judges. One must pass these confessions after practicing holiness to achieve an acceptable death of immortality. These "Confessions" is one of the most distinctive, innovative and best known features of the Book of the Dead. These forty-two declarations were found on papyrus in the tomb of the Nubian Maiherperi of the 18th Dynasty.

Maat Hotep

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