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Jung, God, Lucifer, Jesus & the LHP

EtuMalku

Abn Iblis ابن إبليس
According to Jung the four Horsemen of Revelations show us the sinister side of the Abrahamic god. Jung would not consider this god to be a fully conscious being, but rather the unconscious force behind nature.

This corresponds with many LHP's understanding with what the god/myth is, the "natural ordering of the physical (objective) universe."

Jung believes Revelation's visions stem from the collective unconscious of humans, a racial memory of primordial events that all humans sometimes glimpse. This holds well with his theory of archetypal imagery which too holds well with many LHP's.

Lucifer took advantage of God, goading God into treating Job unfairly and immorally. Job, for his part, displayed a greater sense of morality than God did. Jung claims Job showed himself superior to God both intellectually and morally. God then, to expiate this wrongful treatment of Job--and through Job, all humanity--decided to become human and suffer as Job suffered

Now the cool stuff . . .
Jung voiced that "evil was only a semblance of evil, but in reality a bringer of healing and illumination. In fact, the inner voice is a ‘Lucifer' in the strictest and most unequivocal sense of the word, and it faces people with ultimate moral decisions without which they can never achieve full consciousness and become personalities.

Lucifer took advantage of God, goading God into treating Job unfairly and immorally. Job, for his part, displayed a greater sense of morality than God did. Jung claims Job showed himself superior to God both intellectually and morally. God then, to expiate this wrongful treatment of Job--and through Job, all humanity--decided to become human and suffer as Job suffered.

This coincides with the Jesus myth and legend only hinted at in the biblical scriptures yet made clear in the Gnostic Gospels from Nag Hammadi.
Testimonial of Truth:
"the God whom most Christians worship, the God of the Hebrew Bible, is 'himself' one of the fallen angels, from whose tyranny Christ came to set human beings free. It reveals truth only when one reads it in reverse, recognizing that God is actually the villain, and the Serpent (Lucifer) the holy one."

Jung views the woman of Rev. 12 (the woman clothed with the sun and standing on the moon) as a pre-Christian, pre-Yahwist image stemming from human collective unconscious. This image portends the birth of a divine child . . . the ability for Man to be Self-Deified.

Jung identifies the woman as "anima mundi" (earth's soul), a peer of primordial cosmic man. She is in a perennial process of birth that has occurred over and over again throughout history. Briefly stated we are becoming more and more aware of the God that is within us through a birthing of what was in the unconscious bursting forth into our consciousness. Jung's main theme is God's repressed hostility due to God's unbending and amoral interaction with the universe.
 
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