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Serapis - a link to Imhotep

Imhotep:

Serapis - a link to Imhotep

First Ray - Red Ray - Root Charka - Ascension and Initiations - Kundalini

The Master Serapis holds the ascension door open at the Temple of Ascension on the etheric level in Luxor, Egypt.

He was the Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep III, c. 1417-1379 BC called "the Magnificent." He brought Egypt to its height of diplomatic prestige, prosperity and peace. His extensive building of monuments, palaces and temples included construction of the temple of Luxor, which was built to correspond to the outline of the human skeletal framework. Careful studies of its architecture have revealed that the entire temple explains many secret functions of the organs and nerve centers.

Serapis was also embodied as Leonidas, king of Sparta. In about 480 b.c., with only 300 soldiers, he resisted the advance of Xerxes' vast Persian army in a Herculean effort at Thermopylae. Though finally defeated, their fight to the last man is celebrated in literature as the epitome of heroism in the face of overwhelming odds.

Serapis was embodied as a high priest in the ascension temple on Atlantis more than 11,500 years ago.

In the nineteenth century, Serapis Bey worked closely with St. Germain, El Morya, Kuthumi, Djwal Kul and other Masters to found the Theosophical Society - Madame Blatvatsy

Serapis Bey allegedly ascended in about 400 BC.

Serapis - A Historical Profile

Greek-Egyptian god, also called Sarapis, who was created by Ptolemy I out of Osiris and Apis to protect the Greek immigrants of Egypt, especially Alexandria.

Serapis was a god of the underworld, with similarities to Hades and Dionysus. He was married to
Isis, and connected to medicine and healing.

 

God of ancient Egypt religion and Greek religion. Serapis was often associated with gods like Orisis, but mainly he was thought of as a human representation of Apis. His roles were being a god of fertility and of the dead in the region of Tartarus.

The cult of Serapis was the one of Ancient Egyptian religion that survived the longest into the Greek and Roman periods, even if it was in an altered religion that was heavily influenced by Greek religion. At his temple, the Sarapeum in Alexandria, he was represented as a robed and bearded figure, with a three-headed dog at his right hand, and a sceptre in his left hand. In this role he was a sun god, and a god of fertility and healing. 

Serapis became a god revered all around the Mediterranean Sea, and he even played a role with Gnostic, where he became a symbol of the universal god. It was the destruction of Sarapeum in Alexandria in 391 CE that marked the end of his cult, as well as Ancient Egyptian religion.

Serapis was especially worshipped as a god of healing, and his temples were connected with dream-oracles that were much resorted for such purpose. This is a direct connection to Imhotep who also was a human deity that was known to be a keeper of the master secrets, namely: healing, medicine, science, math and architecure, as well as the dream-oracle.  Imhotep was the only human that was raised to the level of a God and displaced the son of Ptah, forming a new triad. Both Ascelpius and Imhotep have been related to Serapis. It is in this more esoteric understanding that we can see the model for humans to become annoited into a higher divine consciousness within the mystery schools. 

 

 

Noteworthy comments:

 

" Serapis was a composite of several Egyptian and Hellenistic deities who was introduced to the world at the beginning of the Ptolemaic Period in Egypt during the reign of Ptolemy I, though his legacy lasted well into the Roman period. He was meant to form a bridge between the Greek and Egyptian religions, so that both the Egyptians and Greeks could find union in a specific supreme entity." Jefferson Monet

 

" In the city on the borders of Egypt which boasts Alexander of Macedonia as its founder, Serapis and Isis are worshipped with a reverence that is almost fanatical." Macrobius

 

" Syncretic god worshipped as a supreme deity in Egypt to the end of the 4th century A.D. The highly popular cult Serapis used many trappings that were later adopted by Christians: chants, lights, bells, vestments, processions, and music. Serapis represented a final transformation of the savior Osiris into a monotheistic figure, virtually identical to the Christian god... This Ptolemaic god was a combination of Osiris and Apis... As Christ was a sacrificial lamb, so Serapis was a sacrificial bull as well as god in human form. He was annually sacrificed in atonement for the sins of Egypt."  Barbara Walker

 

" The catacombs of Rome are crowded with illustrations that were reproduced as Egypto-gnostic tenets, doctrines, and dogmas which served to Persian, Greek, Roman, and Jew as evidence of the non-historic origins of Christianity. In the transition from the old Egyptian religion to the new Cult of Christianity there was no factor of profounder importance than the worship of Serapis. As the Emperor Hadrian relates, in his letter to Servianus, "Those who worship Serapis are likewise Christians: even those who style themselves as the Bishops of Christ are devoted to Serapis". - Albert Churchward

 

"...the mysteries of Isis and Serapis, which were models of those of Eleusis and Samothrace, are part of Masonry."   Godfrey Higgins

 

See  more information at our sister site here  gnosticmystics.wetpaint.com/page/Serapis+-+a+link+to+Imhotep

The Author

mathues kumaraI am a Networker at heart, a visionary that see the bigger picture, a leader, and an individual who is willing to be of assistance for the cause that are close to my heart. You can also see my extended profile at http://saintiam.wetpaint.com/account/mathues ... (Full Bio)

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