Pyramids like tombs? Churches like tombs!

1 28. 03. 2013
6th international conference of exopolitics, history and spirituality

I have been thinking over the textbook statement for a long time the pyramids served as tombs to the vile Pharaohs. I myself have been to Egypt 3 times and seen the pyramids with my own eyes. I could also touch them and take a closer look. It never seemed to me that I was moving around the cemetery. I had a comparison with the Valley of the Kings, where graves are actually carved into the rocks. That feeling is unmistakable.

The association has attacked me today. When you go to the church, the church is often connected with the cemetery. You must go through a cemetery or at least around a graveyard wall to get to the church itself. The cemetery itself has its unmistakable heavy energy and the church has a completely different atmosphere. Of course, it depends on its overall decoration, its size, and it certainly plays the role of the place where it is built.

Someone may argue that they were buried in the churches and may be buried somewhere today. Many tall dynasties built chapels and crypts directly in the chambers of the churches, or left their wreckage walls in the walls of the church. (An example might be St. Vitus Cathedral at Prague Castle.) However, this phenomenon is only a consequence. The primary purpose of the churches was never to serve as tombs. Trying to be buried as close as possible to the church was (in my opinion) derived from the desire to be near God even after death.

Many churches are the source spiritual forces. Especially those whose architecture is built on the principle of the golden ratio (mainly Gothic buildings). It is similar, in my opinion, with the pyramids. At the beginning, the pyramids served as a source of energy - perhaps spiritual, perhaps electrical, or both. We don't know for sure yet. In any case, the pyramids apparently had a similar power for the people of their time as for many of us churches. With the decline of knowledge and the intention of the original philosophy of the state, a cult was created (let's call it, for example, the "cult of the pyramids"). People resorted to the desire to be buried near and the imaginary light of the pyramids.

In the pyramids, no one was buried. According to current knowledge, a single mummy was not found in one pyramid. Egyptians claim that all the pyramids have been stolen in ancient times. If a mummy finds it, I think it is the same situation as in our churches.

If anyone claims that the primary purpose of the pyramid was to serve as tombs to the venerable pharaohs, then it is the same as if the same one today claimed the churches. Just look in person and try to feel the difference.

 

 

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