Mankind is
ever on the search for the "truth" of all things. It
is seen in the types of churches that are supported, the movies
that are frequented and the books published. Never more than at
the present time has the human species felt itself at the brink
of something so grand, so immense and so frightening that it is
heightened its exploration of all possible venues for answers.
In this light,
we see a renewed interest in translations of the Bible, astronomy,
astrology, New Age concepts (which are really Old Age knowledge),
ancient texts unearthed and previously ignored by the majority
and a host of previously forbidden subjects. Mankind is persistent
and relentless in its pursuit for a belief system upon which it
can hang its hat.
Can the ancient
texts help us find a solution to the ageless question? Did not
the Anunnaki question their origins? Did they not have a concept
of God? If we are to believe that the Anunnaki created mankind
as we know it, do the creators not need a creator, also? Perhaps
a closer look at the Bible will provide an answer.
In Psalms
95:3, we read that Yahweh was a "great God, a great king
over all of the Elohim". "Before the Elohim upon Olam
He sat," recites Psalm 61:8. Yahweh was on Olam/Nibiru before
the Anunnaki were created in the same manner that they were on
earth before Adam was created.
The Anunnaki
appeared to have very long life spans boarding on immortality
due to the fact that one year on Nibiru equaled 3,600 earth years.
This length of time is long enough to create the illusion of a
godlike people who live forever to those generations who would
live and die on earth in the presence of the same Anunnaki. The
Psalms recognize a measure of time known as "days of Olam"
and "years of Olam" versus days of earth or years of
earth. Yet it was also recognized that the Elohim were not immortal
and Yahweh was, as stated in Psalm 82: "I have said, ye are
Elohim, all of you sons of the Most High; But ye shall die as
men do, like any prince ye shall fall."
Modern research
is revealing that the Bible as we know it today begins with an
incorrect letter beginning the first verse. The manner in which
we accept our Bible today allows for the beginning verse to start
with the word "Breshit", using the second letter of
the alphabet to begin the common translation, "In the beginning
God created the Heaven and the Earth". If the first letter
of the alphabet, Aleph, were to be used, the beginning sentence
would read, "The Father-of-Beginning created the Elohim,
the Heavens, and the Earth" - "Ab-Reshit, the Father
of the Beginning". And so Yahweh would be telling mankind
that It IS and WAS from the before the beginning.
Perhaps the
Bible was changed before it was known as our modern book of origin
when the original translation of the first five books (the Torah)
were edited. It is well-known that the Anunnaki Marduk considered
himself to be immortal. Perhaps the change to the second letter
creating the opening word of the Bible "Breshit" was
done to be politically correct.
|