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Are the two but one?

 
 
Sat 5 Nov, 2022 08:42 pm
“Ptah is an Egyptian creator god who existed before all other things and, by his will, ‘THOUGHT’ the world into existence. It was first conceived by ‘Thought’ and realized by the Word: He was also regarded as the father of the human sage Imhotep, who was later deified and became a god.

Imhotep was called the “God of Medicine,” “Prince of Peace,” and a “Type of Christ,” as was Melchizedek. Imhotep was worshipped as a god and healer from approximately 2850 B.C. to 525 B.C., and as a full deity from 525 B.C. to 550 A.D. Imhotep was a known scribe, chief lector, priest, architect, astronomer and a creator of drugs and medicines from plants.

For 3000 years he was worshipped as a god in Greece and Rome. Early Christians worshipped him as the “Prince of Peace,” ‘Salem.’ A poet and philosopher, Imhotep coined the saying “Eat, drink and be merry for tomorrow we shall die.

The similarities between Imhotep and Enoch, of who it is said in scripture, was translated in order that he should never experience death, and who, like Imhotep, was chosen as the Son and heir to the throne of ‘The Most-High’ in the creation and also deified and became a god, are so close it is my belief that they are one and the same individual.

Enoch was born in 622 A.M., and was anointed as the heir to the throne of the Most High in the creation when he was 365 in the year 987 A.M., or around 2348 B.C.

In their last Testaments to their children before dying in Egypt, five of the Patriarchs make mention to the recorded words of righteous Enoch.

Jesus and his apostles taught from the words of Enoch and Jude from the family of Mary and the carpenter, quotes verbatim from the book of Enoch the prophet, which was held in great reverence by many of the early church fathers, including, Irenaeus, Origen and Tertullian and was cherished by the early Christians up until the fourth century, when it was banned as being heretical by certain dogmatic authorities of the Roman church of Emperor Constantine such as Jerome, Hilary and Augustine and by the middle of the fifth century about the same time as the demise of the worship of Imhotep, they finally passed out of circulation and were thought lost for Millennia until rediscovered among the “Dead Sea Scrolls,” the first of which were discovered in 1947.
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