Sacred Geometry and Spiritual Symbolism by Donald B. Carroll

Sacred Geometry and Spiritual Symbolism by Donald B. Carroll

Author:Donald B. Carroll
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: A.R.E. Press


Fig. 11.1—Satellite Dish

Fig. 11.2—Eucharist Communion

Additionally the number 7 was important not only in Egypt and other cultures, but also in early Eucharistic traditions and was incorporated in the rite. It is similar to the significance of 7 in chakras and the sine (.777) of the Great Pyramid and its meaning of the cross to the Coptic Gnostics.

In this, as in all Eucharistic frescoes, the symbol of Communion appears in close proximity with a baptismal symbol…The number of guests in all symbolical repasts of the Eucharist is invariably seven, a peculiarity which Wilpert regards as due to the early Christian fondness for the symbolism of numbers. According to St. Augustine (Tract. cxxiii, in Joan.), the number seven represented the totality of the Christian world.5

At such a site of initiation, such as the Great Pyramid, a place both for a spiritual baptism and to commune with God through one's higher self, it could be expected that its entire design and symbolism would be made to invoke its exact purpose. This would include not only its symbolic shape but also the units of measurement and numbers used in its construction where such symbolic numbers would be derived. The units of measures used could be expected to have significance in their derivation.

The Cayce readings relating to Egypt that deal with some of its temples and pyramids indicate a specific unit of measurement used in their design and construction. This unit of measurement was identified as having a length as 27.5 inches (69.85 centimeters).



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.