Thulean Archives

Hebrew vs European (World View)

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DescriptionSource: The full study: https://www.physiology.org/doi/pdf/10.1152/physrev.00029.2015

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Uploaded2018-06-10
So why is it Völuspá has been interpreted as a prophecy of Armageddon and a creation myth? Let's find out. The Christians who rediscovered the Norse mythology in the 19th century felt that in order to be a proper mythology, it had to have two things. A myth about the Armageddon and a creation myth. Therefore, when they looked into the Norse mythology, they interpreted Völuspá as being just that. When I wrote this book in 1998, I kind of parroted that scholarly idea of Völuspá being a Ragnarök and a creation myth. But I grew wiser. So when I wrote this book some years later, I had realized and I prove here in this book that Völuspá is not a creation myth and Ragnarök is not about Armageddon. Ironically, this one is my best mythology book of these three, and this is actually just a role-playing game. But if you go to the religion or the high festival section of this book, you will find a much more correct and proper interpretation of Völuspá, or what you can find in Völuspá. As I show in this book, Völuspá is not at all a creation myth. Also, Ragnarök is not at all about Armageddon. It's a yearly event that we celebrate today as the New Year's Eve. And in a more metaphysical sense, it's something the kids had to go through ritually in order to be reborn, which of course is exactly what the deities are in Ragnarök. They die so that they can be reborn. They are killed so that they can come back, return. The reason why it's called Völuspá, which means "The prophecy of the sorcerers", you could say, is that the sorcerers were midwives. And when a child is born, the placenta[1] it comes out and you can actually look at the placenta and you can see whether or not the child will have health issues. You can actually diagnose future diseases[2] of the child. You can find its weaknesses and its strength by looking at how the placenta is. If it's thick, if it's thin, if it's shaped like this or that and so forth. And that's why these midwives were called prophets. Völva means a round staff, which of course is what the[3] fairies use in the fairy tales. And in Christian times, the fairies, that would be the midwives, were accused of being responsible for these weaknesses that the child would have. But in reality, they just were able to predict the weaknesses of the child and the strengths, because they could study the placenta.[4] Völuspá is describing a reincarnation process. And the Ragnarök described in Völuspá is part of that. It's a part of the reincarnation of the gods in us. The concept of a creation myth is in itself extremely un-pagan and extremely Judeo-Christian, because in Judeo-Christianity the worldview is a linear. It has a start and a finish, an end. Creation and Armageddon. However, in pagan worldviews it's circular. And as you know, a circle has no beginning and no end. There is no creation myth in any pagan mythologies. There is no Armageddon myth in any pagan mythology. Those who believe that simply don't understand the mythology that they're reading.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
  1. The World Tree, with Branches and Roots.
  2. See link to resent studies in the video description.
  3. Norse norn: "prophet". Norse völva: "prophet", originally "wand".
  4. The World Tree. The Tree of Life.
  5. Ragnarök when translated as "The Twilight of the Gods" is just one of many possible translations.
  6. They used only that translation because it fitted their Judeo-Christian agenda.
  7. Ragnarök from: Norse ragna, genitive of regin, meaning "powers", "gods".
  8. Ragnarök from: Norse rök; meaning "development "origin", "cause", "reason' "testimony", "sign", "events", "destiny" "end".
  9. Ragnarök is not just the end of the gods, but also their development and meaning. Their REINCARNATION.
  10. And this is an ANNUAL high festival, that we STILL celebrate as "The New Year's Eve".
  11. Stop thinking like a life-hating Hebrew sulphur preacher! The world is not coming to an end! There is no "Armageddon".
  12. The European world view is positive, happy and life-embracing, not an excuse to give up or surrender to degeneracy.
  13. HailaR WôðanaR!