11-16-2015, 04:48 PM
(11-11-2015, 05:22 PM)isis Wrote: I love history. So long as the record-keeping gets done, renaming something can only ever actually be adding a new name to it &, consequently, not erasing the soul or w/e I guess.
The way I see it, refer to Egypt as "Kemet" if you want bc a quick googling of the word Kemet will let someone know what's being referred to if they don't know. (& if they don't have the net you'd just have to do a little splainin'.)
I learned a neat fact the other day that's kinda relevant:
We don't actually know who named Earth.
http://www.livescience.com/32274-how-did...-name.html
I am a lover too, of history.
I agree that soul's are not erased as a consequence of renaming, or striking a name from the record (though the latter is an effective way to make someone feel really bad), but at the same time I don't think that all names are equal, or just an arbitrary shuffling of letters into sounds.
Different names have different meanings, and perhaps an earlier or original name more closely matched the vibration/essence of that which had been named.
For instance, Native American names of places and features probably, generally, match the vibration of that place better than the English overwrites. Though if the English name is "large canyon wall under which flows a river that discharges ten thousand gallons per minute," then perhaps the English is the more accurate.
Also, there seems to be something metaphysical about naming. Consider:
Quote:85.7 Questioner: What would the difference be?
Ra: I am Ra. If one wishes to have power over an entity it is an aid to know that entity’s name. If one wishes no power over an entity but wishes to collect that entity into the very heart of one’s own being it is well to forget the naming. Both processes are magically viable. Each is polarized in a specific way. It is your choice.
How and whether that applies to this situation, I don't know.
I wasn't saying that Carla knew Egypt's original name, but Ra definitely knew what it was. Surprising that they used Jesus' actual name but didn't use Egypt's.
The nuanced point that I was, however, trying to make was that He was the original Egyptian:
![[Image: Kermit_contemplating.png]](http://s9.postimg.org/encc5l15r/Kermit_contemplating.png)
Also, "Earth" in the Zulu language is "Umhlaba."
Explanation by the tongue makes most things clear, but love unexplained is clearer. - Rumi