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Egyptian Mythos and the Law of One — Ra Contact Presentation

Egyptian Mythos and the Law of One — Ra Contact Presentation

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Tim takes us on a journey from the tomb complex of Ramses II to the spiraling arms of the Milky Way, tracing the threads that connect ancient Egyptian mythology with the Law of One. Beginning with an inscription found in the world's oldest known library — Psyches Iatreion, "The House of Healing for the Soul" — Tim explores Ra's stated purpose in coming to Earth: the healing of mind/body/spirit complex distortions. That word, distortions, becomes the interpretive key. Ra didn't come to fix something broken in us. They came to address the warping, the misalignment — a distinction Tim unpacks with a lawyer's eye for language and a seeker's heart.

From there, Tim walks us through Ra's contact with the wanderer-pharaoh Akhenaten, the Trinitarian faces of Ra (Khepri the scarab at dawn, Ra the falcon at zenith, Atum the human at dusk), and the eternal nightly battle between Ra and the great serpent Apophis — chaos personified, endlessly regenerating, never fully vanquished. Through stunning Egyptian art and reliefs, Tim reveals how Apophis coils around canopic jars, boxes in Ra's light on all sides, and mirrors the spiral of the galaxy itself. The way up, it turns out, has always been through descent.

The group discussion opens into rich territory: the ankh as the archetype of archetypes (dying and rising, loss and renewal), the universality of serpent symbolism across cultures, and Tim's memorable metaphor for the Law of One as a "hairnet" — holding together Steiner, Jung, Eastern philosophy, process theology, and a Mormon upbringing without forcing any of them into a rigid mold. His wife's grounding question echoes through the evening: How has this made you more loving?

Key Ra Material references: Sessions 2.2, 14.23, 14.26, 23.6, 1.5

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