"As above, so below" is an aphorism so popular with satanic secret societies that it has its own Wikipedia entry.
The site informs, "The Message, intended as a "version of the New Testament in a contemporary idiom",[2] uses the maxim in its translation of the Lord's Prayer from Matthew 6:10. (The prayer's phrase is traditionally rendered "on earth, as it is in heaven".)Wikipedia reveals, "The phrase derives from a passage in the Emerald Tablet (variously attributed to Hermes Trismegistus or Pseudo-Apollonius of Tyana). The 16th-century scholar Chrysogonus Polydorus provides the following version translated from the original Arabic into Latin:
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Here's an article from Washington Monthly (one that I by no means endorse but shows the worship of Greek gods so prevalent today in Washington, D.C., Trump being no exception as he is a worshipper of Apollo by his own admission--look at pictures of his 5th Avenue Manhattan penthouse if you need further proof) that was published in 2017:
Hermes wears winged sandals because he’s in a hurry. Messenger of the gods, he is a communicator. The Lord of Liars, Hermes is patron of both merchants and thieves because all sales contain a bit of thievery, right? Liar, merchant, thief, improviser, media-savant. Sound familiar?
But Hermes is a culture-bearer who brings fire to humanity and invents rituals to honor the gods (creating Hellenic culture). The more extreme Trickster Dionysus doesn’t just push, he shreds the envelope. He promises a new order but mostly brings chaos. In Euripides’s Bacchae, Dionysus incites his followers to tear limb from limb the hyper-rational Theban king Pentheus—Obama? Hillary?—and the play ends without order restored.
As bringer-of-chaos, Trump seems also to be channeling Hermes’s more destructive cousin Dionysus. The god of intoxication and ecstasy, Dionysus embodies and offers his followers the transformation of individual identity. Worshipped directly in nature without the mediation of a priesthood, he is the god of the people (and hence of demagogues). Dionysus fulfills our longing for transcendence, or, in political terms, our longing for change. Sound familiar?
Trump is following patterns associated with the cult of Dionysus. The cult flourished for a thousand years until the triumph of Christianity, but Dionysian longings for transcendence have outlived his cult. When Trump’s followers assert their indifference to his (many) imperfections and, despite all evidence to the contrary, trust he will deliver on his promises, that’s Dionysian intoxication.
As an enemy to autocrats like Pentheus, Dionysus’s initial appeal is democratic and egalitarian. But as a matter of historical fact, Dionysus is associated with tyranny. Aspiring tyrants in antiquity aligned themselves with Dionysus to challenge the reigning hierarchies: in other words, to drain their swamps.
All Rome welcomed Mark Antony as Dionysus who then transformed Rome’s oligarchy into an autocratic empire. Caligula and Nero, renowned for their sadism, extravagance, and sexual perversity, paraded as the “new Dionysus.” Perhaps tweeting is the new fiddling. Trump’s “identification” with the Dionysus archetype explains his allure and rise to power. Like Dionysus, Trump seems determined to break every rule and overturn every norm. In 2014, he imagined apocalypse as the solution to the country’s ills: “When the economy crashes, when the country goes to total hell and everything is a disaster. Then you’ll have a [chuckles], you know, you’ll have riots to go back to where we used to be when we were great.”
[12] For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.
"When he talks about high places, he's not talking about state government; he's talking about the heavenly places," explains Jordan.
"Four times in Ephesians the phrase 'heavenly places' occurs and this time it's translated 'high places.' There's a reason for that even though they're talking about the same thing.
"We're fighting against the principalities and powers in that invisible realm of the heavenly government because those are the ones we're going to dispossess and they don't want to give up their positions; they're going to fight against the people designed to take their position.
"Appreciate as we get into this the reality of it. Paul believed in a personal prince of evil; a real policy of evil that the Adversary has. Satan is not just an evil force like Darth Vader. Most of Christendom doesn't believe there's a real personal Satan.
"Satan is a supernatural spirit being who has a mind that plots and strategizes. He's 'the god of this world,' but he's a little 'g' god. He's just a pretender; he's not omniscient. However, there's a real, highly strategized plan by an Adversary who wants to take over and destroy your life and what God wants to do with you in the ages to come.
"Ephesians 6 goes on, [13] Wherefore take unto you the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand.
[14] Stand therefore, having your loins girt about with truth, and having on the breastplate of righteousness;
[15] And your feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace;
[16] Above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked.
[17] And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God:
"It's always struck me--if you got a breastplate, how do you wrestle? The idea in a soldier is, 'If I can kill the enemy over yonder I'd like to do that because the further away I can kill him the safer I am.' That's why they bomb from artillery 30,000 feet up.
"Wrestling is close-in conflict; it's not remote. It's an up-close, hand-to-hand struggle against a cunning opponent who knows the tricks of the trade of warfare. He knows how to use you against you. It's not just a battle in the physical realm; it's a battle in the spiritual realm."
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