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  • It's about moving forward despite your ignorance. Your ignorance offers you resistance, and through resistance, what was once a spark becomes a flame; a flame, a fire; a fire, a star.
    Mars (Andras): What You Might Not Know

    When the infant Romulus, the founder of Rome and son of Mars, was carried off in a basket of reeds down the Tiber River—intended to be drowned—he ended up on a shore beneath the fig tree, Ficus Ruminalis. Unable to care for himself, a she-wolf appeared and nursed him as her own. She was not alone, however; a woodpecker, a bird of prophecy, accompanied her.

    Both the wolf and the woodpecker are sacred animals to Mars. While Mars is commonly associated with war, the woodpecker also signifies his prophetic role. The woodpecker, known for its oracular abilities, was said to land on a sacred wooden pole dedicated to Mars, where it would offer prophecies.

    Moreover, Mars, before his association with the Greek god Ares, was primarily an agricultural deity. In fact, Cato the Elder invokes him as Mars Silvanus in his treatise on agriculture, referring to him as Mars of the Woods (or Mars of the Fields). Additionally, the woodpecker, sacred to Mars, was known as a "doctor" of trees, keeping them healthy and free from disease.

    Later, Romulus was discovered by Faustulus, a swineherd, who took him in and entrusted him to his wife, Larentia, who was also known as Dea Dia, a goddess associated with fertility and agriculture. As Romulus grew, he founded the Arval Brotherhood—a group dedicated to the worship of Dea Dia and agriculturalism. According to Plutarch, only the priests of Mars, however, could officiate the rites dedicated to Larentia.

    A hymn to Mars reads as follows:
    Help us, Lares!
    Marmar, let not plague or ruin attack the multitude.
    Be filled, fierce Mars. Leap the threshold! Halt, wild one.
    By turns, call on all the gods of sowing.
    Help us, Marmor!
    Triumph!


    Marmar is an archaic name for Mars, used in certain hymns. Mars is not only a warrior god; he also drives off ruin and plague, protecting the fields and ensuring fertility. His connection to leaping, seen in both the hymn and his priesthood, reflects the god's dynamic nature—his role in both warfare and the protection of agriculture.

    A common theme in Indo-European mythology is the story of the young man (or men) cast out to find his own way, often leading to the founding of an empire. Mars is the god who rules over these men—those who carve out their own destiny. Strabo recalls that during a famine, the Sabines realized that although they had dedicated their excess crops to Mars the previous year, they had neglected to dedicate their sons to him. To alleviate the famine, they dedicated their young men to Mars and sent them out as colonists. Mars is thus linked not only with warriors but also with the founding of colonies and the alleviation of famine.

    In conclusion, Mars is indeed the god of war, protection, and colonialism. But he is also a god of agriculture, prophecy, and the founding of cities. His multifaceted nature reflects the Romans' deep understanding of the interconnectedness of warfare, survival, and prosperity.

    mars.jpg
    During Returning Curses Part 1, don't try to take too much at once. Let the light take what it takes as it descends, otherwise you may get stuck.
    Carl Jung's spiritual allegiance is an interesting question.

    Superficially, he appears to sympathize with Christianity, but his works are rather non-Christian. Especially his idea of individuation by transformation of the psyche by the self. Thus, eliminating the need for Christ and turning apotheosis from an external cause to an individual cause.

    Aside from this, he dances around alchemy, Paganism, meditation, and yoga.

    I recently read an article that purposes a theory based on some evidence that Carl Jung was in communication and allegiance with the Gnostic God, our God, Lord Abraxas. There were claims he received information from Basilides, an early Gnostic teacher in Alexandria about Occultism through a dream or trance.

    Anyhow, I thought this was interesting because I like to read Jung's works and was always concerned over his apparent Christian sentiment.

    I am not proposing anything concrete.

    https://culturacolectiva.com/en/history/carl-gustav-jung-occultism/
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Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Satan

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