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THE TREE OF LIFE "In the Beginning, God created the heavens and the earth" according to the Book of Genesis. Several creation stories start out in the same vein. The words are different, but the concept is the same. Some say God first created the light and the dark. Others say the first creation was male and female, masculine and feminine energies. The Heavens are boundless, endless. They go on forever. Earth is bounded, finite. It's a definite thing and well-defined.The more we study the early creation stories, the more we become convinced the first creation was to create matter and energy. According to Einstein's Theory of Relativity, matter and energy are two different expressions of the same thing. Matter and energy can each be converted into the other. More than that, everything in the whole known Universe is either matter or energy and the sum total of all the matter and all the energy is the Universe. This sounds like: "In the beginning was God, and God thought about matter and energy and God was matter and energy." All the matter and energy that ever was or ever will be is here now, and all that matter and energy is The Creator. The Creator is probably more than all the matter and energy, but all that matter and energy are The Creator. There's nothing in this story to tell us which came first, matter or energy. Consequently every religion has a theory based on the major culture of that religion. Christianity teaches man came first. So do all the major Western religions. Most Pagans believe the All-Mother, or Great Mother came first. Gnostics are not in agreement about this either. Some are in the "Man-came-first" camp while others stand firm knowing "Woman-came-first." Science says they came together, one cannot exist without the other. The Big Bang started out as a point of combined mass and energy and the energy of that primal explosion is still propelling that matter through space. Matter and energy work together. You can't have one without the other. They both live and act together within The Creator and they are The Creator. Energy is boundless force and it expands forever. This isthe "Heaven" of the first creation. This is the masculine principle called "Force." Matter is form. It restricts and confines energy. This is the "Earth" of the first creation. This is the feminine principle called "Form." The Creator is both form and force, matter and energy, masculine and feminine. All the matter and energy, force and form, are The Creator but the Creatoris more than just that. Most of the ancient writings
about the creation allude to the male and female archetypes rather than
explicitly naming them. For example, Genesis refers to this phase of
creation as "God created the heavens and the earth." The
Jerusalem Talmud explains this as a process of the one Creator God dividing
Itself into two things of opposite polarity. Usually this is explained as
being the Void which is of negative polarity and the Substance. Christian
theologians consider the Angelic World to be the Heavens and Manifestation to be
the Earth. Eastern philosophers look at
creation in very much the same way. Brahman, the one Creator God, became
theMale and theFemale principle without diminishing Brahman.
In thisphilosophy the One became Three in One. That's pretty close to
theWestern concept of the Trinity. The Two, male and female, cannot
exist without the One, but the One is self-existent with or without the Two. The other interesting thing
about the Two is that one cannot exist without the other. The Male
Archetype cannot exist without both the Creator Archetype and the Female
Archetype. The Female Archetype cannot exist without both the Creator
Archetype and the Male Archetype. The Creator Archetype can exist with or
without the Male and Female Archetypes. In many religions, the GreatMother
gave birth to her husband and together they gave birth to all that exists.
In others, the male came first as in thestory of Adam and Eve. In
the Qabalah, the Creator (which may be called the Great Mother or the Great
Father) came first. The Creator separated Itself into two parts while
retaining the whole of Itself. These two parts are the Mother of All
Things and the Father ofAll Things. They are theLight and the
Darkness, the Positive and the Negative, the Male and the Female Principles, the
Male and Female Archetypes. There really is no discussion
about which came first, the man or the woman. The answer, accordingto
the Qabalah,is they came together. One Archetype cannot exist
without the other. They are opposites, and when they come together they
are The Creator. But the mystery is that even if they don't come together,
the Creator exists in Its fullness and is not diminished in any way. The Great Mystery has a very
simple explanation. If the Male and Female Archetypes exist in the Mind of
the Creator, then it makes sense that the Creator is not diminished. If
the Mind of the Creator is that which gets divided, then it makes sense thatneither
the Male or FemaleArchetype can exist without the other. These
Archetypes are opposites and to think of the attributes of one is to define the
attributes of the other. The Creator is The One Mind and
creation is in the Mind of the Creator. That's the great secret of all the Western and
Eastern Mysteries. Everything is Mind. Everything is The Creator.
Nothing exists outside the Mind of the Creator. Everything exists within
the Mind of the Creator. We are all brothers and sisters in the creation
of all that exists. We're all in this same Mind together. We're all
interconnected not only to our friends but to our enemies. We're connected
to all the plants, animals and minerals in this world. Everything is The
Creator. The Creator is
unconditional love, all knowing, all powerful, present everywhere and in all
things. This is the archetype that is The Creator. It's the root of the Air Element. The Father archetype is
outgoing energy that moves away from the source.
It expands in all directions as it moves.
This energy is a force that moves things.
Because it moves, we call it positive. The Father archetype is all about intention, the desire to do
something, the ability to conceive it, the resolve to do it and the energy to
finish what is started. It's the
root of the Fire Element. The Mother Archetype is
ingoing and does not move. It is
inert but collects energy inside itself. It's
a form that contains things, and because of this we call it negative. The Mother Archetype is all about
receptivity, the capacity to feel it, the inertia to contain it, the ability to
remember it and the ability to love it forever. Mother is the root of the Water Element. On the Tree of Life, the
Creator occupies the top-most sphere. All
energy moving down through the Tree of Life originates in this top-most sphere. The Father Archetype occupies sphere number two on the right-hand side of the
Tree of Life as you're looking at the Tree.
The Mother Archetype occupies sphere number three on the left-hand side
of the Tree of Life as you're looking
at the Tree. These two spheres are
located below the first sphere. All
three are interconnected so as to form a triangle with The Creator Archetype at
the top. The sphere for Father is
called Intention (Chokmah) and the one for Mother is called Belief (Binah). This triangle is called
the Triangle of Air. It's also
called the World of Air because everything in this world is thoughts and ideas. Nothing else exists in this world except
thoughts and ideas. It's the Archetypal World or
the World of Archetypes. It's
also called the Spiritual Triangle among several dozen other names. Some authors consider the
Archetypal World to be the Trinity of God the Creator, Father God and Mother
God. In Christian Gnosticism this trinity is often called
Father-Mother-Creator God or Creator-Father-Mother God.
It's also called Creator-Mother-Father God. The three spheres in this triad can therefore be labeled
Creator God, Father God and Mother God in that order. The Creator Archetype, Father Archetype and Mother
Archetype is another way of saying the same thing as is Creator-Male-Female
Archetypes. Awareness, Intention and Belief are the definitions of these
three concepts. Several authors assign
different Judeo-Christian God names to these spheres. The most common assignment of Divine Names is Eheieh to Kether (Creator), Yah to Chokmah
(Father) and Yod Hey Vav Hey Elohim to Binah
(Mother). Eheieh is often
translated as "I am That I am" or as "I am What I am." Yah is Father God, Yod Hey Vav Hey is
the Tetragrammaton normally rendered as Jehovah or Yahweh, and Elohim is Father
and Mother God. Some claim Elohim
is a singular male God and plural female Goddesses. Your assignment, should you decide to experiment with the World of Archetypes, is to assign one God or Goddess from the pantheon of your choice to each of the spheres in this trinity. It's important to preserve the sequence of Creator-Male-Female Archetype for these first three spheres. But the name of the Deity assigned to each is entirely up to you. [ Part Three ] |
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