Genesis 3:10

Science Rendition

And the dynamic aspect of the ADM-ic mind and consciousness hearkened unto the sound of the creative essence of the progressively expanding power complex in the organic sphere and rayed outwardly because of the ascension of the inner ardour, fire hidden mysteriously within, a power of desire and resonance.

KJV: And he said, I heard thy voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself.

Key Words: GN YRA ERM CHBA


Y-R-A – ‘raying outward, upward’

3372. yare, yaw-ray´; a primitive root; to fear; morally, to revere; caus. to frighten:—affright, be (make) afraid, dread(-ful), (put in) fear(-ful, -fully, -ing), (be had in) reverence(-end), x see, terrible (act, -ness, thing).

3371. yare, yaw-ray´; from 3372; fearing; morally, reverent:—afraid, fear (-ful).

RA The sign of movement proper united to that of power, forms a root characterized hieroglyphically by the geometric radius; that is to say, by that kind of straight line which departing from the centre converges at any point whatsoever of the circumference: it is, in a very restricted sense, a streak, in a broader sense, a ray, and metaphorically, the visual ray, visibility. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 446)

YR Every idea of respect, of fear, of reverence, of veneration. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 367)

Y …symbol of all manifested power. It represents the hand of man, the forefinger. As grammatical sign, it is that of potential manifestation, intellectual duration, eternity…

Plato gave particular attention to this vowel which he considered as assigned to the female sex and desgnated consequently all that which is tender and delicate. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 361)

E-R-M – ‘progression and ascension of inner ardour, rising of dynamis’

6191. aram, aw-ram´; a primitive root; properly, to be (or make) bare; but used only in the derivative sense (through the idea perhaps of smoothness)…

6192. aram, aw-ram´; a primitive root; to pile up:—gather together.

ER – This root should be carefully distinquished under two differenct relations. Under the first, it is the root עו, image of physical reality and symbol of the exterior form of things which is united to the sign of movement proper ר; under the second, it is the sign of material sense united by contraction to the root אור, image of light, and forming with it a perfect contrast: thence, first:

ער Passion in general; an inner ardour, vehement, covetous; an irresistible impulse; a rage, disorder; an exciting fire literally as well as figuratively. Secondly:

ער Blindness, loss of light or intelligence, literally as well as figuratively; absolute want, destitution, under all possible relations; nakedness, sterility, physically and morally. In a restricted sense, the naked skin, the earth arid and without verdure: a desert. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 421)

RM The sign of movement proper considered in its abstract mode, or in its different radical modifications, רא, רה, רו, רכ, רי being here universalized by the collective sign ם, designates that sort of movement or action, by means of which any thing whatsoever, rising from the centre to one of the points of the circumference, traverses or fills an extent or place, which it has not occupied previously.

That which is borne upward, which rises, dilates, mounts, projects, shoots up, increases rapidly, follows a movement of progression and ascension. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 451-452)

CH-B-A – ‘impregnate, take within, cherish, love’

2244.  chaba, khaw-baw´; a primitive root (compare 2245); to secrete:—x held, hide (self), do secretly.

2245. chabab, khaw-bab´; a primitive root (compare 2244, 2247); properly, to hide (as in the bosom), i.e. to cherish (with affection):—love.

CHB …that which is occult, hidden, mysterious, secret, enclosed, as a germ, as all elementary fructification: if the root אב is taken in its acceptation of desire to have, the root in question here, will develop the idea of an amorous relation, of fecundation.

CHBB To hide mysteriously, to impregnate, to brood, etc. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 346)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:9

Science Rendition

And the eternal living essence of the progressively expanding power complex seeks to discern where the blind, instinctual passion has taken the dynamic aspect of the ADM-ic mind and consciousness.

KJV: And the LORD God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou?

Key Words: YHWH ALHYM HADM


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:8

Science Rendition

And they (the rational faculty and its creative power) could now discern the nature of the creative essence of the progressively expanding power complex, and the dynamic aspect of the ADM-ic mind and consciousness and its creative rational power entered into the depths of the sources of generative power of the organic sphere of life.

KJV: And they heard the voice of the LORD God walking in the garden in the cool of the day: and Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the LORD God amongst the trees of the garden.

Key Words: YHWH ALHYM GN HADM ASHH ETZ YHWH ALHYM ETZ GN


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:7

Science Rendition

The physical manifestation mutates by means of a reciprocal, polaric action leading to comprehension of the vital power of the universe, of the terrible mystery of the dynamic, polaric nature of life under the influence of blind, chaotic forces, and this brings forth an ascent of suffering of the soul due to existence, and launches a turbulent journey of self-discovery.

KJV: And the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves aprons.

Key Words: EYN SHNY PHQCH HM EYRM THPHR THNH ELH CHGR


PH-Q-CH – ‘inquisitive (antithetical) action with comprehension’

PHQ That which opens and shuts; which is stirred by an alternating movement back and forth; that which is intermittent, inquisitive, exploratory, etc. Action of passing from one place to another, being carried here and there, going and coming; action of obstructing, standing in the way, etc. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 428-429)

QCH The idea of an effort that is made toward a thing to seize it, to comprehend it. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 441)

H-M – ‘vital life, power of the universe’

Universalized life: the vital power of the universe. See הו. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 331)

HW The sign of life united to the convertible sign, image of the knot which binds nothingness to being, constitutes one of the roots most difficult to conceive that any tongue can offer. It is the potential life, the power of being, the incomprehensible state of a thing which, not yet existing, is found, nevertheless, with power of existing. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 329)

E-Y-R-M – ‘blind, disordered movement; turbulent passion; darkness’

It is always the root עור, containing the idea of ardour, of a vehement fire, literally as well as figuratively. Formed from the root אור, which presents the idea of luminous corporeity [light], it becomes its absolute opposite. The one is a tranquil action; the other, a turbulent passion: here, it is an harmonious movement; there it is a blind, disordered movement. In the above example, the sign of manifestation י, has replaced the sign of the mystery of nature, and in this way Moses has wished to show that this terrible mystery was unveiled in the eyes of universal man, Adam. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 101-102)

TH-PH-R – ‘bring forth, excite within’

…it is evident that the verb פרות, used here according to the reflexive form, signifies, to produce, to bring forth, to fecundate and not to sew. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 102)

TH-A-N-H – ‘mutual lamentation, agony of the soul due to existence’

As to the word תאנה, …[it] is an expression of grief not only in Hebrew, but in Samaritan, Chaldaic, Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic. It is formed of an onomatopoetic root which depicts the groans, sobs, pain and the anhelation of a person who suffers. This expressive root belongs to all tongues. One finds it united to the sign ת on several occasions, and especially to express a deep, mutual sorrow. It is presumable that the fig-tree has received the metaphorical name of תאנה on account of the mournfulness of its foliage, from which lactescent tears appear to flow from its fruits. However that may be…it is at first, in Hebrew…only a kind of exclamation as alas! but transformed into a verb by means of the convertible sign ו, it becomes און or אונה whose meaning is, to be plunged in grief, to cry out with lamentations. Thence אנוה, sorrow, affliction; and finally תאונה or תאנוה deep and concentrated grief that one shares or communicates. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 103-104)

AN An onomatopetic root which depicts the agonies of the soul; pain, sorrow, anhelation. The signs which compose this root are those of power and of individual existence. They determine together the seity, sameness, selfsameness, or the me of the being, and limit the extent of it circumscription. In a broader sense, it is the sphere of moral activity; in a restricted sense, it is the body of the being. One says in Hebrew, אני I; as if one said my sameness, that which constitutes the sum of my faculties, my circumscription. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 295-296)

E-L-H – ‘elevation, covering, protection; ascend, cause to ascend’

For the Hebraic word signifies neither a leaf, nor leaves, but a shadowy elevation, a veil; a canopy, a thing elevated above another to cover and protect it. It is also an elevation; an extension; a height. The root על develops all these ideas. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 103)

5927. alah, aw-law´; a primitive root; to ascend, intransitively (be high) or actively (mount); used in a great variety of senses, primary and secondary, literal and figurative

5929. aleh, aw-leh´; from 5927; a leaf (as coming up on a tree); collectively, foliage:—branch, leaf.

CH-G-R – ‘turbulent journey (back to self, of self-discovery)’

GR …a root which presents the image of every iterative and continued movement, every action which brings back the being upon itself. That which assembles in hordes to journey, or to dwell together; the place where one meets in the course of a journey. Every idea of tour, detour; ruminaiton, continuity in movement or in action. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 317)

CHG Every hard and continued action; every turbulent movement: every transport of joy; joust, game, popular fete, tournament, carousal. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 346)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:6

Science Rendition

When the creative rational power expanded to come into contact with the power of the source of the knowledge of resonant generation and physical, material manifestation, it was drawn to assimilate it and in so doing it also caused the rational faculty of the ADM-ic mind and consciousness to be influenced by this power.

KJV: And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto her husband with her; and he did eat.

Key Words: ASHH ETZ TWB EYN AYSH


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:5

Science Rendition

The expansive, elevative power complex knows that in the time when it takes in the generative power it will manifest corporeally and expand and rise knowing both a resonant generation and a degradation toward materiality.

KJV: For the LORD doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.

Key Words: ALHYM YWM EYN ALHYM TWB RE


E-Y-N – ‘physical manifestation; rendered visible’

EN Material void embodied, made heavy, obscure, dark.

EYN From the idea attached to the manifestation of bodies, comes that of the eye, and of everything which is related thereunto. In a metaphorical sense, a source, a fountain, etc. See עי (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 419)

EY It is in general, growth, material development; accumulation.

EYN Corporeal manifestation; the eye. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 416-417)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:4

Science Rendition

And the blind, instinctual aggrandizing power influences the creative rational power to undergo an indefinite expansion through a profound transformation of state.

KJV: And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die:

Key Words: NCHSH AMR ASHH LA MWTH MWTH


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:3

Science Rendition

But if it were to assimilate or even desire to take in the central source of generative power of the organic sphere of life, it would, as a result of the nature of the progressively expanding power complex of creation, result in a transformation of consciousness taking it back to the Universal Source.

KJV: But of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die.

Key Words: ETZ GN ALHYM AMR NGE MWTH


N-G-E – ‘merge, super-impose, possess’

5060. naga, naw-gah´; a primitive root; properly, to touch, i.e. lay the hand upon (for any purpose; euphem., to lie with a woman); by implication, to reach (figuratively, to arrive, acquire); violently, to strike (punish, defeat, destroy, etc.)

That is to say, it is not permitted you to stretch out, to aspire, to have your desires…it signifies literally, in its verbal state, to expire, to bear its soul wholly into another life. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 99)

NG This root is applied to every kind of reflected light, after the manner of a mirror; of solar refraction: thence, the ideas of opposition, of an object put on the opposite side. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 397)

GE Root analogous to the root גו, but presenting the organism under its material view point. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 316)

GH, GW, GY The organic sign united either to that of life, or to that of universal convertible force, or to that of manifestation, constitutes a root which becomes the symbol of every organization. This root which possesses the same faculties of extension and aggrandizement that we have observed in the root גא, contains the ideas apparently opposed to envelopment and development, according to the point of view under which one considers the organization. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 311-312)

M-W-TH – ‘transmutation, fusion with/return to Being’

…whose literal meaning is a fusion, a sympathetic extension, a passing, a return to the universal seity… Thus, the idea that is contained in the Hebraic verb to die has no connection with anything which pertains to destruction or annihilation, as Moses has been accused of having thought; but on the contrary, to a certain transmutation of the temporal substance. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 99-100)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:2

Science Rendition

And the creative rational power causes the instinctual desire to come to know that it can take in the fruit of the generative power.

KJV: And the woman said unto the serpent, We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden:

Key Words: ASHH AMR NCHSH ETZ GN


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:1

Science Rendition

A blind, instinctual drive for self-aggrandizement acts on the natural living forms created by the eternal creative essence of the progressively expanding power complex. And it influences the creative rational faculty (of the ADM-ic mind) to desire to expand itself to take in all sources of generative power within the sphere of creation.

KJV: Now the serpent was more subtil than any beast of the field which the LORD God had made. And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?

Key Words: NCSH ERWM CHY SHDH YHWH ALHYM ASHH ALHYM ETZ GN


NOTE

The term here translated as ‘subtil’ or ‘subtile’, is ערום (haroum), which essentially means “blind and general passion.” The root עור has the idea of calamity, a loss of sight. The primitive root ער means a violent adversary, and ערום a desert, a barrenness, literally as well as figuratively. Thus, the nature of this centralizing power of elemental nature is to destruction and barrenness (unless harnessed to a higher end or purpose). The English ‘subtile’ has as one of its meanings, that of a fine, penetrating power.

Thus, the nature of ‘evil’ in the world is a blind passion, action without reflection, directed by elemental forces rather than by a higher consciousness or what Bacon called ‘the dry light’ (lumens siccum) of reason. What we call ‘evil’ is an integral part of creation, of the functional duality between the forces of darkness (centripetal or forming forces) and the forces of light (centrifugal or radiating forces). The darkness needs to be converted into light, as the prologue to the Gospel of John sets out clearly (the role of Judas in assisting the Christ in having the darkness receive the light is explained in my earlier work, The Great Deception: Understanding the Judas Story). (The Great Mystery: Understanding the Story of Adam and Eve, R. Verspoor, Amazon Kindle)

N-CH-SH – ‘eager covetousness; egoistic, anxious passion; function of the orgy’

This wretched interpretation appears to go back to the epoch of the captivity in Babylon and to coincide with the total loss of the Hebraic tongue…

The word, as it is employed, cannot mean a serpent. It is an eager covetousness, self-conceited, envious, egoistic, which indeed winds about in the heart of man and envelops it in its coils, but which has nothing to do with a serpent, other than a name sometimes given metaphorically….

Let us examine the word נחש with the attention it merits, in order to prove the meaning contained in its root, not only by means of all the analagous idioms which possess it, but also by its own hieroglyphic composition.

This root is חש, which as I have said in explaining the word חשך, darkness, indicates always an inner covetousness, a centralized fire, which acts with a violent movement and which seeks to distend itself…related to anxiety, agony, sorrow and painful passions. It is literally, a torrefaction; figuratively, an eager covetousnessa suffering, a grievous passion in the Syriac…a turbulent agitation in the Ethiopic. This root verbalized in the Hebraic הוש, depicts the action of being precipitated, of being carried with violence toward a thing…

The hieroglyphic analysis can perhaps give us the key to this mystery…two different roots, אר and אש, to designate equally the first principle, the elementary principle and the unknown principle of things…the Egyptian priests…

…attached to both, the idea of movement; but they considered as the symbol of movement proper, rectilinear; and as that or relative movement, circular. The hieroglyphic character which corresponded to these two movements was likewise a serpent, but a serpent sometimes straight and passing through the centre of a sphere, to represent the principle אר; sometimes coild upin itself and enveloping the circumference of this sphere, to represent the principle אש. When these same priests wished to indicated the union of the two movements or the two pirnciples, they depicted a serpent upright, uncoiling itself in a spiral line, or two serpents interlacing their mobile rings. It is from this last symbol that the famous caduceus of the Greeks has come.

The priests were silent as to the inner nature of both these principles; they used indifferently the radicals אר or אש to characterize the ethereal, igneous, aerial, aqueous, terreous or mineral principle; as if they had wished to make it understood that they did not believe these simple and homogenous things, but the composite ones. Nevertheless, among all these several significations, that which appeared the most frequently was that of fire. In this case they considered the igneous principle under its different relations, sentient or intelligible, good or evil, and modified the radical word which represented it, by means of the signs. Thus, for example, the primitive אר became אור to designate elementary fire, אור light, איר intelligible brightness, etc. If the initial vowel is hardened, it takes a character more and more vehement. הר represented an exaltation, literally as well as figuratively: חר, a burning centre, ער a passionate, disordered, blind ardour. The primitive was nearly the same.

The movement alone still distinguished the two principles, whether they were exalted or whether they were debased. The rectilinear movement inherent in the primitive אר, prevented the confusing of its derivatives with those of the primitive אש, in which the gyratory movement dominated. The two radicals חר and חש represented alike a central fire; but in the first חר, it was a central fire from which the igneous principle radiated with violence; whereas in the second חש, it was, on the contrary, a central fire from which this same principle being moved in a circular movement, was concentrated more and more and destroyed itself.

Such was the hieroglyphic meaning of this root which I have already examined under its idiomatic relations…Now the sign which governs it in the word נחש, is that of passive action, individual and corporeal; so that the devouring ardour expressed by the root חש, becomes by means of this sign, a passive ardour, cold in its vehemence, contained, astringent and compressive. Literally, it is every hard and refractory body; everything acrid, cutting and corroding; as copper, for example, which this word signifies in a very restricted sense; figuratively, it is every sentiment, painful, intense or savage, as envy, egoism, cupidty, it is in a word, vice.

…It can be clearly seen that it does not signify simply a serpent. Moses, who has spoken so much of the reptilian life, in the beginning of the Beraeshith, was careful not to emply it…(The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 94-97)

The symbol of the ‘serpent’ involves the dual nature of the universe: between the centralizing forces and the radial or expansive forces, between those that seek to fix and form (curving or spherical forces) represented by אש (ash) and those that seek to radiate out (radial forces) represented by the Hebrew root אן (an). It is from this concept of a polarity of forces that we get the famous caduceus of the Greeks, a serpent upright, uncoiling itself in a spiral or two serpents interlacing themselves.

When the root אש, or ‘centripetal force,’ is hardened as in חש, it takes on a certain vehemence or force, a centralizing fire that consumes itself – an all-consuming passion. The sign that governs the root in the word נהש (Nahash) is that of receptive action, so that the devouring ardor expressed by the root CHSH חש, becomes cold and vehement, astringent and compressive. As d’Olivet states, “it is every sentiment, painful, intense or savage, as envy, egoism, cupidity.” (The Great Mystery: Understanding the Story of Adam and Eve, R. Verspoor, Amazon Kindle)