Genesis 3:15

Science Rendition

And there will be a tension, antipathy between the blind, instinctive aggrandizing power and the creative mentative power, and between their products (unconscious instincts, impulses versus conscious thoughts); the creative mentative power shall bring to a culmination the active principle of blind instinct (lust, desire), and the latter shall centralize the condensation, consequence, results of the creative mentative power.

KJV: : And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.

Key Words: AYB ASHH ZRE YSHWPH RASH YSHWPH EQB


A-Y-B – ‘antipathy, movement away, contraction’

340. ayab, aw-yab´; a primitive root; to hate (as one of an opposite tribe or party); hence to be hostile:—be an enemy.

341. oyeb, o-yabe´; or (fully) owyeb, o-yabe´; active participle of 340; hating; an adversary:—enemy, foe.

AY Power accompanied by manifestation, forms a root whose meaning, akin to that which we have found in the root או, expresses the same idea of desire, but less vague and more determined. It is no longer sentiment, passion without object which falls into incertitude: it is the very object of this sentiment, the centre toward which the will tends, the place where it is fixed…represented…by the adverbial relation where. Every centre of activity, every place distinct, separate from another place. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 292)

AYB Every idea of antipathy, enmity, animadversion. It is an effect of the movement of contraction upon the volitive centre אי by the sign of interior activity ב. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 292)

Y-SH-W-PH – ‘centralize, act centripetally’

The verb שוף signifies to centralize, to act from the circumference to the centre, as is proved by the signs ש and פ, of which the one expresses relative movement, and the other, interior action, particularly in its relations with the paternal sign ב, which it often replaces. This verb is used here according to the positive form, active movement, future tense. It is governed by the third person masculine, because the word זרע, which signifies literally seed, and which I have rendered in this instance by the word progeny, is masculine in Hebrew. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, p. 110)

R-A-SH – ‘active principle, culminating point’

This word signifies not only the head or the principle, as I have already said: but it also signifies the source of evil, the venom. In this case the elementary root אש is taken in the bad sense, and the sign ר, which governs it, is regarded as symbol of disordered movement. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, p. 110)

RSH The sign of movement proper, united to that of relative movement, constitutes a root which is hieroglyphically symbolized by a point at the middle of a circle: it is the centre unfolding the circumference: the fundamental principle. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 455)

RASH Every acting principle, good or bad; a venomous poison, a very bitter, gall; that which is primary, initial; the origin, summit, top; the culminating point of all things; the head of man or of anything whatsoever; the leader of a people, a captain, a prince, a king. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 455)

E-Q-B – ‘condensation, result, consequence’

Those who have seen in this same verse the bruised head of a serpent, have seen here the bitten heel of a woman: but how can the verb שוף, signify at the same time to bruise, that is to say, to trample upon, and to bite? For Moses was careful to repeat this verb twice. If the modern Hebraists had wished to detach themselves a moment from the Hellenists, they might have seen that the word used here as the antithesis of ראש, could not mean simply the heel, except in its most restricted sense; but that, in its most ordinary signification, it expresses the consequences, the traces of a thing, and particularly of evil, whose material sign it, moreover, bears. Indeed, this can be proved by a great number of Hebrew and Chaldaic passages, in which this word signifies fraud, perversity, malice and all the evil qualities generally, which belong to vice. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 111)

QB …expresses all rejection, expurgation. Literally, it is an excavation; figuratively, an anathema, a malediction. But if one considers here the figure ק, as being contracted with the root אב, then the root קב characterizes every object capable of and containing any kind of measure: literally, genitalia muliebra; figuratively, a bad place. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 438-439)

EQ Every idea of extreme condensation, of contraction with itself, of hardness; figuratively, anguish. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 420)

 

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:14

Science Rendition

And the creative essence of the progressively expanding power complex caused the blind, instinctive aggrandizing power to form a power for the perpetual regeneration of organic life within the progressive, sustained movement of natural life forms, and the spiraling of the volatile elemental movement will accumulate living forms.

KJV: : And the LORD God said unto the serpent, Because thou hast done this, thou art cursed above all cattle, and above every beast of the field; upon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust shalt thou eat all the days of thy life.

Key Words: YHWH ALHYM AMR NCHSH ARR BHMH CHY SHDH GCHN EPHR AKL YWM CHY


A-R-R – ‘perpetual regenerative power’

AR This root and the one which follows [ASH] are very important for the understanding of the Hebraic text. The signs which constitute the one in question here, are those of power and of movement proper. Together they are the symbol of the elementary principle, whatever it may be, and of all which pertains to that element or to nature in general. Hieroglyphically אר was represented by the straight line, and אש by the circular line. אר , conceived as elementary principle, indicated direct movement, rectilinear; אש relative movement, curvilinear, gyratory. [= spiral movement – Kreiselwelle]

That which belongs to the elementary principle, that which is strong, vigorous, productive. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 298-299)

This is a primitive root containing the idea of power א, that has a doubly powerful intense organic movement of regeneration, RR. Sign of all movement proper, good or bad: original and frequentive sign: image of the renewal of things as to their movement. (d’Olivet) Rayesh (200), the cosmic container of all existence, has its roots in the intense organic movement of the universe. (The Cipher of Genesis, Suares)

G-CH-N – ‘twistings, turnings’

It was quite natural that those who had seen only a serpent in an insidious passion, should see only a belly where they ought to see the turnings, the inclination, of this same passion…The word גחך holds to the root גך …The Hebrew verb גחוך, which is derived from it, signifies to bend, to incline…As to the verb following תלך, thou-shalt-grovelling-proceed, which all the translators have believed to be from the verb תלוך to go and come, to walk up and down, it is derived from the compound-radical לבוך or from the radical לוך, both of which signify literally to get dirty, to wallow, and figuratively, to behave iniquitously, basely. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 110)

 

 

 

 

Genesis 3:13

Science Rendition

And the eternal living essence of the progressively expanding power complex causes the creative rational faculty to take in the morphological (mutable, variable, deceptive) quality of the blind instinctive aggrandizing power (lust) and ascend towards its culmination.

KJV: And the LORD God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast done? And the woman said, The serpent beguiled me, and I did eat

Key Words: YHWH ALHYM AMR ASHH NCHSH NSHA AKL


N-SH-A – ‘instability, variability, mutability, morphological, deceptiveness’

5377. nasha, naw-shaw´; a primitive root; to lead astray, i.e. (mentally) to delude, or (morally) to seduce:—beguile, deceive, x greatly, x utterly.

5375. nasa, naw-saw´; or nacçah (Psalm 4 : 6 (7)), naw-saw´; a primitive root; to lift, in a great variety of applications, literal and figurative, absol. and rel. (as follows):—accept, advance, arise,

5378. nasha, naw-shaw´; a primitive root (perhaps identical with 5377, through the idea of imposition); to lend on interest; by implication, to dun for debt:

NSH This root which is applied to the idea of things temporal and transient, in general, expresses their instability, infirmity, decrepitude, caducity: it characterizes that which is feeble and weak, easy to seduce, variable, transitory; literally as well as figuratively. Every idea of mutation, permutation, subtraction, distraction, cheating, deception, weakness, wrong, etc. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 405)

SHA The sign of relative movement united to that of power, constitutes a root which is hieroglyphically characterized by the arc of the circle inscribed between two radii…considered in movement or in repose; thence, the opposed ideas of tumult and of the calm which it develops. (The Hebraic Tongue Restored, Fabré d’Olivet, p. 456)

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 3:1

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)