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What kind of Fire was worshipped by the ancient cultures?

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Answers from the books of Samael Aun Weor

The Fohat is the Nature's Lapix Philosophorum. The Parsis worshipped the fire and the Hindus worshipped the four lords of the flame. The fire is sacred in all the great religions.

The fire is the Christians' INRI, the Japanese's Zen, the Chinese's Tao, the Aztecs' Quetzalcoatl, the Greeks' Demiurge, the Romans' Jupiter.
Because of his ignorance, Marx believed that the Universal Spirit of Life was that mental idol with long beard down to the navel seated up there in a throne of tyranny throwing thunder and lightning against the poor ants' nest.

Marx was wrong because that anthropomorphic idol is not the Universal Spirit of Life; if Marx thrown curses against such idol, then the Marxist-Leninist can be sure that because of ignorance Marx deceived himself.

The world really is a ball of fire that turns on and off according to certain laws and it hasn't been done by any God nor by any man.
The intelligence of Fire is undeniable since it turns on and off according to certain laws; it would be absurd to suppose the fire as an element without any intelligence at all.

If the fire were an element without any intelligence it wouldn't turn on and off according to certain laws.

If the fire were an element without intelligence there were no intelligence in the world because the world is a crystallization of the fire.
The fire is the Universal Spirit of Life that wisely gives birth to multiple and varied phenomena in the world.

The diversity of forms and types of the matter wouldn't exist without the fire.

The mutual links and the interdependency relationship between the phenomena that the dialectic method highlight are consequence of different igneous processes.

The Social Christ, Chapter 50: The Universal Spirit of Life. Samael Aun Weor.

 

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