Allisnum2er Posted April 5 Share Posted April 5 14 hours ago, Eric Roberts said: I give up. Can you give me another hint? Hi Eric, More than just another clue, I will try and do my best to share my thoughts about it. Here is my interpretation. John Dee's famous signature (007) is said to be, in fact, a visual pun that conceals two ball cane i.e "Tubal Caïn" ! https://www.freemason.com/tubal-cain/ The same visual pun is in use in a famous masonic badge. Now, back to the frontispiece ... Forget the instruments and the gun, and concentrate on the shapes. We have two ball(s) right above a "Cane" ... Tubal Caïn ! https://www.freemason.com/tubal-cain/ I remind you that Caïn means Spear in Hebrew. And here are the interesting results that I found with what I called the K1 cipher. Can we find another connections between William Shake-speare and Tubal Caïn ? Last year, I shared my thoughts about the two pages 173 of the First Folio, and I told that, for me, the page 173 of Comedies concealed Tubal and the page 173 of Histories concealed Caïn. (I remind you that 173 # 17.3. # R.C. for Rosy Cross ) Here is why I meant to say ... https://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/facsimile/book/SLNSW_F1/191/?zoom=1275 https://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/facsimile/book/SLNSW_F1/527/?zoom=1275 R.C. : TUBAL-CAÏN 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Light-of-Truth Posted April 5 Share Posted April 5 2 hours ago, Allisnum2er said: John Dee's famous signature (007) is said to be, in fact, a visual pun that conceals two ball cane i.e "Tubal Caïn" ! Thank you Yann!! I never knew, or remembered, if I ever read it here or elsewhere. May I mention, the two small "o"s at 14 Simple cipher each is 28 together (oo). The elongated 7 covers them as we know. 28 and 7, or 287. Funny, I thought 007/287 was the "solution" with Dee being part of Elizabeth's "Seal" as is Bacon, but today I think it is merely a clue to more that I have never noticed. 2 T A A A A A A A A A A A T 157 www.Light-of-Truth.com 287 <-- 1 8 8 1 1 O 1 1 8 8 1 --> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Light-of-Truth Posted April 6 Share Posted April 6 "Francis St. Alban lived to the age of 106-(that is the age assigned to the Rosicrucian Father)." Busy day is an understatement, and I have a brief few minutes to post what was bouncing around in my brain all day with moment or two at best to search Google. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosicrucianism RC Father born 1378, lived 106 years. 1378 + 106 is 1484. Line 1484 of the Sonnets is the 13th Line of Sonnet 106. http://www.light-of-truth.com/pyramid-GMT.php#Sonnet106 For we which now behold these present dayes, This is Sonnet 106 to me, the first 8 lines. WHen in the Chronicle of wasted time, I see discriptions of the fairest wights, And beautie making beautifull old rime, In praise of Ladies dead,and louely Knights, Then in the blazon of sweet beauties best, Of hand,of foote,of lip,of eye,of brow, I see their antique Pen would haue exprest, Euen such a beauty as you maister now. I hear Bacon, speaking overtly; Lady dead, lovely Knights, "blazon of sweet beuaties"? Or the visual: https://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/facsimile/book/UC_Q1_Son/45/?work=son&zoom=500 We know and can recognize Bacon's life in the words, but word number 32 (or 33 counting the page header "Sonnets" a as word) "blazon" is nagging at me. I wish I had the freedom to pursue!! My mind is on fire! Were not the two little "o"s and the 7 used by Dee about being eyes? Am I wrong? Or was that just Dudley? I'm not even going to color the letters I want to bring attention to in the clip below. If you read this far, you will see. 😉 Was Sonnet 106 a curious "prophesie"? The other part: So all their praises are but prophesies Of this our time,all you prefiguring, And for they look'd but with deuining eyes, They had not still enough your worth to sing : For we which now behold these present dayes, Haue eyes to wonder,but lack toungs to praise. So the RC Father dies in Sonnet 106 when he is 106 years old. Line 13 of Sonnet 106 is Line 1484 of the Sonnets. RC Father was born in 1378. He lived 106 years and died in 1484. Right? Really, before 1609 or whenever these Sonnets were printed, the RC Father was already designed, planned, orchestrated, figured out, prophesied, or whatever. So all their praises are but prophesies These are the Manes. Right? I'm dreaming on things to come. EDIT: Follow up canvas wide open if you can read the words: 2 T A A A A A A A A A A A T 157 www.Light-of-Truth.com 287 <-- 1 8 8 1 1 O 1 1 8 8 1 --> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A Phoenix Posted April 6 Author Share Posted April 6 Andreae Descendant #FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #KingJames #Buckingham Paper: https://www.academia.edu/51468107/Did_Francis_Bacon_die_in_1626_Or_did_he_Feign_his_Death_with_the_Help_of_his_Rosicrucian_Freemasonry_Brotherhood Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTnZDpMy8uM&t=217s 3 https://aphoenix1.academia.edu/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrY7wzlXnZiT1Urwx7jP6fQ/videos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A Phoenix Posted April 6 Author Share Posted April 6 Symbolism #FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #KingJames #Buckingham Paper: https://www.academia.edu/51468107/Did_Francis_Bacon_die_in_1626_Or_did_he_Feign_his_Death_with_the_Help_of_his_Rosicrucian_Freemasonry_Brotherhood Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTnZDpMy8uM&t=217s 3 https://aphoenix1.academia.edu/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrY7wzlXnZiT1Urwx7jP6fQ/videos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eric Roberts Posted April 6 Share Posted April 6 3 hours ago, A Phoenix said: Andreae Descendant #FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #KingJames #Buckingham Paper: https://www.academia.edu/51468107/Did_Francis_Bacon_die_in_1626_Or_did_he_Feign_his_Death_with_the_Help_of_his_Rosicrucian_Freemasonry_Brotherhood Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTnZDpMy8uM&t=217s "The Two Deaths of Francis Bacon" Mabel Sennett 1947_Baconiana_No 125.pdf See pages 179-184 and 206 On page 180 the author states: The register of Lady Anne's burial, on 1st August, 1610, is to be found at St. Stephen’s Church, St. Albans http://www.hertfordshire-genealogy.co.uk/data/places/places-s/st-albans/st_stephens.htm 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allisnum2er Posted April 6 Share Posted April 6 21 hours ago, Light-of-Truth said: So the RC Father dies in Sonnet 106 when he is 106 years old. Line 13 of Sonnet 106 is Line 1484 of the Sonnets. RC Father was born in 1378. He lived 106 years and died in 1484. Right? Really, before 1609 or whenever these Sonnets were printed, the RC Father was already designed, planned, orchestrated, figured out, prophesied, or whatever. So all their praises are but prophesies These are the Manes. Right? I'm dreaming on things to come. Well spotted, Rob !❤️ Thank you for pointing to "Blazon" 🙏❤️ Indeed, it is the 33rd word by counting from the famous number 106. With "Ladies" right above I noticed something echoing a passage of the First Folio I am working on for a forthcoming video. Here is a first suggestion ... Queen Elizabeth called Robert Dudley, her "Eyes" but also "Sweet Robin". And I believe that you are right regarding the fact that "the RC Father was already designed, planned, orchestrated, figured out, prophesied." Here is what I've just found .... 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A Phoenix Posted April 7 Author Share Posted April 7 Frau Von Le Coq #FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #KingJames #Buckingham Paper: https://www.academia.edu/51468107/Did_Francis_Bacon_die_in_1626_Or_did_he_Feign_his_Death_with_the_Help_of_his_Rosicrucian_Freemasonry_Brotherhood Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTnZDpMy8uM&t=217s 3 https://aphoenix1.academia.edu/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrY7wzlXnZiT1Urwx7jP6fQ/videos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A Phoenix Posted April 8 Author Share Posted April 8 Masonic & Rosicrucian Emblems #FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #KingJames #Buckingham Paper: https://www.academia.edu/51468107/Did_Francis_Bacon_die_in_1626_Or_did_he_Feign_his_Death_with_the_Help_of_his_Rosicrucian_Freemasonry_Brotherhood Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTnZDpMy8uM&t=217s 2 2 https://aphoenix1.academia.edu/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrY7wzlXnZiT1Urwx7jP6fQ/videos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allisnum2er Posted April 8 Share Posted April 8 5 hours ago, A Phoenix said: Masonic & Rosicrucian Emblems #FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #KingJames #Buckingham Paper: https://www.academia.edu/51468107/Did_Francis_Bacon_die_in_1626_Or_did_he_Feign_his_Death_with_the_Help_of_his_Rosicrucian_Freemasonry_Brotherhood Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTnZDpMy8uM&t=217s Hi A Phoenix , I knew this Portrait, and I am intringued by the words of Alfred Dodd. "Frau Von le Coq assured me that Andrea possessors of the picture were quite uncertain that it was a picture of Andrea and COULD GIVE NO EXPLANATION of what the "F.B." stood for apart from Francis Bacon." There is, at least and obviously, a simple explanation: These are the first letters of the words written right above each blason, i.e BRAVNEN and FAISLIN. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/97/Johann_Valentin_Andreae_mit_Wappen.jpg Evidently, the interesting thing is that those are the only two blasons in which we have a letter instead of an image and I also think that, indeed, F. B. stands for Francis Bacon. The Blason between the F and the B is also very interesting and must be taken into account. FASNACHTE is the German word for Carnival and the blason depicts a Carnival FOOL ! https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Three_Fools_of_Carnival.jpg And by counting from the first Blason on the bottom left (CURRER) : F is the 10th blason The Carnival Fool is the 11th blason B is the 12th blason 10 +11 +12 = 33 = BACON (Simple cipher) And this is confirmed by the Blason of GRUNINGER with its three leaves. 33 = BACON Notice also the four Blasons in the four corners. Still by counting from "CURRER" thare are respecively the 4th , 6th , 8th , 9th and 13th blasons in the chain. 4+6+8+9+13 = 40 or Four T ( TTTT) Happy Eastern week-end 😊 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eric Roberts Posted April 8 Share Posted April 8 2 hours ago, A Phoenix said: Masonic & Rosicrucian Emblems #FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #KingJames #Buckingham Paper: https://www.academia.edu/51468107/Did_Francis_Bacon_die_in_1626_Or_did_he_Feign_his_Death_with_the_Help_of_his_Rosicrucian_Freemasonry_Brotherhood Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTnZDpMy8uM&t=217s https://logon.media/logon_article/the-other-johann-valentin-andreae/ 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A Phoenix Posted April 8 Author Share Posted April 8 Hi High Wizard of B'Hive, Masterclass! Brilliant! 1 1 https://aphoenix1.academia.edu/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrY7wzlXnZiT1Urwx7jP6fQ/videos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allisnum2er Posted April 8 Share Posted April 8 Searching on the net for another example of GRUNINGER's Blason with the 3 leaves, I found this website : http://s-grueninger.de/_Pages/Wappen_Hausmarke_Grueninger_e.html We learn that "On the right side, the coat of arms from his wife's ancestors are shown." Thanks to this site https://gedbas.genealogy.net/person/show/1228043622 here is the family tree of his wife, Agnes Elisabeth Grüninger. I believe that Francis Bacon used all this information to its benefit. https://logon.media/logon_article/the-other-johann-valentin-andreae/ Regarding the number 33 ... Notice the Coat of Arms of EFFERN (Von Efferen) with 3 white elements, and the Coat of Arms of ENTRINGER with 3 birds, that both appears twice ... 33 = BACON The Coat of Arms of MOSER probably hides something too. But I do not know what that is. EDIT : Interestingly, in the following Portrait .. https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Valentin_Andreae#/media/Fichier:Andportraits2.jpg The Coat of Arms of MOSER depicts a Horse (that corresponds to the Coat of Arms of ROSLIN in the previous engraving) instead of a Goat. I think that it is one avenue to explore ! 🙂 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allisnum2er Posted April 8 Share Posted April 8 I would like to share with you a last suggestion ! You will probably say that it is a bit far-fetched but I share it with you anyway !😃 What if the F of Faislin and the B of Braunen hides another clue ? What if it was an indication that we have to take a closer look at the first letters. We have four blasons in the corners : MOSER ANDREAE GRUNINGER EFFERN I noticed that the first letters of each word formed the French word MAGE that is MAGUS, a reference to the 3 kings. (Rois Mages in French) Then I noticed that the name of the engraver was ... MELCHIOR !!! "No way ! The name of one of the 3 Kings." Given that all this engraving is about Coat of Arms, I decided to take a look at the Coat of Arms of Melchior. What a surprise !!!😲 http://lalanguedublason.blogspot.com/2013/01/les-rois-mages-en-heraldique.html Magus Melchior is depicted as ... A SPEAR-SHAKER !!! Joy 😊 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A Phoenix Posted April 8 Author Share Posted April 8 You are on a serious roll here, Yann. 2 https://aphoenix1.academia.edu/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrY7wzlXnZiT1Urwx7jP6fQ/videos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A Phoenix Posted April 8 Author Share Posted April 8 Yann, You are truly world class. You have for the first time in four hundred years made known previously unrevealed deeply embedded clues and secrets incoporated and encoded in this amazing engraving/portrait which taken together with all the other evidence and information makes it tolerably certain that who we have in front of us is the Great One Lord Bacon, pointing to the fact the he is the Founder of the modern Rosicrucian-Freemasonry Brotherhood and the greatest poet and dramtist of all time, our Shakespeare. Take a Bow Maesto, you truly have earned it. 1 1 https://aphoenix1.academia.edu/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrY7wzlXnZiT1Urwx7jP6fQ/videos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RoyalCraftiness Posted April 8 Share Posted April 8 7 minutes ago, Allisnum2er said: Searching on the net for another example of GRUNINGER's Blason with the 3 leaves, I found this website : http://s-grueninger.de/_Pages/Wappen_Hausmarke_Grueninger_e.html We learn that "On the right side, the coat of arms from his wife's ancestors are shown." Thanks to this site https://gedbas.genealogy.net/person/show/1228043622 here is the family tree of his wife, Agnes Elisabeth Grüninger. I believe that Francis Bacon used all this information to its benefit. https://logon.media/logon_article/the-other-johann-valentin-andreae/ Regarding the number 33 ... Notice the Coat of Arms of EFFERN (Von Efferen) with 3 white elements, and the Coat of Arms of ENTRINGER with 3 birds, that both appears twice ... 33 = BACON The Coat of Arms of MOSER probably hides something too. But I do not know what that is. Are those three swans in the Andrea Blazon at the top left? There are 20 Blazons showing of which 4 are repeated. The Sun and moon symbol are showing on each side, presumably telling us something about Andrea's male and female lineages. The Effren blazon next to the mother symbol (moon) is appropriate as the genealogy shows. I can't find the etymology for the Effern name. It is perhaps tied to the German word Eifern which means means one who strives or works to accomplish something. The animal symbol atop it at the bottom right is the elephant which symbolizes strength, wisdom and courage in heraldry. The other blazon has a goat/ram above it. Its a symbol of practical wisdom and an emblem of a man who wins victories through diplomacy means, rather than by force, It may also represent own who is willing to work hard for high honors. The Moser name is Jewish in origin I believe. That's his mother's name. It is a word meaning "informer". You can get a combined meaning of "striving to inform" from the pairing of the maternal names, which is what these men were up to. Combined with the skull above there are the crossed bones below. This is a traditional memento mori pairing. "Remember death" is one of the chief warnings of not only the Rosicrucians, but of later Freemasons. You ought to be mindful of your eternal judgement above all. The promised treasure awaits; act accordingly! Of interest and probably only tangent, Andrea was from Wurttemberg. This is the area of Germany the English went to get the first population of German loyals to resettle Nova Scotia in the 1750s. These subjects were related to the British monarchs. They were settled at what they chose to call Lunenburg at Mahone Bay in honor of the Duke of Braunschweig-Lüneburg who had become King George II. The Canadian Province of New Brunswick was also named for this reason in 1784 when that part of Nova Scotia received the American Loyalists after the American Revolutionary war. The British were very careful who they brought into the empty colony after the French Deportation event, fishing also in Rhode Island where there was religious tolerance and freedom from the controlling behaviors of New England Puritanism who clashed with Protestants. The desire was to repopulate the territory with "good stock" which they referred to as "planted seed" (the early settlers were called Planters), and by good stock we can assume we are talking of a recognizable Protestant faith that was defended by the British colonial government and military made up of high ranking Freemasons. There was a visceral hated of Catholics in NS that one can trace firmly back to the German Reformation. The project to reestablish the colony from the ashes was recognized by the earliest NS Masons as something equivalent to the raising of the Phoenix in myth. It was going to be a proper God-fearing colony to carry on the vision of the Holy Royal Arch. I like to think of this period of colonialism as one where the idealism and humanism of Rosicruciansim and the earliest speculative Masonry was lost. Bacon would likely not have approved of such things as he was quite tolerant of other faiths, and of Puritans. The FB pairing is sometimes seen as a musical reference because the key of F has only one flat note in it which is B. The key is of F is a symbol of serenity and calm which is said to accompany those who are not afraid to go to their deaths. Nicholas Poussin used it symbolically. The muse which plays from the lyre tuned to the key of F is there to calm the shepherds contemplating the tomb in the "The Shepherds of Arcadia". They've lost their sheep and have come across a tomb (death). The message relayed is to not worry as the shepherd above will come and find his lost sheep. I've not studied this image, but it looks like it has some things to say. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allisnum2er Posted April 8 Share Posted April 8 35 minutes ago, A Phoenix said: Yann, You are truly world class. You have for the first time in four hundred years made known previously unrevealed deeply embedded clues and secrets incoporated and encoded in this amazing engraving/portrait which taken together with all the other evidence and information makes it tolerably certain that who we have in front of us is the Great One Lord Bacon, pointing to the fact the he is the Founder of the modern Rosicrucian-Freemasonry Brotherhood and the greatest poet and dramtist of all time, our Shakespeare. Take a Bow Maesto, you truly have earned it. My heartfelt thanks A Phoenix ! ❤️❤️❤️ I will continue to explore this incredible engraving that has, for sure, more things to reveal. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/97/Johann_Valentin_Andreae_mit_Wappen.jpg 😉 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allisnum2er Posted April 8 Share Posted April 8 A Phoenix, I think that I have just found something else ! And it echoes something that you shared with us few days ago about Dr Kirsch informing Constance M. Pott that Francis St Alban lived to 106 years. The latin motto "DEO CONFISUS NUNQUAM CONFUSUS" above the head of "J.VALENTIN ANDREAE" ... https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/97/Johann_Valentin_Andreae_mit_Wappen.jpg ... can be found in an German Book written in 1667 by Johann MELCHIOR Bayer !!! https://gdz.sub.uni-goettingen.de/id/PPN689589352?tify={"pan"%3A{"x"%3A0.473%2C"y"%3A0.325}%2C"view"%3A"info"%2C"zoom"%3A0.927} The Frontispiece is interesting ! “The world’s a bubble, and the life of man, Less than a span.” (Notice the Phoenix and the Pelican) 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allisnum2er Posted April 8 Share Posted April 8 3 hours ago, Allisnum2er said: I would like to share with you a last suggestion ! You will probably say that it is a bit far-fetched but I share it with you anyway !😃 What if the F of Faislin and the B of Braunen hides another clue ? What if it was an indication that we have to take a closer look at the first letters. We have four blasons in the corners : MOSER ANDREAE GRUNINGER EFFERN I noticed that the first letters of each word formed the French word MAGE that is MAGUS, a reference to the 3 kings. (Rois Mages in French) Then I noticed that the name of the engraver was ... MELCHIOR !!! "No way ! The name of one of the 3 Kings." Given that all this engraving is about Coat of Arms, I decided to take a look at the Coat of Arms of Melchior. What a surprise !!!😲 http://lalanguedublason.blogspot.com/2013/01/les-rois-mages-en-heraldique.html Magus Melchior is depicted as ... A SPEAR-SHAKER !!! Joy 😊 My apologies 😟 I just realised that I made a mistake !!! The Magus that hold a spear is Balthazar, not Melchior ! http://lalanguedublason.blogspot.com/2013/01/les-rois-mages-en-heraldique.html However, this is intringuing to have a book and an engraving with the same latin motto and the name Melchior. I feel that I miss something. Edit : Eureka ! In fact, the Blazons were not always attributed to the same Magus ! 😅 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Light-of-Truth Posted April 9 Share Posted April 9 Allisnum2er brings us back in a circle/cycle with "Blazon" with Sonnet 106. WHen in the Chronicle of wasted time, I see discriptions of the fairest wights, And beautie making beautifull old rime, In praise of Ladies dead,and louely Knights, Then in the blazon of sweet beauties best, Of hand,of foote,of lip,of eye,of brow, I see their antique Pen would haue exprest, Euen such a beauty as you maister now. So all their praises are but prophesies Of this our time,all you prefiguring, And for they look'd but with deuining eyes, They had not still enough your worth to sing : For we which now behold these present dayes, Haue eyes to wonder,but lack toungs to praise. I'm sure it has been over 20 years since I first saw an image of the JOH V A and I immediately saw Bacon in his older age. Its likely I believed it even before I had any clue of what I was looking at. I am enjoying seeing this come up! Around 2003 if I brought this up it was mostly taboo. Yann, Maister, these lines are for you from Bacon: I see their antique Pen would haue exprest, Euen such a beauty as you maister now. 1 1 T A A A A A A A A A A A T 157 www.Light-of-Truth.com 287 <-- 1 8 8 1 1 O 1 1 8 8 1 --> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Light-of-Truth Posted April 9 Share Posted April 9 9 hours ago, RoyalCraftiness said: The FB pairing is sometimes seen as a musical reference because the key of F has only one flat note in it which is B. The key is of F is a symbol of serenity and calm which is said to accompany those who are not afraid to go to their deaths. Nicholas Poussin used it symbolically. The muse which plays from the lyre tuned to the key of F is there to calm the shepherds contemplating the tomb in the "The Shepherds of Arcadia". They've lost their sheep and have come across a tomb (death). The message relayed is to not worry as the shepherd above will come and find his lost sheep. I like this a lot for Easter Eve. I'm not a religious kind of guy, but since I was a little kid I have experienced some kind of energy, or magic as I always called it on Easter day. Every year the dates change, life goes this way and that, people in and people out, but fairly consistently Easter Sunday is a pretty cool day for me, lots of joy and magic. Maybe it is the Easter Bunny? For me as I wake up tomorrow, I'll be celebrating Bacon's "passing" from one place to another, on Day 99! This is a first for me! Last time Easter was on Day 99 was 1950, I think. Easter on April 9, Day 99! The day we all "know" Bacon "died" in 1626 which was 397 years ago! LOL The message relayed is to not worry as the shepherd above will come and find his lost sheep. I have never been able to put my finger on what makes Easter sparkle, but I do know Easter is some very old stuff. For me, where I am in my path, the "shepherd above" is not a person. Bacon was a voice, likely. It is not an angel or glowing entity. It is ancient and alive today. I have some ideas, but can only speculate. If you are a "lost sheep", then maybe you are not a sheep at all. Happy Easter 2023 on April 9, Day 99!!! 🙂 3 T A A A A A A A A A A A T 157 www.Light-of-Truth.com 287 <-- 1 8 8 1 1 O 1 1 8 8 1 --> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A Phoenix Posted April 9 Author Share Posted April 9 Second Secret Life #FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #KingJames #Buckingham Paper: https://www.academia.edu/51468107/Did_Francis_Bacon_die_in_1626_Or_did_he_Feign_his_Death_with_the_Help_of_his_Rosicrucian_Freemasonry_Brotherhood Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTnZDpMy8uM&t=217s 1 2 https://aphoenix1.academia.edu/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrY7wzlXnZiT1Urwx7jP6fQ/videos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A Phoenix Posted April 9 Author Share Posted April 9 The Metaphorical Resurrection of the Man Who Will Never Die 'Not of An Age but for All Time' 1 2 https://aphoenix1.academia.edu/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrY7wzlXnZiT1Urwx7jP6fQ/videos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allisnum2er Posted April 9 Share Posted April 9 1 hour ago, A Phoenix said: Second Secret Life #FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #KingJames #Buckingham Paper: https://www.academia.edu/51468107/Did_Francis_Bacon_die_in_1626_Or_did_he_Feign_his_Death_with_the_Help_of_his_Rosicrucian_Freemasonry_Brotherhood Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTnZDpMy8uM&t=217s Hi A Phoenix, Brilliantly summerised and superbly written !❤️ I am looking for that day. Happy Easter to all ! 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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