- Moses and the Egyptian Heritage in the Past and
Present
ASSASSINATING MOSES
vol. 4
In Danish: "Den Hemmelige Religion" (Attentatet på Moses, Vol.4) / by Ove von Spaeth
Copenhagen
2004
pp. 367,soft cover,
DKK: 295, - illstr., facsims.,
geographical and celestial maps, plans. Includes bibliography and index.
Stjernerne Magazine (Vol.49, p.26-27), (19
November) December 2004 - Review:
A Masterpiece
By CATHARINE OPPENHEIM, editor
A tremendous whizzing brings us back in time - not inside a time machine - but on the wings of history - all the way back to pre-Moses times. It is a challenge
to dive into different ages of time - for instance the Hellenic period, ca.
600-300 B.C. - at a time of a mix-up of spiritually new thinking and religious
universes. That is Ove von Spaeth (OvS), the Writer and the "Alchemist".
He is our guide on this
wonderful journey to the Mecca of the religious mysteries and to our
cultural-religious cradle. His ability to synthesize so many religious,
historical and archaeological lines of thought is quite an achievement! - and communicating it to others is an even greater exploit! The book appeals to the
mystic, the sociologist of religion, the archaeologist, the philologist, and the
historian. In order to understand and make something out of the book, a historical-archaeological-theological and philological approach, insight, and knowledge would be recommendable. For a person open to causalities and curious
to know the background for the origin of intellectual and spiritual sciences,
here is REALLY something to catch.
Hidden Messages
If the desire is biblical research and exegesis, the rabbinical writings -
Talmud, Midrash, Aggada, the Samaritan texts, royal mythology, religion and anthropology, ancient astronomy and star mythology - this is the book, and it is
delightfully written and plotted with enthusiasm and commitment.
The backdrop is Moses and
his possible Egyptian adolescence and knowledge - all that Moses passed on to
the Israelites and their descendents - with the Egyptian leads in the rear,
together with Egyptian mysticism, magic, and spell. For a person familiar with
philology here is a lot of "titbits", because it is the Semite language, the
roots of the words, and their possible hidden messages that keeps OvS on the
track. The Semite languages - among these Arab, Coptic, Aramean, etc - have all been weaved around the essence of this book - that even the gods rejoice!
In chapter 6, the section
about "Moses - the Mystic", one should have Semite philology on the brain in
order to get straight and stick to the many different kinds of ways to spell and
comprehend Jawe, the Jewish God, and this makes me boil over with enthusiasm, in
particular because I never met anyone who was interested in the biblical
philology in this way - until now!
How Daring - How Wild - How Groovy!
The writing and the conclusions are a pleasure, for instance when it comes to
the Ahron and Moses mysteries, the Logos recognitions, the writing in the skies,
the 10 Sephirot - (God's emanations), the Zodiac: the sphere of the eighth sky,
the hidden biblical ways of reading, the Cabala: the biblical-mysterious
science, the background of the origin and use of numerology - where OvS peels it
all apart leaving the raw essence clearly and distinctly.
The Hebrew letter "Alef"
(en soph) is being dealt with - every mystic knows that letter and is fascinated by it - and it is consumed in a relaxed way, when OvS explains and
gives our imagination free reign about the background, the connection, and the
parallelism. In a lot of chapters OvS explains, claims, and sustains by means of
the findings and his thoughts about them that one and only one wrote the texts
of Moses.
For instance there is
information on the Sirius Cycle (each 1460th year) and about the celestial
cosmology, about the wild boar (the Great Bear) and in between OvS takes Moses
and Jesus together in the most handsome way as serene guides within "the great
teaching" (- and the hidden one). OvS draws a line through questions and
thoughts of centuries - for instance about the Trinity in the chapter on
celestial-geometrically mysteries. Good thinking! Each chapter is an introduction to a life-long study. One part of the many chapters of the book is headlined "New Platonic and Hermetic Astro-Philosophy" - how daring - how wild -
how groovy!!!
Enthusiasm on the Move
To my knowledge, nobody has ever before in Danish published anything like this.
For years several foreign writers have published popular scientific literature -
but OvS's book is much easier to understand. OvS writes in a light style without
excessively long theoretical links - within the religious and historical
material. This is knowledge that has unfortunately been met by thundering
silence in some circles - maybe because of their occasional lack of
documentation.
OvS's knowledge is
summarizing and concerned. OvS is so obsessed with the Moses mysteries that all
through the book it is a thrill to feel his fervour for the subject - no traces
of falling-off anywhere. OvS is a historian who dares to use the astronomical,
astrological, and mythological cencepts all the way to the end and based on his
own thinking. OvS is a brave man, whose words will eternally be consolidated in
these 5 acts about the "Moses Assassination". The words are carved - not with
flames, but with an enthusiasm that pulls. The book will appeal to those
obsessed with religious history, and the initiated, and those who want to walk
through this (moon node) gate.
C.O.
Ove von Spaeth: Den Hemmelige Religion, Attentatet på Moses, vol. 4,
C.A. Reitzels forlag, Febr. 2004, 367 sider, pris 298 kr.
Can we get more close to understand history from
inside? Jurij Moskvitin has dealt with this question by his reading of a new
and controversial book, which is tracing back our present basis into
historical Egypt's impact on the religion of Moses.
The book observes a
principle adopted by Max Weber, the sociologist and anthropologist, who
calls it 'Verstehen', - that it is not possible to describe a distant culture's habits and rituals without understanding the meaning of it and the
purpose itself.
By JURIJ MOSKVITIN, M.A. in Philosophy,
Mathematician, Writer
What is truth? Nietzsche defines truth as "the set of lies which is most free of
contradiction". That of course is a sceptical way of defining a scientific
truth, however, the fact is that we have no better definitions.
And definition of truth
is - directly and indirectly - what Ove von Spaeth's great work about Moses is dealing with. Of the five volumes, we are strongly exploring volume four, titled
"The Secret Religion", in which together with the reader the author reaps what
was sowed in the preceding and equally interesting volumes. Ove von Spaeth may
be met with pros et cons, however, one fact is imperative, i.e. this author
offers us interesting and rewarding reading.
Which truths can we bring
to light from the texts reaching back to events, which took place 3,500 years
ago? In the case of Moses - the central figure in the Old Testament - we have a confusion of information of different value and credibility, often even
contradicting. How to make choice or refuse, so that the set of the least
self-contradicting lies we come up with, can not only be characterized as a
result of the "chop off a heel and cut a toe" method?
Initiated Knowledge Brought Forward
Ove von Spaeth's method is classical scientific. He puts forward a hypothesis
which he by good reasoning may consider to be probable. Subsequently he draws
the conclusion of his hypothesis - the theory. And finally he conducts an
experiment - explores if the theory may cause more pieces to fit in compared to
other and previous hypotheses or assumptions. If this is the case, the
experiment can be said to have proved the sustainability of the hypothesis.
The leading principle of
the hypothesis in von Spaeth's work about Moses is that the generally accepted
dating of Moses is wrong. Ove von Spaeth has fixed the date of the death of
Pharaoh Tuthmosis (III) to be 1455 B.C. - identical to the Exodus of the
Israelites from Egypt, a central point in the life of Moses.
Further now, the
subsequent theory requires that Moses is made the son of Queen Hatshepsut and
Egyptian heir to the throne, but is tricked out by plots, an event becoming the
incentive for Moses to a kind of uprising; he leads the Jewish people, carries
out the Exodus simultaneously with letting them become bearers of a religion new
to them, which, however, in reality is the old Egyptian religion in the core of
which Moses as heir to the throne has been initiated, and he is thus passing it
on to the world in a new and fruitful way.
Now - is this
sustainable - do the pieces fit? Is the experiment successful? To a reasonably
likely degree the answer is positive. No one can certainly ask for more. With
his work von Spaeth has brought back one of the great personalities of history
from the misty world of myths - to which he has been relegated - now to sheer
reality. But during this endeavour the author has also been able to prove a very
close connection between the ancient Egyptian perception of the world and a
modern perceived realistic initiation psychology, this breathing new life and
meaning into the gradually sectarian, petrified Christianity. In fact, via von
Spaeth the Moses of 3,500 years ago becomes a life-giving source for modern
people.
Theologians' Hostility
Lead by von Spaeth we are not tackling trifles. Indeed, the author has employed
all means in order to demonstrate his vision: again to focus on the life-giving
source. He blasts rocks or drills passes through them all; at von Spaeth's
disposal seems to be all weapons in the shape of a comprehensive knowledge of
many otherwise isolated subjects.
Of course it is the
conventional conceptions of Moses and the contents of the Old Testament that
von Spaeth has to depart from. And this immediately brings us face to face with
something very interesting: the opposition against Ove von Spaeth's work, of
which seems to have been quite a lot, stems mainly from theological quarters,
and although strongly reduced, these quarters have mainly been mobilised among
German-protestant orientated theologians and their local followers. A man like
Adolf Harnack, the great, influential German theologian, who hated any idea
about a close relation between Christianity, Gnosticism, and Neo-Platonism,
would undoubtedly have insisted on von Spaeth being burnt at the stake.
Outstanding Survey
At all times von Spaeth will find his supporters
among psychologically and philosophically orientated historians. Nietzsche would
have nodded approvingly at von Spaeth's - by the way - outstanding
interpretation of Christianity's evolution from primary Christianity, its fall,
and its ability to stay alive by means of secretly returning to its Egyptian
roots and draw nourishment from that, and how this hidden side of Christianity
all of a sudden came into flower as the humanistic movement of the Renaissance.
Ove von Spaeth says in photo-negative the same as Nietzsche in Antichrist. And
so far also Kierkegaard, where he claims that modern ecclesiastical Christianity
is diluted rubbish and being almost the opposite of the original meaning.
Sigmund Freud would have accepted - as a matter of course - von Spaeth's
hypothetical basis, which makes Moses an Egyptian. "The Egyptian factor" as von
Spaeth calls it - as being also a fundamental element in living Christianity -
would have been acceptable to different history authors such as Oswald Spengler
and Egon Friedell. And the close relation between Christianity and Buddhism - it
is this relation Wagner deals with in "Parsifal". Obviously, Carl G. Jung would
have taken von Spaeth's side. (In Denmark von Spaeth is on wavelengths with
Johannes Hohlenberg of the old generation, and to some extent in its own way
with Aage Henriksen of a later generation). In today's England a man like Colin
Wilson would not feel alienated to von Spaeth's ideas.
Traces and Evidences
And lies and truth - now being the subject. Is it not common sense to believe
that the correct description of the source is most likely be the one
chronologically closest to the source? And conversely - that you can get so far
away from the source that it may be mistaken for a broken drain pipe? When von
Spaeth points out the ancient perception of the relation between Judaism,
Christianity, and Egyptian ideology, even the most hardcore sceptic must find it
obvious that von Spaeth have something important to say.
Augustine, Philo,
Josephus - only to mention a few of the most famous names - are among the many
persons that von Spaeth offers the opportunity to tell about Moses and Egypt,
about the influence of Moses on Egyptian religious thinking of his time, about
the many parallels to Egyptian thinking we find in the Old Testament, as well as
corresponding traces in the New Testament. These evidences are simply essential.
Fathers of the Church,
mentioned besides Augustine - and further Plotin's secretary, Porphyrius, and in
addition Iamblichus, an entire host, can not all have been people of dreams and
wishful thinking. Incidentally, von Spaeth points out that the ancient church
understood the Christian faith more as a climax and a synthesis of a number of
the other religio-philosophical movements, and that it was only in the following
centuries it was tried to present Jesus as a completely new and isolated figure.
Prior to that, the inclination was to see great spiritual figures preceding
Christ as a kind of forerunners for him - Plato was considered as some kind of a
Christian.
Documentation You Can't Escape
The documentation presented here by von Spaeth is hard to escape. Reading von
Spaeth - and with just an inferior knowledge of the New Testament, one can not
escape listen to the sympathetic resonance of this work. Just think of "Our
Lord" - "Thy will be done! In Heaven as on Earth". That is close to Plato's
doctrine of ideas in existential form and, thus, absolutely also an idea we see
by the ancient Egyptians. And when Jesus is said to say that "the Kingdom of God
is within yourself" - can that be reasonably understood in any other way than
the mystic-psychological way? And von Spaeth makes the interested reader ask
himself from where in heaven's name stems the later fear of concrete nearness of
heaven?
Already in the Old
Testament there is a permanent inclination to flinch from the Egyptian-Gnostic
Christian core - which incidentally von Spaeth believes is the core of all
society-creating religions - he presents a number of examples. Such an example
is the Cathar version of the line in "Our Lord", "Give us this day our daily
bread". With this Christian direction we find the version "give us this day our
spiritual bread". But should not this version be closer to the idea that it is
the interior, "the spirit", within ourselves and in Cosmos that we
We have the same problem
with the Sermon on the Mount, the verse "blessed are the poor in spirit",
(Luke). As the other gospels do not contain "in spirit" the inclination has been
to claim that "in spirit" with Luke has been added by some contemporary
anti-Marxist. In support of von Spaeth's observation that there is a general
inclination also to repel Moses and the core of his ideology, I want to point
out that St. Hieronymus, the first translator of the Old Testament from Hebrew
and the New Testament from Greek, indeed translated "our daily bread" to
"panis
nostrum supersubstantialis" i.e. "our spiritual bread". For did not Hieronymus
know what he was talking about? This man - praised and worshipped by August for
his firm knowledge of Hebrew, Greek, and Latin.
The Essential Understanding
A central basis of the analysis of his texts is von Spaeth's use of a principle
adopted by Max Weber, the sociologist and anthropologist, who calls it
"Verstehen", i.e. - the obvious, but rarely observed - that it is not possible
to describe a distant culture's habits and rituals without understanding the
meaning and the purpose itself. An explorer who wants to describe the rituals of
a exotic tribe in connection with calling forth of rain will never be able to
describe it correctly unless he understands the purpose of the ritual - the
calling forth of rain.
And by this von Spaeth
proceeds into serious minefields - the ancient mystery cults and astrology. Ove
von Spaeth simply means that without a knowledge of ancient history's
astrological imaginations and the profound idea of many and often strange,
cultic rituals, we only understand a fraction of the contents of the Bible, and
in any case not at all enough to be aware of the existing relations between the
Egyptian, the Jewish, and the Christian worlds. Further, as a red rag in front
of modern religio-sociologists, von Spaeth emphasizes that the great religions
were not originally a social product, but that civilization, and in general
societies capable of surviving, origin from a kind of mysterious, individual
experiences provoked by the purpose of the cults.
In which ever way we turn
this over in our minds we can not escape von Spaeth's emphasis on the conditions
of practice ruling in ancient times and for a long time ahead. From ancient
Egypt via Greece and Rome, with a medieval break, but with a revival during the
Renaissance, the entire period was pervaded with cultic and astrological ideas.
Cultic Sky-Inspiration
The actual "The Secret Religion" with the subtitle "Moses and the Egyptian
heritage in the past and present" (C.A. Reitzel Publishers), the fourth volume of
von Spaeth's series about Moses, is a tour de force in trying to make us read
the Old Testament and the New Testament through cultic and astrological glasses.
For those who turn sick by the word "astrology" I should like - on my own behalf
- to present an explanatory note: constellations of stars should not be - as
often done - interpreted as an immediate explanation of events on the individual
and general level on our planet. Constellations of stars appear with a cyclic
and thus calculated periodicity. For instance such as solar eclipses.
At different times and in
different positions compared to the sun the Earth is influenced by different
kinds of more or less important cosmic radiation that is not any news or
incomprehensible. Neither that cosmic radiation may be the reason for many
explicable and also more inexplicable phenomena on this planet. Of course
different kinds of cosmic radiation also can appear with regular periodicity -
like for instance the result of sunspots, which can both be measured and often
be calculated.
Therefore, nothing
prevent a certain kind of cosmic radiance from appearing simultaneously with a
certain constellation of stars. If only the result and not the source of this
cosmic radiance is known, and this result appears apparently connected to a
certain constellation of stars, there will be a natural inclination to point to
this in itself innocent constellation of stars as the reason. The signs of the
Zodiac should just be understood as signs or signals. Like the Pavlovian dogs -
we make the mistake to believe that the ringing bell is the source of the
delicious food. The bell is only signalising that dinner is served.
Orphic or Osiric Interpretation
The result of cultic
rituals need not be explained or "defended". It is a thoroughly studied fact. It
is beyond doubt that from ancient times to places on Earth where they still are
maintained, the purpose of rituals is ecstasy and some kind of a "higher state".
That hallucinatory states may be reached through what we today call sensory
deprivation - deprivation of all senses - is no news - on the contrary. If
someone is lowered into a tank with lukewarm water for 72 hours or is forced to
stay in a closed coffin for 72 hours is in this connection one and the same
thing. The cultic rituals have a purpose - they are not absurd tomfoolery.
When we read in an
official Scandinavian church policy called the Augsburg Confession - about God's only begotten Son, who was executed by
Pontius Pilate, spent three days in the kingdom of the dead, only to finally
resurrect, and ascend into Heaven - it will be pure rubbish to a person of today of
sound mind. If, however, the text is interpreted Orphic or perhaps Osiric, i.e.
cultic-ritual, it is about achieving a higher or different state of mind through
complete isolation from external influences.
A Fascinating World Opens Up
In this the fourth volume of his great work von Spaeth makes us read through
astrological-cultic symbolizing glasses, and it is both very exciting and often
very amusing.
We know that the
concealed is always interesting, but it is not for entertaining reasons that
mystery cults are being surrounded by a huge and at times impenetrable wall of
secrecy. One the explanations is, of course, the danger of vulgarisation,
causing evaporation of the psychical excitement necessary to achieve the
concrete results, i.e. some kind of ecstasy. In the same way von Spaeth explains
Moses' ban against images of God. What is supposed to be an introvert and
spiritual matter is made reified by images and will draw the mind off its focus.
Another reason for
keeping secret the mystery cults is probably that preparations of the mystic
initiation were often rituals directed against liberation from conventional
strings attached to society. Also rites using sex and bloodshed cannot be
public. That rites have often very drastic forms is beyond doubt. In some cases
they have had such a form that nobody felt inclined to describe them. In "A
Poet's Bazaar" Hans Christian Andersen mentions an initiating ritual ceremony
with the "Turkish dervishes"; having described the beginning of the performance
he discontinue by saying, "the following was of a kind not suitable for the
paper".
But now, read the
volume (four) concerned - "The Secret Religion" - of the series
"Assassinating Moses". Reading this volume makes you at once want to read
the three preceding volumes again. This summary of the volume four is only
referring to a fraction of the subjects that von Spaeth is dealing with - if
not to say scrutinises. A fascinating world opens up under his magnifying
glass.
J.M. Rio de
Janeiro, 24 November 2004
Info: Ove von Spaeth: "The Secret Religion; Moses and the Egyptian Heritage in
the Past and Present", 367 pages,
illustr., DKK 295,-, C.A. Reitzel Publishers, 2004 (p.t. in Danish
only).
(The essayist/reviewer, Jurij Moskvitin, M.A. in philosophy, mathematician,
concert pianist, film music compositor, and author (Jurij Moskvitin"s "Essay on the
Origin of Thought", Ohio University Press, 1974, was soon established as a
true classic); he has formerly been a reviewer for the Copenhagen newspaper
"Politiken" and occasionally for the Danish national television).
(Jurij Moskvitin has, 24.Nov.2004, given OvS. permission to use this
article)
Danish Edgar Cayce Society, Vol.10, December
2005, pp.9-11 - & - siqintelligens.dk,
permanent text, October-November 2004 - feature article:
Inspirations in the Light of Ove von Spaeth's
Authorship
By MERETE GUNDERSEN, Writer, SIQ Therapeutist
Knowledge of Reincarnation. - A special book, on many levels an extremely
interesting and unusually activating, has been published - and indeed,
containing part of the special light: "The Secret Religion", the work of Ove
von Spaeth, the writer and researcher, presents new insights in religious
history from ancient Egypt up till the modern, western world. One - also
brilliantly and thoroughly prepared - aspect of the diversified contents of
the book will be focused in the following.
Many people of
the modern world ask the question to themselves why they should at all
engage in something as distant to them as the thought of reincarnation. Or
as the thought of that human beings may have lived several or many previous
lives. And the thought, that perhaps they may also experience many future
lives.
To some people
this thought may seem immense, frightening, and very peculiar, because to a
broad extent they have probably already have had plentiful decisions to take
a stand on concerning events, which have happened, or happen, in this life.
The reader may ask, "What's the use for me?". One can imagine that, what
gives the life a meaning, may be the teachings of reincarnation: The fact
that human life on this planet may be meaningful in a much larger
perspective of development than we usually imagine.
Throughout the wisdom's eternal substances
Therefore, it is of extremely importance to do research on human
consciousness - and to describe it - much more than has been the case
hitherto. Ove von Spaeth, a Danish Writer, has done research in exciting
finds and discoveries, not least in the spiritual parts of ancient history.
And in the
veritable goldmine of knowledge that Ove von Spaeth has generated to us in
his books and articles, a very basic knowledge can be seen, which may
contribute to various future research on the teachings of reincarnation,
together with research in consciousness. It is impossible to escape this
knowledge - as Ove von Spaeth among other things is dealing with in his
book, "The Secret Religion" (C.A. Reitzel Publisher and Booksellar,
Ltd., 2004), especially the chapter: "Religion's Lost Dimension".
Reincarnation
is only to be attached to one out of many lines of his authorship. But
especially valuable is Ove von Spaeth's text about reincarnation, which
presents an impartial survey not giving priority to any definite faith or
religious conception. For instance, his texts seek to emphasize the
important and meaningful role - often not recognised fully today - that
these ancient ideas have had, and still have, behind our cultural history,
religions, and ways of thinking. Not least such
contributions may help the future circulation of the teachings and the
research on the conception of reincarnation. Because in these texts can be
found the abundantly documented information, which are often missed in other
works on reincarnation. In his books Ove von Spaeth presents also
comprehensive literature references about kindred subjects - and his very
discoveries are unique and are totally presented with a great spirit of
research.
The soul attached to life following life
The individual may be able to extend the outlook of life to understand that
being is not ending, when we stop breathing, but that life goes on - and
that the human consciousness is an eternally valid structure, which will
live on in the more subtle worlds as an eternal monad of light in the
structure of the whole Universe.
It should make
sense that the less good deeds we may do to others and to ourselves in a
given circle of life, may provide us with a positive possibility for having
them disappear from our mind by showing in a new incarnation, that in a
similar situation in new incarnation we are able to act in a more positive
or benevolent way in support of our existence. Consequently, here are
possibilities for making progress through equalizing settling it in another
incarnation. This may encompass being able to develop your own consciousness
and your own understanding of soul. Therefore,
reincarnating deals also with the soul's "growth of experience" by the
individual being - with, by such an extended consciousness can cause the
human potential to develop to an even very beautiful degree.
The eternal source of life flowing through all the many lives in their
sequences
Talking about extension of consciousness as a commencing and further
development of insight, one of many roads to this may be reading about what
was known in pre-historic times concerning these topics. This in order to
focus on ion finding i which area we, at present, may do research to
understand. For instance, here may be done research in, and if possible
disclose what the human consciousness can get in contact with concerning
former lives.
Within
psychology much new knowledge are to be expected, together with major
advances regarding imbalances of the human mind. And, here, everything for
the purpose of bringing them to light and to dissolve them by working with
the human mind's admission to conditions and possible problems of previous
lives. In order to do
future research in the human consciousness, and in order to create new
thinking of psychology in its many aspects, it is a leading point that the
teachings about lifetimes after this life - and the life prior to the life,
should be included. The following "codes" are known from old sources, but
not always recognized: - Withdrawal from the physical body: Earth to earth,
dust to dust, to resurrection. - Withdrawal of the soul: Light to light,
light to be, to resurrect from light. Does it sound too religious? However,
the light is not limited by religion.
The texts of Ove von Spaeth - expanding insights
As far as research is concerned, Ove von Spaeth has passed the major test of
apprenticeship long ago with his treatise on the ancient Egyptian star map,
the oldest star map in the world - and in addition the master test with his
five volume work about the historical Moses. A hallmark of quality also
striking in his many articles - and might be published as e-books, too. All
seeking persons can find answers in Ove von Spaeth's texts. They inform
today's women and men, the teacher, the vicar, and especially the researcher
- here, everybody can find the most unique and subtle information. Such
concentrated knowledge presented in such a way of clarity and wisdom is hard
to find elsewhere.
Several of Ove
von Spaeth's books and articles also dealing with associated subjects may,
thus, contribute to consolidate one of the steps towards a greater
recognition of the ego, the self, the consciousness, and not least the
divine, and also the faith - and now also the knowledge which at all times
have saturated the backgrounds for the perception of history and the
information from the lot of religions and cultures. Altogether, veritable
gems of wisdom have been born with Ove von Spaeth's texts - so read them,
get insight, become worldly-wise and experienced - and have your perception
extended concerning history, religion, and your self and YOUR life and the
teachings of reincarnation. Happy discoveries!
(Merete Gundersen, Writer, Holistic SIQ Therapeutist, is the
author of many books - including the book-series named "The Spiritual
Human Being" , 2004).
The Net Publication of AMH Magazine, medio
January 2005 - reference:
A spiritual journey into ground-breaking books
By KARL AAGE JENSEN, Editor-in-Chief
I see the book -
Ove von Spaeth's "The Secret Religion" - as a spiritual journey which may also
be compared to Paulus' famous journey, - it is immediately felt like this
because our author knows abot how to take us with him on, precisely, a spiritual
journey via his ground-breaking books.
The book is monumental,
an ultimative work about Moses. It may not be for rapid reading but it can, with
a great benefit, be read many times and be used for a genuine study. There is a
meaningful information in each sentence. No stuffing or small talk - you get
your money's worth.
In addition, the book's
advance publicity about the final volume of the series makes us look forward to
that also next time there will be quite a lot of fascinating material about the
ancient star knowledge which had a such a great historical role. Much more about
these important books is to be read on these book's own website:
www.moses-egypt.net.
K.Aa.J.
Karl Aage Jensen, edior-in-chief AMH Magazine,
www.astrologihuset.dk/artikler/avanceret%20stjerneviden.pdf - (medio January
2005)
The Morning Star: Ove von Spaeth is an author and first and last a researcher with a basis in history and astronomical knowledge. This urge for science has
resulted in a series of books which all in a unique way are aiming for a
new-orientation, especially concerning theology and Egyptology; - although, as
we could espect, these books were received by certain theological circles in an
outmost freezing atmosphere. In his books,
the series
about Moses, Ove von Spaeth presents af picture of a living person; thus not
obly a person as we know from the Bible and about whom many are doubting if he
has existed. These books are a journey back in time; a journey well worth doing
as it is providing a basis for future perspectives. So, most welcome - and
enjoy!
A special treasure of knowledge and wisdom
of Greece, Rome, and the Renaissance had originated in Ancient Egypt -
and was here known to connect also with the historical Moses' dramatic
fate and mystery.
Ove von Spaeth has
written an intriguing, new-orientating work presenting this still
influential background of our civilization. • His interdisciplinary
research on history, archaeology, and anthropology goes deeply into
Egyptian tradition, history of religion, initiation cults, star-knowledge,
and mythology - relating to biblical studies, the Rabbinical Writings,
and the authors of Antiquity. • Each volume offers unique insights not
presented before.
Special information is
presented by clicking on the individual cover illustrations:
(ed.note: reading the orientation is highly
recommended. The books are being translated into English)
News about the book-series:
www.moses-egypt.net