| 12.17 |
Messiah syndrome
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A phenomena virtually never spoken about in public is the hundreds of thousands of men and women around the world who believe in their hearts and minds that they are the one true messiah, come to redeem the world.
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This self-belief is usually manifested through the associated icons of the culture to which the person was born. In the case of Christian cultures, it is the belief by a person that they are Jesus Christ, or Mary. In the case of Islam or Judaism, it is the belief of a person in being the reincarnation of a great prophet. |
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| 12.17.1 |
There are too many people to simply call this just delusion |
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While many thousands of unhappy souls have found themselves committed to psychiatric clinics and prisons around the world, an equal number of people still manage to function within society, masking their true personal beliefs. Some, occasionally manage to grab the reins of power of a religion or society only to wreak havoc. |
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The point is that there are simply too many humans that have lived and who are alive today to consider the “messiah complex”, some psychological delusional disorder. |
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| 12.17.2 |
The great trap– the poisoned enlightened mind |
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It is the belief of the author that the “messiah complex” is a deliberate program within the mind designed to totally disable any mind seeking greater enlightenment and understanding of self. |
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Once stumbled upon, it poisons 99.999% of enlightened minds to think of themselves as better, greater, higher, more unique than others. A perfect trap, a terrible legacy of the gods. |
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| 12.17.3 |
Function of messiah syndrome |
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The function of the Messiah syndrome is both focused and unrelenting– to deny the individual the ability to really understand great knowledge and wisdom they have acquired and to shut them off from being aligned in the present moment. |
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So powerful is the messiah syndrome that when activated it will largely prevent a person from objectively seeing their position and statements. Messiah syndrome is kind of like being possessed. |
| 12.17.4 |
Origins of messiah syndrome |
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Traditional western cultures possess a cryptic tradition of knowledge pointing to the origin of the Messiah Syndrome as a kind of inner-blindness. |
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The Gnostic tradition talks of a deliberate blindness created in the minds of the first humans being our creator (the gods). Some cultures even talk of this as a kind of “evil seed” or “original sin”. |
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Further clues are provided in mainstream judeo-islamic-christian tradition of the story of the garden of Eden and the “hubris of mankind” being to believe itself being equal to God. |
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Thus the concept of Messiah syndrome in one sense (believing yourself a “god”) is listed in plain site as a core part of the cultural tradition of judeo-islamic-christian thought. |
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