This is a blurb from my upcoming book, The Hidden Things of the Garden" which I encourage you to buy at month's end:
As
Jesus was approaching death upon the cross, He began to sing in agony as if He
was being turned inside out — the 22nd Psalm that God had forsaken Him;
that God had withdrawn from Him. That seems ambiguous but Jesus would have been
a threshold creature who would have the Glory of Himself come out of its
cocoon, as if it was a complete metamorphosis. The “agony of Christ” would have
been that painful change which we suppose that insects do without any pain.
That
does seem stretching it a bit, but earlier Jesus had been temporarily
transfigured, but the cross provided a complete and lasting metamorphosis; Jesus,
no longer God in the flesh of a beast, He became God in glorious incorruptible
Substance — the “Angel of the Lord” (Mat 28:2).
Caterpillars
use either trees or branches to hang from to undergo metamorphosis. Jesus was
put upon His Tree (Acts 5:30) — the Cross — to change from one substance to
another. Jesus shed His flesh to become the glorious “butterfly” and later “flew”
away to spread His Glory to the world.
Why
the 22nd Psalm? He was singing about Himself a changing. He noted
that He had God in Him, saying, “My God, why have You forsaken me?... But I am
a worm, and no man…” (Psalm 22:1,6).
Using
the tables in the Appendix, the “worm” is tola’ (תּוֺלָע) whose pictographs suggest a cocoon or
similar thing. (CoPilot AI). A cocoon is a threshold existence prior to a
transition as the creature undergoes metamorphosis. That was what Jesus was
undergoing on the Cross.
The
coccus ilicis which is believed to represent the “worm” in the psalm ready
to undergo metamorphosis; the males “go through multiple nymphal stages and a
pupal (cocoon) stage to emerge as winged adults, living only a few days in
order to mate”
Males
undergo change but the female coccus ilicis becomes a berry-like thing
from which crimson die is made. Coccus ilicis undergo a change like Jesus
whose flesh bled crimson and His inner existence became the “butterfly.” God
used His creatures to transform Himself. That is a smart move, God!
Jesus
would have come into the world as a creature of flesh from the womb of Mary,
just like any worm. His baptism would have been a stage of development with Him
going from a divine “nymph” to an instar — stages between molts. The
transfiguration would have been the second stage and the crucifixion the third.
The final instar would have been the Resurrection of Jesus as an entirely new
creature — the Angel of the Lord. (Instar simply means “likeness”).
In
the same manner, Adam would have been a threshold creature going from a
beautiful angel of the Lord to a beast, sort of a reverse metamorphosis due to
decoherence from sin that reversed the normal process in defiance of God.
Stages
(instars) of coccus ilicis development are much like windows catch the
process in action. They are threshold creatures that look little like before or
after. The same may apply to any of the hybrid sky creatures which take on different
images: Anunnaki, watchers, Masikim, or even Adam, prior to becoming flesh-bearing
creatures.
To
understand the hidden things of God perhaps butterflies and their “worms”
should be studied.
Jesus
shed His flesh and became an Angel of the Lord. His life was much like the life
of a butterfly.
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