Kabbalah Explained
The kabbalah is a collection of Jewish magical texts, which were given to mankind via psychic communion with a fallen angel called Raziel. Raziel is one of the Pentium of the so-called fallen angels who serve the light bringer Lucifer. The Kabbalah describes the many angels and demons who inhabit the spiritual realm. The Kabbalah gives kabbalists a roadmap called The Tree of Life, which explains how to invoke and communicate with these powerful spirits. The magical information in the Kabbalah originates from Babylon and ancient Egypt at the time of the Pharaohs, but did not reach Europe in printed form until the 11th and 12th centuries.
The sacred books of the Kabbalah are just a few thousand words long but they contain complex descriptions of a spherical earth, parallel universe, and the atomic nature of matter; ideas which should become common doctrine amongst modern physicists and astronomers. How could such complex information be contained in a group of ancient texts barely larger than an average magazine. The answer is that the Kabbalah is written in code. Codes are used to conceal multi layered complex information which would later be studied by many evil alchemists. Sir Isaac Newton and many leading scientists studied the rich occult sciences within the Kabbalah. There was a time when mysticism, religion, alchemy, astronomy and astrology were studied as one kabbalistically based tradition. Jewish physicist Albert Einstein conveyed pages and pages of complex calculations in a simple five symbol code, “e equals m c squared (e=mc2).” Modern day quantum physics chaos theory and the notion of parallel universes can all be traced back to the original text of the ancient Kabbalah.
Since medieval times, the Jewish people have been considered a race of magicians. The biblical rabbis used shaman type techniques to induce altered states of consciousness, fasting, flagellation and burying one’s self up to the neck, were all techniques used to prepare the rabbi magician for a battle through the seven portals of the kabbalistic Tree of Life, where they would eventually meet the supreme deity in a realm called the Merkabah. Rituals sex magic was also practiced amongst some Jewish cults. Many temples had holes in the walls so that rabbis could ritually sodomize a prostitute, a young man or a boy and invoke the fallen angel Raziel as they reached sexual climax. The word sodomy is derived from the name of the biblical city of Sodom in which sex magic and blood sacrifice were widely practiced. A strange version of vampirism, or blood drinking, is still a practice to this day by many rabbis who suck the blood from the freshly severed fore skin of newborn babies. Much of the ritual we see in the modern-day Catholic Church, such as the symbolic eating of the flesh of Christ and the symbolic drinking of his blood, are derived from ancient Jewish rituals in which different forms of vampirism and blood sacrifice were an accepted part of this occult tradition. After all, the Pope does wear a Jewish yarmulke.
The collection of texts called the Kabbalah were eventually transcribed by Rabbi Isaac the Blind in Provence, in the south of France, during the 12th century. For the first time in a six-thousand-year history, the ancient magical techniques of invoking fallen and demonic angels and killing someone using the evil eye, were put down on paper.