Hapi, Amset, Kebehsenuef, and Duamutef.” I saw an image of the four sons of Horus. But the most interesting part is that studying them confirms what I figured out in the matrix. The same analogy is there. It states: “The sons of Horus also represented the four cardinal directions.” It also mentions: “One of these four sons has a human face, while the others have animal faces.” This matches with Orthodox Christianity, where there are four animals, four horsemen of the apocalypse, with one having a human face and the others having animal faces. The excerpt from the Book of the Dead says: “The gods in Horus’s entourage – Amset, Hapi, Duamutef, and Kebehsenuef. Greetings to you, lords of truth and justice, supreme princes standing behind Osiris; you eradicate sins and crimes and are part of the entourage of the goddess Hetep-sekhes, so allow me to approach you. Deliver me from all the vices hidden within me, as you did for the Seven Spirits who followed their leader Sepa. Anubis showed them their places on the day he said: ‘So go there.’ These lords of truth and justice are Thoth and Astes, the lord of Amentet. Supreme princes standing behind Osiris, namely, Amset, Hapi, Duamutef, and Kebehsenuef, are those who stand at the Hip in the northern sky.” This describes the matrix. “The Hip in the northern sky is the ‘plough’ of the constellation Ursa Major, called the ‘hip of Set’ by the Egyptians. Its seven main stars were called in ancient Egypt the Seven Celestial Spirits, four of which are the sons of Horus.” Here it says, “Four of which” and three are the three principal gods. “The four sons of Horus are constantly referred to as the ‘Pillars of Heaven.’ So, it turns out that there is a main god in Egyptian mythology, and then there are three gods that are his manifestations.
It even says, “Ra, the ancient Egyptian sun god, the supreme deity in the religion of the ancient Egyptians. His name means ‘Sun’ (Coptic PH). The center of his cult was Heliopolis, where Ra was identified with the older local solar deity, Atum, and where he was associated with, as his manifestations, the Phoenix bird, the bull Mnevis, and the Ben-Ben obelisk.” Here you see the three gods and their manifestations. “In other religious centers, Ra, through religious syncretism, was also associated with local deities of light: Amun (in Thebes) as Amun-Ra, Khnum (in Elephantine) as Khnum-Ra, Horus as Ra-Horakhty (Ra-Horahte). The last association was particularly widespread. Ra led the Heliopolitan Ennead of deities.”
But what’s interesting next is that “Set in ancient Egyptian mythology is the god of fury, sandstorms, destruction, chaos, war, and death, who is part of the Heliopolitan Ennead. Originally worshiped as the ‘defender of the sun Ra,’