Chapter 27. Four Moods of the Sun
What I want to add and say now – today, a reader asked me about the four gods and the fifth god. And I explained to her that I didn’t sleep all night until 6 a.m. studying all of this. I was searching for all the information available about the Sun God, the God of the Sun – who he is, where he is mentioned, why he is the Sun God, why he is the main one. Then I also searched using various keywords in Google and other search engines: “four gods,” “who are the main four gods.” That is, not three, but four, and who exactly is the fifth god – are there five in total, or are there really just four? And what conclusion do I have today? Once again, I’ll repeat, even though I’ve mentioned this before: we have a day, meaning a 24-hour period, during which we experience the Sun’s quick cycle – sunrise and sunset. And within this period, within a day, there are four cycles: evening, morning, day, and night – these are the four moods of the Sun. The Sun itself is the fifth God, and it always manifests as day, night, morning, and evening – these are the stages of the Sun. Likewise, we have a larger annual cycle, where the Sun moves through the year and is divided into four groups – four seasons: winter, summer, spring, and autumn. These four seasons are the four gods, the four moods of the Sun. But the Sun, which consists of these four, is the main God. So essentially, there is no separate fifth god – the four gods are the fifth god, meaning the fifth god is made up of the four. It’s the same as if we were to imagine having two hands and two legs, representing the four seasons. If I were to depict them separately – one arm, one leg, the left and right sides – and label them as different gods, people would count four. And if I then depicted the head, the face, as the fifth god, people would assume that it’s something separate. But in reality, it’s not – the fifth god is precisely the two arms and two legs. These four limbs are the fifth God – they are its parts, but in totality, it is one. So the fifth element is something that consists of the four elements. That is what the fifth god is. And since everything in this world follows the same matrix, we see that there is a miniature version of this in the micro-world – the daily cycle, which is divided into four stages of the Sun: evening, morning, day, and night. Then, on a larger scale, the matrix expands – the year is divided into four seasons. And on an even grander scale, we have an era, which is also divided into four epochs – just like winter, summer, spring, and autumn.