This is why in the fifth volume, I am simply establishing these boundaries so that people can develop the right understanding, make the right conclusions, and think correctly. I am giving you a hint as to why the fifth volume began the way it did. It began because after death comes a new cycle, a new life. And this is exactly where it all started, and now I am unfolding everything about these four cycles, about the Sun God, and, consequently, about ancient civilizations. And now the focus is on Ancient Egypt – how they disappeared and how they are now being reborn.
So, if I open Wikipedia now, the section on “Mythology of Ancient Egypt,” what interesting things can I highlight? It says that “the collection of myths of Ancient Egypt describes the actions of the ancient Egyptian gods as a means of understanding the world. The beliefs expressed in these myths are an important part of ancient Egyptian religion. Myths are often described in early Egyptian texts and art, in stories and religious materials such as hymns, funerary texts, as well as in temple decorations. These sources rarely contain a complete exposition of a myth and often describe only brief fragments.” But what next? Now, what do I want to emphasize? “Inspired by natural cycles, the Egyptians perceived events of their time as cyclical patterns, whereas the earliest periods of mythical time were linear. Myths were formed in the earliest times, and they explained the cycles of the present era for the ancient Egyptians. According to ancient Egyptian beliefs, the events of their lives repeated plots from myths and thereby renewed Ma’at, the goddess symbolizing the fundamental order of the universe. Among the most important episodes of mythical history are the myths of the creation of the world, in which the gods create the universe from some primordial chaos; the stories of the reign of the sun god Ra on earth; the myth of Osiris, concerning the struggle of the gods Osiris, Isis, and Horus against the destructive god Seth. The plots of these myths include the conflict between the supporters of Ma’at and the forces of chaos, the important role of the pharaoh in maintaining Ma’at, and the cycle of deaths and rebirths of the gods.” Imagine, this is just the first small section of Wikipedia that I am reading for the first time. And based on everything I have already written in all my other volumes, and what I decoded and analyzed at the beginning of the fifth volume, I had already assumed – I am convinced – that these cycles always repeat, that there is a time of chaos, and when order is restored, a new creation of the world