Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Major Discovery!
I have just found evidence from Philo of Alexandria that the core kabbalistic doctrines of the 'Marcosians' were known to him in the early first century! Yes the whole business about the episemon falling from the heavenly assembly of letters was known to Alexandrian Jews c. 40 CE. While this doesn't mean that St. Mark was a real person, that he (as the Copts claim) knew or was related to Philo or that 'Marcus' was St. Mark it does suggest that the Marcosian doctrine was promoted among Alexandrians in the exact time that Alexandrians have always claimed that Mark was active and was known to prominent 'real historical' Jews of the period.
This is big. I will lay this out as one of the hundred proofs I am working on right now. Yet let me say that if JEWS like me had been working on the Patristic literature rather than ignorant Gentiles five year old children would have figured out this kabbalah a century ago.
It's amazing how dense these people really are. Couldn't they see that an episemon was a vav?! Oh I forgot, they think that kabbalah was 'made up' in the medieval period. Ha! Now we have proof from their own 'holy Church Fathers' that it was actively promoted in first century Alexandria and - I am certain - their 'St. Mark' was one of its most prominent advocates.
%$#^&&%! ...
This is big. I will lay this out as one of the hundred proofs I am working on right now. Yet let me say that if JEWS like me had been working on the Patristic literature rather than ignorant Gentiles five year old children would have figured out this kabbalah a century ago.
It's amazing how dense these people really are. Couldn't they see that an episemon was a vav?! Oh I forgot, they think that kabbalah was 'made up' in the medieval period. Ha! Now we have proof from their own 'holy Church Fathers' that it was actively promoted in first century Alexandria and - I am certain - their 'St. Mark' was one of its most prominent advocates.
%$#^&&%! ...
Email stephan.h.huller@gmail.com with comments or questions.