Aztec Christic Magic Samael Aun Weor - Gran Fratervidad Tao ...
Aztec Christic Magic Samael Aun Weor - Gran Fratervidad Tao ...
Aztec Christic Magic Samael Aun Weor - Gran Fratervidad Tao ...
You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles
YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.
<strong>Aztec</strong> <strong>Christic</strong> <strong>Magic</strong><br />
V.M. SAMAEL AUN WEOR<br />
In the year Ce Acatl (895) in the home of Iztacmixcoatl and Chimalma Quetzalcoatl, the<br />
Nahua Cosmic Christ was incarnated. He had a mystical and austere disposition. When<br />
very young he practiced fasting and penance. When he was thirty years old he was named<br />
grand priest and monarch of Tollan (Tula, state of Hidalgo). Another Toltec anna states:<br />
Exiled from his country, he returned to it after many years. From distant countries, he<br />
brought with him a very advanced civilization and a monotheistic religion of love for all<br />
human beings. Another of those chronicles states: Quetzalcoatl arrived to Tollan through<br />
Panuco; he was carried over the sea in a wooden vessel. He was fair skinned and<br />
bearded, he wore a tunic embroidered with little red crosses.<br />
As an instructor, the Nahuas represented Quetzalcoatl with a miter (made out of gold)<br />
that was covered with a precio us feathered (quetzalli) tiger skin along with an attractively<br />
adorned surplice and turquoise earrings. He had a necklace made out of gold from which<br />
hung little tiny and precious marine shells. He wore a precious feathered (quetzalli) cape<br />
that resembled flames of fire, and a Cactli made out of tiger skin from which also hung<br />
little marine shells; these little marine shells were held tight with very wide laces. These<br />
laces were then crisscrossed up the calf. In his left hand he held shields, showing fivepointed<br />
stars in their centers and in his right hand he held a scepter made out of gold<br />
which was engraved with precious stones.<br />
Quetzalcoatl taught them how to farm the earth, how to classify the animals, how to carve<br />
precious stones, how to melt metals. He taught them about the goldsmith trade and about<br />
ceramics. Quetzalcoatl taught them about astronomy and how to use the calendar. He<br />
prohibited war. He taught them that they should sacrifice bread, flowers and copalli<br />
instead of humans and animals. He prohibited homicide, thievery, polygamy and any evil<br />
deed among human beings.<br />
<strong>Aztec</strong> <strong>Christic</strong> <strong>Magic</strong> <strong>Samael</strong> <strong>Aun</strong> <strong>Weor</strong><br />
5<br />
In Tollan, Quetzalcoatl founded a Temple of Mysteries with four great altars. The first<br />
altar was made out of cedar wood with green ornaments. The second altar was made out<br />
of cedar wood with coral ornaments. The third altar was made out of cedar wood with<br />
marine shell ornaments. The fourth altar was made out of cedar wood with ornaments of<br />
precious feathers (quetzalli). Before these altars, Querzalcoatl and his disciples prayed,<br />
fasted and practiced penances.<br />
Quetzalcoatl talked to them about Ipalnemoani (he from whom we live), about the<br />
creation of the world, about the downfall of the human being, about the deluge, about<br />
Christ and his Gospel, about the baptism, about the circumcision and about the cross<br />
(symbol of the immortality of life and of the regeneration of the human genre).<br />
Quetzalcoatl recommended that crosses be set upon the altars of the temples and in their<br />
homes. He named the countries, the mountains and the valleys.<br />
Quetzalcoatl was a divine instructor. He was denied and persecuted by the same people<br />
whom he had taught how to love and live. They persecuted him and in his escape from<br />
Tollan, he sought refuge for some time in Teotihuacan (a place of worship) where he left<br />
behind an open temple. On this temple’s altar, the Masters performed self-sacrifice and<br />
the solemn ceremony of the new fire.<br />
The altar of this temple is adorned with serpents’ heads that are emerging from the calyx<br />
of a flower. This symbolizes Quetzalcoatl’s fall into the atomic human abysses. The<br />
white shells and the red snail shells that decorate these serpents’ heads are the emblem of<br />
the primary origin of this deity.<br />
www.gftaognosticaespiritual.org<br />
GRAN BIBLIOTECA VIRTUAL ESOTERICA ESPIRITUAL<br />
3