Jude: The Acts of the Apostate: High Handed Sins (vv.5-7).pptx
Apu inti, viracocha, .
1. Apu Inti, Viracocha, Machu Picchu
For many years, Z, my spirit guide, and I would go off
alone on adventures in the mountains of upstate NY. One
day, as we walked in a forest by the stream, he told me that
I was connected to a place called Apu.
"What's Apu?" I asked. "Did you mean Apple as in 'Apple
of Knowledge' ... which doesn't fall from the tree?"
"It's more like your Tree of Life," he replied. "One day you
will know this place as its name links to yours and is part of
you."
As there was no internet in those days, search 'Apu' I stored
the word in the back of my mind, as we all do with
expressions we do not understand, knowing later it would
makes sense along with expressions that resonated over and
over.
Enter the Age of Technology. Upon searching for 'Apu', I
discovered that the Incas of Peru had a god named Apu Inti
also known as Viracocha.
In Inca mythology, Apu Qun Tiqsi Wiraqutra, commonly
known today as Con-Tici Viracocha or simply Viracocha,
was the creator of civilization, and one of the most
important deities in the Inca canon. In one legend he had
one son, Inti and two daughters, Mama Quilla and
Pachamama. In this legend, he destroyed the people around
Lake Titicaca with a Great Flood called Unu Pachakuti,
saving two to bring civilization to the rest of the world,
these two beings are Manco Capac, the son of Inti
2. (sometimes taken as the son of Viracocha), whose name
means "splendid foundation", and Mama Ocllo, which
means "mother fertility". These 2 founded the Inca
civilation carrying a golden staff, called tapac-yauri. In
another legend, he fathered the first eight humans. In some
legends, he has a wife called Mama Cocha.
For the meaning of Tiqsi Huiracocha, tiqsi means
foundation or base in Quechua, huira means fat (which the
Inca knew as a source of energy). Cocha means lake, sea,
or reservoir. His many epithets include great, all knowing,
powerful, etc. Huiracocha was also the name of the Inca,
father of Pachacutec. Con-Tici Viracochais is identifiable
with the Polynesian sun god of creation. The Kon-Tiki took
its name from this translation.
Graham Hancock, an anthropologist who is considered a
contemporary by most historians, speculates that Viracocha
was in some way related to Quetzalcoatl, a deity of the
Mexica (Aztecs). While the mythology of the two deities is
quite similar, many respected Aztec historians,
archeologists, anthropologists, and other Aztec experts do
not agree, mostly due to a lack of orthodox historical
evidence. Gods With Water Buckets
Across from the ruins of Ollantaytambo in the Urubamba
Valley stands a sacred mountain believed to have the
profile of Viracocha, the Inca sun god, carved into the
stone.
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6. When the sun strikes this profile of Viracocha during the
winter solstice, the mineral content of the mountain reflects
and refracts the rays.
The solstices were
sacred days for the Inca since so much of their culture was
based on planting seasons.
The buildings to the right and to the left were constructed
by the Inca to store corn as food for winters and as
offerings to Viracocha.
7. Synchronicity or soul attraction brought me to an article
from Labrinthia.com linked to alchemy and sacred
geometry.
This photo is from a place called 'Apu Putucusi, "Apu" is a
Quechua term meaning "Spirit of the Mountain," Putucusi
is located adjacent to the sacred sanctuary of Machu
Picchuthe enigmatic lost city of the Incas. Local legends
recall Apu Putucusi as the access point for the higher
frequency crystal city of light, the Andean equivalent
of Shambhala.
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