Welcome to the Temple of Zeus's Official Forums!

Welcome to the official forums for the Temple of Zeus. Please consider registering an account to join our community.

Yezdi, Doctrines of Zeus and Power of the Gods

GoldenRatio

New member
Joined
Feb 26, 2025
Messages
15

“In the secret of my knowledge, there is no god but me.
These things are subservient to my power.
O mine enemies, why do you deny me?
O men deny me not, but submit.
In the Day of Judgment, you will be happy in meeting me.
Who dies in my love, I will cast him
In the midst of paradise, by my will and pleasure;
But he that dies unmindful of me
Will be thrown into torture in misery and affliction.”


Why is the Yezdi tradition the main focus on the 'Doctrines of Zeus' section? What exactly about their beliefs is particularly special? Also, this passage I quoted sounds a lot like the Abrahamic god using heaven and hell as motivators for submission.

This next question maybe deserves its own thread, but I'll throw it here. I'm unaware of the full history spoken here about interplanetary warfare, but I've surmised that there was a war between the Gods (or Nords) and Grays (source of Abrahamic religions). The Grays won, hence the dominance of Abrahamic faith, but that it's an ongoing war. This supported by threads I've read where apparently people here were helping daemons being released from captivity and such. I'm just having a hard time understanding the connection between this history and passages like the above which indicates an omnipotent power that controls all.
 
You taken this out of context, and haven't done enough study:

Read up on the origins of the Temple of Zeus:

Mp3 recording of HPS Pythia's history of the Yezidi:

I did post hastily because the quote rubbed me the wrong way, but I did read everything on the site regarding the Yezidi and the Al Jilwah. That said, the quote is taken in exactly the context given. If you mean to say that I'm misinterpreting it, fair enough, but that's why I've posted here.

The Al Jilwah, Black Book of Satan, comes from the Yezidi and is the 'most important doctrine in Satanism'. I'm not familiar about all the texts in the world referencing Satan and the Gods, but I presume there's plenty of Hindu or Egyptian texts that make a claim for being from Satan directly. The city of Eridu is considered Satan's city, but the Yezidi people aren't from there- it is an ancient Sumerian city. Hence my question of what makes the Yezidi traditions special in particular.
 
I guess a better way to ask my question is how the Gods relate to the cosmic mind. The Abrahamic God makes the claim of being the cosmic mind, as being an omnipotent power. These Yezidi texts hint at an omnipotent power, but not exactly:

"There is no place in the universe that knows not my presence. I participate in all the affairs..."
"...power and dominion over all that is on earth, both that which is above and that which is beneath, are in my hands."


It's difficult for me to reconcile the idea of losing the battle 10,000 years ago with quotes like the above which hint at extraordinary power. Till now, I've mentally understood the Gods as advanced spiritual beings connected to the cosmic mind and whom are trying to help humans progress spiritually. Slavish worship is not necessary, but reverence is due to their advanced spiritual nature and good intentions for helping humanity.
Presence being felt and being omnipotent are not the same thing. It is a fact that the whole universe knows Satanas well. One of His sigils lays it out right in front of your eyes as it contains all the shapes for a never repeating, endless pattern.

The quote that you mention is not literal in the sense you think, as it explains that there are consequences for certain paths. Aligning your will with His will brings many benefits, and by going in the other direction, many afflictions will come to you. This is why we engage in soul-elevating practices with the aim of improving ourselves and the world while we are fighting against the forces that act in the opposite direction. So there is no judgment in the Abrahamic sense (do as I say, or else!), but rather a judgment of what you have done and the natural consequences of one's actions (Did you accomplish what you were set out to do, and if so, how well? And then proceeding as required as a result. This is real judgement, not some fairlytale powertripping nonsense).
 
I guess a better way to ask my question is how the Gods relate to the cosmic mind. The Abrahamic God makes the claim of being the cosmic mind, as being an omnipotent power. These Yezidi texts hint at an omnipotent power, but not exactly:

"There is no place in the universe that knows not my presence. I participate in all the affairs..."
"...power and dominion over all that is on earth, both that which is above and that which is beneath, are in my hands."


It's difficult for me to reconcile the idea of losing the battle 10,000 years ago with quotes like the above which hint at extraordinary power. Till now, I've mentally understood the Gods as advanced spiritual beings connected to the cosmic mind and whom are trying to help humans progress spiritually. Slavish worship is not necessary, but reverence is due to their advanced spiritual nature and good intentions for helping humanity.
Do you understand what, "taken out of context" means? When you take a section of words (passage) out of an original document and apply your own personal interpretation to it, disregarding and changing the overall meaning of the original document.
As is constantly explained in Temple of Zeus, knowledge is critical to understanding the spiritual nature of things. This is what we here at ToZ are all about. Learning that spiritual knowledge and then passing it on (this is what is happening right now with this thread). Otherwise we can't know and understand what to do to spiritually progress.
@Henu the Great expressed it better than me because he is more spiritually knowledgeable, giving him a better insight and understanding of what the Al Jilwah means (in it's full context). It's the same with all advanced members here.
I try to help by answering questions here, but I'm not yet at the level of many, but hope to be one day. This is another thing too; you must have a sincere intention (humility) to study, listen and learn.
It's a long process of reprogramming, reeducation and awakening/transforming our soul (also with meditation) to bring us closer to perfection of becoming a God, inline with Satya's divine plan.
 
Do you understand what, "taken out of context" means? When you take a section of words (passage) out of an original document and apply your own personal interpretation to it, disregarding and changing the overall meaning of the original document.
As is constantly explained in Temple of Zeus, knowledge is critical to understanding the spiritual nature of things. This is what we here at ToZ are all about. Learning that spiritual knowledge and then passing it on (this is what is happening right now with this thread). Otherwise we can't know and understand what to do to spiritually progress.
@Henu the Great expressed it better than me because he is more spiritually knowledgeable, giving him a better insight and understanding of what the Al Jilwah means (in it's full context). It's the same with all advanced members here.
I try to help by answering questions here, but I'm not yet at the level of many, but hope to be one day. This is another thing too; you must have a sincere intention (humility) to study, listen and learn.
It's a long process of reprogramming, reeducation and awakening/transforming our soul (also with meditation) to bring us closer to perfection of becoming a God, inline with Satya's divine plan.
As I said, I read everything about the Yezidi and with that context made my interpretation. In fact, it was less of an interpretation and more of a pointing out of the Abrahamic overtones, which persist throughout with references to itself like "...the ruling power preceding all that exists."

I do appreciate you clearing up the history. I've seen a similar descriptions around the forums and site. Do you know if there is a section of the site that goes into the history in-depth? I couldn't find anything.
 

Official Temple of Zeus Links

Back
Top