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		<title>Medieval Social Structure and Achad&#8217;s Tree of Life</title>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Medieval Social Structure and Achad&#8217;s Tree of Life<br />
by Benjamin Rowe</p>
<p>Copyright 1988, 1992 by Benjamin Rowe</p>
<p>Permission is granted to distribute this work in electronic form, with<br />
the these conditions:</p>
<p>1) No fees may be charged for the distribution or transmission of this<br />
document, other than standard charges for use of transmission lines or<br />
electronic media. Distribution for commercial purposes or by commercial<br />
entities is specifically prohibited.</p>
<p>2) All copies distributed must contain the complete, unedited text of<br />
the original document and this copyright notice.</p>
<p>3) Persons acquiring the electronic version of this document may make<br />
one printed copy for their personal use.</p>
<p>All other rights are retained by the author.</p>
<p>Medieval Social Structure and Achad&#8217;s Tree of Life</p>
<p>This work presents a brief outline of the relation between Achad&#8217;s Tree<br />
of Life and the various groups making up the structure of medieval<br />
society. It is intended to be suggestive rather than comprehensive, but<br />
what is shown here should establish that the correspondence is fairly<br />
complete. The first outline shows the basic correspondences. The second<br />
shows the manner in which I arrived at these correspondences.</p>
<p>Medieval society generally perceived itself as divided into three<br />
sections, the common folk, the nobility and priests, and God. This<br />
division is reflected in the correspondences here.</p>
<p>_________________________________________________</p>
<p>Formation of the Village Culture</p>
<p>Malkuth &#8211; The empty land.</p>
<p>Aleph &#8211; The people follow the winds into the land. They till the soil<br />
and scatter the seed.</p>
<p>Beth &#8211; The ceaselessly shifting movements of the elements over the land<br />
cause the seeds to grow. The tradesmen take the elements from the land<br />
and fashion them with their tools.</p>
<p>Daleth- Under the care of the women and the fashioning of the tradesmen,<br />
the land produces an abundance. The living creatures within the land<br />
become fruitful and multiply.</p>
<p>Yesod &#8211; The abundance enables the people to establish homes and produce<br />
families, thus ensuring their survival and continuance. A village is<br />
established.</p>
<p>Gimel &#8211; The midwifes, herbalists, wise-women and nature-priestesses<br />
practice skills and trades developed out of the necessities of womanly<br />
existence.</p>
<p>Hod &#8211; The bards and scribes remember and record the wisdom of the<br />
tradesmen and wise-women, transforming them into words so that they can<br />
be passed to the succeeding generations.</p>
<p>Cheth &#8211; when many families have grown in the land, they designate a<br />
place where they will meet to exchange things they have produced. The<br />
meeting-place becomes a market town.</p>
<p>Vav &#8211; Through the families&#8217; interactions, customs develop. The elders of<br />
the village become the guardians of custom, ruling on disputes,<br />
celebrating marriages, etc.</p>
<p>Netzach &#8211; Smiths, merchants, innkeepers, and others whose livelihood<br />
depends on trade between the families set up permanent dwellings in the<br />
market town.</p>
<p>_________________________________________________</p>
<p>The villages have contact with the rest of the world through:</p>
<p>Mem &#8211; Clergymen are appointed under the King&#8217;s approval to represent the<br />
Will of God to the families of the village.</p>
<p>Zayin &#8211; Messengers, minstrels, and tinkers carry news and tales of other<br />
places to the village. Young men seek a wives outside their own village,<br />
under the usual exogamic customs.</p>
<p>Teth &#8211; Traders, salesmen and other theatrical types pass through looking<br />
for money. The merchants seek to influence the king by lending or<br />
withholding money for his projects.</p>
<p>Yod &#8211; Pilgrims and wandering monks come and go in their seeking. Men<br />
from the village are pressed into service in the army.</p>
<p>Lamed &#8211; Judges and representatives of the law come to enforce the laws<br />
of the land.</p>
<p>________________________________________________</p>
<p>The King, Nobles, and Priesthood</p>
<p>Tiphereth &#8211; The King is perceived by the villagers as the embodiment of<br />
the higher powers ruling them. He is a glamorous figure, a living<br />
representation of the soul of the land.</p>
<p>Heh &#8211; As the war-leader he protects the land from invasion, and keeps<br />
the peace by force when necessary. In his dark aspect, he rules through<br />
fear. Conversely, the nobles maintain a degree of influence over the<br />
King because they control the troops and levies he must use. Without<br />
their cooperation his power is an illusion.</p>
<p>Geburah &#8211; As a child, the king is taught the art of war by the knights<br />
and nobility, the hereditary professional warrior class. As an adult, he<br />
rules as one of them. Where the continuity of the village culture is<br />
maintained by the preservation of lore (Hod), the continuity of the<br />
noble culture is maintained through violence and the threat of violence.</p>
<p>Chesed &#8211; The Church and its Priesthood. As a child, the king is taught<br />
history and the peaceful arts by the priesthood, usually in some<br />
monastic environment (Qoph). As an adult, he translates the lessons and<br />
cannons of the priests into laws governing the people.</p>
<p>Qoph &#8211; The Priesthood exerts influence over the King by its control over<br />
the religious and intellectual aspects of life. Since they deal with<br />
areas where material proof is impossible, they can say whatever they<br />
want without fear of contradiction. By identifying the King with the<br />
Savior, they can enhance his position in the eyes of the people. By<br />
declaring his actions to be against the Will of God, they can make him<br />
into the sacrificial victim whose blood must be shed so that the land<br />
might prosper.</p>
<p>Nun &#8211; Where conflicts in the village are resolved by resort to custom,<br />
conflicts among the nobility and priests are resolved through intrigue,<br />
secret agreements, and assassination.</p>
<p>Ayin &#8211; The King is the court of last resort, the enforcer of the spirit<br />
of the law when the letter of the law is abused. In his dark aspect he<br />
is the autocrat, enjoying his power over others and making use of it for<br />
his own pleasure without regard to the consequences for those he<br />
controls.</p>
<p>Shin &#8211; He is anointed by god, and rules by God&#8217;s Will.</p>
<p>Resh &#8211; As the soul of the land, the King&#8217;s fortunes reflect the fortunes<br />
of the land, and foreshadow the fortunes to come.</p>
<p>Peh &#8211; The nobility can maintain their power in the face of stronger<br />
opponents through their possession of impregnable fortresses. These<br />
fortresses are usually placed at strategic points along routes of travel<br />
and trade. So long as the fortress stands, a noble&#8217;s power holds. When<br />
the fortress is taken or is destroyed, his power falls even if he is not<br />
captured himself.</p>
<p>Samek &#8211; The Priesthood maintains its power through its control of the<br />
sources of knowledge, and through its claim that it interprets the plan<br />
of god to man. When knowledge becomes available through other sources,<br />
the power of the Priesthood is weakened.</p>
<p>_________________________________________________</p>
<p>Heaven</p>
<p>The King, the nobility, and the priesthood are answerable only to god,<br />
in his threefold aspect:</p>
<p>Binah &#8211; The Holy Spirit. Also Mary as the Mother or receptacle for the<br />
substance of God. In its Saturnian aspect, God as rule-maker and<br />
immovable power.</p>
<p>Chokmah &#8211; The Son, the Word. The plan of God, which is interpreted by<br />
the priests.</p>
<p>Kether &#8211; God the Father, God the Creator.</p>
<p>Tzaddi &#8211; the Angels and the 12 Apostles, working towards the<br />
manifestation (Binah) of God&#8217;s Plan (Chokmah) under the Will of God<br />
(Shin).</p>
<p>Tau &#8211; The embodiment of God in the matter of which the world is made.</p>
<p>Kaph &#8211; The embodiment of God&#8217;s plan in the motions of the heavenly<br />
spheres.</p>
<p>=================================================</p>
<p>The correspondences in this outline generally derive either directly<br />
from the astrological and elemental attributes of the paths and<br />
sephiroth, or indirectly through the associated Tarot cards.</p>
<p>Malkuth shows an empty land, its resources untouched.</p>
<p>Aleph &#8211; The Tarot card for this path shows a man wandering in the<br />
wilderness, carrying all his possessions in a sack. He can be seen as a<br />
refugee, or a peasant youth forced out of his homeland for lack of<br />
available land to farm. He is the advance scout of the &#8220;volkwanderung&#8221;,<br />
the migration of people seeking new room in which to live.</p>
<p>Aleph is the Ox, the peasant&#8217;s draft animal. The act of plowing is<br />
symbolically the plunging of the knife of the element of Air into the<br />
Earth of Malkuth. The scattering of the seed by the farmer imitates the<br />
natural scattering of seeds by the wind. The Fool&#8217;s staff with its<br />
satchel on the end bears a resemblance to the male sex organs, calling<br />
up a relationship between the sex act and another form of planting, in<br />
which the staff is used to drill a hole in the ground, into which the<br />
seed is dropped.</p>
<p>Beth as Mercury suggests the constant cycling of the four elements in<br />
nature, which activates the seeds and provides them with the materials<br />
they need to grow. The image of the Tarot card recalls the tradesman<br />
with his tools, taking the raw stuff of the elements and making it into<br />
useful products, as does Mercury&#8217;s rulership of Virgo. The path&#8217;s<br />
connection of the practical lore of Hod with the Earth of Malkuth<br />
confirms this interpretation.</p>
<p>Daleth &#8211; The card shows a pregnant woman seated in the midst of a field<br />
of grain. Her robe is embroidered with the sign of Venus. In the village<br />
culture, agriculture (except for the plowing) has traditionally been the<br />
woman&#8217;s task, precisely because the reduced mobility of pregnancy and<br />
the requirements of child care forced her to remain near the home. The<br />
image of the card combines aspects of Ceres and of Aphrodite, of Malkuth<br />
and Netzach, as the women of the village culture produce life both out<br />
of the Earth and out of themselves.</p>
<p>Yesod &#8211; The agricultural village society is the most stable form of<br />
human culture ever invented. The reason for its stability is that it is<br />
focused on the basic necessities of individual and group survival. More<br />
specifically its focus is on the support, protection, and enhancement of<br />
women&#8217;s ability to produce more human beings.</p>
<p>Woman&#8217;s ability to perpetuate the race is the foundation of all human<br />
cultures, since without a continuous supply of new human beings no<br />
culture can survive. Cultures which forget this fact, or fail to take<br />
adequate measures to protect women of breeding age, inevitably die.</p>
<p>Thus the village culture is represented in the Tree of Life by the most<br />
stable of geometric figures, the equilateral triangle, with its vertices<br />
in Malkuth, Hod, and Netzach. Yesod, the sphere of Luna, also titled the<br />
&#8220;Foundation&#8221;, is the central power of this triangle as the woman is the<br />
focus of the village society. Since the men are often away on solitary<br />
tasks, it is the interactions of the women that tend to provide the main<br />
support and cohesion for the group.</p>
<p>Gimel &#8211; The Tarot card for this shows a priestess with a book of<br />
knowledge sitting in front of a tapestry embroidered with pomegranates.<br />
This and the path&#8217;s position connecting Hod and Yesod suggest knowledge<br />
and lore applied to women&#8217;s needs. Hence midwifes, herbalists,<br />
wise-women, and nature- priestesses. This is the path of women&#8217;s<br />
mysteries and crafts, where Beth is the path of the male oriented<br />
crafts.</p>
<p>Hod &#8211; astrologically Mercury is the planet of cleverness and<br />
intellectual knowledge, that is, knowledge of things that can be pointed<br />
to and described, and of how things can be manipulated. This is in<br />
opposition to abstract knowledge, oriented towards universals, which is<br />
ruled by Saturn and Jupiter. In the village culture, information that<br />
would be useful to following generations was formed into songs, rhymes<br />
or chants, which one or two persons in the village would be responsible<br />
for remembering. Often knowledge that was considered the province of one<br />
or the other sex would be held as part of the mysteries of that sex, and<br />
only imparted to initiates. This eventually evolved into the craft<br />
guilds, which are also represented by Hod.</p>
<p>Cheth &#8211; Once several villages were established in a particular area,<br />
they would designate a particular place where they could meet to<br />
exchange goods. These places developed into walled market towns when<br />
people who dealt with many villages settled there, such as smiths,<br />
shopkeepers, innkeepers, etc. The Tarot card for this path shows a<br />
knight in a chariot leaving a town. But this could as easily be<br />
interpreted as a villager in a cart returning home in new clothes<br />
purchased with the sale of his own goods. The idea is one of obtaining<br />
portable wealth in exchange for raw goods, or of travel to obtain<br />
necessities that can not be made locally.</p>
<p>Vav &#8211; The Hierophant, Tarot card of this path, represents the village<br />
elder, the keeper of custom, arbiter and final appeal in local disputes.<br />
This path represents traditional or common law, as opposed to decreed<br />
laws passed down by the nobility. Taurus also signifies men as<br />
husbandmen and as landowners, specifically the yeoman farmers of<br />
medieval society.</p>
<p>Netzach &#8211; Venus, the planet attributed to Netzach, is the astrological<br />
symbol of concentrated wealth, or of portable wealth, things refined so<br />
that only the most valuable part is still present. Grain separated from<br />
its stalks and chaff, refined metals and metal implements, liquors,<br />
crafted goods and specialized tools come under this category. Thus those<br />
who deal in such things come under the rulership of this sephira.<br />
Netzach is the market town, where Yesod is the home village.</p>
<p>To summarize, the village culture contains four essential elements: the<br />
land, the home and family, practical lore, and trade or barter among<br />
villages. These four are all that is needed to maintain a stable<br />
situation. The village culture can get along quite well without any more<br />
extensive national culture. But the opposite is not true. The hierarchic<br />
nobility and priesthood can not survive without a village culture base<br />
from which they can steal wealth to support themselves. It is only after<br />
the makers, the villagers, are well established in a fairly high<br />
concentration that the takers and fakers come along. The noble and<br />
priestly classes of medieval society are parasitical on the society of<br />
the common folk.</p>
<p>Communication between village groups comes through a variety of<br />
wandering types of persons. Some of these are common to most village<br />
cultures, others only appear when the noble class has been established.</p>
<p>Mem &#8211; In medieval society, the church represented the main unifying<br />
factor. Villages thought of themselves as part of &#8220;Christendom&#8221;, and not<br />
as part of a national culture. While local clerics were generally<br />
appointed with the approval of the local king, their main loyalty and<br />
responsibility remained to the church, and the church&#8217;s internal<br />
communications network constituted one of the main means by which news<br />
of the larger world reached the villages.</p>
<p>In one interpretation, this path and the path of Vav represent the wine<br />
and bread of the communion, the sacrament of the Son, Tiphereth,<br />
symbolizing the unifying power the church claimed to hold.</p>
<p>The Tarot card for this path, the Hanged Man, portrays the way in which<br />
the noble culture is a reversal or inversion of the village culture.<br />
Where the village culture is predominantly concerned with the production<br />
of new life, and focuses on the needs of women and their children, the<br />
noble culture is predominantly concerned with war and death, and focuses<br />
on the actions and desires of men.</p>
<p>Zayin &#8211; Gemini is the sign governing messages, writing, and<br />
communication in general. It also governs short journeys, travel of just<br />
a few day&#8217;s duration. Thus various types of wandering communicators are<br />
attributed to this path. In the medieval culture, minstrels and<br />
traveling tinkers were also prime sources of information about events in<br />
other places.</p>
<p>The attribution of exogamic marriage customs to this path is suggested<br />
by the Tarot card and the sign&#8217;s attributes. It was generally the custom<br />
for young men who could not find a suitable mate locally to travel to a<br />
nearby village group to find a wife.</p>
<p>Teth &#8211; Leo is the sign governing theater and showmen, and the travelling<br />
traders of the middle ages were certainly showmen, equivalent to the<br />
snake-oil salesmen of pioneer America.1 Their trade was as much a matter<br />
of entertainment as it was the quality and value of their products.</p>
<p>The Tarot card suggests the influence of merchants on the affairs of<br />
kings. The card shows a woman closing or opening the mouth of the kingly<br />
lion. The woman is Netzach, whose merchants held much of the available<br />
wealth that was not in the hands of the priests. Thus kings who wanted a<br />
new castle or money to conduct a war or other project had to come to the<br />
merchants for loans to do so. If the merchants did not approve of the<br />
project, they could kill it just by withholding funds.</p>
<p>Yod &#8211; Pilgrims and wandering monks and holy men are suggested by the<br />
Tarot card. Armies and bureaucracies are a traditional attribute of the<br />
sign Virgo.</p>
<p>Lamed &#8211; Judges and tax-collectors are suggested both by the Tarot card<br />
and the attributes of the sign Libra.</p>
<p>Tiphereth &#8211; This is the traditional view of the king in the middle ages.</p>
<p>Heh &#8211; The King as war-leader is suggested by the attributes of the sign<br />
Aries, which is ruled by Mars and has the Sun exalted.</p>
<p>Geburah &#8211; Nearly all noble houses of the middle ages started as robbers<br />
and raiders, who eventually gained full control over an area through<br />
violence and settled down to protect their holdings. Most of the castles<br />
of Europe were built on sites covering major trade-routes, from which<br />
the nobles stole most of their income by violence or extortion. They<br />
were professional warriors, as opposed to the part-time levies of the<br />
army ruled by Virgo.</p>
<p>Chesed &#8211; Jupiter is the traditional planet of the priesthood, as well as<br />
of learning and knowledge of the wider universe. These three qualities<br />
were combined in the priesthood of the medieval church. Where the nobles<br />
ruled by violence, the church ruled by promising mercy, a relief from<br />
violence and salvation from toil and suffering.</p>
<p>Qoph &#8211; Monasteries and religious communities are traditionally governed<br />
by Pisces, as are deception and the manipulation of religious dogma, and<br />
the concept of sacrifice.</p>
<p>Nun &#8211; These are traditional attributes of Scorpio.</p>
<p>Ayin &#8211; Both the positive and negative aspects of this path are suggested<br />
by the Tarot card and its astrological sign. The card shows a devil<br />
sitting on a block, to which a man and a woman are chained. The man<br />
could be the nobility and the woman the common folk, following the<br />
symbolism developed previously. The king&#8217;s word was supposed to be law<br />
to both these groups, and the fact that he could override traditional<br />
rights and privileges in his decisions makes him a potential devil in<br />
the eyes of those he rules. The path connects the spheres of Saturn and<br />
Sol, suggesting Judgmental powers embodied in a single person.</p>
<p>Shin &#8211; This path connects Kether and Tiphereth, God and King, and the<br />
Will is traditionally attributed to Fire among the elements.</p>
<p>Resh &#8211; This symbolism follows the common symbolism of the king in most<br />
cultures.</p>
<p>Peh &#8211; Suggested by the Tarot card. The path&#8217;s position above Geburah<br />
emphasizes that the stronghold itself was more important than the person<br />
who owned it, since whoever actually held the stronghold effectively<br />
controlled the area around it no matter what his legal position was.</p>
<p>Samek &#8211; Traditional attributes of Sagittarius.</p>
<p>Tzaddi &#8211; The path connects the sphere of the zodiac with the sphere of<br />
substance, so the apostles are attributed here as bodily representatives<br />
of the 12 signs. In the Tarot card, the seven lesser stars around the<br />
large central star suggests the Seven Spirits before the Throne of God,<br />
giving the same symbolism in planetary terms.</p>
<p>Tau &#8211; The Tarot card suggests the empyrean, the realm beyond the spheres<br />
of Saturn and the Fixed Stars, holding the known universe of middle ages<br />
cosmology as a bubble within it.</p>
<p>Kaph &#8211; The Wheel of the Tarot card suggests the turning of the sphere of<br />
the fixed stars and the motions of the planets along the zodiac.</p>
<p>=================================================</p>
<p>The following brief outline summarizes the steps in a Masonic initiation<br />
ritual I once read, as they apply to Achad&#8217;s Tree. I regret that I can<br />
no longer locate the source for the steps of this ritual. At some future<br />
date I may attempt to turn it into a full ritual again.</p>
<p>Tiphereth &#8211; The God&#8217;s chosen one is led away from his home to the site<br />
of the Temple.</p>
<p>Aries &#8211; The Dawn of the Day of Commencement.</p>
<p>Geburah &#8211; The Craftsmen arrive.</p>
<p>Pisces &#8211; The clearing of the site.</p>
<p>Chesed &#8211; The Architects</p>
<p>Scorpio &#8211; The examination, testing, and selection of the materials.</p>
<p>Sagittarius &#8211; Designing the Temple to embody the god&#8217;s intent.</p>
<p>Sol &#8211; The chosen one gives the god&#8217;s approval for the plan.</p>
<p>Capricorn &#8211; Laying out the plan of the Temple for the craftsmen.</p>
<p>Mars &#8211; The work proceeds.</p>
<p>Binah &#8211; The completed Temple, as yet empty of the spirit. The Mother,<br />
The spirit indwelling and enlivening the Earth.</p>
<p>Aquarius &#8211; the Gathering of the Congregation</p>
<p>Saturn &#8211; the setting of the altar stone.</p>
<p>Jupiter &#8211; the saying of the invocation. The cycle of rituals and holy<br />
days.</p>
<p>Fire &#8211; the indwelling of the God.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p>Footnotes</p>
<p>1       A note added 3/24/88: The &#8220;snake oil&#8221; and patent medicines of<br />
the American frontier were often just alcoholic beverages in disguise,<br />
sold as medicines to get around restrictive liquor laws. The salesmen<br />
were thus in a sense messengers of Dionysius, Sol, confirming their<br />
relation to this path.</p>
<p>a</p>
<img src="http://www.roswellufos.com/?ak_action=api_record_view&id=34&type=feed" alt="" />]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>B L U E P E A C E</title>
		<link>http://www.roswellufos.com/archives/b-l-u-e-p-e-a-c-e/</link>
		<comments>http://www.roswellufos.com/archives/b-l-u-e-p-e-a-c-e/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jan 2008 20:45:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>RoswellUFOs.com</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[BLUE PEACE: Blue peace is a new organization which will be taking over all operations of trying to get &#8220;congressional Hearings&#8221; open hearings concerning this subject matter of Military and Govern- ment cover-up. Blue Peace, is NOT a UFO organization per se but is a civilian interest organization. There will be more information up- coming [...]<p>a</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BLUE PEACE:  Blue peace is a new organization which will be<br />
taking over all operations of trying to get &#8220;congressional Hearings&#8221;<br />
open hearings concerning this subject matter of Military and Govern-<br />
ment cover-up. Blue Peace, is NOT a UFO organization per se but is a<br />
civilian interest organization. There will be more information up-<br />
coming on Blue Peace, in the next few weeks and also what it will<br />
take to become a member of this organization. There will soon be two<br />
CUFON mother system on line, meaning two phone number that can<br />
be used at the same time. One will be set to run at 300 Baud and the<br />
other will run at 1200 Baud. We are thinking of running them both<br />
at 300 and 1200 baud.   We will let all members and users know<br />
when this service starts. Once again thank you, for supporting CUFON,<br />
&amp; UFO Information Service.  Also &#8220;Blue Peace&#8221; will be putting out a<br />
new Journal, the name of this Journal will be called &#8220;The Journal For<br />
Blue Peace&#8221;   This journal will have all types of information for this<br />
subject matter and others along with upcoming information on trying<br />
to get these &#8220;Congressional Hearings&#8221; held.<br />
-<br />
BLUE PEACE, will need all the help they can get to bring about<br />
these hearings so please support this cause in the interests of<br />
&#8220;truth&#8221; concerning this very important subject matter.<br />
-<br />
PLEASE NOTE: Blue Peace is not a New Age movement or New Age<br />
organization; Blue Peace is to get the truth out to people who<br />
would like or who should know the truth about this subject matter and<br />
how it relates to them as Americans, and to others people of the<br />
world.</p>
<p>a</p>
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