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EXHIBIT A3

EXHIBIT A3 | Image Of An Incarnate God

- Who Knows THE SECRET? -

To the interested parties who've been monitoring & evaluating this site, eager to discover if I'm privy to secrets restricted to that very small & select circle of scholars alone.  What do I REALLY know? Am I REALLY worth the risk of investment?  Well, you'll be relieved to know that I'm a SURE thing & NO RISK AT ALL!!!

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As to WHAT I know, let me alleviate your anxieties.  To begin with, I know not to write, print, stamp,... etc., etc.. 

 

Now, for the CONTENT.  I know of EXHIBIT A3, a one-of-a-kind artifact depicting the actual mask of an incarnated god!  I know that this same mask was associated with the exclusive cult of Iah, and that a generation before this mask was fashioned there existed the first documented proof of its priesthood in the 18th Dynasty.  I know that the title of God's Father, first attributed to Mentuhotep I, and besides denoting the biological progenitor of the Egyptian king, was an appointed office implicitly and simultaneously connected with the temples and worship of both Iah and Min [E.g., Ai bore the titles of God's Father, as well as High Priest ( or Prophet) of Min in Akhmim, where Min is described as "...lofty of plume, the king of the gods in the temple of Iah". Iah, it appears, also had a "House", or "Sanctuary" at [Se]khem --- which was Letopolis, which was also Heracleopolis (you know, the very same nome(s) in which the Greeks allowed the Hellenistic Jews to establish a polity --- or so it's been claimed).]!  Warning!  Before you think of challenging me on that last assertion, ask yourself this: To what distance did Ptah's political influence extend beyond the South of His Wall?  The same question can be asked concerning Min.  

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In conclusion, I leave you with this delectable morsel for thought: Isn't it simply sublime how Min's complexion perfectly mirrors that of Moses' Ethiopian wife as depicted in the very beginning of NK art!  And, if that shade of blackness is supposed to symbolize death, does that  mean that Moses --- who is depicted as being alive --- has a corpse seated on the throne next to him? 

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So holla at me and let's work something out, before what I'm offering end up in hands other than yours.

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12/3/2024  7:40 A.M.

I see we are  communicating!  And I agree with your latest response wholeheartedly.  After-all, certain images should NOT be readily visible to the public at large.  That was my point to begin with, which is why I was never intent upon submitting manuscripts.  But since the concept is my idea, why not endorse me so I can further develop and implement it.  If it should raise questions at some point --- which I seriously  doubt --- I can assume complete responsibility.

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