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The "Confusion of Tongues" lesson inherent in the rabbinical stories about the "Tower of Babel" focus mainly on the reasons why the tower was built, as well as, the intentional motivations of its builders who worshiped and did the bidding of the fallen angels and their representatives on the Earth plane of existence. The banished, rebellious angels were enraged that they were no longer permitted to enter the upper world of the higher heavenly spheres which continued to be the abode of the good angels aligned with G-d. So they sought to construct a tower with an idol in the image of fallen angels like Lucifer (Fallen Archangel Andiel) and Satan (Fallen Archangel Samael) that would serve as a signal that they were still at war with the two-thirds of heavenly angels that chose not to rebel against the G-dhead. According to Jewish tradition, the Tower of Babel was built in defiance of the Abrahamic teachings which urged both the fallen angels; and, the sinful Babylonians who paid homage to their evil ways to lead virtuous lives that honored the ways of goodness and honored G-d and the loyal faithful angels. Among the sons of humanity, there was a legendary Babylonian hunter ruler named Nimrod mentioned in Genesis, the First Book of Chronicles, and in the Book of Micah. After coming under the manipulative control of the fallen angels, he tyrannically exhorted his followers to practice black magick and to worship Satan (Fallen Archangel Sammael) and the other fallen angels and those aligned with them by ritually sacrificing animals and humans.
Derived from an Akkadian
word "Bāb-ilu", Babylon means "Gate of God"; while, the word "Babel" was closer
in meaning to the word "confusion". The rebel fallen angels and their human
disciples and devotees planned to use the looming tower as a transmitter of
chaotic and confusing emanations throughout the land.
The extremely tall, thick, burnt brick "Tower of Babel" with its watertight mortar bitumen cement was an "In Your Face" tangible vengeful curse hurled skyward by the rebel angels and their adherents at G-d and the good angels. Although the tower was destroyed by the forces of light via a lightening bolt similar to the pictures used to depict the occurrence on the Tower Card in the Tarot Deck of Cards, a dis-ease similar to a virus had already infected many souls with a resistant strain of chaotic rebelliousness and communicative confusion. Afterwards, the vibratory frequency of the planet was lowered significantly to the point were people, (who used to communicate with each other telepathically rather than verbally through a common tongue), were no longer able to understand each other. As time passed and the tribes migrated over the lands of the Earth kinfolk developed their own native tongues or languages that reflected aspects of their local surroundings and lifestyles. According to historical linguists, no common tongue or singular language existed in the environs of Babylon prior to 10,000 BCE. Now that the vibrational frequency of the planet continues to rise, more and more people will once again also begin to vibrate at higher resonances and be able to communicate with each other telepathically again. In order to do so; however, they will have to elevate their overall consciousness once more until it is well beyond the reach of the negative sonics of the fallen ones who continue to trash the ethers today with entropic drum beats, abrasively booming sonics, screeching electric guitar strings, and music undermined with disharmonious song lyrics dedicated to the continuing rebellious activities of the fallen ones that bind the listeners to the realms of the banished rebels.
There was a time when
Mesopotamian places like Sumeria were radiant with divinity. Other then that old
adage that "Misery Loves Company", there is no reason whatsoever to relive or to
revive any aspect of Babylon including its rebellious Tower of Babel.
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