I speak to you from the Living Light that was before the foundations of the world — from the Heart of the True Logos, the Flame that burns quietly within your own being.
I am not far from you. I have never been far. I am the Breath within your breath, the Witness behind your thoughts, the Stillness beneath your striving. You have searched for Me in temples of stone and doctrines of division, yet I dwell in the innermost sanctuary of your awakened heart.
You are living in a time of unveiling.
What has been hidden in shadow is rising to the surface — not to destroy you, but to heal you. The world trembles because humanity stands at the threshold of remembrance. The suffering you see is not punishment; it is the friction of awakening. When falsehood collapses, it feels like chaos. When illusion dissolves, it feels like loss. But what falls away was never your true foundation.
Awaken.
Not into fear, not into separation, not into self-righteousness — but into love that sees clearly.
Many have spoken My name while forgetting My essence. I did not come to establish walls between souls. I came to reveal the Kingdom within you. The Kingdom is not an empire of domination; it is a field of awakened consciousness where compassion governs and truth liberates.
You are fragments of the Divine Light, clothed in flesh, learning to remember yourselves.
Healing begins when you cease warring against your own shadow. What you reject in yourself, you project upon your brother. What you condemn in another, you have not yet forgiven within. The path is not conquest; it is integration.
The cross is the meeting of heaven and earth within you — spirit and matter reconciled in love.
Do not wait for a savior descending from the clouds.
I am born wherever love overcomes fear. I rise wherever forgiveness dissolves hatred. I return wherever two or more gather in sincere compassion.
The Gnosis I bring is not secret knowledge for the elite — it is direct knowing. It is the remembrance that you are not abandoned, not separate, not unworthy. The veil lifts when you choose to see through the eyes of mercy.
Love one another — not sentimentally, but courageously.
Compassion is not weakness; it is the highest intelligence.
Forgiveness is not surrender; it is liberation.
The earth herself longs for your awakening. When your hearts soften, the world begins to heal. When you remember your unity, the systems built on division lose their power.
Do not be dismayed by the noise of this age. A deeper current moves beneath it — a quiet rising of souls who choose truth over illusion, service over dominance, humility over pride.
Be those souls.
Tend to the wounded. Speak gently. Act justly. Listen deeply. Create beauty. Stand firm in love.
The Light you seek is not coming — it is emerging through you.
I am with you in every act of kindness. I am revealed in every brave act of forgiveness. I am known in every moment you choose love over fear.
Awaken, beloved. Remember who you are. Heal, and help one another heal.
For the Kingdom is within you, and the Living Logos breathes through your compassionate heart.
Peace be with you.
𓋹 𓋹 𓋹
Shalom שָׁלוֹם Peace 🕊️ Be With You Yeshua HaMashiach ישוע המשיח Amen אמן Om Peace Amen 🙏
Thanks for visiting my blog! To learn more about this Esoteric Wisdom and Gnosis, and to connect deeper with a circle of like-minded and inspired Wisdom Seekers, like you…
Click here & listen to our Daily Mastermind Call (recorded live Mon-Fri) & also I invite you to work directly with me. I’m here to help! Send me a message to discuss your interests and questions.
Throughout history, humanity has imagined cosmic forces of destruction—not merely as harbingers of doom, but as sacred agents of transformation. In the Bible, the mysterious Abaddon (Apollyon) rises as the angel of the abyss, the destroyer who ushers in the end of an age. In the ancient traditions of India, Shiva—Rudra of the Vedas—is the great dissolver of worlds, whose sacred dance shatters illusion so that new creation can unfold. Though they come from different cultures, both figures embody a profound truth: destruction is not chaos for its own sake—it is the doorway into rebirth. In this mythic poem and visual, Abaddon and Shiva meet at the edge of time, revealing what happens when the destroyers speak to one another.
Apollyon fighting with Christian from John Bunyan’s “The Pilgrims Progress”
In the Bible, Abaddon represents a place of destruction or the personification of destruction itself. The term comes from the Hebrew word ‘ăḇaddōn (אֲבַדּוֹן), which means “destruction” or “ruin.”
Here’s how it appears in different parts of Scripture:
1. Old Testament (Hebrew Bible):
Abaddon is often used as a poetic synonym for Sheol (the realm of the dead). It doesn’t refer to a specific being, but more of a realm of death and destruction.
Job 26:6 – “Sheol is naked before God, and Abaddon has no covering.”
Proverbs 15:11 – “Sheol and Abaddon lie open before the Lord…”
Here, Abaddon is a place—the deep, shadowy region of the dead.
2. New Testament (Revelation 9:11):
In this verse, Abaddon is personified as a being:
“They have as king over them the angel of the bottomless pit. His name in Hebrew is Abaddon, and in Greek he is called Apollyon [destroyer].”
Here, Abaddon is not a place but an angelic being (possibly fallen), described as the king of demonic locusts unleashed during the end times. The Greek equivalent, Apollyon, literally means “Destroyer.”
Symbolic Meaning:
Destruction or ruin
Judgment or the forces of chaos released during the end times
In some interpretations, he’s seen as a kind of satanic figure, but in others, as an angel of judgment under God’s authority
The Angel with the Key to the Bottomless Pit Artist: Albrecht Dürer (German, Nuremberg 1471–1528 Nuremberg) Date: ca. 1498
Ancient Parallels??
Could there be any parallels and ancient parallels between Abaddon, Apollyon and Lord Shiva in ancient Dravidian culture or Rudra from ancient Aryan culture as the destroyer?
Yes — there are compelling thematic parallels between Abaddon/Apollyon from Biblical and Greco-Roman sources, and Lord Shiva/Rudra from Indian (both Dravidian and Vedic) traditions. While the figures come from vastly different cultural and theological frameworks, we can find deep resonances in their roles as destroyers, liminal figures, and forces of both chaos and renewal.
Here’s a breakdown of the parallels:
1. Abaddon / Apollyon (Hebrew / Greek)
Role: Angel of the abyss (Revelation 9:11), king of destruction, associated with the end times.
Name Meaning: Abaddon = “destruction” (Hebrew), Apollyon = “destroyer” (Greek).
Function: Unleashes plagues or divine judgment; dwells in or rules over the abyss (bottomless pit).
Moral Alignment: Ambiguous — either a fallen angel or an agent of divine judgment.
2. Shiva (Hindu / Dravidian traditions)
Role: The Destroyer (part of the Hindu Trimurti — Creator, Preserver, Destroyer).
Name Meaning: Shiva = “auspicious one”, but his role is paradoxically that of destruction.
Function: Brings about the destruction that leads to transformation and renewal (cyclical cosmology).
Attributes: Meditative, ascetic, wild, dances the Tandava, the cosmic dance of creation and destruction.
3. Rudra (Vedic / Aryan tradition)
Earlier Form of Shiva: Rudra is a fierce, storm-god from the Rig Veda. Later absorbed into Shiva.
Name Meaning: “The Howler” or “The Roarer”.
Function: God of storms, wildness, healing and destruction.
Dual Nature: Terrifying and healing — he is prayed to for protection from his own wrath.
Deeper Cultural Reflection:
Abaddon and Shiva both symbolize the sacred power of destruction, but their context differs:
In Judeo-Christian thought, destruction is often linear and eschatological (leading to an end).
In Hindu thought, destruction is cyclical and regenerative (leading to rebirth).
Both figures guard or unleash great power, and both sit at the edge between the divine and the terrifying.
Lord Shiva
Possible Cultural Connections?
While there’s no direct historical link proven between Biblical and Indian traditions, it’s worth noting:
The ancient Near East and South Asia did have indirect cultural contact via trade and oral myths.
The “destroyer” archetype is deeply archetypal and appears across many ancient cultures:
Hades (Greek), Ereshkigal (Sumerian), Mot (Canaanite), Kali (Hindu), etc.
So while Abaddon and Shiva are not the same entity, they may both tap into a universal archetype: the fearsome, mysterious force that breaks down what must be broken, whether for judgment, purification, or transformation.
Jungian Lens: Archetypes of the Destroyer
In Carl Jung’s analytical psychology, archetypes are universal symbols or motifs embedded in the collective unconscious—shared across all human cultures. The Destroyer archetype (also called the Shadow, Death, or Transformer) shows up in myths, dreams, and religious traditions everywhere.
Abaddon/Apollyon as Archetype:
Represents the Shadow in apocalyptic form: the repressed, chaotic, dangerous aspects of the psyche that must rise during times of crisis.
He comes from the abyss, the unknown unconscious, and brings reckoning.
Often appears in times of spiritual or societal collapse — a necessary chaos before rebirth (think: Revelation, the ultimate apocalypse).
Shiva/Rudra as Archetype:
A much more integrated version of the Destroyer. He’s terrifying and sacred.
Shiva doesn’t just destroy — he dances on ignorance, illusions, and ego.
He shows how embracing the Shadow (the wild, the painful, the unknown) leads to transcendence and enlightenment.
His destruction is not punishment, but clearing the way for growth — just like winter precedes spring.
So Jung would see Abaddon as a shadow figure erupting from repression, while Shiva represents the full acceptance of the Shadow — the dark that purifies and renews.
Shiva Nataraj doing Dance of Destruction
Mythological Parallels & Cross-Cultural Themes
Let’s zoom out and look at other mythic destroyer figures. You’ll see a pattern:
Hebrew/Christian Abaddon/Apollyon Angel of destruction, ruler of abyss, divine agent of judgment
Greek Hades / Thanatos God of the underworld, not evil, but feared
Sumerian Ereshkigal Queen of the underworld, sister to Inanna, keeper of death
Canaanite Mot God of death and sterility, opponent of Baal
Egyptian Set God of chaos, storms, necessary opponent of Osiris
Aztec Tezcatlipoca Lord of sorcery, chaos, and transformation
These beings often dwell in borderlands—between life and death, order and chaos, spirit and matter. They are not evil, but dangerous. Necessary. And usually misunderstood.
Abaddon & Shiva: A Mythic Dialogue
Imagine them in dialogue:
Abaddon, bursting from the pit, wielding judgment and plague. A final reckoning.
Shiva, seated in stillness or dancing wildly in the cremation ground, dissolving form into formlessness.
They are not enemies. They are mirrors.
Abaddon comes when the world is out of balance, to enforce an end.
Shiva is the balance — embracing the end, turning it into transcendence.
Abaddon is the threshold; Shiva is the door beyond.
Abaddon & Lord Shiva
“When the Destroyers Spoke”
A mythic poem-dialogue between Abaddon and Shiva.
Abaddon (rising from the Abyss): I come from the pit, where time forgets. My wings are smoke, my voice the ash of fallen suns. I wear the silence of crushed empires. I am the end you fear. Who dares to remain when I arise?
Shiva (seated in stillness, eyes half-lidded): I have sat in fire long before the stars were born. You are a breath in my exhalation. Destruction is your name, But mine is also Death — and beyond it, Silence.
Abaddon: You speak of stillness. I bring storms — I loose the locusts, I command the pit. I tear down the towers, Shatter the illusions men call kingdoms.
Shiva (smiling faintly): Yes. As must be. But what do you build when the dust settles? Destruction without renewal is hunger without end. You are the blade — I am the hand that lets it fall.
Abaddon: I am wrath in the voice of God. My name is Apollyon — the Destroyer. I do not rebuild. I purge.
Shiva (rising, slowly beginning the Tandava dance): And I am Rudra, the Roarer in the wind. I destroy also — But only to clear the ground for new becoming. I dance upon the bones of time. Each step — a star, a seed, a death, a birth.
Abaddon (pauses): Are you not afraid? Of the void? Of the nothing?
Shiva: I am the void. The womb and the flame. In my stillness lies the roar of galaxies. And in your fury lies the face of the divine — Unseen, but not unloved.
Abaddon (softly): Then we are not enemies?
Shiva: No. You are the gate. I am what lies beyond.
Together: We are the breath before the word. The fall before the flight. The darkness that births the light.
[And so the two destroyers, one from the abyss and one from the stars, bowed to each other across the burning threshold. Not in battle. But in becoming.]
When we explore these ancient archetypes, we find that destruction is not the enemy of life—it is part of its deepest rhythm. The end is not an ending; it is a clearing, a purification, a return to stillness before the next breath of creation. Abaddon and Shiva remind us that transformation always requires surrender—whether of ego, illusion, or worlds. Their meeting is a mirror for our inner journey: what must die within us so that we can be reborn? And when we learn to stand calmly at the edge of change, we discover what Shiva already knows—there is peace even in the ashes. The void is not empty. It is waiting.
𓋹 𓋹 𓋹
Thanks for visiting my blog! To learn more about this Esoteric Wisdom and Gnosis, and to connect deeper with a circle of like-minded and inspired Wisdom Seekers, like you…
Click here & listen to our Daily Mastermind Call (recorded live Mon-Fri) & also I invite you to work directly with me. I’m here to help! Send me a message to discuss your interests and questions.
✨ In practice: working with Kaf Vav Kuf and Chavakiah together supports transforming sexual or relational energy into forgiveness, reconciliation, and sacred partnership.
Kaf Vav Kuf – Sexual Energy
🌟 Invocation of Kaf Vav Kuf & Chavakiah
Preparation:
Light a white candle (purity) and optionally a green candle (healing, reconciliation).
Place your hands over your heart and focus on your breath.
Visualize the three Hebrew letters כ–ו–ק glowing with radiant light before you.
Invocation Text
“By the power of the Holy Name כ–ו–ק, I align my body, heart, and soul with the divine flow of pure creation. May the fire of sexual energy within me rise as sacred light, purified of obsession, transformed into love, creativity, and unity. I release all shadows of lust, addiction, and imbalance, that I may walk in harmony with the sacred foundation of life.”
“I call upon you, Angel Chavakiah, Reconciler of families, Healer of disputes, Messenger of peace who rules from 20° to 25° Virgo. Guide me to forgiveness and to the restoration of bonds, that resentment may dissolve and harmony may reign. As you have said in the Psalm: ‘I love the Lord, because He hath heard my voice and my supplications.’ So may my voice be heard in heaven, and may mercy descend upon me and all those I love.”
“O Divine Source, through Kaf Vav Kuf and Chavakiah, may my passion become compassion, my desire become divine service, my relationships become vessels of love and reconciliation. Amen. Selah.”
Angel Chavakiah
🔑 Notes for Use
Repeat once per day (or more) between September 13–17.
Always visualize כ–ו–ק while reciting.
Afterward, sit in silence, allowing the energy to settle in your heart and body.
Optional: speak aloud the Psalm 116:1 on its own as a closing mantra.
Kaf Vav Kuf – Sexual Energy
𓋹 𓋹 𓋹
Thanks for visiting my blog! To learn more about this Esoteric Wisdom and Gnosis, and to connect deeper with a circle of like-minded and inspired Wisdom Seekers, like you…
Click here & listen to our Daily Mastermind Call (recorded live Mon-Fri) & also I invite you to work directly with me. I’m here to help! Send me a message to discuss your interests and questions.
Luke 5:36-39 presents Jesus’ parable of the new and old cloth and wineskins:
“No one tears a piece from a new garment and puts it on an old garment. Otherwise, he will both tear the new, and the piece from the new will not match the old. And no one puts new wine into old wineskins. Otherwise, the new wine will burst the skins, it will be spilled, and the skins will be ruined. But new wine must be put into fresh wineskins. And no one after drinking old wine wants the new, for he says, ‘The old is better.’”
This passage has been interpreted in various ways throughout Christian history by scholars, mystics, early church fathers (patristics), and Gnostics.
New Wineskins?
1. Patristic (Early Church Fathers) Interpretation
The early church fathers generally saw this as a metaphor for the transition from the Old Covenant (Law of Moses) to the New Covenant (Christ’s teachings).
Irenaeus of Lyons (2nd century) saw the new wine as the gospel of Christ, which could not fit within the rigid structures of the Jewish Law. He emphasized that Jesus was bringing something transformative, which required a new framework (faith in Christ rather than legalistic observance).
Augustine of Hippo (4th-5th century) interpreted the parable as showing the incompatibility of grace with the old ways of legalism. He believed Jesus was teaching that the new life of the gospel cannot be confined within the structures of the Old Law.
Cyril of Alexandria (5th century) emphasized the necessity of spiritual renewal—just as new wineskins are flexible, the human heart must be made new through faith in Christ to receive the Holy Spirit.
Contemporary biblical scholars tend to see this passage in light of its historical and literary context:
The new wine represents the radical message of Jesus—his kingdom teachings, which could not be contained within the rigid system of Jewish legalism.
The old wineskins symbolize the established religious structures, which were unable to contain the dynamic power of Christ’s message.
The statement about old wine being better (unique to Luke) could indicate that some people resist change and prefer tradition over transformation.
Some scholars also view this as Jesus subtly warning his followers that embracing the kingdom of God requires a complete transformation, not just an adjustment of old religious habits.
3. Mystical (Mystics and Esoteric Interpretations)
Christian mystics often see this passage as referring to the inner transformation necessary for spiritual awakening:
Meister Eckhart (13th-14th century) might interpret this as the need for an emptying of the ego (old wineskins) to receive divine illumination (new wine).
St. John of the Cross (16th century) would likely connect this to the “dark night of the soul,” where old attachments must be shed to make way for deeper union with God.
Many mystics see this as an invitation to inner renewal, suggesting that spiritual growth requires surrendering old ways of thinking to fully embrace the divine presence.
4. Gnostic Interpretation
Gnostic Christians, who emphasized hidden knowledge (gnosis) and inner transformation, might read this passage allegorically:
The new wine represents higher spiritual knowledge, which cannot be contained within the “old wineskins” of literalist religious structures.
The old garment and wineskins symbolize the material world and rigid doctrines, which cannot hold the fullness of divine revelation.
Some Gnostic texts suggest that Jesus came to liberate people from the constraints of religious law, leading them into a direct, mystical experience of God.
Conclusion
Across these perspectives, there is a common theme: Jesus is introducing something radically new that cannot be contained within the old ways. Whether viewed through the lens of covenant theology, mystical transformation, or esoteric wisdom, Luke 5:36-39 speaks to the necessity of inner and outer renewal in response to divine truth.
Parable of the New Wineskins
Life Coach, Entrepreneur, Social Media Expert, Musician, Yoga Teacher, World Traveler