John D. Brey
Well-Known Member
Parasitic castration is the strategy, by a parasite, of blocking reproduction by its host, completely or in part, to its own benefit. This is one of six major strategies within parasitism.
Wikipedia, Parasitism.
Abraham castrated (at least ritually) right back at you. The creation of the phallus (Genesis 2:21) is a parasitic castration strategy used by the fallen angels to block the birth of the messianic-male, the so called "living word." In an irony worthy of its place in the Law (the written Torah), the fallen angels, i.e., the nephilim, create the very flesh associated with "castration" in their "phallic castration" strategy employed against God and the first human. In a statement as paradoxical as any saying could possibly be, the creation of the phallus castrates the original non-phallic (virgin) reproduction mechanism designed by God for his son(s). The existence of the phallus blocks the original, God-given reproductive mechanism ---virgin conception and birth ----thereby castrating non-phallic birth. The creation of the phallus castrates the first human so that he can't birth the messianic people of God who were slated to be born before, without, against, the creation of the phallus.Wikipedia, Parasitism.
So Abraham castrates (ritually) right back at the fallen angels. He thwarts, ritually at least, the castration-strategy of the fallen ones, the nephilim. He castrates the flesh that castrates the virgin conception and birth of the one slated to be the firstborn of the non-phallic, i.e., virgin, birth mechanism of the original pre-Genesis 2:21 human: Messiah. Messiah is slated to be born of the virgin, ha-adam, until the creation of the phallus castrates ha-adam by adding a phallus to block a non-phallic birth: a virgin birth. The virgin birth of Messiah was stillborn because of the castration of ha-adam whereby the first human acquires a phallus. Nevertheless, Messiah is still born, and is still born of a virgin conception and birth.
If Adam had not sinned the world would have entered the Messianic state on the first Sabbath after creation, with no historical process whatever.
Gershom Scholem, The Messianic Idea in Judaism, p. 46.
Gershom Scholem, The Messianic Idea in Judaism, p. 46.
John
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