Atlas University Podcast

The Eye Inside the Triangle: The Religious Architecture of Control

38 min · I går
episode The Eye Inside the Triangle: The Religious Architecture of Control cover

Beskrivelse

This book presents a maximalist theological critique of the "Eye of Providence" symbol, arguing that the eye inside the triangle is not a benign Christian emblem but a "Trinitarian mark" of imperial religious control. The author contends that the triangle functions as a doctrinal enclosurethat abstracts the living God of Scripture into a manageable, metaphysical diagram. By capturing the definition of God, the "beast system" governs the human conscience and imagination before eventually controlling physical actions and commerce. The eye itself is traced back to ancient solar deities like Ra, representing an active, royal gaze that enforces authority through surveillance. Ultimately, the source warns that this symbol serves a "religious architecture of control" that normalizes state and ecclesiastical oversight across churches, currency, and modern technology.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Atlas University Podcast-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

1 måned kun 9 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

300 episoder

episode The Eye Inside the Triangle: The Religious Architecture of Control cover

The Eye Inside the Triangle: The Religious Architecture of Control

This book presents a maximalist theological critique of the "Eye of Providence" symbol, arguing that the eye inside the triangle is not a benign Christian emblem but a "Trinitarian mark" of imperial religious control. The author contends that the triangle functions as a doctrinal enclosurethat abstracts the living God of Scripture into a manageable, metaphysical diagram. By capturing the definition of God, the "beast system" governs the human conscience and imagination before eventually controlling physical actions and commerce. The eye itself is traced back to ancient solar deities like Ra, representing an active, royal gaze that enforces authority through surveillance. Ultimately, the source warns that this symbol serves a "religious architecture of control" that normalizes state and ecclesiastical oversight across churches, currency, and modern technology.

I går38 min
episode Numbers Decoded: Is Numbers the Key to Predicting Human History? cover

Numbers Decoded: Is Numbers the Key to Predicting Human History?

This book presents a detailed analysis of the Book of Numbers, arguing that its extensive censuses and tribal lists function as a mathematical languageencoding world history. By applying a numerical grammar—specifically dividing tribal populations by fifty—the author identifies hidden Hebrew words and theological concepts within the camp arrangements. This system links ancient biblical data to pivotal historical milestones, such as the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE and the restoration of Israel in 1948. The text suggests that the tribes act as enduring historical offices, where their names, positions, and census totals reveal the timing and nature of global events. Ultimately, the work portrays the Bible not just as a record of the past, but as a divine architecture mapping the course of human history from the Messiah to future dates like 2026 and 2048. These sources maintain that every figure in the census is a symbolic building block designed to show a world meticulously ordered around a sacred center.

I går52 min
episode The Balisiya Operating System: Designing Self-Improving Communities cover

The Balisiya Operating System: Designing Self-Improving Communities

The Balisiya Operating System is a holistic framework designed to transform community development from a collection of isolated projects into a unified, self-improving system. Rather than focusing solely on physical structures, this philosophy emphasizes the invisible architecture of relationships between health, housing, education, and ecology. The text introduces Community Capital as a comprehensive measure of wealth, accounting for natural, human, social, and cultural assets alongside traditional financial gains. Central to this approach is the principle of protecting enduring principles while constantly refining methods based on evidence and experience. By prioritizing long-term stewardship and institutional memory, Balisiya aims to ensure that future generations inherit a more resilient and capable environment. Ultimately, the system seeks to build integrated communitieswhere every institution reinforces the strength and vitality of the whole.

15. juli 202644 min
episode The Ideogenic Mind: Understanding the Life of Ideas cover

The Ideogenic Mind: Understanding the Life of Ideas

This book  introduces the concept of the ideogenic mind, a specific temperament where the generation and integration of ideas serve as the primary source of emotional reward and meaning. Unlike conventional intelligence, which is often instrumental, the ideogenic person finds intrinsic pleasure in understanding systems and discovering hidden patterns across disparate fields. This psychological profile is explored through various lenses, including childhood development, where such individuals are frequently misread as difficult, and social life, where their analytical nature may be mistaken for coldness. To support these thinkers, the author proposes Atlas University, an institution designed to provide the rigorous discipline and mentorship necessary to transform raw possibility into tangible contributions. The text also emphasizes the importance of physical health and spiritual stewardship, arguing that the intellect must remain embodied and humble to be sustainable. Ultimately, the sources aim to name and protect a marginalized type of intellect, helping these individuals move from isolated ideation to fruitful service in the world.

15. juli 202623 min
episode The Messiah Cut Off: Patterns of Empire and Image - Second Edition cover

The Messiah Cut Off: Patterns of Empire and Image - Second Edition

This book explores a typological interpretation of the prophecy in Daniel 9, arguing that the biblical pattern of a "holy order" falling into corruption and rejecting its Messiah is a recurring historical cycle. The author posits that just as the restored Judean sanctuary under Roman occupation bodily rejected the living Yeshua, later imperial Christian institutions effectively "cut off" the Messiah a second time by replacing His living authority with a manageable religious image. By examining the transition from the physical destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD to the rise of Romanized Christendom, the text warns that systems bearing the correct name of Christ can still become spiritually desolate. The narrative emphasizes that true faith requires recovering the Hebrew Messiah from the layers of metaphysical abstraction, clerical control, and political power that have come to define traditional church structures. Ultimately, the work serves as a covenantal warning that no religious institution is immune to judgment if it prioritizes its own survival over the direct obedience commanded by the living Son of Yahweh.

15. juli 202643 min