The Becoming God

Thursday, January 27, 2022

Exodus 3:14's "I AM THAT I AM" Does Not Mean He Simply Exists As An Uncaused Cause

'Ehyeh 'Asher 'Ehyeh in Hebrew is translated "I am that I am," but even the 'ams', from the Hebrew word hayah (Strong's Hebrew #1961), mean "become". There is transition involved. In Aramaic the words are Ahiyeh Ashur hiyeh. The Aramaic Ahiyeh means the pure intent of the one coming to come - that he is coming (see Alexander). Or, as is understood in the Hebrew, the absolute intent of the becoming one to become. The Hebrew 'Asher ('that') is a relational bridge between the two expressions. The Aramaic hiyeh is THIRD person: his becoming. Put them all together and you've got: "My intention to become is his becoming."

His who? Your "I AM's" - Ashur. In Aramaic Ashur is the spark that begins creation: imagination. As Moses observed in Genesis 1:1 (thank you, Moses, for putting the most important thing you learned up front), "As the beginning, (the Ineffable's) imagination creates the heavens and the earth." The beginning of creation is constant! They, the heavens and the earth, your manifestation ("let us…") are the third person. So God's intention to become is our imaginations' manifestation. 

That the Ineffable is an uncaused cause is a given - of course It is. But God, the Ineffable's Consciousness - the Source of our being - which assumes that it is what it desires to be, has become us by its spiritual dreams. And by our imagination/dreams (as we are it) it is becoming our overt experiences and situations, or "states." It - we- are all ONE, the I AM THAT I AM.

Moses took it up to Pharaoh, his ignorance - Satan Central - and said, "I'm out of here," and fought his way to the promised land, where Jesus takes us in to victory.

1 Comments:

  • Thanks for what you do

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 6:24 PM  

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