Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Noah's Identity As Quetzalcoatl

Noah is identified as Quetzalcoatl

(As with all mythologies trying to figure out who was who in the Bible, and outside the Bible for that matter, one must take each recorded incident, and even description, as a separate person until proven otherwise, or else that the gods and goddesses of mythology are amalgams, jigsaw puzzles of different people who actually lived, both before the flood and after.)


Quetzalcoatl, the Mexican Deity, is said to have come from "the distant east." He is described as a white man with a flowing beard. (N.B.—The Indians of North and South America are beardless.) He originated letters and regulated the Mexican calendar. After having taught them many peaceful arts and lessons he sailed away to the east in a canoe of serpent skins (see Short's North Americans of Antiquity, pp. 268-271). The same story is told of Zamna, the author of civilization in Yucatan.  Truly, this is an apt description of Noah after the flood (white man, flowing (possibly long) beard(, especially considering that he would have had to travel thousands of miles to do so (the distant east).  (from http://www.gutenberg.org/files/21796/21796-h/21796-h.htm)

Given the above information as a starting point, and using the legends/genealogy of Xochiquetzal for supplemental information, we can now track Noah's ancestry as it was told to the Middle American peoples of old.  This genealogy is as follows:

Noah = Quetzalcoatl
Lamech = Mixcoatl  -  Noah's mother = Xochiquetzal
Methuselah = Tonacatecutli  -  Methuselah's wife = Cihuacoatl

Noah's mother, Xochiquetzal, apparently had multiple husbands.  In Middle American history, they are called Tezcatlipoca and Tlaloc.  Although she had no children by Tezcatlipoca, she did have a son by Tlaloc, who is called Tecciztecatl.  Additionally, it appears that Noah's mother was the daughter of Noah's grandmother by a man called Xipe Totec, who, although it is not he, when he bears the title "our lord the flayed one," is a match for Jesus Christ, thus giving us a pre-flood testimony of the events of his crucifixion and vindication of the accuracy and legitimacy of the KJV Bible.

Tezcatlipoca's father was Ometeotl.  He is sometimes represented as both male and female, possibly indicating that, although a man he had feminine features, or was very smooth-skinned.

An interesting feature concerning Ometeotl is his connection to Ometecuhtli/Omecihuatl.  Ometecuhtli/Omecihuatl are actually two separate people, which if overlaid with people from the Bible and using their aspect as creators of life, identify them as Adam and Eve, the first man and the first woman.

More to come, God (Jehovah) willing.

(For additional reading,  please go to http://www.gutenberg.org/files/21796/21796-h/21796-h.htm.  While I do not regard this site as 100% accurate, there are some statements which I know to be true.)

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