2020-10-07. Caligastia vs Yahweh: Let the games begin!
I have been enjoying reading the last seven volumes of Timothy Wyllie’s books which contain, in part the history of the rebel angels and other nefarious and helpful celestial beings that have mostly thrived over the last half-million years, since the founding of Dalamatia. I say mostly, since, as we of the Teaching Mission understand, Caligastia, Lucifer, Satan, and Dalagastia are no longer with us. And while they were with us they have led our world into much chaos, confusion, pain, and suffering. Good riddance, I say.
The narrative of these 8 volumes of Timothy Wyllie’s book comes to us via Mr. Wyllie, who graduated in 2017, by way of Georgia, a rebel angel who is trying to redeem herself by being a help to Timothy in his earth life but doing two things.
One is the telling of the story of Timothy Wyllie’s adventure in what was known as the Process Church (later known as The Process Church of the Final Judgement, later renamed as the Foundation Faith of the Millennium, and in 1980 renamed to the Foundation Faith of God) until he left it in 1977.
The second story Georgia tells is about her life as a rebel angel from the time of the Satania system rebellion in which 37 evolutionary planets––out of 630-some planets––participated in a rebellion against our Creator Son, Christ Michael (aka Jesus when he was incarnated on our world) and his administration.
All of this is to help set the stage for a point I am going to make next.
Georgia saw it all. At one point in the seventh volume, The Rebel Angels Among Us, she describes the efforts that Caligastia went through to have himself worshipped as “god of this world.” The only way Caligastia (I am speculating here, and we know that that measures as being false since there is no proof) could have is claim upheld so he could be worshiped was by demanding a monotheistic religious program. Part of my thinking here is that he did succeed, in a roundabout way.
Fast-forward to the times when, in the second millennium before Christ, the rebel midwayers were still in the mode of causing trouble for the human race, often by pretending to be gods and goddesses that show up in ancient mythologies. While they were not gods nor goddesses, they fooled a lot of folks. One such rebel midwayer clan was stationed on Mount Horeb. It was here that they discovered a bunch of ragtag nomads––Hebrews some but not all––trying to make their way into what they were told was the ‘promised land’. At least this is the story the Old Testament tells us in the Book of Exodus.
We read in the Old Testament that their fearless leader Moses went up a mountain and had a conversation with Yahweh, the most notorious name of the God of the Jewish faith of old. A bush was burned, words were exchanged, and stone tablets were carried back down to the encampment.
We UB readers know that God does not speak to us other than through our indwelling spirit, our Thought Adjuster. Our Paradise Father is not in personal contact with the billions and billions of worlds in our space-time universes, much less with individuals. Thus, it seems like the time Moses spent with Yahweh is probably a myth. Unless….
Here is where Georgia sheds some light on this story. She tells us that Caligastia was not having much luck after almost two-hundred thousand years of getting the people to recognize him as the “god of this world.” She tells us: “The only success Prince Caligastia could claim was a small cluster of the more compliant midwayers overseeing some of the Middle Ester hill tribes––those who were far more familiar with the Prince’s presence because of the proximity of his palace.”
As an aside, Caligastia’s palace is today known as Gobekli Tepe, a ruin in Turkey.
Georgia continues: “This was the midwayer clan who over the millennia will come to be known as Yahweh––or by the more familiar name Jehovah––and will represent the sole fruit of Caligastia’s campaign of self-deification.”
Later we read “Although Yahweh was originally merely one of the thousands of so-called nature gods (midwayers), he happened to be the local deity of the tribes around Mount Horeb––a semi-active volcano in the Sinai Peninsula.”
Yahweh of the Old Testament was the angry and jealous god. This was the very nature of Caligastia. Georgia tells us: “… Caligastia’s imposed monotheism was very different from Vanu’s (that is Van of the UB fame) worship of the Unseen Father God, whose presence could be discerned by mortals as a direct experience of the Indwelling Spirit. The Prince’s monotheism as it manifested among the hill tribes was more concerned with an accumulation of power through conquest…” and was “very materialistic in essence.”
And in the next book by Wyllie, yet to be published, Georgia writes that another angel, a watcher as Georgia is, tells Georgia, “It was precisely Caligastia’s declining influence over his independent rebel Midwayers which had made him place so much attention and energy on the Yahweh. … Then I’d venture that the Prince’s imposing his monotheism through Yahweh on the Semitic tribes of southern Palestine was every bit as much the Prince’s final bid for absolute power.”
Looking at Wyllie’s books and the story that Georgia weaves through them, I can get a glimpse of a bigger picture. This bigger picture includes why our Jewish and Christian faiths include so much angst over our religious perspectives, as they were based upon erroneous conclusions drawn from the mythologies fed to the Jewish people, then adopted by the Christian traditions. We know from the UB that monotheism while encouraging to world faiths––as opposed to polytheism––is not the whole story. The universe has many Deities, several Gods, and billions if not trillions of celestials, all of them of deified origins and many of them with much of the creative power as does our Father in Paradise.
We puny humans were relegated as non-essential personal by rebellion forces. And most of our religious beliefs that are still harmful to us as individuals and to our cultures and civilization were imposed by a traitorous tyrant, an angry and jealous god that was rather our devil instead. Caligastia has been gone but a few decades, but his legacy still thrives today among most of the religious peoples of our planet, hamstringing them with false ideas about the nature of God and of mankind. Two hundred thousand years is quite enough, wouldn’t you think?
Caligastia’s ideas were so formidable that most so-called religious peoples of the West would rather worship the devil––he must have been more fun what with all the killing he has inspired over the millennia––than pay attention to the life and teachings of Christ Michael when he came to us as Jesus. Force has always been the strength of those that wish us no good. Yet power, all power, comes from the First Source and Center. And so it is.
James Leese – October 7, 2020