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Angels_Oversouls

Keywords

The Daoudic paradigm

The past lives presented here reflect a particular paradigm, one among many, which we call the Daoudic paradigm today. Its central teachings can be found in the anonymously published Book of El Daoud (1923). This cosmic wisdom echoes the story of human evolution from the viewpoint of the gods and was transmitted to various authors in the 1920s, specifically in the 'Osirian Scripts' of HC Randall-Stevens (1896 – 1978). While overlaps exist with other authors, including Rudolf Steiner (1861 – 1925) and Edgar Cayce (1877 – 1945), there are inevitable variations between these paradigms (mostly around the names, terms and concepts used). Traces of this ageless knowledge are also found among Rosicrucian and Gnostic texts and, yet earlier, in Hermetic and Sufi sources. These teachings precede any school and its wisdom pre-exists all inspiration — it is the honey before the bee, the wine before the grape.

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Adam el Daoud

Adam el Daoud, 'the Beloved', is the creator and ruler of all the mundane worlds (secondary to the divine cosmos created by God the Son). He is also known as the Son of God, the Father-King, the Ancient of Days, the Righteous One, the Messiah and the Holy Spirit. Other titles include Ptah, Ahura Mazda and Sanat Kumara. He incarnated as the ancient Indian avatar Krishna and was, between the Entry into Jerusalem and the Crucifixion, co-incarnate as Jesus Christ. 

Adam el Daoud is the first-born and eldest progenitor of the Dhuman-Adamics, the so-called Gardeners of Eden, and his female half (twin-soul) is Evam el Daoud. They led the way from Paradise to Earth, then still latent with life, and 
where transpersonal lives first began. Adam el Daoud's first born son and grandson, Arbal el Caen and Arthur, were also co-incarnate as oversouls of Jesus of Nazereth. Together they constitute the Christ Being (a composite of entities forever present, singularly or collectively).

Dhuman-Adamic

Dhuman means ‘twin’ since they are twin-soul entities, male and female, and the sons and daughters of the Father-King, Adam el Daoud. The Dhumanim (plural) incarnated with the sons and daughters of Eden and are thus known as Dhuman-Adamics; that is, one part divine (rays) and the other human (sparks). The bible calls them sons of God, or angels, including all fallen ones (Genesis 6:1–4, Job 1:6). In Greek and Norse mythology they are known as the gods of either Olympus or Asgard — and were once the semi-divine elders of Atlantis.
 
Dhuman-Adamics are so-called Fallen Angels who have guided (oversouled) incarnate life on earth since creation or, at least, since early human evolution in Atlantis. Today it would be better to call them Rising Angeloi since they too are evolving. They were themselves ‘human’ in a previous cosmic dispensation and are now actively assisting the spiritual evolution of mankind through our current phase (also known as the Aquarian Age). 
 
Dhuman-Adamics are the overseers (we use the term oversouls) of individual souls, soul groups or soul lineages and do so as either incarnate or discarnate entities. The Dhumans-Adamics most often cited here belong to a section of the hierarchy
known as the Osirian Adepts and Osirian Scarabs; the custodians of spiritual wisdom through the ages. They have been an inspirational source of wisdom for many esoteric groups and movements — from Rosicrucianism to Anthroposophy — but are never allied to any one individually or exclusively.

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Oversouls

Oversouling can be described as the manifestation of immortal guiding spirits (Dhuman-Adamics) that assist evolving human souls in their earthly endeavours and upward evolution, individually or in groups. One Dhuman is generally responsible for a distinct group of souls, although individual souls may sometimes be oversouled by a Dhuman other than the oversoul of the group to which they belong. The oversoul, whether discarnate or incarnate, is always spiritually connected to all members of its group, both in the mundane worlds and beyond. 

 

For instance, Pompey the Great, Julius Caesar, Mark Anthony, Augustus Caesar and Cato the Younger were all contemporaneously oversouled by Dhuman-Adamic Arcturus, himself then incarnate as Cicero (106 – 43 BCE).

One-on-one incarnations are common. Here a Dhuman oversoul and human soul are together more or less from birth until death and function as one personality, each contributing its character and its karmic propensities to the life lived out as one. Sometimes two or more Dhuman-Adamics will oversoul one soul, together, but this is rare. The following two examples aptly illustrate both cases:

 

Dante's visions of 'heaven and hell' were inspired by his oversouling guide, El Amenu, which he skilfully disguised as the Roman poet Virgil (see painting above). Similarly, Socrates was a joint or co-incarnation of Orfu, his lifelong oversoul, and later in life by Ezekunu, the true Daimon or Genius behind Socrates. He is shown here as a whispering angel (see painting by Franois-Andr Vincent). We discuss Dhuman oversouling under Recurring Collaborations.

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Conjoint incarnations

Conjoint incarnations occur when two souls choose/share one body during a single incarnation. These incarnations involve one Dhuman oversoul or 'angel' and one human soul, as depicted here with St Matthew (see painting by Rembrandt). Or it can be two human souls who incarnate again and return to live separate lives, as exemplified by the ancient legend of Romulus and Remus.
 
Moreover, souls appear to have a fixed gender that does not change. The sex of the physical body needs to match the gender of the incarnate soul or, in the case of conjoint incarnations, of at least one of the incarnate souls. Thus a male soul cannot incarnate into a female body without conjoining with a female soul, and vice versa. This applies to both human souls and Dhuman oversouls. Dhuman oversouls generally choose a host with the same gender as their own. They function as one incarnate personality
— the divine oversoul and the human soul together — with each contributing to their character and their karmic propensities.

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Twin-souls

Twin-Souls (not to be confused with modern 'soulmates') are paired Dhuman-Adamics who initially incarnated as two-in-one — that is, twin souls in one body — but after the Fall they became one-in-two — namely, one pair in two single bodies, male and female. Thereafter twin-souls became estranged from each other, living separate lives with other souls in cycles of post-Atlantean incarnations. Sometimes they returned together to work on the karmic issues required for their eventual reunion, as did the pair known as Salomaiu and Salome. We know them as Lot and his wife, then as pharaohs Thothmes and Hatshepsut, later as King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba until, again together, as Simon Zelotes and Mary Salome at the time of Jesus. They returned as an age-defining pair over the next two millennia, including as Madame Blavatsky and Colonel Olcott. We shall examine them under Returning Companions but, for now, show them side-by-side as Ethiopian Queen Bilqis and the Arabian King Sulaiman.

 

Another example are El Aurenx and El Aurene, formerly Laurence Oliphant and his wife Alice Le Strange, who are destined to be born again as two-in-one in their next life. Ultimately, all twin-souls are to be reunited in pairs, but without a physical-sex body.

Imprinting

This is another new term. Imprinting occurs when one soul is allowed to share the experiences of another soul in order for it to benefit from the latter’s karma. Imprinting can be done by any soul and usually occurs between death and rebirth. The past lives which appeal to such a soul can be 'downloaded' from the Akashic record, so to speak, with the result that all effect and memory of this imprinted life will become indistinguishable from the effect and memory of the life to be lived by that soul. However, this leaves the soul with a karmic debt owed to the author of that former life, much as royalties are owed to a copyright author. This also explains why so many feel they've lived the same past lives as others do; notably as great soldiers, rulers or saints (Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar or Mary Magdalene).

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