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A good protection Moxie is the golden light, not white light but the golden light.
If you place yourself in a golden sphere all will be well.
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That does work well. I like to meditate on filling my entire house with liquid golden white light that floods in from the floor and fills the house up. Then it flows out of the house and creates a dome of liquid golden white light. The bad guys cant penetrate it. It is like us trying to take a space walk without a suit.
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What i will say is Amun ; ie Amen also used at the end of prayers is Amen Ra the sun god.
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Not the same deity here are the descriptions off the two from my book "The Encyclopedia of Gods"
Amun
Origin: Egypt. Supreme Creator God
Amun is a sun god, lord of (the sky and king off the Egyptian world. He is perceived as a primeval deity present in chaos at the creation of the cosmos and is therefore also one of the eight deities of the Ogdoad coupled with the goddess Amaunet and representing hidden power.
There are 6 gods from Japanese Shinto that start out with the Words Amen. There are none others listed.
Ra is not the same beings as Amun
Ra (Re)
Origin: Egypt. Creator God and Sun God
One of several manifestations of the sun god and creator god of Egypt. Closely linked with the underworld god Osiris, the notion took shape that the combined deity was Ra by day as the sun and became Osiris, lord of the western Horizon at the onset of night.
So they are similar in the idea that they are both beings that where worshiped by cultures that worshiped the sun. However, they are essentially different beings at different stages of cosmic evolution.
FROM WIKIPEDIA ABOUT AMEN
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The word Amen (pronounced /ˌɑːˈmɛn/ or /ˌeɪˈmɛn/; Hebrew: אָמֵן, Modern Amen Tiberian ’Amen ; Arabic: آمين, ’Āmīn ; "So be it; truly" is a declaration of affirmation[1][2] found in the Hebrew Bible and New Testament. Its use in Judaism dates back to its earliest texts.[3] It has been generally adopted in Christian worship as a concluding word for prayers and hymns.[2] In Islam, it is the standard ending to Dua (supplication). Common English translations of the word amen include: "Verily", "Truly", "So be it", and "Let it be." It can also be used colloquially to express strong agreement,[2] as in, for instance, amen to that.[4]
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