Assistance and expulsion of the symbols of the path of Apophis - egymorte



Assistance and expulsion of the symbols path Apophis

The path of Apophis Darkness and evil spirits bring fear to the sailors in the ritual of the god Ra. There is an attack from Seth's help with a spear that makes the belief of Apophis stop from the snakes that threaten and harm the god Ra. The sun god and the help in the ritual is like the power of creation for the gods of Seth. The ancient Egyptian gods do not have power to go everywhere or be anywhere according to belief. Although the story of the Egyptian gods has appeared in many places at the same time But in the past, there was worship of the gods in the Egyptian temple for thousands of years before Christ.


Apophis is important as Seth is the enemy of the serpent Apophis. In the Egyptian gods' time it was believed that the day Seth was born was not a good day. The land of rain descended from underground full of threats and dangers that Ra caused. And it is the origin of the story of the threat to the land of Egypt and made it believed that the land of happiness did not really exist. The story that was told in the creation of beliefs in the rituals of the god Ra in Apophis Seth the god of chaos. Some believe that Seth is the god of storms and winds in the desert land. Apophis is like something that goes against nature against the state of the solar system and the Egyptian gods are clear opposites. But Apophis also goes against the original belief that the serpent is a symbol of protection of Egypt linking the priesthood and the Egyptians in the past.

On the day that the sun has a prominent position on the bow of the ship with other gods Seth picked up the spear on the journey in the solar system that must fight together with the enemy Apophis. From the time the sun rises that light cannot occur for sure every day And the ritual in this literature can tell about the power of the Egyptian gods and the solar system and the duty of the gods to protect and drive it away from danger. In the solar ship, the sun and the serpent Apophis who came back to attack and threaten the god Ra at night endlessly. And Apophis can also come back again according to Egyptian beliefs. Apophis has a roar like thunder. The desert becomes like a wave that does not stop. It is believed that it is the serpent Apophis with a body size of about eight to thirty cubits that threatens. Seth once fought with Apophis as an important clash in ancient Egyptian rituals and it is believed that Seth can drive the serpent away when there is a threat.


Nephthys, sister/wife of Seth, 1279-1213 BC.

By expelling the serpent Seth the path of light was restored across the horizon. In the Egyptian gods Ra was believed to travel across the western horizon to Duat a mysterious land bordering on formlessness. At dawn Ra would emerge from Duat on the horizon. Ra's path across the sky was darkened by the evil serpent Apophis who threatened his journey across the horizon to the mysterious land. The path of the sun across the sky was believed to be the sun's path across Duat over the surface of the sky from west to east at night moving through an area of ​​the world that could not be seen called Duat, a mysterious formless area and at dawn Ra would emerge from the horizon. The stars move with the nature of the sky and their positions are uncertain.



The darkness and evil of Apophis influenced Christian thought in the past and was associated with the Greco-Roman era as a vice against the Greek god Typhon or perhaps reincarnated after the god had a responsibility to the truth. The Greeks often used the name of the python to refer to Seth and Typhon, the most fearsome serpentine creatures in Greek and Roman mythology who were believed to have lost to Zeus, Apollo, Helios, or Helium, the sun gods. All were important to the ancient Egyptian myths, the combination of Seth and the priest became Typhon in Greek mythology or Hippopotamus, the crocodile and the serpent the evil of the ancient dragon Typhon in Greek and Roman mythology as a vice against the Greek god and the god's responsibility to the truth.