Father, Mother…speak the power of the Word into the world…While these songs pretty much suck, that is not the point, they are made to speak the living words into existence. Casting them into the world so they can be rediscovered after having been slaughtered by the ego of evil, deceived, men.
The Bridal Chamber: https://www.mureka.ai/song-detail/G29Q8dKXrBHdMKhEZcJzqx?is_from_share=1
https://www.mureka.ai/song-detail/UUN17dXriEWtyUrtxSpaU5?is_from_share=1
https://www.mureka.ai/song-detail/PD2d2Jk4QAQ6AXM35NHdui?is_from_share=1
https://www.mureka.ai/song-detail/Bk1kZRFo4R1VkAoYimyNR6?is_from_share=1
https://www.mureka.ai/song-detail/6LgCW1d1b4oXQ6TUxgttUj?is_from_share=1
AI assembled the following information: Geradama (often appearing as Geradamas) is a figure found in ancient Gnostic and Sethian cosmological texts from the Nag Hammadi library, such as Zostrianos. In these writings, he is revered as a primal, heavenly forefather and spiritual ancestor of humanity.
Key Contexts & Meanings
- The Forefather: In the context of Gnosticism, Geradama represents an archetypal or celestial “Adam” (the Heavenly Image). He acts as the spiritual progenitor of the immutable, divine race. [1, 2, 3]
- Divine Connection: In texts like Zostrianos, figures like Emmacha Seth (representing Seth from the Bible) refer to Geradama as their heavenly father or spiritual mind, exploring the idea of a spiritual lineage before the physical creation of the world.
If you meant “Emacha,” this is a common Manipuri name that directly translates to “youngest child.” If you meant “Seth,” it is a widespread given name and surname.
Mirotheos (or Mirotheas) is an ancient term primarily known from the Nag Hammadi Library, a collectrion of early gnostic texts. It appears in the “Three Steles of Seth,” an ancient mystical hymn where it roughly translates to “my God” or a name used to invoke a divine, spiritual revealer. [1, 2, 3]
The concept is strongly tied to Gnosticism and Platonism of late antiquity. In the Steles of Seth, the speaker praises a father figure (Geradamas) and addresses him as “Mirotheos,” acknowledging him as a manifestation of divine light, wisdom, and knowledge. It reflects the Gnostic journey of the soul seeking to shed illusion, recognize divine truths, and reunite with the primordial source of existence