THOUSANDS of years before the Greeks used the term "Christos", our Afrikan Ancestors taught the world about the KRST.
KRST (Karast, Ausur)–an Egypto-African word meaning an ‘enlightened’ or “shining” one–an idea dating to early African mythology.
He was the reincarnation of Asar (Osiris), his father. In turn, Osiris was an incarnation of the High God Ra. From this mythical dogma, the idea of divine kingship became established. This meant each king was a symbol literally of the mythical and mystically Hermetic (i.e. Tehuti) order and a reflection of the original all-pervasive light–known as the Horian Logos. This light contained universal energy coming from God’s mind and divine intelligence. In other words, it was about divine consciousness embodied in a perfected (Enlightened) human being who was thereafter immortal.
For example, Ausares is the name given to indicate the unmanifested aspect of God and those who achieved a spirituality-realized state were given the title “Ausar” (the God-Self dwelling in Man). The same practice applied to the title of Christ.
The word “Christ,” says Diop (Civilization or Barbarism, p. 312), came from the Pharaonic Egyptian expression “kher sesheta”: “he who watches over the mysteries.” Some say the “anointed Messias” is a term meaning (K) Christos, or “Christ.” The Greek, “Christos,” or “Kristos” is the borrowed Kemetic, “KRST (Karast)” or H RST. Since the Greeks could not pronounce the letter H, they substituted the sound with the letters Ch which means, among the Greeks, Horus; among others, one mummified; and among the Egyptians, a being that has been Osirified. Egyptians applied “Christ” to the divinities, Osiris, Anubis, and others long before Jesus was born. Coffin Texts contained such inscriptions on wooden coffins as: Heru “comes walking on the water of his father“–a reference to discovering ones divine nature. “Christ” meant the unmanifested aspect–equated with the Father, so that the Father and Son are one. The “Karast” is a person who is anointed an ‘enlightened’ or “shining” individual–also known as a Heru (Hero-Christ) during his or her own lifetime.
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