Monday, 23 June 2025

Why Do Spirit Communicators Repeat Messages Three Times?

If you’re exploring spirit communication or mediumship, you may have noticed that many traditions emphasize repeating messages or words three times. But why is this practice so important?


Here’s the spiritual wisdom behind the power of the number three in spirit communication:


1. Clarity and Confirmation

Spirit messages often come in subtle ways — whispers, impressions, or fleeting words. Repeating a message three times helps ensure you receive it clearly and confirms that it’s important. This prevents misunderstandings and strengthens your trust in the communication.


2. Amplifying the Energy

The number three has deep spiritual significance across cultures. Saying something three times amplifies the energy and intention behind your words, making the connection stronger. It’s like turning up the volume on your spiritual “radio” to hear the message better.


3. Sacred Symbolism 

Three represents balance and wholeness — mind, body, and spirit; past, present, and future; creation, preservation, and transformation. This sacred pattern aligns your communication with universal spiritual laws, making the exchange harmonious and powerful.


4. Piercing the Veil

The veil between our world and the spirit realm can be thick and layered. Repetition acts as a key to pierce this veil, helping messages pass clearly through energetic boundaries. It also stabilizes your connection, allowing spirit energy to flow more freely.



5. Maintaining Focus

Repeating words three times helps keep your mind centered and present during communication, preventing distractions and allowing deeper connection.


Try this: Next time you connect with your guides or loved ones, consciously repeat their messages or your prayers three times. Notice how it deepens your clarity and strengthens your spiritual bond.


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Saturday, 21 June 2025

🔔 Why They Silenced the Bells

A Spiritual and Energetic Perspective


Once upon a time, bells rang through villages and towns across the world — not just to tell time, but to remind the people of something sacred. They marked the rhythm of life: births, deaths, marriages, and prayer. But they did more than that.


Bells were spiritual technology.


They carried frequency, intention, and power — tools of divine alignment woven into everyday life.


But now? Silence.


No more town bells. No more cathedral chimes at dusk. No more sacred soundscape blanketing the land in harmony.


And the question must be asked:

Why did they get rid of the bells?

🔕 1. It Wasn’t Just About Noise

They’ll tell you it was due to modern noise bylaws… or changing times. But the truth goes deeper.

Bells weren’t removed for convenience.

They were silenced as part of a spiritual disconnection strategy — a war on vibration, memory, and divine resonance.



🧿 2. Bells Disrupted Darkness

Bells weren’t just heard.

They were felt — in the bones, in the soul, in the unseen.


For thousands of years, across every spiritual tradition, it was known:


  • Sound clears energy.
  • Vibration breaks stagnation.
  • Certain tones repel darkness and attract light.


Church bells, temple chimes, and monastery gongs created protective resonance fields. Their sacred geometry of sound pushed away low-frequency entities, dispersed fear, and invited peace.


So if you were building a society on control, division, confusion, and fear…


You’d silence those bells, too.


⛪ 3. Cathedrals Were Frequency Chambers

Gothic cathedrals weren’t just places to pray — they were sonic temples built with sacred mathematics and acoustic genius.

Their arches, domes, and stained glass created resonance zones — where chants and bells could vibrate through the body, unlocking healing, memory, and divine alignment.


Gregorian chant, for example, was tuned to Solfeggio frequencies — tones that activate the chakras, cleanse the aura, and connect us to higher realms.


The entire structure of the cathedral was a healing instrument.


🌀 4. Sound Was the Original Medicine

Before pharmaceuticals and synthetic cures, there was vibration.

  • Singing bowls in Tibet
  • Tuning forks in modern sound therapy
  • Drums and flutes in Native traditions
  • Chanting in Hindu, Sufi, and Christian rituals

Even today, science confirms that:

  • 528 Hz helps repair DNA
  • 432 Hz calms the heart and brain
  • 396 Hz releases fear
  • 417 Hz breaks trauma cycles


They removed the bells…

But some of us are still holding the forks, bowls, and tones — restoring what was taken.



🌌 5. They Replaced Bells With Alerts

Look around. What do we hear now?

  • Sirens
  • Alarms
  • Phone notifications
  • Fear tones
  • Emergency broadcasts


They’ve replaced divine resonance with artificial stimulation.

The human nervous system is constantly triggered, fragmented, and disconnected from the rhythms of Source.


Bells brought order.

The new sounds bring chaos.



🧬 6. The Bells Activated Soul Memory

Certain tones awaken dormant memory within our cells and spirit.

They realign us with the Earth, with each other, with God.


The ringing of a sacred bell doesn’t just tell you the time —

It tells you who you are.


That’s dangerous in a world that thrives on confusion, amnesia, and disconnection.



🕯️ 7. 

But the Bells Are Not Gone… They’re Sleeping

Even in the silence, we remember.

Even in the noise, we feel what’s missing.

Even if the towers fall, the resonance lives inside you.


You are the bell now.

Your voice, your fork, your song, your intention — it carries frequency.

And frequency is everything.



📜 And So…

If you’ve ever felt haunted by the silence…

If you’ve ever longed for something sacred you couldn’t name…

If you hear bells in dreams, or remember lifetimes where they rang with purpose…


You’re not imagining it.


You are remembering.

And you were born to help bring it back.



🧘‍♀️Because no matter how silent the world becomes…Your soul still rings. 🔔

You’re holding sacred memory. Let’s help it resonate.


📕 1. Banned Books of the Bible

  1. 📕 Banned Books of the Bible
  2. 🕰️ Timeline of the Bible’s Evolution
  3. 🆚 Tyndale vs. King James Comparison


Also called the “Apocrypha” or “Lost Gospels,” these texts were excluded from the Bible over centuries for political, theological, or control-based reasons. Many contain mystical, radical, or non-doctrinal teachings.



✝️ Early Christian Texts (New Testament Apocrypha)


Book

Why It Was Banned

Gospel of Thomas

Purely sayings of Jesus — mystical and Gnostic. No crucifixion or resurrection.

Gospel of Mary Magdalene

Presents Mary as Jesus’s closest disciple and reveals a spiritual interpretation of resurrection.

Gospel of Judas

Portrays Judas as obeying Jesus’s secret request to betray him — flips the narrative.

Infancy Gospel of Thomas

Stories of Jesus as a child with miraculous powers — some disturbing or odd.

Acts of Paul and Thecla

Depicts a female disciple of Paul preaching and baptizing — contradicts patriarchal doctrine.

Apocalypse of Peter

Visions of hell and punishment — more graphic than Revelation; excluded for fear and inconsistency.



📜 Jewish Texts (Old Testament Apocrypha or Pseudepigrapha)


Book

Notes

Book of Enoch

Huge in early Christianity; talks of fallen angels, Nephilim, and end times. Still part of the Ethiopian Bible.

Book of Jubilees

A retelling of Genesis and Exodus with more detail and heavenly calendar systems.

Tobit, Judith, Wisdom of Solomon, Sirach, 1 & 2 Maccabees

Included in Catholic and Orthodox Bibles, but cut from Protestant Bibles after the Reformation.

2 Esdras

Apocalyptic visions — includes the famous phrase “Let the multitude perish.”



🔥 Why Were They Removed?

  • Too mystical or Gnostic
  • Contradicted Church doctrine
  • Empowered women, inner divinity, or alternative interpretations
  • Didn’t support centralized Church control


🕰️ 2. Timeline: Evolution of the Bible


Era

Key Event

Notes

~1200–100 BCE

Hebrew Scriptures written

Pentateuch, Prophets, Psalms

3rd–2nd BCE

Septuagint created

Hebrew Bible translated into Greek in Alexandria

50–100 CE

New Testament written

Gospels, letters, Revelation

140–400 CE

Many gospels circulating

Early Christians read multiple versions

325 CE

Council of Nicaea

Nicene Creed; began defining orthodoxy

382 CE

Vulgate Latin Bible

Translated by St. Jerome under Pope Damasus I

405–500 CE

Canon settled

27 New Testament books confirmed

800s–1400s CE

Church bans translation

Only Latin Bibles permitted

1526 CE

Tyndale’s English NT

First English New Testament from Greek

1530 CE

Tyndale’s Pentateuch

First five OT books in English

1535–1537

Coverdale & Matthew Bibles

Based on Tyndale’s work; legalized

1611

King James Version

Based heavily on Tyndale, authorized by the crown



🆚 3. Tyndale vs. King James: Verse Comparison

Let’s look at key passages to see how much the King James Version (KJV) relied on Tyndale’s bold and clear language:



📖 John 3:16


Tyndale (1526)

King James (1611)

For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten son: that none that believe in him, should perish, but should have everlasting life.

For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.

🧠 Nearly identical. KJV kept Tyndale’s structure and even phrasing.



📖 Matthew 6:9–13 (The Lord’s Prayer – Excerpt)


Tyndale

King James

Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Let thy kingdom come. Thy will be fulfilled as well in earth, as it is in heaven.

Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.

🧩 KJV only tweaks small words like “fulfilled” → “done”, but Tyndale’s voice is clearly dominant.


📖 Genesis 1:1


Tyndale

King James

In the beginning God created heaven and earth.

In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.

🧐 Even here, the difference is minimal — Tyndale’s translation became the backbone of Biblical English.



📌 Key Differences:

  • KJV adds more poetic formality (e.g., “whosoever” instead of “none that…”).
  • KJV reflects monarchical influence — more references to “church”, “servants,” or “kingdom.”
  • Tyndale used simpler language for the common person — and that’s why he was killed.


🧠 Summary Snapshot


Topic

Summary

📕 Banned Books

Dozens were excluded for being too mystical, feminist, or non-doctrinal

🕰️ Timeline

The Bible evolved over 2,000+ years, shaped by empires, councils, and translators

🆚 Tyndale vs KJV

~90% of KJV’s New Testament is lifted directly from Tyndale’s brave original work

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