Kristos the Luciferi
Kristos the Luciferi: Kristos – thee anointed, the manifestation of the Pistis to bring gnosis to awaken man from the dream world of the Demiurge, Ialdabaoth stimulation of unconscious memory. Grounded in Air, Ruler of the Sun. Ialdabaoth is part of the liberation through alchemical transmutation, representing the demiurge in the darkness of matter that the Kristos now radiates brilliantly in its pristine state.
This may seem paradoxical, but yet in many ways it is a progression of apotheosis, The Demiurge sadistically reaching Moksha, not through freedom from escaping saṃsāra, the cycle of death and rebirth. But escaping singularity and unity from the Monad, creating this physical material dimension. While the Gnostics (purely focused on the spiritual) rejected all that was material, it is plainly obvious why they viewed the Demiurge as evil. The Demiurge forged and erupted forth creating this dimension and whilst the Gnostic’s viewed the Demiurge as an oppressing creator god, they failed to see that the Kristos unintentionally or maybe intentionally became an intermediary not just for humanity but between the Monad and the Demiurge. The Kristos was of the Monad and sent forth through to be born in the flesh of the Demiurge, at the spark of conception into this physical dimension the Kristos became not just of the Monad but also the offspring of the Demiurge. Thus creating a symbolic reminder and a metaphor about creating balance in our own journeys towards creating apotheosis, the Kristos has both the light and shadow archetypal components.
Examples of the archetypes of the Kristos:
Extracted from Caroline Myss whom has taken from Carl Jung.
Messiah (Redeemer, Savior) This archetype is associated with the embodiment of divine power and being sent on a mission by heaven to save humanity. For all of its Judeo-Christian significance, the archetype of the Messiah has also become associated with psychological behavior. The Messianic complex, for example, applies to a person who is convinced of his divine mission and, in almost all cases, becomes obsessed with his mission to the point of psychosis, reaching an extreme in which a person begins to hear voices directing him to take lethal action. The Martyr archetype is well known in two arenas: as a classic political or religious figure, and in the self-help world of contemporary psychology. Within the self-help field, the shadow Martyr is viewed as a person who has learned to utilize a combination of service and suffering for others as the primary means of controlling and manipulating her environment. Visionary (Dreamer, Prophet, Seer–see also Guide, Alchemist) The Visionary archetype lets you imagine possibilities that are beyond the scope of your individual life and that benefit all of society. The Visionary brings into view what could be if certain choices are made, or what is inevitable given choices that have already been made. The Prophet proclaims a message associated with divine guidance, as in the Hebrew Prophets, some of whom also appear in the Quran. (Islam reveres both Jesus and John the Baptist as prophets). Both the Visionary and the Prophet engage their abilities in behalf of humanity rather than for personal use, but while many Prophets are rejected by the group they were sent to enlighten, Visionaries tend to be celebrated for their capacity to read what is just over the horizon. The shadow Prophet or Visionary manifests as a willingness to sell one’s visionary abilities to the high bidder, or to alter their vision to make it more acceptable to society. In extreme cases, tainted visions may lead entire societies into murderous or destructive rampages; then the Destroyer archetype may supersede the Visionary, as in the case of Hitler, Stalin, and Mao. “… Lucifer was perhaps the one who best understood the divine will struggling to create a world and who carried out that will most faithfully. For, by rebelling against God, he became the active principle of a creation which opposed to God a counter-will of its own. Because God willed this, we are told in Genesis 3 that he gave man the power to will otherwise. Had he not done so, he would have created nothing but a machine, and then the incarnation and the redemption would never have come about. Nor would there have been any revelation of the Trinity, because everything would have remained One forever.” Jung (1942)