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  • Divine Encounters

  • A Guide to Visions, Angels, and Other Emissaries
  • By: Zecharia Sitchin
  • Narrated by: Bill Parrish
  • Length: 12 hrs and 20 mins
  • 4.8 out of 5 stars (23 ratings)

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Divine Encounters

By: Zecharia Sitchin
Narrated by: Bill Parrish
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Publisher's summary

The Ultimate Human Experience

The interaction between mankind and spiritual beings—of Divine Encounters—as recorded in scriptures and ancient texts provides a powerful drama that spans Heaven and Earth, involving worship and devotion, eternity and mortality, love and sex, jealousy and murder. But how much of these are based on real happenings and how much is based on myth?

With a visionary's ardor and a scientist's attention to detail, Zecharia Sitchin, author of The Earth Chronicles, gives a stunning account of human interaction with celestial travelers. He also provides further proof that prophetic dreams, visions, UFO encounters, and other extraordinary phenomena are indeed the hallmark of intervention by intergalactic emissaries who reach out from other realms to enlighten, guide, punish, and comfort us in times of need. Sitchin's research and theories chronicle a magnificent and inspiring journey through history, from the dawn of time to the approach of the millennium.

©2002 Zecharia Sitchin (P)2023 Tantor
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Another stellar book from the copious notes of Zecharia Sitchin

Divine Encounters: A Guide to Visions, Angels, and Other Emissaries is more like a sequel to The Lost Book Of Enki than a new foray into additional data that has been available over the last 125 years.

The text is well written as expected, and filled with footnotes and references as with his other writings.

For me the book was short of a “prep” for the surprise ending which was rather disappointing in the closure of who the god YHVH is… this time. :-/

All previous text strongly supported the idea that Enlil (and sometimes Enki) was the YHVH, however this warning takes a sharp left then backtracks to leave us with a sort us primordial “Cthulhu” God and no longer any of the well known cast from the actual Sumerian tablets.

Which ignores the vast pottery and plates/plaques wherein it’s written “ YHVH and his Ishtar (mating). and show the symbol if Enlil, and they are also shown as reptilian creatures often copulating….

All of which goes contrary to the modern Jewish narrative, so it was (I suppose. evidently and intentionally) not included in the latest Sitchin books that completely soft-shoe this subject.

I find the ending rather unfortunate and causing more problems that solutions as it back pedals centuries of available work and suddenly promotes a more mainstream Jewish Orthodox narrative-driven perspective than sticking with the evidence.

IMO this does a great disservice to the Jewish person that wants to know the truth, and further depends the idea that YHVH is some unknowable character from countless eons past… that the ancient Anuna heard about in “their” bery ancient past.

OMG….. Really???

As mentioned above this book is like a follow-up and big detour, and possible “debugging” at the same time.

If you want YHVH to no longer be Enlil (and sometimes Enki), but now be Cthulhu, then you will have a greater appreciation for the ending!

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