Artificial Intelligence and New Messiah
A Greek tragedy concealed in a Christian Recruitment play
Vecinos Afuera la Casa-Keep the Neighbors outside the Home
1. The Sephardic community in New Mexico and southern Colorado are known fondly as the Seranditas-loosely translated as the cryptic Jews.
2. A community that has historically survived with language and faith with roots in old Palestine, no, this group was known to many as Maranos-Swine.
3. Juan B. Oñate explorations into the New Spain in the year 1598. Following the latitude market of 33, the same as marker Jerusalem the Holy.
4. The Ladinos were seeking the solitude and privacy their Judaic faith away from the always seeking eye of the Inquisition.
5. Christian poetry, songs, psalms that raised the flag of suspicion of town Friars that reported Quintana to the Holy Office of the Inquisition.
6. In the year of 1733, the Ladino version of Las Pastores would be written anonymously. This version would contain the Judaic history of both the written word of Moses and the esoteric insight of the Kabbalah.
Who wrote the Exodus play detailed in the book, The Portal of Light?
Authors maintained the -wisdom of both biblical insight of the New and Old Testament, law of Moses-Torah, Greek play writings, latitude ques and clues of the cosmos.
Flaveous Josephus writings were included and the knowledge of the Essene cosmos study, all of these hidden utilizing the concealment techniques of PARDES of Moshe Cordoviero.
How Writers Structured Play
The Exodus play was patterned after the native recruitment play Las Posadas, yet written in 5 word sentences similar to the Alabado-psalm style format.
Hebrew and Ladino words, a word such as Feliciad-happiness, possessed the concealed meaning as Happy New Year-Yom Kuppor for this readership, the- Hebrew words such as Tafila-prayer, Asmodeo-King of Demons from the Kabbalah.
The Kabbalah use of the ladino term Semano-Heaven.
How Concepts of Importance and Historic Characters Were Hidden
Wolf is spelled Lobo in Spanish and Lovo in Ladino.
Bacto and Tavano are both names of Greek descent and provide the clue that the play is written as a Greek tragedy.
Jila, the female slave in the Greek tragedy The Iliad by Homer in 1250 BC