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Andrew Collins examines the entrance of a cave,
which experts say may not have been
discovered or explored in modern times. |
We know the ancient Egyptians dug underground passageways and chambers in the bedrock of the
plateau. In 1998, Dr. Zahi Hawass, Secretary General of the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities, discovered and
explored a shaft along the causeway from the Sphinx to the second pyramid (Khafre) that descended 95 feet into the
limestone bedrock of the plateau. Inside this intricately chiseled shaft were two chambers at different depths,
each holding a beautiful sarcophagus. The deepest one was dedicated to the Egyptian god Osiris. Dr. Hawass believes
these chambers and sarcophagi were used in religious ceremonies, not as burial tombs. A.R.E. researchers agree and
add that all the pyramids in Egypt and their sarcophagi were devices for experiencing the essence of death for
enhanced spiritual and mental awareness of life beyond death. None of the pyramids were tombs. This is supported by
the interesting but often ignored fact that no mummies were found in any of the major pyramids in all of Egypt.
These magnificent structures were not tombs. They were religious structures for ceremonies and initiations. The
tombs of the pharaohs, queens, and their designers are in the Valleys of the Kings, Queens, and Artisans, across
the Nile River from the enormous Karnak Temple in Luxor, in those mountain valleys on the west bank of the
Nile.
Collins hopes that his discovery will eventually lead to finding a passageway to Edgar Cayce’s
famous Hall of Records, which is believed to be beneath the Sphinx. In this chamber are ancient Atlantean records
on 30- some stone tablets written in pre-hieroglyphs that will require translation.
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