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Father of Understanding

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He who increaseth knowledge, increaseth sorrow.

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"May the Father of Understanding guide you."
―A Templar blessing.[src]-[m]

The Father of Understanding is a subject often mentioned in reverence by Templars, particularly during ritual ceremonies, blessings or as a form of greeting to one another.

Symbolism and meaning

It has not been truly established whether or not the Father of Understanding refers to a metaphor or a literal entity, such as an Isu or even a higher being who is worshipped as a God by the Templars. Despite these speculations, The Father of Understanding does allude to the principle of order that the Templars embrace.

What it symbolizes is more important to them than what it is, personifying the logic the Templars appeal to in their dream to shepherd and transform the world and humanity as a whole into an eternally peaceful utopia which blossoms and advances under their supervision and leadership.[1]

History

Isu Era

On the 24th day of 2161 Isu Era, Samael, an Isu official tasked with the preparatory work for Project Anthropos, referred to Yaldabaoth as the Father of Understanding.[2]

Antiquity and early history

During the Peloponnesian War, an organization called the Cult of Kosmos revered a mysterious entity called Kosmos as their deity and manifestation of their beliefs. Whether this has any connection to the Father of Understanding has never been mentioned or even discussed.[3] In 15th March 44 BCE, when the leader of the Order of the Ancients, Lucius Septimius engaged in battle with the Hidden One Aya, she questioned whether Julius Caesar was the new king of the Order of the Ancients, to which Septimius replied that Caesar was the Father of Understanding.[4]

During the Viking expansion, members of the Order of the Ancients in England revered a Trinity of deities they called the Father of Understanding, the Mother of Wisdom and the Sacred Voice.[5] It was noted in King Alfred the Great's research that these beliefs were from the Gnostic texts, and therefore blasphemous to his accepted religion of Christianity. He stated that the Mother of Wisdom and the Sacred Voice were false, and that the Father of Understanding was the one true God of the universe. After destroying the Order of the Ancients in England, King Alfred vowed to create a new order, in which the Father of Understanding would be revered as the almighty source of goodness, harmony and order for all of mankind.[6]

Influence

Over the next two hundred years, worship of the Father as an entity ceased with the rise of Christianity and the name instead became a symbolic catchphrase among Templars, representing their goal to lead humanity by adopting the role of a concerned "father" instructing a wayward child. However, this did not stop the Templars' continued use of the Father's title among themselves. By the Third Crusade, the Levantine Templars would sign his name as a closing in their letters.[7] Similarly, the Italian Templars during the Renaissance would invoke him when resolving meetings.[8]

In 1715, the phrase was used briefly by Laureano de Torres y Ayala, Grand Master of the West Indies Templars, during his first meeting with the pirate Edward Kenway, who was impersonating the late Assassin turncoat Duncan Walpole.[9]

Before and during the American Revolutionary War, the phrase was used three times by Haytham Kenway; first, during the induction of Charles Lee to the Colonial Templars in 1755,[10] second, when inducting Shay Cormac to the Order in 1757,[11] and third, when Haytham used it as a password to enter the Smith and Company Brewery with his son, Connor.[12]

During his investigation into the Parisian Templars' affiliation with the Cult of Baphomet, the French Assassin Arno Dorian required a password to gain entrance into the cult's lair. He was informed by a cult recruiter that the password was "The Father of Understanding".[13]

The use of the blessing continued into the early 21st century, as Abstergo Industries' CEO Alan Rikkin once emailed Warren Vidic and placed the phrase at the end of his message.[14]

Behind the scenes

In Western Mystery Religions, especially Gnosticism, Yaldabaoth is one of the many names of the Demiurge, an omnipotent supreme entity who is believed to have created humans and imbued them with souls, while also trying to limit mankind's knowledge by forbidding them the fruits of paradise.[15]

References

pt-br:Pai da Compreensão zh:认知之父