METATRONS CUBE
Metatron (Hebrew מטטרון) or Mattatron (a differentiation of Metatron)[2] is the name of an angel in Judaism and some branches[citation needed] of Christianity. There are no references to him in the Jewish Tanakh or Christian Scriptures (New and Old Testament). Although he is mentioned in a few brief passages in the Talmud, Metatron appears primarily in medieval Jewish mystical texts and other post-scriptural esoteric and occult sources. In Rabbinic tradition, he is the highest of the angels and serves as the celestial scribe,[3] though there is no consensus as to his genesis, nor is there a Christian consensus on his position in the hierarchy of angels or existence.[citation needed]
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Origins
The Talmud
relates that Elisha
ben Abuyah (a
rabbi
and Jewish
religious authority
born in Jerusalem
sometime before 70 BC),
also called Acher,
(אחר,
"other", as he became an apostate),
entered Paradise and saw Metatron sitting down (an action that in
heaven is permitted only to God himself). Elishah ben Abuyah
therefore looked to Metatron as a deity and said heretically, "There
are indeed two powers in heaven!"[4]
The rabbis explain that Metatron was allowed to sit because of his
function as the Heavenly Scribe, writing down the deeds of Israel
(Babylonian Talmud, Hagiga 15a).[5]
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