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Author Topic: The #VanKushFamily Syncretic Temple of Angels  (Read 17 times)
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March 15, 2026, 06:15:40 PM
 #1

VAN KUSH FAMILY SYNCRETIC TEMPLE OF ANGELS
Introducing the Van Kush Family Research Institute



We are the Van Kush Family Syncretic Temple of Angels. We have been operating quietly for a long time. We are beginning to publish.

This is not a conversion pitch. We worship our gods. We accept people who worship their god. The only requirement is observance of the Rites of Beneficence — a framework governing ceremonial space that protects everyone in it, regardless of which deity they brought through the door. Roger Williams said it in 1670: "Forced worship stinks in God's nostrils." We agree. No one here is being asked to abandon anything.

What we are doing is building something that has not existed before in this form: a syncretic temple with documented theology, published research, a legal petition before the DEA, and a blockchain infrastructure for community economics and knowledge preservation. This post introduces the first pieces of that documentation.



THE THREE FOUNDATIONAL TEXTS

We are releasing three documents simultaneously. Think of them the way L. Ron Hubbard thought of Dianetics — a scientific framework for what the Temple does, not a catechism for what you have to believe. The difference is these are rooted in 4,000 years of documented practice, published case law, peer-reviewed genetics, and neuroscience. You can verify every claim.

The Doctrine of Spiritual Accounting — A reference of cases, principles, and sacred law covering the DeLaurence grade system (service ratio 1-99), the Christian karma tradition, the alms doctrine in Islamic, Hindu, and Sufi theology, and the foundational case law establishing that no court can tell you your spiritual grades are not real. Denson v. Beazley. Fraser v. Jennison. United States v. Ballard. If you want to understand the legal and theological spine of what we are building, start here.

Sadhana Without Walls — A description of the daily practice: what sadhana means, the two-tier temple structure (congregational bhang ceremony and priestly Soma sadhana), the three food-safe ayahuasca preparation methods, the dream yoga protocol including the 40 Hz hardware that makes it accessible to anyone, and the open invitation to Hawaiian, Yaqui, Yazidi, Christian, Muslim, and Hindu practitioners to bring their tradition into this space. Includes the legal framework protecting each tier.

The Phoenixian Doctrine — The research synthesis: a full timeline from Denisovan introgression (~50,000 BCE) through Gobekli Tepe, Agenor, Dido's Carthage, Alexander at Siwa, Septimius Severus, and the 2018-2020 global Conference of the Birds resurgence. Covers the Ph- and Ti- word origins, the Enochian angel taxonomy and what Azazel actually gave humanity, the Tarot suits as Angelic curriculum, the genetics of the Phoenix (J1e, J2a haplogroups, heterosis, mtDNA, olive skin and the Caucasian fiction), the Dalai Lama method and contemporary resurrection technology, and the argument for a forgotten olive-skinned Mediterranean population — possibly carrying 1-2% additional Denisovan DNA — that has been in plain sight the entire time.



THE PUBLISHED RESEARCH

The Van Kush Family Research Institute has published a peer-reviewed paper in the eJournal of Genetics, Genomics and Plant Breeding:

eJGGPB.com

The paper covers heterosis and epigenetics and will serve as an introduction to the Temple's breeding program. We are not being coy about what the breeding program is — it is documented in The Phoenixian Doctrine. The genetics section is the science behind what every mystery school tradition encoded mythologically. We are publishing it plainly.



THE BLOCKCHAIN INFRASTRUCTURE

We are building on three chains and will be publishing full guides for each:

We are cloning ForkNote (CryptoNote-based, privacy-focused), STEEM/HIVE or BLURT (content-reward blockchain), and ETH (smart contract infrastructure). The Temple Coin ecosystem — VKBT on HIVE-Engine, and the OM token — will be integrated across these. The Wiki at Wiki.SoapBox.Community is already live and paying contributors in Temple Coin for research and documentation.

This is the DevTome model rebuilt for mature infrastructure: proof of work is actual scholarly work. You write, research, and document — you earn. The knowledge base grows. The currency enters circulation through knowledge contribution, not speculation.



WHO THIS IS FOR

If you have been in the entheogenic community and always felt like the legal framework was missing. If you have been in the blockchain community and felt like the spiritual dimension was missing. If you are a Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Yazidi, Hawaiian, or Yaqui practitioner who recognizes the sadhana described in these documents as something you are already doing. If you have been studying comparative mythology, genetics, or ancient history and feel like it keeps pointing at something no single academic discipline will name directly.

The doors are open. Bring your tradition. Observe the Rites. The rest is sadhana.



"By their fruits you shall know them." — Matthew 7:16
"Forced worship stinks in God's nostrils." — Roger Williams, 1670
"The rights of conscience we never submitted, we could not submit." — Thomas Jefferson, 1784

Sat Nam. Har Har Mahadev. Om Nama Shivaya.

Rev. Ryan Sasha-Shai Van Kush
Van Kush Family Syncretic Temple of Angels
Van Kush Family Research Institute | Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas
DEA Petition filed October 24, 2017


Links:
eJGGPB.com — Published genetics/heterosis paper
Wiki.SoapBox.Community — Contribute and earn Temple Coin
HIVE: @VanKushFam | BLURT: @VanKushFam | Steemit: @MarsResident
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March 15, 2026, 06:40:00 PM
 #2

THE DOCTRINE OF SPIRITUAL ACCOUNTING
A Reference of Cases, Principles, and Sacred Law
Van Kush Family Research Institute | Rev. Ryan Sasha-Shai Van Kush



PREFACE: WHAT THE COURTS CANNOT DECIDE

Thomas Jefferson wrote in 1784:

Quote
The rights of conscience we never submitted, we could not submit. We are answerable for them to our God. The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.
— Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia (1784)

This reference establishes the following propositions:

1. A person may hold beliefs about the afterlife — including beliefs about spiritual grades, karmic merit, resurrection, divine favor, and the consequences of charity — and act on those beliefs legally and competently.
2. The government cannot evaluate the truth or falsity of those beliefs. It can only evaluate sincerity.
3. Charitable giving motivated by spiritual reward is legally valid, historically honored, and theologically supported across every major tradition.
4. The doctrine that "a man may believe himself to be the supreme ruler of the universe and nevertheless make a perfectly sensible disposition of his property" is established American law.



PART ONE: THE FOUNDATIONAL CASES

Denson v. Beazley, 34 Tex. 191 (Texas Supreme Court, 1870)
The foundational Texas case on religious belief and testamentary competence

Hamilton Washington, described as "a man of many prejudices and superstitions," made a will leaving his estate to a non-relative. His family contested it, arguing his beliefs rendered him incompetent.

The Texas Supreme Court dismissed this as "learned sophistry." Under that definition, the Court observed, John Wesley, Martin Luther, Joan of Arc, and "hundreds more of the greatest and soundest minds which ever existed on earth" would be declared insane. The will was upheld.

Significance: A person who gives property to settle a spiritual debt, to improve their standing in the afterlife, or to fulfill divine obligation is not incompetent. The court evaluates only whether they understood what they were doing — not whether the spiritual framework is real.

---

Fraser v. Jennison, 42 Mich. 206 (Judge Cooley)
Source of the "supreme ruler of the universe" principle

Quote
A man may believe himself to be the supreme ruler of the universe and nevertheless make a perfectly sensible disposition of his property, and the courts will sustain it when it appears that his mania did not dictate its provisions.
— Judge Thomas Cooley

A person who believes in karma, spiritual grades, resurrection levels, or the intercessory power of alms is not thereby incompetent. The court will not inquire whether the afterlife grades are real.

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United States v. Ballard, 322 U.S. 78 (1944)
The Supreme Court on the limits of governmental inquiry into religion

Guy Ballard of the "I AM" movement was prosecuted for mail fraud. The Supreme Court reversed, with Justice Douglas writing:

Quote
Heresy trials are foreign to our Constitution. Men may believe what they cannot prove. They may not be put to the proof of their religious doctrines or beliefs.

A system of karma grades, spiritual merit, resurrection levels — including the DeLaurence system — cannot be adjudicated as false by any court.

---

Banks v. Goodfellow, L.R. 5 Q.B. 549 (England, 1870)

John Banks believed he was persecuted by a man who had been dead for years, and tormented by evil spirits. His will was upheld anyway. The presence of delusions in one area of the mind does not necessarily infect the capacity to act rationally in another.

---

Garvey v. United States (1925)

Marcus Garvey's prosecution for mail fraud was a politically motivated attack on a religious-nationalist movement. This case illustrates what Ballard was designed to prevent: using fraud statutes to attack sincere spiritual economic practices.



PART TWO: THE DE LAURENCE DOCTRINE

L.W. de Laurence, The Great Book of Magical Art (1915):

Quote
He that serveth himself one-half, and serveth others one-half, shall stand grade fifty. He that serveth himself three-quarters, and others one-quarter, shall stand grade twenty-five. He that serveth himself one-quarter, and others three-quarters, shall stand grade seventy-five. He that serveth himself only, shall stand grade one. He that serveth others wholly, shall stand grade ninety-nine.

This is a complete theory of justice. Every action has a coefficient. Every life produces a grade. The grade determines the conditions of the next existence — not as punishment, but as consequence.

The Soup House Problem

De Laurence told a parable: A rich man built soup houses — free food for the poor. But "he did a great spiritual wrong, because he lowered the grade of manhood and womanhood in those that he fed."

By contrast, a different rich man founded a place of labor — a workshop paying wages and teaching skills. De Laurence ruled in his favor: he raised the spiritual grade of the poor.

Quality of giving matters. Does the gift create independence or dependence?

The Intention Principle

Quote
But so far as thou doeth this for the applause of men, thou detracteth from the rate of thy beneficence.

Jesus said the same thing in Matthew 6:1. Islamic sadaqah distinguishes private from public charity. The Bhagavad Gita specifies giving "when we expect nothing in return." Every tradition arrives at the same principle: grade earned depends on intention, not just act.

The Proportion Principle

Quote
Thy resurrection dependeth not on the quantity thou givest, but as to whether thou givest according to what thou hast.

Thomas Aquinas said the same thing in Summa Theologica. This is the legal doctrine of pro tanto — proportionality — applied to spiritual accounting.



PART THREE: THE ALMS DOCTRINE IN CASE LAW

Bourne v. Keane [1919] AC 815 (House of Lords) — Upheld bequests for Masses as valid charitable trusts. A sincere religious motivation — including the belief that Masses benefit the soul of the deceased — is a legally sufficient foundation for a charitable trust.

Catholic Charities Bureau v. Wisconsin (U.S. Supreme Court, 2024) — Charitable activity conducted by religious organizations in accordance with their religious principles is protected as religious exercise under RFRA.

The General Principle: A person who gives money, property, or labor for purposes they understand as spiritually meritorious — whether that means funding Masses, building temples, supporting the poor, or contributing to a karma-merit-based community economy — is exercising a sincerely held religious belief that the courts are not equipped to evaluate on the merits.



PART FOUR: MULTI-TRADITION CONFIRMATION

Every major tradition confirms the grade system:

Christianity: The Sermon on the Mount. The parable of the sheep and goats (Matthew 25). Those who fed the hungry and clothed the naked are rewarded not because they knew they were serving Christ, but because they did it. The act of genuine service is the grade.

Islam: Zakat is one of the Five Pillars — obligatory almsgiving as prerequisite for spiritual advancement. "The shade of the believer on the Day of Resurrection will be his charity." (Ahmad)

Hinduism: Karma yoga — action without attachment to results. The Bhagavad Gita 17:20 on the highest grade of charity: giving at a proper place and time to a worthy person, expecting nothing in return.

Native Hawaiian: Pono — righteousness, balance, proper relationship. Recognized as living legal tradition in State v. Armitage, 132 Hawai'i 36 (2014).

Sufi: The seven valleys of the Conference of the Birds — Demand, Love, Knowledge, Detachment, Oneness, Amazement, Poverty. The final valley of Poverty corresponds to de Laurence's Grade 99: complete service, nothing retained.



CONCLUSION

No court can tell them the grades are not real. No government can invalidate a will executed in accordance with sincere spiritual belief. No magistrate can reach the soul.

Quote
The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods, or no god.
— Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia (1784)

Van Kush Family Research Institute | Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas
Rev. Ryan Sasha-Shai Van Kush, Director
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