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Khepera (Khepri; Khoprer; G/R Xepera) - "Becoming" As a theophany of
the solar-god, the scarab beetle (Scarabeus sacer) is large, golden, and winged. It
rolls balls of dung, sometimes for long distances, in order to have a place in which to
lay its eggs. The young beetles then spring forth from the ball of dung, seemingly as if
created from nothing. In this process, the ancients saw a metaphor for the daily progress
of the sun (rolling as a ball across the sky every day), and for the mystery of creation
and birth. Khepera as a full scarab or a scarab-headed man is often shown either within
the Disk of the physical sun, or rolling it, as it were, from the eastern mountains in the
morning and back into Tem's watchful embrace in the evening. Khepera is associated
with the life-giving powers of sunlight and with the act of sunrise itself, forming a
special triad with Ra (noontime sun) and Tem (setting sun).
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