New Hall of Mysteries Series!
- Husam AlHakim

- 15 hours ago
- 3 min read

All you need to know about Hermes Trismegistus
What if one of the most misunderstood figures in religious history was not a pagan philosopher, nor a mythical god, but a prophet whose voice still echoes through Judaism, Christianity, and Islam?
This is one of many daring questions explored at The Hall of Mysteries, a new unfolding series that takes viewers deep into the writings of Hermes Trismegistus, The Thrice Great, and places him exactly where ancient believers once did: inside the prophetic tradition.
This is not speculation. It is a historic adventure.
A Forgotten Prophet at the Crossroads of Faith
Across centuries and civilizations, Hermes appears under many names: Thoth in Egypt, Hermes in Greece, Mercury in Rome. Yet early Christian scholars identified him as Enoch, and Islamic scholars later affirmed him as Idris, a prophet mentioned in the Qur’an and revered for his wisdom.
What makes this astonishing is not merely the identification itself, but the content of his teachings.
The series demonstrates, step by step, that the Corpus Hermeticum speaks the same theological language as the Abrahamic faiths:
One Indescribable and transcendent God
God manifesting Himself through Mind, Word, and Will
Knowledge of God as the true meaning of worship
These are not common loose parallels, they are foundational, and deeply precise.
“The Unseen is the Most Manifest”
One of the most striking moments explored in the series is Hermes’ teaching that God is invisible precisely because He is not created, a principle that mirrors Mosaic theology, Qur’anic monotheism, and the teachings of the Family of the Prophet.
Hermes speaks of a God who cannot be seen with the eyes, yet is revealed through all things. A God who thinks the universe into existence. A God who is known only by the awakening of the mind.
If that sounds familiar, it should.
Magic, Mind, and the Science of the Prophets
Perhaps the most controversial, and most exciting topic in this series is the exploration of “magic” as understood by the prophets.
In the Hall of Mysteries, magic is not fantasy or superstition. It is presented as:
Prophetic science rather than a dark art.
Understanding of correspondence between heaven and earth.
Hermes, like Enoch and Idris, speaks of astrology, alchemy, and spiritual forces, not as rivals to God, but as tools governed by divine permission. The series carefully places these teachings alongside Qur'anic verses, prophetic narrations, and historical practices long accepted within Abrahamic traditions.
What modern religion often rejects as evil, ancient prophecy once understood as good.
Why This Series Matters Now
The series does not ask you to abandon your faith. It asks something far more unsettling:
What if your faith is far older, deeper, and more unified than you were ever told?
By restoring Hermes to his prophetic context, the series exposes a hidden continuity, a single stream of revelation flowing through different languages, cultures, and eras.
This is not about blending religions. It is about uncovering their shared origin.
An Invitation, Not a Conclusion
This article can only gesture toward what the series reveals in depth: the sacred sermons, the conversations between Mind and man, the prophetic cosmology that bridges Egypt, Israel, and Arabia. Depths of monotheism, and so much more!
If you are willing to question inherited assumptions, revisit sacred texts, and listen closely when wisdom speaks, then the doors of the Hall of Mysteries are already open.
The only question left is: Will you dare to step inside?







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