Germ Layers According to GNM
In the next couple of weeks I will be writing about germ layers so I feel the need to explain exactly what a germ layer is, as simply as I can, and although it can certainly go much deeper than my explanation, how Dr. Hamer uses these tissues in explaining his work.
Basically, when an egg is fertilized it then divides (remember your biology class?) and forms three cellular layers called ectoderm (outer layer), mesoderm (middle layer) and endoderm (inner layer). These layers will give rise to all of the body’s tissues and organs.
For example, from the Ectoderm (in red below) develops the outer skin and nervous tissue. From the Mesoderm (in orange below) develops muscle, bone, cartilage, blood vessels and connective tissue. And the Endoderm layer (in yellow below) develops into the lining of the digestive and respiratory systems.
Although these cellular layers are also called germ layers, according to traditional medicine, they have nothing to do with germs. Dr. Hamer however, in his research, has determined that the organs derived from this ectoderm tissue uses viruses and certain bacteria when healing from a conflict. Organs derived from the mesoderm tissue use bacteria and sometimes fungi for healing, and the organs that originate from the endoderm tissue use TB bacteria and fungi for healing.
Dr. Hamer has also determined that these germs multiply at the time of a DHS and they do not cross the tissue layers. For example, in a lung cancer (death fright) you will never find a virus but instead TB bacteria. (The following is a diagram taken from Dr. Hamer’s book.)