General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Yamazakura v. Lyfflandt
ReligionForBreakfast
comments
Comments by "Yamazakura v. Lyfflandt" (@BiglerSakura) on "ReligionForBreakfast" channel.
Previous
1
Next
...
All
It is also worth noting that the terms we use in the modern languages are derived either from the Germanic "Hellheim" or the Hellenistic "Hades", both originally describing cold, dark and boring places rather than something hot, burning and painful.
110
It was quite common practice in heathen societies to name children with bad names like Fool, Ugly etc. in order to avoid the evil eye. The traces of this tradition can still be found in the form of strange surnames derived from ancient names.
15
Also in the eyes of the "standard" Jews the parable contained an oxymoron, a contradiction with the stereotype: a good Samaritan sounded to them like, say, a generous Scot.
4
Do they have secular (municipal, state) offices to register civil status? If no, and the church is the only institution to register birth, marriage, death, then the public rite statistics is irrelevant when it comes to evaluation of religiousness.
4
There are also daemons.
2
"why Protestants, Catholics, Orthodox, and some Oriental churches all have different old testament cannons" ------------------------------------------ Oh yes, a church that has more cannons is usually more successful in spreading its teaching.
2
"ch" in "cherub(im)" should be pronounced as "kh" in "makakh".
2
Jeshua ha-Nozri: "You know, that guy who followed me everywhere and was constantly taking notes... Once I took a glance into his notes..." Pontius Pilatus: "So, what was there?" Jeshua: "I've never said anything like that."
2
26:45 --- "Solomonic seal" - is it a pentagram?
1
@ANNIHILATOR135 yes, just wanted to say exactly the same.
1
It's often being said that God is not a bearded old guy sitting on a cloud. The Supreme God is not, but Saklas probably is. Otherwise what image and likeness was Adam created according to?
1
YAM-na-ya culture. Wiki: The Yamnaya culture or the Yamna culture (Russian: Ямная культура, Ukrainian: Ямна культура lit. 'culture of pits'), also known as the Pit Grave culture or Ochre Grave culture, was a late Copper Age to early Bronze Age archaeological culture of the region between the Southern Bug, Dniester, and Ural rivers (the Pontic steppe), dating to 3300–2600 BCE. It was discovered by Vasily Gorodtsov following his archaelogical excavations near Siversky Donets in 1901—1903. Its name derives from its characteristic burial tradition: Я́мная (romanization: yamnaya) is a Russian adjective that means 'related to pits (yama)', as these people used to bury their dead in tumuli (kurgans) containing simple pit chambers.
1
That's all about paleocontacts, and also Ezekiel, and Muhammad who was granted an excursion to the orbital station.
1
0:34 - "pretty apocalyptic staff..." --- What else could we expect from a book titled "Apocalypse" :)
1
The Hebrew inscription in The Detroit Free Press and its transcription are somewhat dubious ...
1
Probably, a remarried widow had a higher social status and more authority in her second family. Because as a widow she de-facto had been a head (despot) of a household.
1
It's more like a "TeleDoc" program
1
Jeshua ha-Nozri: "You know, that guy who followed me everywhere and was constantly writing down some notes after me... Once I looked into his notes..." Pontius Pilatus: "So, what was there?" Jeshua: "I've never said anything like that."
1
Previous
1
Next
...
All