Originally posted by Lord Urizen
Holy Scriptures of the OrgasmismTestament of Orgy Kalima
Clause 79
Verses xxx 51-53"Thy sun and the moon mate to create thy blue sky
For even thy celestial bodies submit to the power of Orgasm
which is ultamate truth and bliss"
* you claimed there's an error because of two identical verses? i answered you with a verse that tells you that some events are also written in other books, for example the book of Joshua, some of its contents are also written in the book of Jasher... it's a real pity that when you see a Bible verse, you automatically resorted to this silly post and did not even pause and understand the point i gave... 😉
Originally posted by peejayd
* you claimed there's an error because of two identical verses? i answered you with a verse that tells you that some events are also written in other books, for example the book of Joshua, some of its contents are also written in the book of Jasher... it's a real pity that when you see a Bible verse, you automatically resorted to this silly post and did not even pause to understand the point i gave... 😉
Originally posted by peejayd[/B][/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=8161743]Originally posted by peejayd
[B]* you claimed there's an error because of two identical verses? i answered you with a verse that tells you that some events are also written in other books, for example the book of Joshua, some of its contents are also written in the book of Jasher... it's a real pity that when you see a Bible verse, you automatically resorted to this silly post and did not even pause and understand the point i gave... 😉
I copied you copying you. 😱
Now tell me wh you did that. 😠 😛
[edit] oh I see (odd mistake though)
Originally posted by peejayd
* you claimed there's an error because of two identical verses? i answered you with a verse that tells you that some events are also written in other books, for example the book of Joshua, some of its contents are also written in the book of Jasher... it's a real pity that when you see a Bible verse, you automatically resorted to this silly post and did not even pause and understand the point i gave... 😉
Cuz i didn't get your point...you always try to validate scripture with other scripture, and the point is that does not work...
That's like me proving my own point with my own reasoning, and ignoring and outside or universal source to back me up.
You didn't answer me why would a scripture be repeated word for word ? What is the purpose of that ?
Well a person cannot trust that all Isaiah said is actually from Isaiahs mouth.
How hast thou fallen from heaven, Helel's son Shaher! Thou didst say in thy heart, I will ascend to heaven, above the circumpolar stars I will raise my thrown, and I will dwell on the Mount of Council in the back of the north, I will mount on the back of a cloud, I will be like unto Elyon..
Sound familiar?
"How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations! For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: . . . I will be like the most High." Isaiah 14:12-14
Pagan scriptures of the 7th century BC include this little dirge, so centuries later, a Jewish scribe copied this Canaanite scripture into the Bible and pretended it was written by Isaiah..Quoting Isaiah 14:12-14.
Originally posted by Lord UrizenThe Bible says "the" 5,000 times. God is repetitive. 😐
"One day, while randomly reading my Bible, I made a startling discovery. After reading 2 Kings 19, I flipped a couple of pages and read some more. To my astonishment I found myself reading the same words. [b]Now, class, open your Bibles to 2 Kings 19--and also to Isaiah 37.These books are word for word identical! No bible scholar has been able to give me a satisfactory explanation for this. (Maybe the scholar who double-titled heeded Jesus' warning and didn't take out one tittle----Alex) "http://ejm.tripod.com/who_wrote_bible.htm
Why are these two passages exactly the same word for word ?
Can someone explain this to me ? Why would "God" give two passages that are EXACTLY the same ?????
Does God repeat himself ?
Or perhaps is this an error in the human editting of our current Bible ? [/B]
Originally posted by debbiejo
Well a person cannot trust that all Isaiah said is actually from Isaiahs mouth.How hast thou fallen from heaven, Helel's son Shaher! Thou didst say in thy heart, I will ascend to heaven, above the circumpolar stars I will raise my thrown, and I will dwell on the Mount of Council in the back of the north, I will mount on the back of a cloud, I will be like unto Elyon..
Sound familiar?
"How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations! For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: . . . I will be like the most High." Isaiah 14:12-14
Pagan scriptures of the 7th century BC include this little dirge, so centuries later, a Jewish scribe copied this Canaanite scripture into the Bible and pretended it was written by Isaiah..Quoting Isaiah 14:12-14.
Much of the OT is borrowed from other histories like the Canaanites. Hebrew scriptures borrowed and adapted earlier neighboring Middle Eastern myths from Egypt, Canaan, and particularly Mesopotamia. The Genesis creation myths, for example, have parallels in the older Babylonian Enuma elish with its conflict between watery chaos of the earth (the goddess Tiamat) and stormy wind of the sky (the god Marduk). The story of Noah and the flood has prior analogues in a third-millennium Sumerian flood myth, the myth of Ziusudra, as well as in two Akkadian versions, the epic of Atrahasis and the epic of Gilgamesh, which both also have versions of the paradisal garden. Gilgamesh also employs a narrative of a magical plant that is said to bestow a godlike quality on humans, similar to the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil in Genesis. The Genesis myth of humans being molded from clay is found in the more ancient Egyptian myths about the potter god Khnum. Mesopotamian myths of conflicts between elemental forces--a male sky god against a watery goddess or sea monster--can be found in redacted forms in various places in Hebrew scriptures, such as in the figure of Leviathan and in poetic or prophetic traditions about such monsters.
http://community.tncc.edu/faculty/longt/REL200/intro_to_Jewish_ss.htm
http://cc.usu.edu/~fath6/bible.htm
This last link is pretty excellent....
Originally posted by Adam_PoE
Isaiah lived during the late eighth and early seventh centuries BCE. Nice try though.
Originally posted by debbiejo
Much of the OT is borrowed from other histories like the Canaanites. Hebrew scriptures borrowed and adapted earlier neighboring Middle Eastern myths from Egypt, Canaan, and particularly Mesopotamia. The Genesis creation myths, for example, have parallels in the older Babylonian Enuma elish with its conflict between watery chaos of the earth (the goddess Tiamat) and stormy wind of the sky (the god Marduk). The story of Noah and the flood has prior analogues in a third-millennium Sumerian flood myth, the myth of Ziusudra, as well as in two Akkadian versions, the epic of Atrahasis and the epic of Gilgamesh, which both also have versions of the paradisal garden. Gilgamesh also employs a narrative of a magical plant that is said to bestow a godlike quality on humans, similar to the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil in Genesis. The Genesis myth of humans being molded from clay is found in the more ancient Egyptian myths about the potter god Khnum. Mesopotamian myths of conflicts between elemental forces--a male sky god against a watery goddess or sea monster--can be found in redacted forms in various places in Hebrew scriptures, such as in the figure of Leviathan and in poetic or prophetic traditions about such monsters.http://community.tncc.edu/faculty/longt/REL200/intro_to_Jewish_ss.htm
http://cc.usu.edu/~fath6/bible.htm
This last link is pretty excellent....
Originally posted by Nellinator
If you want to be picky yes. The dates are slightly cloudy, he may not have made it into the 7th century, but it is thought he lived probably less then ten years into the 7th century. The point being that he predates the inscription debbiejo is talking about.
Yes, I do want to get picky. Isaiah lived during the late eighth and early seventh centuries BCE, around the same time the Canaanite passage was written. He does not "predate" the passage at all.
Originally posted by Adam_PoE
Yes, I do want to get picky. Isaiah lived during the late eighth and early seventh centuries BCE, around the same time the Canaanite passage was written. He does not "predate" the passage at all.