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#2
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Horza in here grilling.
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Last edited by Mblake1981; 08-16-2021 at 07:55 PM..
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#3
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Also, this just in: allowing Turkey and Iran to jointly run Afghanistan would keep women in schools and see every taliban member dead
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God Bless Texas
Free Iran | ||
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#4
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Quote:
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#6
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I work 60-65 hours a week to support a family of 6 exclusively, while tithing, growing my own food (Hos 10:12), teaching my children, and frequently volunteering my time to charitable endeavors. You really don't know shit. Just because I don't agree to swaddling degenerates while allowing them to remain in squalorrous conditions (of their own making) doesn't mean shit.
Your entire aims are off if you think handing people fish while refusing to teach them how to fish, and in fact prohibiting them from fishing, means you're virtuous. In fact it means the opposite. It means that you really don't care enough about them to exhort and correct their bad decisions, poor lifestyles, and anti-christian ideals. Being an accusatory dipshit do-nothing on an elf forum is not taking action. You're just being an annoying douchebag. Now, if you'll excuse me, men are talking here. | ||
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Last edited by Gwaihir; 08-16-2021 at 08:25 PM..
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#8
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https://www.fandom.com/articles/fansy-everquest
Quote:
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#10
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We should also mention, that in nearly every example of "the poor" being used throughout both the Torah and the NT, the Hebrew word used is "Anayim".
If you do a little research, you will find "Anayim" was not used to describe people living in squalor of their own making, it was almost entirely used to describe people who had a severe physical handicap which rendered them incapable of sustaining themselves. Furthermore, in the instances where it was used to describe a "people" it was used to describe the "Iesennian" (Essene) congregation, who swore off all possessions to serve the public as "therapeutae" while living communally as Nazarites under the Torah. The origin of the word being from the Greek "Ieso" (the Greek demigoddess of healing, daughter of Asclepius), used to describe a Greek-Israelite sect of "healers" who at the time of "Iesous" (Jesus) who were led by John the Baptist, were exclusively vegetarian, consuming only vegetables (+seeds, nuts, grain), dairy, and honey one meal a day, after their daily work, whom one had to pledge to for two years, relinquishing to the communal coffers, and swearing off all property to do so, before finally being allowed to dine with fellow "Iesonnoi" during their daily meal. Any violation of their codices meant expulsion from the group, which was essentially a death sentence as the guidelines for their food preparation we're not duplicated in any other communities they were enmeshed within. Literally, the name "Jesus" means "Essene". That who "the poor" are, in the bible. They were a messianic Hebrew sect, who essentially entirely converted to Ebionitism under Christ, and then following the death of their messiah fell under the leadership of James, "Iesous'" brother. The book of acts specifically denotes their disagreement with Pauline doctrine, and is precisely why Paul, after receiving Peter's blessing refers to them in Galatians 2:10 which I will now quote in both the Orthodox Jewish Version of the New Testament, as well as the KJV so you can see the Truth for what it is: 10 Only that we should remember the Aniyim (the Poor), the very thing which I was also eager to do. Kehilah in Galatia 2:10 OJB https://bible.com/bible/130/gal.2.10.OJB 10 Only they would that we should remember the poor; the same which I also was forward to do. Galatians 2:10 KJV https://bible.com/bible/1/gal.2.10.KJV And here's the Dhouay Rheims if a direct translation from the Greek is what you prefer: Galatians 2:10 [10]Only that we should be mindful of the poor: which same thing also I was careful to do. | ||
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Last edited by Gwaihir; 08-16-2021 at 09:11 PM..
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