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Religious extracts from Warrior post

Started by falkor, Nov 28, 07:27 AM 2014

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falkor

Here's a good riddle:

Who needs it spoon-fed to them? The inventors of Christianity didn't want to spoon-feed it!

Still

Quote from: falkor on Nov 28, 07:17 AM 2014
Likewise, the New Testament is a collection of 60+ riddles to inform only the intelligent and open-minded of it's real agenda.   

Summary: how to make people appreciate things without spoiling them!

Quote from: falkor on Nov 28, 07:27 AM 2014
Here's a good riddle:

Who needs it spoon-fed to them? The inventors of Christianity didn't want to spoon-feed it!

Because my legal name is Still Christ! i have some thoughts on this subject.  A real teacher will endeavor to communicate rather than conceal.  A riddle is designed to conceal, while a parable ought to be designed to reveal.  The very term "new testament" is a riddle, ending in a book that, like Warrior's thread, purports to reveal, but actually just continues to conceal the issue with more riddles.   The book of "revelations" reveals absolutely nothing, at least nothing that is actually true.   Jesus' efforts to communicate, and how the bible portrays his efforts are really irreconcilable.  There is not much in common.  Rather, it serves to string a mainstream demographic along a broad path to oblivion, the blind following the blind, serving a hierarchy of pedantic patricians in their efforts to slice off for themselves a piece of the pie of Levitically styled priest-craft, which is the art of controlling the most amount of people with the least sized police force for profit. 

But i hope you are right and Warrior is just an extremely intelligent and generous person who has figured out how to conceal his knowledge from the lazy, while at the same time distribute it to the hard-working.   

Still

falkor

The book of revelation is easy to understand once you have the key to unlock it. It was written by Domitian and contains his warnings to the 7 early churches of Turkey known as the "Commune Asiae". You have to unlock the "Seven Seals":



Revelation 6 contains a description of the 7 seals, so you now look for the word "seal" in the remaining books of the bible, and they are found here:
Romans 4:11-13 "a seal of the righteousness of the faith"
Romans 15 "sealed to them this fruit"
1 Corinthians 9:2-25 "for you are the seal of my apostleship in the Lord"
2 Corinthians 1:8--22 "who also has sealed us and given us the Spirit"
Ephesians 1:4-5,17-21 "were sealed with the  promised Holy Spirit"
Ephesians 4:7-30 "whom you were sealed for the day of redemption"

you then have to combine that information with the official Roman history book Suetonius, Domitian, 1-15


Leviticus contains a puzzle known as "Pedimental Composition", which was also used in the creation of Christianity.

Still

Quote from: Proofreaders2000 on Nov 28, 08:17 AM 2014
You guys are playing with fire being sacrilegious.  FYI

This statement is an example of the art of priest-craft, which is the control of the most minds (and bodies) with the smallest possible police force.   If you can get folks to police their own thoughts along these lines, you can reduce the expense of enforcement, and increase profits.  Deception is the preferred form of force, before brute force, being most economical.   As an aspect of war, deception comes first, there being substance to the saying, "truth is the first casualty of war".  A warrior will always seek to deceive first to save the expense of brute force.  In this way, priest-craft and a world of war-craft are similar.  The most effective deception involves an appeal to greed, or the idea of getting something.  The next most effective is an appeal to fear.   Brute force is an escalation of an appeal to fear.  Other than an apparent appeal to fear, "sacrilegious" is a nebulous reference not well defined, which could mean different things to minds with different value systems, and so, remains a riddle that i won't comment on right now. 


Quote from: Proofreaders2000 on Nov 28, 08:17 AM 2014
Perhaps if a new thread is made with just the system and
another thread for the opinions maybe that will solve the problem?

No system has been revealed, so the efforts made so far have been backed by opinions about what the system might be.  This thread appears to be some opinions about the opinions.  There is an opinion about the law of thirds expressed in riddles.   There is one riddle about "two inside two inside two", which reminds me of "a riddle wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma", which Churchill used to describe Stalin's state.  "But perhaps there is a key", he continued, "That key is Russian national interest".   The thread is a lot like a cold war where data/information is sought by showing a few cheap cards, but always keeping one's ace in the hole (or at least the perception of an ace in the hole). 

falkor

Quote from: Still on Nov 28, 08:52 PM 2014
This statement is an example of the art of priest-craft, which is the control of the most minds (and bodies) with the smallest possible police force.   If you can get folks to police their own thoughts along these lines, you can reduce the expense of enforcement, and increase profits.  Deception is the preferred form of force, before brute force, being most economical.   As an aspect of war, deception comes first, there being substance to the saying, "truth is the first casualty of war".  A warrior will always seek to deceive first to save the expense of brute force.  In this way, priest-craft and a world of war-craft are similar.  The most effective deception involves an appeal to greed, or the idea of getting something.  The next most effective is an appeal to fear.   Brute force is an escalation of an appeal to fear.  Other than an apparent appeal to fear, "sacrilegious" is a nebulous reference not well defined, which could mean different things to minds with different value systems, and so, remains a riddle that i won't comment on right now. 


No system has been revealed, so the efforts made so far have been backed by opinions about what the system might be.  This thread appears to be some opinions about the opinions.  There is an opinion about the law of thirds expressed in riddles.   There is one riddle about "two inside two inside two", which reminds me of "a riddle wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma", which Churchill used to describe Stalin's state.  "But perhaps there is a key", he continued, "That key is Russian national interest".   The thread is a lot like a cold war where data/information is sought by showing a few cheap cards, but always keeping one's ace in the hole (or at least the perception of an ace in the hole).
Yep - everyone is conditioned through authority figures to police each other and act as agents of conformity. People that say the system works, work for the system! It all goes back to the Frankpledge system in Saxon times. There was no police force, but every 10th villager had to watch over the other 9, known as the "Chief-Tithing man". It was like North Korea is now! So if you are caught tuning into South Korean radio then you and your family will be sent to a prison camp. Just remember: 9/10 people are evil, and the world is more evil now than it was 5 minutes ago!  ;)




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