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Christ had hair like lamb's wool?
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Afronut Slayer: [QB] It is obvious you do not know anything about hebrew metaphoric writing and it is obvious I am wasting my time with you. Hebrew writers employed double equivalent sayings in the same verse to reinforce one message. This can be seen in quite a few passages. Here are some examples... Psa 35:4 [1]Let them be confounded and put to shame that seek after my soul: [2]let them be turned back and brought to confusion that devise my hurt. Psa 35:5 [1]Let them be as chaff before the wind: [2]and let the angel of the LORD chase [them]. Psa 35:9 [1]And my soul shall be joyful in the LORD: [2]it shall rejoice in his salvation. Psa 35:18 [1]I will give thee thanks in the great congregation: [2]I will praise thee among much people. There are literally THOUSANDS of passages with this technique of writing. But of course, you are too much of an ahole and proud to admit YOU JUST DID NOT KNOW. My advice to you, shut your da*n hole in matters you know not and especially when evidence is produced for you. Humble yourself Afrohole and learn to accept when you are wrong. The hebrews used the hebraec word [se'r] for hair. It is the root word for the goat [sa'yr]. The hebrews correlated the two because they made an association between the hebrew hair and the fur of the goat. If you want to know the hair texture of the hebrew, look no further than the mountain goats found in Mt. [Seir]. You are getting schooled Afro-idiot. You should have kept your pot-mouth shut when I posted the passages demonstrating how the term "wool" is used as an idiom and not in the literal sense. GAME OVER FOOL. [QUOTE]Originally posted by alTakruri: [qb] This quote [QUOTE] Rev 1:14 [i] His head and [his] hairs [were] white like wool, as white as snow; and his eyes [were] as a flame of fire; [/i] [/QUOTE]is a knock off of Daniel 7:9. but before examining the Hebrew a careful analysis of even the English version of the Revelations quote show two similes given for the hair: 1 - wool 2 - snow. If just the color of whiteness were all that it refers to then snow would have been sufficient alone. By using wool the writer intentionally invokes not just color but texture. There's no hair the texture of snow. There is hair the texture of lamb's wool. At its best snow can only reiterate the whiteness of lamb's wool. Now Daniel 7:9 has [QUOTE][i] I beheld till thrones were placed, and one that was ancient of days did sit: his raiment was as white snow, and the hair of his head like pure wool; his throne was fiery flames, and the wheels thereof burning fire.[/i][/QUOTE]Notice white snow is in reference to garments whereas the hair is simply "pure wool." The Revelations writer, a Greek, didn't remain true to the Hebrew original. He botched up by leaving out the garment and substituting hair for the garment. See, he used two similes for one item, both wool and snow for the hair alone. Quite unnecessary. Lamb's wool is white and, well, it's wooly. The Hebrew writer sensibly uses two similes for two items. Snow for garments and wool for hair. Wool is perfect for an old man's grey nappy hair. Maybe if the Greek hadn't reversed the order of snow and wool he would've got himself on target. [/qb][/QUOTE] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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