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Why I am always on guard, the Albinos and Mulattoes always try.
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by jantavanta: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Mike111: [qb] The history of what is now called Iran. http://realhistoryww.com./world_history/ancient/Elam_Iran_1.htm http://realhistoryww.com./world_history/ancient/Elam_Iran_2.htm http://realhistoryww.com./world_history/ancient/Elam_Iran_2a.htm http://realhistoryww.com./world_history/ancient/Elam_Iran_3.htm [b]If you are only interested in the current people of Iran, you only have to read this one.[/b] http://realhistoryww.com./world_history/ancient/Elam_Iran_3a.htm [/qb][/QUOTE]Mike111, I think there is the need to review the origin of the Hebrews by examining the ancient egyptian evolution of Hebrew and Zoroastrian Theology. http://realhistoryww.com./world_history/ancient/Elam_Iran_2.htm "Egyptians, Greeks, Anatolians, and Persians also share the use of Sphinx's (Human Headed Lions), as mythical creatures" The use of the Sphinx is of ancient egyptian origin. Zoroaster had his teachings in Egypt and from there, he developed the Zoroastrian Eschatology http://egyptianchristianity.com/ezra_truth_about_hebrew_scriptures.htm "At the time of the Jewish exile in Babylonia, much Zoroastrian thought had the chance to enter Judaism and surely did. Scholars once took this for granted. Thus, in Jeremiah, Rab-Mag was the chief of the Magi. 2 Chronicles, Ezra and Deutero-Isaiah show how close Persian and Jewish thought was. Darius Hystaspes, the Persian King of about 550 BC, worshipped Ormuzd. He was probably a Zoroastrian, as was his father Cyrus. Jewish history is dated from the reign of Persian kings and the Persian king Cyrus is seen as a Deliverer. He rebuilt the Jerusalem Temple as we know from inscriptions as well as the Old Testament and was much admired by the prophet, Isaiah. Herodotus confirms that he was a noble king. The Jews, as well as Christianity today, derive most of their modern doctrines from Persian religion, the religion founded by Zoroaster. Persia gave Judaism its angelology, the immortality of the soul, the doctrine of the millennia , the heavenly book in which human actions are inscribed, a Last Judgment, rewards or punishments after death, paradise on earth or in heaven, hell, the final transformation of the earth and resurrection. Satan first appeared in Judaism as God's servant, His prosecutor, but with Persian influence he evolved into a Jewish Ahriman, God's enemy. The Messiah, conceived as a human warrior King who would save his people from oppression like king David of old, evolved into a cosmic saviour very similar to the Persian Saoshyant. Ancient Judaism knew of no Last Judgement but they did in Egypt where the Hebrews once lived. This is just one example where the earliest Divine Revelations of mankind as held by the Egyptians were later altered by later nations. Before the exile the Jewish concept of death was Sheol, a dark and dismal place with no memory of God. After it the concepts of Heaven and Hell had emerged and the Jews had a doctrine of resurrection and Judgement for all. Ironically Persian religion restored this religious belief to the Jewish people which they had encountered before in Egypt. The "dry bones" of Ezekiel seems to be based on the Persian custom of leaving the dead to be picked by birds in towers, so that they do not defile the earth, after which they could be resurrected." http://egyptianchristianity.com/akhenaten_and_monotheism.htm "Not only did the Hebrews develop their monotheistic tenets slowly and over the course of several centuries, a fully developed form of monotheism emerged in Israel only after a lengthy period of evolution. In fact "monotheism" developed long before the Hebrews even existed as a people as the ancient Egyptians experimented with a form of single-deity worship. The guiding force behind this effort to "correct" Egyptian religious practice was Akhenaten (the Biblical Moses) who both felt the abuses and excesses of the Thebes' Amun-Ra Priesthood needed to be stopped as well as the prevalent overemphasis on worship of one individual neteroo like Osiris which, it just so happened, had reached its zenith in the 18th Dynasty. In his opinion Egypt was beginning to lose is way from an implicit "monotheism" by an over emphasis in the worship of various individual "neteroo". Simply put he felt that this nation was losing its proper worship of the "One" which comprised the "All" by the overemphasis one these "parts" of the whole." The Hebrews are Black Ancient Egyptians who left Egypt as a result of a theological disagreement started by Pharoah Akenaten over the choice of the supreme deity. They chose to retain [b]Aten[/b] even after the death of Akhenaten. I do not defend all the information on the websites quoted above, because I see the forged one-eyed statue of Nefertiti and a claim to a 'White-Semite' infusion into the 18th Dynasty through Biblical Joseph. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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