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TakenusernameA on scored.co
1 year ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)2 children
>Notably -- it was prophesied that Israel would forget their ancestors.
Do you have the specific passage, I'm curious.
>Also somewhat oddly -- the Germanic tribes carry on traditions and laws from ancient Israel. IE, the ancient Anglo-Saxon laws bear a very striking resemblance to the laws that Moses gave Israel
Theres also the curious fact that the Voluspa Ragnarock poem resembles a garbled flood or possibly apocalypse account, and also ends with a prophecy of a ruler who will rule after the Pagan gods are all dead: "There comes on high, | all power to hold,A mighty lord, | all lands he rules.", though these things could either be coincidences or due to Christian influence.
Start with Joseph's two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, who's names mean "doubly fruitful" and "to make forgetful".
Jacob passed on the blessing he had inherited from Abraham and Issac to both of these grandsons. Jacob also prophesied that multiple nations would come from them. This is the last time the Biblical record shows the blessing of Abraham being given and the only time it didn't all go to a specific son, so it seems the blessing from this point belonged to the tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh in general. Both of whom disappeared without a trace after the Assyrians conquered the Northern Kingdom of Israel. Forgotten and fruitful.
apparently the tribes that didnt make it into israel were resettled along some river in central eurasia, I cant remember the name of it off the top of my hand.
As for epheraim and manesses' names, they can also translate into "plenty" and "void".
Here's something I looked up. I did not read it. It seems to have some stuff. Read the whole bible for yourself.
RE Voluspa Ragnarock: The jews don't want you to know the reality of history and religion. Our ancestors were more in agreement than disagreement about things. The Bible is one part of a broader history, and thanks to the jews, it is a mutilated version of it.
Have you ever wondered how Christianity spread so rapidly in the 1st and 2nd centuries? How did an obscure sect with bizarre beliefs suddenly convert millions and millions of "pagans" to worship Jesus? The answer should be blindingly obvious, but we have a mental block that prevents us from seeing it.
Do you have the specific passage, I'm curious.
>Also somewhat oddly -- the Germanic tribes carry on traditions and laws from ancient Israel. IE, the ancient Anglo-Saxon laws bear a very striking resemblance to the laws that Moses gave Israel
Theres also the curious fact that the Voluspa Ragnarock poem resembles a garbled flood or possibly apocalypse account, and also ends with a prophecy of a ruler who will rule after the Pagan gods are all dead: "There comes on high, | all power to hold,A mighty lord, | all lands he rules.", though these things could either be coincidences or due to Christian influence.
Jacob passed on the blessing he had inherited from Abraham and Issac to both of these grandsons. Jacob also prophesied that multiple nations would come from them. This is the last time the Biblical record shows the blessing of Abraham being given and the only time it didn't all go to a specific son, so it seems the blessing from this point belonged to the tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh in general. Both of whom disappeared without a trace after the Assyrians conquered the Northern Kingdom of Israel. Forgotten and fruitful.
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis%2048&version=ESV
https://www.gotquestions.org/Ephraim-in-the-Bible.html
https://www.gotquestions.org/Manasseh-in-the-Bible.html
As for epheraim and manesses' names, they can also translate into "plenty" and "void".
RE Voluspa Ragnarock: The jews don't want you to know the reality of history and religion. Our ancestors were more in agreement than disagreement about things. The Bible is one part of a broader history, and thanks to the jews, it is a mutilated version of it.
Have you ever wondered how Christianity spread so rapidly in the 1st and 2nd centuries? How did an obscure sect with bizarre beliefs suddenly convert millions and millions of "pagans" to worship Jesus? The answer should be blindingly obvious, but we have a mental block that prevents us from seeing it.
Hint: pagans were not who we are told they were.