Showing posts with label into. Show all posts
Showing posts with label into. Show all posts

Saturday, December 14, 2013

The Departure: God"s Next Catastrophic Intervention Into Earth"s History

The Departure: God’s Next Catastrophic Intervention Into Earth’s History


The Departure: God


As the world races toward its momentous end-times encounter with God, cascading fulfillment of Bible Prophecy clearly points to the catching away of the saints — an event popularly known as the Rapture of the Church. Specific circumstances, which were prophesied to occur in the days just before this Departure, would appear as signs of the nearing moment, including:


- The emergence of a new global order and global government.
- Technological developments making possible the Mark



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The Departure: God"s Next Catastrophic Intervention Into Earth"s History

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Psalm 83 Precursors: Israel Fires Into Syria Again



Psalm 83: http://kkministry.com/israel-psalms-83-the-prophesied-inevitable-war-podcast/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~***KK SOCIAL MEDIA***~~~~~~~~~~~~ Facebook Page: http://…
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Psalm 83 Precursors: Israel Fires Into Syria Again

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Egyptian Tanks Moving Into Sinai Desert!!! REGIONAL WAR Unfolding !!!



My God! Is it possible that the Psalm 83 war may be fought in a matter of days or weeks or is this new conflict between the PLO and Israel just anohter huge …
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Egyptian Tanks Moving Into Sinai Desert!!! REGIONAL WAR Unfolding !!!

Friday, December 6, 2013

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Vanished Into Thin Air: The Hope of Every Believer

Vanished Into Thin Air: The Hope of Every Believer


Vanished Into Thin Air: The Hope of Every Believer


  • Used Book in Good Condition

Author Hal Lindsey continues his discussion of the escatology surrounding the rapture prophecy that he started in his earlier book entitled, The Rapture. If you thought you knew all there was to know about the end times and the rapture, you were wrong! Mr. Lindsey gives exquisite detail on how to analyze today’s world for yourself to see the prophesy coming alive, tossing out what is mere coincidence and reviewing what is true substance. This is a book for every Biblical scholar and for anyone w



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Vanished Into Thin Air: The Hope of Every Believer

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Syria: my journey into a nightmare war

Palmyra, Syria
syria war damascus
Image by james_gordon_losangeles

Palmyra, Arabic: Tadmur, was an ancient city in central Syria. In antiquity, it was an important city located in an oasis 215 km northeast of Damascus[1] and 180 km southwest of the Euphrates at Deir ez-Zor. It had long been a vital caravan stop for travellers crossing the Syrian desert and was known as the Bride of the Desert. The earliest documented reference to the city by its Semitic name Tadmor, Tadmur or Tudmur (which means "the town that repels" in Amorite and "the indomitable town" in Aramaic) is recorded in Babylonian tablets found in Mari.

Though the ancient siteinto disuse after the 16th century, it is still known as Tadmor in Arabic (aka Tedmor), and there is a newer town of the same name next to the ruins.[6] The Palmyrenes constructed a series of large-scale monuments containing funerary art such as limestone slabs with human busts representing the deceased.

Culture

Palmyrans bore Aramaic names, and worshipped a variety of deities from Mesopotamia (Marduk and Ruda), Syria (Hadad, Baʿal, Astarte), Arabia (Allāt) and Greece (Athena). Palmyrans were originally speakers of Aramaic but later shifted to the Greek language. At the time of the Islamic conquests Palmyra was inhabited by several Arab tribes, primarily the Qada’ah and Kalb.

History

Ancient

The exact etymology of the name "Palmyra" is unknown, although some scholars believe it was related to the palm trees in the area. Others, however, believe it may have come from an incorrect translation of the name "Tadmor" (cf. Colledge, Seyrig, Starcky, and others). The city was first mentioned in the archives of Mari in the second millennium BC. It was a trading city in the extensive trade network that linked Mesopotamia and northern Syria. Tadmor is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible (Second Book of Chronicles 8:4) as a desert city built (or fortified) by the King Solomon of Judea:

There had been a temple at Palmyra for 2000 years before the Romans ever saw it. Its form, a large stone-walled chamber with columns outside, is much closer to the sort of thing attributed to Solomon than to anything Roman. It is mentioned in the Bible as part of Solomon’s Kingdom. In fact, it says he built it.

—Terry Jones and Alan Ereira, Terry Jones’ Barbarians, p. 183

Flavius Josephus also attributes the founding of Tadmor to Solomon in his Antiquities of the Jews (Book VIII), along with the Greek name of Palmyra, although this may be a confusion with biblical "Tamara". Several citations in the tractates of the Talmud and of the Midrash also refer to the city in the Syrian desert (sometimes interchanging the letters "d" and "t" – "Tatmor" instead of Tadmor).

Greco-Roman periods

When the Seleucids took control of Syria in 323 BC, the city was left to itself and it became independent, flourishing as a caravan halt in the 1st century BC. In 41 BCE, Mark Antony sent a raiding party to Palmyra, but the Palmyrans had received intelligence of their approach and escaped to the other side of the Euphrates, demonstrating that at that time Palmyra was still a nomadic settlement and its valuables could be removed at short notice.

In the mid 1st century AD, Palmyra, a wealthy and elegant city located along the caravan routes linking Persia with the Mediterranean ports of Roman Syria and Phoenicia, came under Roman control. A period of great prosperity followed.

Jones and Erieira note that Palmyran merchants owned ships in Italian waters and controlled the Indian silk trade. Palmyra became one of the richest cities of the Near East. The Palmyrans had really pulled off a great trick, they were the only people who managed to live alongside Rome without being Romanized. They simply pretended to be Romans.

Palmyra was made part of the Roman province of Syria during the reign of Tiberius (14–37 AD). It steadily grew in importance as a trade route linking Persia, India, China, and the Roman Empire. In 129, Hadrian visited the city and was so enthralled by it that he proclaimed it a free city and renamed it Palmyra Hadriana.

Beginning in 212, Palmyra’s trade diminished as the Sassanids occupied the mouth of the Tigris and the Euphrates. Septimius Odaenathus, a Prince of Palmyra, was appointed by Valerian as the governor of the province of Syria. After Valerian was captured by the Sassanids and died in captivity in Bishapur, Odaenathus campaigned as far as Ctesiphon (near modern-day Baghdad) for revenge, invading the city twice. When Odaenathus was assassinated by his nephew Maconius, his wife Septimia Zenobia took power, ruling Palmyra on the behalf of her son, Vabalathus.

Zenobia rebelled against Roman authority with the help of Cassius Longinus and took over Bosra and lands as far to the west as Egypt, establishing the short-lived Palmyrene Empire. Next, she took Antioch and large sections of Asia Minor to the north. In 272, the Roman Emperor Aurelian finally restored Roman control and Palmyra was besieged and sacked, never to recover her former glory. Aurelian captured Zenobia, bringing her back to Rome. He paraded her in golden chains in the presence of the senator Marcellus Petrus Nutenus, but allowed her to retire to a villa in Tibur, where she took an active part in society for years. A legionary fortress was established in Palmyra and although no longer an important trade center, it nevertheless remained an important junction of Roman roads in the Syrian desert.

Diocletian expanded the city to harbor even more legions and walled it in to try and save it from the Sassanid threat. The Byzantine period following the Roman Empire only resulted in the building of a few churches; much of the city went to ruin.

Islamic rule

The city was captured by Muslim Arabs under Khalid ibn al-Walid in 634 but left intact. After the year 800 and the civil wars that followed the fall of the Umayyad caliphs, people started abandoning the city. At the time of the Crusades, Palmyra was under the Burid emirs of Damascus, then under Toghtekin, Mohammed the son of Shirkuh, and finally under the emirs of Homs. In 1132 the Burids had the Temple of Ba’al turned into a fortress. In the 13th century the city was handed over to the Mamluk sultan Baybars. In 1401, it was sacked by Timur, but recovered quickly, so that in the 15th century it was described as boasting "vast gardens, flourishing trades and bizarre monuments" by Ibn Fadlallah al-Omari.

In the 16th century, Qala’at ibn Maan castle was built on top of a mountain overlooking the oasis by Fakhr ad-Din al-Maan II, a Lebanese prince who tried to control the Syrian Desert. The castle was surrounded by a moat, with access only available through a drawbridge. It is possible that earlier fortifications existed on the hill well before then.

The city declined under Ottoman rule, reduced to no more than an oasis village with a small garrison. In the 17th century its location was rediscovered by Western travellers, and was studied by European and American archaeologists starting in the 19th century. The villagers who had settled in the Temple of Ba’al were dislodged in 1929 by the French authority.

City remains

The most striking building in Palmyra is the huge temple of Ba’al, considered "the most important religious building of the first century AD in the Middle East". It originated as a Hellenistic temple, of which only fragments of stones survive. The central shrine (cella) was added in the early 1st century AD, followed by a large double colonnaded portico in Corinthian style. The west portico and the entrance (propylaeum) date from the 2nd century. The temple measures 205 x 210 m.

Starting from the temple, a colonnaded street, corresponding to the ancient decumanus, leads to the rest of the ancient city. It has a monumental arch (dating to the reign of Septimius Severus, early 3rd century AD) with rich decorations. Next were a temple of Nabu, of which little remains today apart from the podium, and the so-called baths of Diocletian.

The second most noteworthy remain in Palmyra is the theater, today with nine rows of seats, but most likely originally having up to twelve with the addition of wooden structures. It has been dated to the early 1st century AD. Behind the theater were located a small Senate building, where the local nobility discussed laws and made political decisions, and the so-called "Tariff Court", with an inscription suggesting that it was a place for caravans to make payments. Nearby is the large agora (measuring 48 x 71 m), with remains of a banquet room (triclinium); the agora’s entrance was decorated with statues of Septimius Severus and his family.

The first section of the excavations ends with a largely restored tetrapylon ("four columns"), a platform with four sets of four columns (only one of the originals in Egyptian granite is still visible). A transverse street leads to Diocletian’s Camp, built by the Governor of Syria, Sosianus Hierocles, with the remains of the large central principia (hall housing the legions’ standards). Nearby are the temple of the Syrian goddess Allāt (2nd century AD), the Damascus Gate and the Temple of Ba’al-Shamin, erected in AD 17 and later expanded under the reign of Odenathus. Remains include a notable portico leading to the cella.

Funerary art

Outside the ancient walls, the Palmyrenes constructed a series of large-scale funerary monuments which now form the so-called Valley of the Tombs, a 1 km long necropolis, with a series of large, richly decorated structures. These tombs, some of which were below ground, had interior walls that were cut away or constructed to form burial compartments in which the deceased, extended at full length, were placed. Limestone slabs with human busts in high relief sealed the rectangular openings of the compartments.

These reliefs represented the "personality" or "soul" of the person interred and formed part of the wall decoration inside the tomb chamber. A banquet scene depicted on this relief suggests a family tomb rather than that of an individual.

Further excavations

Archaeological teams from various countries have worked on-and-off on different parts of the site. In May 2005, a Polish team excavating at the Lat temple discovered a highly-detailed stone statue of the winged goddess of victory.

Recently, archaeologists in working in central Syria have unearthed the remnants of a 1,200-year-old church believed to be the largest ever discovered in Syria, at an excavation site in the ancient town of Palmyra. This church is the fourth to be discovered in Palmyra. Officials described it as the biggest of its kind to be found so far — its base measuring an impressive 47 meters by 27 meters. The church columns were estimated to be 6 meters tall, with the height of the wooden ceiling more than 15 meters. A small amphitheater was found in the church’s courtyard where the experts believe some Christian rituals were practiced. In November 2010 Austrian media manager Helmut Thoma admitted to looting a Palmyrian grave, where he has stolen architectural pieces, today presented in his private living room. German and Austrian archaeologists protested against this crime. In summer 2012 there is increasing concern of looting of the museum and the site, when a video was posted, which shows Syrian soldiers carrying funerary stones.


Syria: my journey into a nightmare war

Our Syrian friends in the UK were anxious about their families but people weren"t talking much about the war. My mum"s family live in central Damascus, which has stayed relatively safe, but my dad"s family are in a south-eastern area of the city that …
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Syrians grow numb to pain of war as conditions get worse

Syrians are still showing their famed hospitality, extending aid to neighbours and strangers. But this war is now putting pressure on almost everyone. And every time I come back to Damascus, the crisis is different. This time, there"s still a constant …
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Syria: my journey into a nightmare war

Posturing goes into high gear on eve of Iran nuclear talks (+video)

Can Sanctions on Iran Create the Leverage We Need?
Iran nuclear
Image by CSIS: Center for Strategic & International Studies

CSIS held a discussion with:


Stuart A. Levey,

Under Secretary of Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence


On


“Can Sanctions on Iran Create the Leverage We Need?”


Moderated by


The Honorable Juan C. Zarate

Senior Adviser, CSIS Transnational Threats Project


For more including full event audio and video please visit csis.org/event/can-sanctions-iran-create-leverage-we-need


Posturing goes into high gear on eve of Iran nuclear talks (+video)

Istanbul. Iran"s appeal for "dignity” and “respect” took new form today in a slickly produced video message from Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif on the eve of another round of nuclear talks in Geneva. Skip to next paragraph …
Read more on Christian Science Monitor


China tells Iran to seize opportunity before nuclear talks

BEIJING/DUBAI (Reuters) – China"s president told his Iranian counterpart to "seize the opportunity" to improve relations with world powers, as diplomats head to Geneva hoping to clinch a preliminary deal to ease a nuclear dispute between Tehran and the …
Read more on Reuters




Posturing goes into high gear on eve of Iran nuclear talks (+video)

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Friday, November 15, 2013

US IS INCREASINGLY PROVOKING CHINA, RUSSIA & INDIA INTO THIRD WORLD WAR



US IS INCREASINGLY PROVOKING CHINA, RUSSIA & INDIA INTO THIRD WORLD WAR US is now provoking CHINA, RUSSIA, INDIA and many other sovereign countries – using D…
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US IS INCREASINGLY PROVOKING CHINA, RUSSIA & INDIA INTO THIRD WORLD WAR

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

The World is Heading into World War III -- Gerald Celente



http://usawatchdog.com/the-world-is-going-to-war-gerald-celente/ Trends Journal founder Gerald Celente says, “The banks are forcing . . . governments to keep…
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The World is Heading into World War III -- Gerald Celente

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Hagel Falls Into the Israel-Palestinian Trap

Hagel Falls Into the Israel-Palestinian Trap

Because of the current muddle, most — actually, all — of America"s allies are trapped in a state of anxiety, unsure whether the U.S. is their friend or if it wants to be friends with Iran instead or if it even knows at all what it wants to do. So at …
Read more on Bloomberg


Bringing Rain to Israel and Iranian Influence in Syria

They move on to give an update on preparations for Chanukah in the Fleisher household and Yishai"s experience with renewing his driver"s license in Israel. Yishai and Malkah end the segment discussing Iranian influence in the ongoing conflict in Syria …
Read more on The Jewish Press


"Turkish Betrayal" Is the Talk of Israel

Beyond tightening tensions between Ankara and Jerusalem, the new reports also add to the narrative of the secret war between Israel and Iran that has been emerging in bits and pieces. In January 2012, intelligence sources acknowledged to TIME that a …
Read more on TIME



 



Hagel Falls Into the Israel-Palestinian Trap

Safety called into concern at condition&#39s municipal law enforcement academy

Protection known as into query at state"s municipal police academy

Protection is being called into issue at the state"s municipal police academy. The Channel three Eyewitness News I-Team located that a warning about an situation on the firing variety didn"t direct to action until finally an individual acquired hurt. The facility is the area police …
Study far more on WFSB


Condition Police Seeking for Runaway Teen

The West Virginia State Police is trying to identify a runaway juvenile. Betty Jo Cost, fourteen-12 months-aged female, was very last observed at 572 Afton Highway, close to Terra Alta, West Virginia on Friday, November 1, 2013. Ms. Cost is roughly fiveƈ&quot tall and weighs&nbsp…
Read through a lot more on WDTV


Are Americans All set To Acknowledge A Police State?

But I really question just how numerous Us citizens have currently acknowledged the police state in their hearts and minds. It is totally real that ahead of despots and tyrants can put shackles around guys"s necks, they must first set them all around men"s hearts. So …
Study a lot more on Appropriate Side Information



 


Alex breaks down subjects in the information including police pointing guns at civilians at illegal checkpoints in The united states. Stay in the know – Comply with Alex on Twitter:…
Video Ranking: four / five

Safety called into concern at condition&#39s municipal law enforcement academy