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Reason: None provided.

It's a paradox. Simple causality. Revelations simply describes, seige warfare. Sacking of the once great city states and kingdoms they once ruled from. It hasn't changed metaphorically. Despite being figuratively reworded and reconstructed.

What visions did he see from those caves, calling on the gods of his exile in his stoicism, none I daresay. Simple coursework, and a team of monks, yes yes it has happened endlessly, timelessly, because it is always set to befall the faithful. You have a two tier system of godly versus the ungodly. Easier controlling the godly causing the ungodly too, and so sets a motion of it repeating endlessly. Because there will always be the religion we have bestowed, and it always draws the eire of hell. Every enemy so named. Their gods are not our gods. They are savages and demons.

It could be any sacking, ending, and collapse of civilization. The devoted, the godly, against the unbeliever, and enemy. It is doomed to repeat, give it some clause to win, got to draw the patriotism and believers foremost providing them their valor. Until in their decadence and decline they fail, but belief must not fail us. Despite the faithful crushed on the distant battlefield, versus the spawn of hell seiging the faithful's last bastions. Until there is respite, despite of the constant loss, a seige to the faithful seeking salvation, and the religion bestowed on them. It cannot forget, so it will always be a fortress, seiged, until a second coming reinforces its will, less it is completely forgotten and sacked by hell. The design is both simplimistic and eternal.

Jerusalem, Alexandria, Babylon specifically before, where it all constantly repeats itself from, it has been relayered, from so many of those manuscripts, at least he had a few left in those caves like the illiads of Troy, Rome again, Constantinople. Etc etc. Imagine what they thought of their enemies and why they fought, and what gods and virtues they held. How their belief simply reminisced.

A paradox. Where the scripture becomes the ironclad armor providing religion and victory to their believers, until as always its bastions become a metaphor for any revelations.

If you believe it you apply it. No other reason to forget it.

If there is another cosmic design, it was only regret. The city fell and had to be saved by its savior,, when it failed, because belief was all but lost in the destruction ripping it out and removing it. This narrative has been cemented into the paradigm of Christ. Hell it was Promethus.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

It's a paradox. Simple causality. Revelations simply describes, seige warfare. Sacking of the once great city states and kingdoms they once ruled from. It hasn't changed metaphorically. Despite being figuratively reworded and reconstructed.

What visions did he see from those caves, calling on the gods of his exile in his stoicism, none I daresay. Simple coursework, and a team of monks, yes yes it has happened endlessly, timelessly, because it is always set to befall the faithful. You have a two tier system of godly versus the ungodly. Easier controlling the godly causing the ungodly too, and so sets a motion of it repeating endlessly. Because there will always be the religion we have bestowed, and it always draws the eire of hell. Every enemy so named. Their gods are not our gods. They are savages and demons.

It could be any sacking, ending, and collapse of civilization. The devoted, the godly, against the unbeliever, and enemy. It is doomed to repeat, give it some clause to win, got to draw the patriotism and believers foremost providing them their valor. Until in their decadence and decline they fail, but belief must not fail us. Despite the faithful crushed on the distant battlefield, versus the spawn of hell seiging the faithful's last bastions. Until there is respite, despite of the constant loss, a seige to the faithful seeking salvation, and the religion bestowed on them. It cannot forget, so it will always be a fortress, seiged, until a second coming reinforces its will, less it is completely forgotten and sacked by hell. The design is both simplimistic and eternal.

Jerusalem, Alexandria, Babylon specifically before, where it all constantly repeats itself from, it has been relayered, from so many of those manuscripts, at least he had a few left in those caves like the illiads of Troy, Rome again, Constantinople. Etc etc. Imagine what they thought of their enemies and why they fought, and what gods and virtues they held. How their belief simply reminisced.

A paradox. Where the scripture becomes the ironclad armor providing religion and victory to their believers, until as always its bastions become a metaphor for any revelations.

If you believe it you apply it. No other reason to forget it.

If there is another cosmic design, it was only regret. The city fell and had to be saved by its savior,, when it failed, because belief was all but lost in the destruction ripping it out and removing it. This narrative has been cemented to into the paradigm of Christ. Hell it was Promethus.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

It's a paradox. Simple causality. Revelations simply describes, seige warfare. Sacking of the once great city states and kingdoms they once ruled from. It hasn't changed metaphorically. Despite being figuratively reworded and reconstructed.

What visions did he see from those caves, calling on the gods of his exile in his stoicism, none I daresay. Simple coursework, and a team of monks, yes yes it has happened endlessly, timelessly, because it is always set to befall the faithful. You have a two tier system of godly versus the ungodly. Easier controlling the godly causing the ungodly too, and so sets a motion of it repeating endlessly. Because there will always be the religion we have bestowed, and it always draws the eire of hell. Every enemy so named. Their gods are not our gods. They are savages and demons.

It could be any sacking, ending, and collapse of civilization. The devoted, the godly, against the unbeliever, and enemy. It is doomed to repeat, give it some clause to win, got to draw the patriotism and believers foremost providing them their valor. Until in their decadence and decline they fail, but belief must not fail us. Despite the faithful crushed on the distant battlefield, versus the spawn of hell seiging the faithful's last bastions. Until there is respite, despite of the constant loss, a seige to the faithful seeking salvation, and the religion bestowed on them. It cannot forget, so it will always be a fortress, seiged, until a second coming reinforces its will, less it is completely forgotten and sacked by hell. The design is both simplimistic and eternal.

Jerusalem, Alexandria, Babylon specifically before, where it all constantly repeats itself from, it has been relayered, from so many of those manuscripts, at least he had a few left in those caves like the illiads of Troy, Rome again, Constantinople. Etc etc. Imagine what they thought of their enemies and why they fought, and what gods and virtues they held. How their belief simply reminisced.

A paradox. Where the scripture becomes the ironclad armor providing religion and victory to their believers, until as always its bastions become a metaphor for any revelations.

If you believe it you apply it. No other reason to forget it.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: Original

It's a paradox. Simple causality. Revelations simply describes, seige warfare. Sacking of the once great city states and kingdoms they once ruled from. It hasn't changed metaphorically. Despite being figuratively reworded and reconstructed.

What visions did he see from those caves, calling on the gods of his exile in his stoicism, none I daresay. Simple coursework, and a team of monks, yes yes it has happened endlessly, timelessly, because it is always set to befall the faithful. You have a two tier system of godly versus the ungodly. Easier controlling the godly causing the ungodly too, and so sets a motion of it repeating endlessly. Because there will always be the religion we have bestowed, and it always draws the eire of hell. Every enemy so named. Their gods are not our gods. They are savages and demons.

It could be any sacking, ending, and collapse of civilization. The devoted, the godly, against the unbeliever, and enemy. It is doomed to repeat, give it some clause to win, got to draw the patriotism and believers foremost providing their valor, until in their decadence and decline they fail, but belief must not fail us. Despite the army crushed on the distant battlefield, versus the spawn of hell seiging the faithful's last bastion. Until there is respite, despite of the constant loss, the seige to the faithful seeking salvation, the religion bestowed on them. It cannot forget, so it will always be a fortress, seiged, until a second coming reinforces its will, less it is completely forgotten and sacked by hell. The design is both simplimistic and eternal.

Jerusalem, Alexandria, Babylon specifically before, where it all constantly repeats itself from, it has been relayered, from so many of those manuscripts, at least he had a few left in those caves like the illiads of Troy, Rome again, Constantinople. Etc etc. Imagine what they thought of their enemies and why they fought, and what gods and virtues they held. How their belief simply reminisced.

A paradox. Where the scripture becomes the ironclad armor providing religion and victory to their believers, until as always its bastions become a metaphor for any revelations.

If you believe it you apply it. No other reason to forget it.

1 year ago
1 score