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Topic: God and the Bible
feralcatlady's photo
Sun 04/20/08 06:21 PM
Well read the bible sweets.....there are references to them...

no photo
Sun 04/20/08 08:21 PM

Well read the bible sweets.....there are references to them...


They were probably talking about the dreaded flesh eating blood drinking reptilian creatures and/or the Nagas, the snake people.

JB

feralcatlady's photo
Tue 04/22/08 06:09 PM


Well read the bible sweets.....there are references to them...


They were probably talking about the dreaded flesh eating blood drinking reptilian creatures and/or the Nagas, the snake people.

JB


laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh OMG your a goofball......thats why feral adores this one......

MirrorMirror's photo
Tue 04/22/08 06:33 PM
Edited by MirrorMirror on Tue 04/22/08 06:33 PM

Well read the bible sweets.....there are references to them...
flowerforyou There are no references to dinosaurs in the bible.flowerforyou There are references to mythical creatures like angels and dragons and giantsflowerforyou

no photo
Tue 04/22/08 06:47 PM


Well read the bible sweets.....there are references to them...
flowerforyou There are no references to dinosaurs in the bible.flowerforyou There are references to mythical creatures like angels and dragons and giantsflowerforyou


The reptilians were called "dragons" sometimes. Reptilians would rape human women. Ancient pictures depicted these events.

There are also creatures called the "draco's." The royal draco's have wings and a tail. They come in red, black, and white and probably gray.

JB




feralcatlady's photo
Wed 04/23/08 03:31 PM
(Isaiah 27:1) would seem to be a reference to a Semitic beast mentioned in literature of Ugarit, a city-state in North Syria. According to Canaanite, the Leviathan was an enemy of order in Creation and was slain by the Canaanite god Baal. The word Leviathan to the ancient Jews became synonymous with that which warred against God's kingdom. This especially included nations warring against Israel such as Assyria and Egypt. (The Bible Knowledge Commentary, Old Testament)

Leviathan also appears in the Apocryphal Book of Enoch, giving the following description of this monster's origins there mentioned as being female, as opposed to the male Behemoth:

And that day will two monsters be parted, one monster, a female named Leviathan in order to dwell in the abyss of the ocean over the fountains of water; and (the other), a male called Behemoth, which holds his chest in an invisible desert whose name is Dundayin, east of the garden of Eden. - 1 Enoch 60:7-8

Leviathan as an animal

In the book of Job, both Behemoth and Leviathan are listed alongside a number of other animals that are clearly mundane, such as goats, eagles, and hawks, leading many Christian scholars to surmise that Behemoth and Leviathan may also be mundane creatures. The animal most often proposed for Leviathan is the Nile crocodile.

Like the Leviathan, the Nile crocodile is aquatic, scaly, and possesses fierce teeth. Job 41:18 states that Leviathan's eyes "are like the eyelids of the morning". Some have compared this verse to a crocodile's eyes, which rise out of the water before the rest of its head, invoking the image of the sun rising over the horizon. Major difficulties of this view are that in Job chapter 41 Leviathan is described as breathing fire like a dragon, and that the crocodile does not seem to fit the descriptions of Leviathan given in other Bible passages, such as in the book of Psalms, e.g. it does not have multiple heads.

Some Young Earth Creationists have alleged that Leviathan was either a dinosaur, such as Parasaurolophus, or a giant marine reptile, such as Kronosaurus [3]. Neither hypothesis can satisfactorily explain why Leviathan is described as breathing fire, or, according to the description in Psalms, has multiple heads. The current consensus among Young Earth Creationists is that the giant crocodilian, Sarcosuchus, best fits the description in the Bible, including its fire breathing capability[4].

Roger Zelazny's 1965 novelette "The Doors of His Face, The Lamps of His Mouth", in which the protagonist hunts for a giant sea monster, takes its odd title from phrases describing the Leviathan in Job 41.


feralcatlady's photo
Fri 04/25/08 12:41 PM
there dinos..........you think mytical creature....I will think dinos......

RainbowTrout's photo
Tue 04/29/08 01:33 PM
Gen 2:24 Therefore, shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.

Wouldn't it have sped up the dating process if they were just one flesh to begin with? Imagine all the communication problems that could have been avoided and the whole dating nightmare.

feralcatlady's photo
Tue 04/29/08 01:49 PM

Gen 2:24 Therefore, shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.

Wouldn't it have sped up the dating process if they were just one flesh to begin with? Imagine all the communication problems that could have been avoided and the whole dating nightmare.


interesting

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