The meta-victims' Golgotha |
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Συνεννόηση για Δράση - Απόψεις | |||
Συντάχθηκε απο τον/την Χρήστος Μπούμπουλης (Christos Boumpoulis) | |||
Δευτέρα, 01 Μάιος 2017 22:59 | |||
The meta-victims' Golgotha
Calvary, also Gagulta, was, according to the Gospels, a site immediately outside Jerusalem's walls where Jesus was crucified. Golgotha(s) (Greek: Γολγοθᾶς) is the Greek transcription in the New Testament of the Aramaic term Gagultâ. The Bible translates the term to mean place of [the] skull, which in Greek is Κρανίου Τόπος (Kraníou Tópos), and in Latin is Calvariæ Locus, from which the English word Calvary is derived. Biblical references and etymologyGolgotha is referred to in early writings as a hill resembling a skullcap located very near to a gate into Jerusalem: "A spot there is called Golgotha, – of old the fathers' earlier tongue thus called its name, 'The skull-pan of a head'." Since the 6th century it has been referred to as the location of a mountain,[3] and as a small hill since 333.[3] The Gospels describe it as a place near enough to the city that those coming in and out could read the inscription 'Jesus of Nazareth – King of the Jews'.[4] When the King James Version was written, the translators used an anglicized version – Calvary – of the Latin gloss from the Vulgate(Calvariæ), to refer to Golgotha in the Gospel of Luke, rather than translate it; subsequent uses of Calvary stem from this single translation decision. The location itself is mentioned in all four canonical Gospels:
In the Douay-Rheims Version (a Roman Catholic English translation of the Bible), Luke 23:33 reads: "And when they were come to the place which is called Calvary, they crucified him there; and the robbers, one on the right hand, and the other on the left." The “place of a skull” (Aramaic: gagûltâ ܓܓܘܠܬܐ) etymology is based on the Hebrew verbal root גלל g-l-l, from which the Hebrew word for skull, גֻּלְגֹּלֶת (gulgōleṯ), is derived. A number of alternative explanations have been given for the name. It has been suggested that the Aramaic name is actually Gol Goatha, meaning mount of execution, possibly the same location as the Goatha mentioned in a Book of Jeremiah passage, describing the geography of Jerusalem. An alternative explanation is that the location was a place of public execution, and the name refers to abandoned skulls that would be found there, or that the location was] near a cemetery, and the name refers to the bones buried there.[3] In some Christian and Jewish traditions, the name Golgotha refers to the location of the skull of Adam. A common version states that Shem and Melchizedek traveled to the resting place of Noah's Ark, retrieved the body of Adam from it, and were led by Angels to Golgotha – described as a skull-shaped hill at the centre of the Earth, where also the serpent's head had been crushed following the fall of man. This tradition appears in numerous older sources, including the Kitab al-Magall, the Conflict of Adam and Eve with Satan, the Cave of Treasures, and the writings of Patriarch Eutychius of Alexandria. It is also suggested that the location's landscape resembled the shape of a skull, and gained its name for that reason.[3] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calvary]
The meta-victims are normal people whom human rights have been instrumentally violated, probably, because few National economies are not viable (though their viability is achievable) due to specific restrictions embedded within the corresponding spoken languages, of those Nations.
Scarface Trailer HD (1983)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=7pQQHnqBa2E
The direction and the pace of meta-victims personal evolution is, probably, determined by the “neural plasticity” property of all living creatures and it isn't bright, meaning, it manifests a true Golgotha's climbing.
Avril Lavigne - Innocence (Official Music Video)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xoG0Xv3vs0
Innocence is the origin state of all meta-victims, with no exception. Innocence can be, also, their potential destination state provided that, they shall choose to contribute positively to their own de-meta-victimization.
Christos Boumpoulis economist
P.S.: Sometimes, we do not let go of Innocence. I condemn violence of all kinds.
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Τελευταία Ενημέρωση στις Δευτέρα, 01 Μάιος 2017 23:07 |