Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / NewStats: 3,200,335 members, 7,974,424 topics. Date: Monday, 14 October 2024 at 01:56 AM |
Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Religion / Depopulating The World So The Pan Worshippers Can Turn Evil Into Good (470 Views)
Anambra Catholic Church Flooded, Worshippers Hold Service In Front Of Church / Igbogbo Demolition: Angry Worshippers Hold Service In Demolished Church / Temple Of The Most High God Ogun: Satan Is ‘Brother’, Worshippers Served Alcohol (2) (3) (4)
Depopulating The World So The Pan Worshippers Can Turn Evil Into Good by HarshBitterTrut: 7:34pm On Jan 28, 2022 |
King James Bible Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter!
|
Re: Depopulating The World So The Pan Worshippers Can Turn Evil Into Good by HarshBitterTrut: 7:36pm On Jan 28, 2022 |
PAN IS SIMPLY ONE, OF THE MANY NAMES OF SATAN AND, AS THEY SAY, THE DEVIL IS IN THE DETAILS! Update added at the end. So, to help you get a clearer picture, here are some more details for you to consider. Please do your own research on the subject. Ask God to lead you, he knows best. PAN — GREEK GOAT GOD OF THE FOREST AND OF CHAOS Pan, a Greek goat pagan nature god of the woods, a sylvan, and satyr or faun played the pan pipes or flute. Pan – as a prefix means “all”. The ancient scholars of Alexandria believed that Pan personified the Natural Cosmos, and the word Pantheism is derived from this idea, that all Nature is God and that God is All Nature: not merely a manifestation of the material world but the Animus Mundi, the spirit of the natural world. A panacea is a cure for all diseases. Pangea is the original one continent from which all our continents drifted. Pan seems to personify the concept of wisdom through oneness with Nature and so he was called the “Pangenitor’ the all-begetter. Pan is where we derive the words panic and pandemonium. Pan had a very dark nature, as the Hunter and Pursuer who was prone to violence and madness at times, he was called ‘Panphage’ the all-devourer. The word is also a term used on movie sets to describe the lateral movement of the camera when filming. Flutes or pan pipes as windpipes are woodwinds and also wind instruments. Pan is shown on the cover of the classic book The Wind in the Willows. As a fish-tailed sea-goat Aegipan is associated with Capricorn and also Enki or Oannes. As the horned goat god or satyr, he is the manifestation of Lucifer/Satan. The song Stairway to Heaven features a recorder that mimics a soft pan flute at the beginning of the song almost whispering like the whispering wind that’s referenced in the song. The songs Stairway to Heaven, Hotel California and The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper all contain thinly veiled references to Lucifer, the Light-bearer. The album Sgt. Peppers even has the song Lucy (Lucifer) in the Sky with Diamonds. Lucifer according to the dictionary is actually female and is Venus.
|
Re: Depopulating The World So The Pan Worshippers Can Turn Evil Into Good by HarshBitterTrut: 7:41pm On Jan 28, 2022 |
1958 Visit to a Dakar Boy Brothel MICHAEL DAVIDSON In 1949, Dakar was still the administrative capital not only of Senegal but also of a number of vast tribal territories [French West Africa], which today are sovereign nations.1 The French still ruled, and Dakar was already the “gay” city of West Africa. When I returned nine years later, the French rulers had gone, and Dakar was gayer than ever. … For some reason, buried in history and ethnography, the Senegalese—the people who inhabit the vast plains on either side of the Senegal River, raising livestock and harvesting the easy-growing peanut—have a reputation in all those regions for homosexuality, and in Dakar, one can quickly see that they merit this reputation. … The Dakar of 1958 was the Paris of Africa. … That one didn’t have to be shy in Dakar, and even less furtive, if one was queer, became pretty plain to me almost my first evening there. … I’d been introduced to an official of some sort in one of the Ministries: a middle-aged Senegalese of great charm and culture—and himself a lover of boys. Would I care to see a very special side of Dakar night-life, off the regular beat of most foreign visitors to the city? And so, one night after dinner—it must have been toward 10 o’clock—we set off in his car for some outlying suburbs. We soon left the “modern” town beyond and drove through miles of dimly lighted districts of the ville indigène—long acres of “native quarters”: low-walled cantonments containing, according to tribal customs, either thatched beehive huts or parallelograms of one-room dwellings built of sunbaked brick. Then we came into a world of bidonvilles—a twilit, dismal, shantytown constructed of corrugated iron and empty oil drums and any sort of do-it-yourself material that the owner-builder could lay his hands on. From the endless rows of dark and unwelcoming hutments there came a low muttering of human life—the life of the crowded families that lived in them, and, here and there, the throbbing of some deep-voiced drum, beating for a wedding or other family festival. But there was nothing festive in the aspect of these sad districts: behind the general air of squalor and dejection, I got the impression of latent hostility and watchfulness: a notion that all these sullen shells, which were the scene of human love and passion and family devotion, were on the defensive, on the lookout, in a state of mental siege. That sort of peripheral slum always attracts police interference, to say nothing of those little government busybodies obsessed with things like rates and taxes. … Somewhere near the core, it seemed, of this labyrinth of sad—and even a little sinister—dreariness, my friend stopped his car and said: “Here we are. There are a couple of places we can look at here. I think you’ll see something to amuse you.” He parked the car and locked it, and I got out and stood in the sultry, near-tropical night and suddenly found that I was listening to the muffled rhythms of some kind of dance music. There were drums of course, there are always drums in Africa, and I love drums, but I also heard the nasal noise of something like a saxophone. … Full of misgivings, what with the rather weird surroundings, now almost pitch dark, and the saxophone, I followed my guide along a number of narrow and unlit alleyways, branching off abruptly at right angles one way or the other, till suddenly he stopped at a wooden door at the end of a blind alley—and now, all at once, I became aware of a large arc of illumination being thrown into the night from whatever might be beyond the door. The door was opened. My friend talked to somebody or other—whether it was a club with an entrance fee I can’t now remember—and then we were let in and walked across what was an open-air dance-floor of polished and hard-trodden earth, veneered and admirably dressed with cattle dung, and found a table handily adjacent to the door whence the drinks came and as far as possible from the saxophone. We sat down, ordered some beer, and looked around. Couples were dancing vaguely European dances—after all, Europeans had been dancing in Dakar, among their other European activities, for two or three hundred years; people were sitting in tables round the dance-floor in twos and threes—and a few in solitary expectance. The whole small circular arena was brightly lit. Our beer was brought. By now I was really looking around. The place was full of adolescent Africans in drag. In drag. I mean that most of them were indeed in girls’ clothes: some in European, some wearing the elaborate headdress of the West African mode. It was in fact a drag party, and apart from ourselves and perhaps two or three African onlookers of adult age, nobody there, I judged, was more than 18 years old and most were around 15.
|
Re: Depopulating The World So The Pan Worshippers Can Turn Evil Into Good by HarshBitterTrut: 7:51pm On Jan 28, 2022 |
Aztec priests, using razor-sharp obsidian blades, sliced open the chests of sacrificial victims and offered their still-beating hearts to the gods. They then tossed the victims' lifeless bodies down the steps of the towering Templo Mayor
|
Re: Depopulating The World So The Pan Worshippers Can Turn Evil Into Good by HarshBitterTrut: 7:55pm On Jan 28, 2022 |
Prevalence According to This Day, ritual murders are "a common practice" in Nigeria (26 Sept. 2010). This statement is partially corroborated by the Sahara Reporters article, which states that ritual murder is common in southern Nigeria (3 July 2012). The Daily Trust writes that ritual killings continue to be practiced in Nigeria and have become more prevalent since 1999 (21 June 2010). Similarly, a 2012 Daily Independent article states that "in recent times, the number of brutal murders, mostly for ritual purposes and other circumstances, involving couples and their partners has been on a steady progression" (30 July 2012). In contrast, a research associate at the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London who has researched and written on Nigerian religions stated in correspondence with the Research Directorate that, while ritual murder does occur in Nigeria, it is not a "systematic practice" (31 Oct. 2012). According to a report published in Leadership, ritual murder is not limited to any specific part of the country and "every region, tribe and state has its own share of the scourge" (30 Apr. 2012). However, in 2009, This Day reported that a confidential memo from the Nigerian police to registered security service providers indicated that ritual killings were particularly prevalent in the states of Lagos, Ogun, Kaduna, Abia, Kwara, Abuja, Rivers, and Kogi (26 Oct. 2009). Corroborating information could not be found by the Research Directorate within the time constraints of this Response. In 2010, one newspaper reported that dead bodies with missing organs were being discovered on a daily basis on a road close to Lagos State University that was described as a "hot spot for ritual killers" (This Day 26 Sept. 2010). A second newspaper reported in February 2011 that, in the same area, ten people had been killed in suspected ritual murders in the preceding two months (Daily Times 11 Feb. 2011). A 2009 article published by Agence France-Presse reported that, according to a state government official, the kidnapping of children for ritual murder was on the rise in Kano (4 July 2009). 3. Specific Incidents of Ritual Murder Nigerian media sources report on the killing of a "hunchbacked" person in four separate incidents: in the capital of Ondo State in 2012 (Leadership 30 Apr. 2012), in the south of the country in 2011 (Sahara Reporters 3 July 2012), in Kogi State in 2010 (Daily Independent 24 Feb. 2010), and in Osun State in 2009 (This Day 27 Oct. 2009). The "hunch" of the victims was removed, reportedly for use in money-making rituals (Leadership 30 Apr. 2012; Sahara Reporters 3 July 2012; Daily Independent 24 Feb. 2010; This Day 27 Oct. 2009). Media sources have documented the following incidents of ritual murder that resulted in arrests: In May 2012, in Kogi State, a convicted serial killer and former soldier killed a 22-year-old female student, intending to dismember her body for ritual purposes, before being arrested by police (APA 19 May 2012; Vanguard 2 June 2012). The killer had reportedly been convicted of murder and sentenced to death in 2003 but had later been acquitted and released (ibid.; APA 19 May 2012). In July 2012, two men from Nasawara State confessed to killing a seven-year-old boy, the child of neighbours, and severing his head for a man who had promised them 250,000 Nigerian Naira [C$1,591 (XE 1 Nov. 2012)] for it (The Punch 10 Aug. 2012; Channel S TV 24 July 2012). In July 2012, two men were arrested in Lagos for killing and dismembering their brother and reportedly selling his body parts (The Punch 10 Aug. 2012; Daily Times 27 July 2012; Online Nigeria 28 July 2012). In August 2012, in Ebonyi State, seven people were arrested for kidnapping, killing, and dismembering a young girl, reportedly for money-making rituals; two of the suspects confessed to the crime (Vanguard 28 Aug. 2012; Guardian 31 Aug. 2012). Media sources also document the following cases of suspected ritual murder that resulted in arrests: In 2012, in Osun State, a young man was found dead with his head and genitals severed from his body; a close friend of the man was reportedly arrested in connection with the murder (Leadership 30 Apr. 2012; Nigerian Tribune 22 Apr. 2012). One source indicates that a herbalist who reportedly performs money rituals and two other individuals were also arrested as suspects (ibid.). In 2012, in Abia State, two men kidnapped and killed two children, aged four and six, removed their vital organs and buried them, before being arrested (The Sun 18 June 2012; Nigeria Newspoint [2012a]). In June 2012, in Nasawara State, a man and a "witch doctor" were arrested for their involvement in what police suspected to be a ritual murder of the man's wife, whose body was found with some body parts missing (The Nation 26 June 2012; Daily Trust 26 June 2012). Media sources also document the following cases of suspected ritual murder for which no suspects were apprehended: In February 2011, near Jos, Plateau State, an elderly couple was beheaded and their grandchildren were beaten to death in what police suspected to be ritual killing because the killers had left with the woman's head (Reuters 12 Feb. 2011; Press Trust of India 13 Feb. 2011; Leadership 30 Apr. 2012). In April 2012, a woman was found along an Abuja expressway with her head and genitals severed from her body (ibid. 30 Apr. 2012; Weekly Trust 14 Apr. 2012). In June 2012, in Imo State, a woman was killed by unknown assailants (Nigeria Newspoint [2012b]; Leadership 10 June 2012). Her head and some internal organs had reportedly been removed (ibid.). Information on the outcomes of the above cases could not be found among the sources consulted by the Research Directorate within the time constraints of this Response.
|
Re: Depopulating The World So The Pan Worshippers Can Turn Evil Into Good by oranget(m): 8:23pm On Jan 28, 2022 |
Please can someone summarize all these write ups. Is the world coming to an end? |
Re: Depopulating The World So The Pan Worshippers Can Turn Evil Into Good by HarshBitterTrut: 10:58pm On Jan 28, 2022 |
. |
Re: Depopulating The World So The Pan Worshippers Can Turn Evil Into Good by HarshBitterTrut: 2:47pm On Jan 29, 2022 |
HarshBitterTrut: Some of us are not so easily fooled. You see the Devil exposes which is put a slant on anything and anyone he is uncovering. While the Lord sees through such deception and reveals all the satanists and evil doers. Donald Trump is just as much a satanist as the rest of the satanic empire. There is not one of them who are not related to the whole by bloodline among the Elites.
|
(1) (Reply)
How To Discover Your Destiny. Apostle Joshua Selman. / Pls I Need An Interpretation / The Little Known Story Of Bob Marley's Conversion To Christianity
(Go Up)
Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 49 |