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originally 6posted by: Degradation33
a reply to: Privy_Princess
Read The Book of Enoch. I know King James and The Council of Trent decided it was bad, but it's one of the best Hebrew canon texts written. It just contradicts revelation so they removed it after the first printing of The King James Version.
Therein was the first mention of the 7 Archangels. It also provide the reader with the explanation for; demons, Nephilim, why certain angels fell, why the flood was morally necessary, and finally the first apocalyptic Hebrew text with a prophetic vision for the 1000 year reign of the prophet.
Who still has 218 years until arrival.
"Lucifer" or "Day-star" (Hebrew: הילל hēylēl, from הלל hâlal, "to shine")...
The New Oxford Annotated Bible suggests the correlation with "a Canaanite myth of the gods Helel and Shahar (Morning Star and Dawn), who fall from heaven as a result of rebellion."
How art thou fallen from heaven
This is not to be understood of the fall of Satan, and the apostate angels, from their first estate, when they were cast down from heaven to hell, though there may be an allusion to it; see ( Luke 10:18 ) but the words are a continuation of the speech of the dead to the king of Babylon, wondering at it, as a thing almost incredible, that he who seemed to be so established on the throne of his kingdom, which was his heaven, that he should be deposed or fall from it...
O Heylel (Lucifer), son of the morning!
alluding to the star Venus, which is the phosphorus or morning star, which ushers in the light of the morning, and shows that day is at hand; by which is meant, not Satan, who is never in Scripture called Lucifer, though he was once an angel of light, and sometimes transforms himself into one, and the good angels are called morning stars, ( Job 38:7 ) and such he and his angels once were; but the king of Babylon is intended, whose royal glory and majesty, as outshining all the rest of the kings of the earth, is expressed by those names; and which perhaps were such as he took himself, or were given him by his courtiers.
originally posted by: boomerdude
So, where does the name Semyaza, and the story of Tartaurus come from ? I always thought that tale and the seven angelic governors was of Hebrew origin. Cannanite ? Babylonian captivity ?
originally posted by: Byrd
originally posted by: boomerdude
So, where does the name Semyaza, and the story of Tartaurus come from ? I always thought that tale and the seven angelic governors was of Hebrew origin. Cannanite ? Babylonian captivity ?
The names come from the Book of Enoch (Tartarus is actually a Greek myth that appears to be reworked here), which places it around 200 BC for the oldest sections (the youngest part of the book may date to 160 AD). So it was written after the Babylonian captivity and after the Maccabee revolt.
Source: en.wikipedia.org...
(Danʹi·el) [My Judge Is God].
most angelic names end in "el"
originally posted by: DeathSlayer
No one knows the date or time...
35 Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away. 36 But of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but my Father only.
How did you fall from the sky Heylel Ben-Shahar. You landed in the land of power over the Gentiles.