this is me and this war between me and the annunaki 3 enki fake - TopicsExpress



          

this is me and this war between me and the annunaki 3 enki fake olorun enlil fake olokun.... this is me in the abzu before we came here the crossroads between the abzu earth and the aye earth....... this is why history is repeating coz this is my ascention program i take every time i evolve i put self in a game of life and death and create as i go.... to form the perfect creation from my mind into reality... so i set out my idea in ugarit the foundation to the word.. then i brake it down into the races on the earth then through the wisdom i am born then i unite my wisdom so i can live in my last life then as we all have our 2nd death on 21st decmeber 2012 nobody will notice they died and was reformed in less than a sec... we all died 21st 2012 imagine if you died 1000 times the speed of light you wouldnt even notice thats why GOD says you will not feel you 2nd death Marduk/chango, in Mesopotamian religion, the chief god of the city of Babylon and the national god of Babylonia; as such, he was eventually called simply Bel, or Lord. Originally, he seems to have been a god of thunderstorms. A poem, known as Enuma elish and dating from the reign of Nebuchadrezzar I (1124–03 bce), relates Marduk’s rise to such preeminence that he was the god of 50 names, each one that of a deity or of a divine attribute. After conquering the monster of primeval chaos, Tiamat, he became Lord of the Gods of Heaven and Earth. All nature, including man, owed its existence to him; the destiny of kingdoms and subjects was in his hands. Marduk’s chief temples at Babylon were the Esagila and the Etemenanki, a ziggurat with a shrine of Marduk on the top. In the Esagila the poem Enuma elish was recited every year at the New Year festival. The goddess named most often as the consort of Marduk was Zarpanitu. Marduk’s star was Jupiter, and his sacred animals were horses, dogs, and especially the so-called dragon with forked tongue, representations of which adorn his city’s walls. On the oldest monuments Marduk is represented holding a triangular spade or hoe, interpreted as an emblem of fertility and vegetation. He is also pictured walking or in his war chariot. Typically, his tunic is adorned with stars; in his hand is a sceptre, and he carries a bow, spear, net, or thunderbolt. Kings of Assyria and Persia also honoured Marduk and Zarpanitu in inscriptions and rebuilt many of their temples. Marduk was later known as Bel, a name derived from the Semitic word baal, or “lord.” Bel had all the attributes of Marduk, and his status and cult were much the same. Bel, however, gradually came to be thought of as the god of order and destiny. In Greek writings references to Bel indicate this Babylonian deity and not the Syrian god of Palmyra of the same name.
Posted on: Thu, 08 Jan 2015 21:23:48 +0000

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