Anonymous ID: a1b93b Feb. 1, 2022, 7:56 p.m. No.15524343   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4362 >>4377

Was jumping in a river at 7, sorry I missed prayer time so:

 

My Heavenly Almighty Father

I pray to You with shock and awe and love for You

Thank You for the blessing of true sight to my blind eyes, which by Your grace grows brighter and clearer

May You gift to me, God, the strength, courage, discernment and compassion to lovingly, gently, unerringly make use of Your blessings towards the total fulfillment of Your perfect, loving plan

Guide and protect all your children Lord who turn to You, especially those most afraid and in pain who are suffering at the hands of the enemy and would dearly love to escape back to Your embrace

Heavenly Father, reveal the lies and the evil which will lead us to victory and freedom over darkness

And God Father, would You deliver into us who ask for it the loving and beautiful Spirit of Your Son the Savior, the Messiah, the Christ, to transform our hearts to become the righteous children who would be pleasing to Your eyes

Amen

Anonymous ID: a1b93b Feb. 1, 2022, 8:08 p.m. No.15524435   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15524361

[THEY] love the key

What does it spell in Greek?

Renaissance was public resurgence of what?

 

The terms Greek key, fret, and meander are all names for a decorative device employed on buildings and objects beginning in ancient Greece and continuing to modern times. The device comes in a variety of forms. At its most basic, it is a band consisting of short horizontal and vertical fillets connected to each other at right angles. It has been called a Greek key because an individual section vaguely resembles a primitive key. The labeling of it as a meander results from its continuous back and forth progression, recalling the winding course of the Meander River in Asia Minor, now present-day Turkey. The unbroken, interlocking pattern made it a symbol of both unity and infinity. What I define as the complex Greek Meander consists of two parallel strips of meandering fillets crossing one another at continuous intervals. The designation is my own since I can find no specific definition for this distinctive form of Greek fret.