>>1585796 #1994
>https://hooktube.com/watch?v=Vvy0wRLD5s8
>>1586032
>>1586101
rough sketch for a verse set to original song
>>1585796 #1994
>https://hooktube.com/watch?v=Vvy0wRLD5s8
>>1586032
>>1586101
rough sketch for a verse set to original song
been sounding that way for a good month now since just before the Macroni visit.
maybe insightful to listen to his first mention of Jer 29:11 again.
can't remember which speech it was exactly.
>>1587727 (lb)
veddy inter-est-ing.
>http://mysteriouswritings.com/the-atbash-cipher-and-jeremiah-511/
The Atbash cipher is a basic encoding method known to be used in the Bible. Examples of its employment appear in the Book of Jeremiah which dates to around 600B.C.
The simplicity of the code should not have one assume a lack of depth for meaning, though.
The name Atbash derives from how the code works, and the Hebrew language which has been noted to use it. The first letter of the alphabet is exchanged for the last; the second letter exchanged for the next to last and so on. In the Hebrew alphabet, these letters are Aleph (first) and Tav (last), Beth (second) and Shin (next to last).
Taking the first letter of each supplies ATBSH for the rendering of Atbash. Basically, it is a reversal of writing. In English, A to Z would equal Z to A.
In the Book of Jeremiah the code is seen used in 25:26, 51:1, and 51:41. Jeremiah 25:26 and 51:41 includes the place name, “Sheshach”.
This place was unknown to scholars at first, but, after applying the Atbash cipher, they realized it was the coded name for Babylon (Babel).
The Atbash cipher is a form of Temurah.
Temurah is a belief by Cabbalists that the rearrangement of letters in words holds spiritual meanings; like how the anagram of a person’s name revealed hidden meanings.
hey, did you know NYU is doing a long-term study using measured amounts of psilocybin to treat manic-depressives?
maybe you'd like to check it out?
Johns Hopkins also doing one to help people quit smoking. 1st trial was extremely successful.
>https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/news/stories/mushrooms_quit_smoking.html
Longtime smokers may have a new, effective way to kick the habit: consuming psilocybin, the active hallucinogenic agent in “magic mushrooms.”
“When administered after careful preparation and in a therapeutic context, psilocybin can lead to deep reflection about one’s life and spark motivation to change,” says Matthew Johnson, Ph.D., a corresponding author on the study.