Anonymous ID: 989f81 Feb. 16, 2023, 12:20 p.m. No.18359826   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18359398

TYB!

(from lb Notables, #22504)

> >>18359256 (pb) Whistleblower says FBI plotting to criminalize Christianity

=BIBLICAL!!!=

Whistleblower's name Kyle Seraphin, who performed angelic actions of revelation of secrets.

>The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has made it a priority, Seraphin revealed, to root out “terrorists” in “radical traditional Catholicism,” which it sees as a threat to the country.

The seraphim (plural) were angels in Scripture.

From:

https://www.biblestudytools.com/dictionary/seraphim/

Seraphim [E] [H]

(burning, glowing ), an order of celestial beings, whom Isaiah beheld in vision standing above Jehovah as he sat upon his throne. ( Isaiah 6:2 ) They are described as having each of them three pairs of wings, with one of which they covered their faces (a token of humility); with the second they covered their feet (a token of respect); while with the third they flew. They seem to have borne a general resemblance to the human figure. ver. 6. Their occupation was two fold to celebrate the praises of Jehovahs holiness and power, ver. 3 and to act as the medium of communication between heaven and earth. ver. 6.

SERAPHIM

ser'-a-fim (seraphim):

A plural word occurring only in Isaiah 6:2–Isaiah's vision of Yahweh. The origin of the term in Hebrew is uncertain. Saraph in Numbers 21:6; Isaiah 14:29, etc., signifies a fiery serpent. A Babylonian name for the fire-god, Nergal, was Sharrapu. In Egypt there have been found eagle-lion-shaped figures guarding a grave, to which is applied the name seref. The equivalent English term is "griffin."

It is probable enough that popular mythology connected fire with the attendants of the deity in various ways among different peoples, and that burning lies at the base of the idea in all these suggested etymologies. It remains, however, that in Isaiah's use there is nothing of the popular legend or superstition. These seraphim are august beings whose forms are not at all fully described. They had faces, feet, hands and wings. The six wings, in three pairs, covered their faces and feet in humility and reverence, and were used for sustaining them in their positions about the throne of Yahweh. One of them is the agent for burning (with a coal off the altar, not with his own power or person) the sin from the lips of the prophet.

That last sentence? The "Iron Man" movie reflected it, with the hot coal almost being put in Tony Stark's assistant's mouth. And of course that was inversion! The hot coal was a punishment, in the movie; whereas it is for removing sin, in Scripture.