princ€harryga$k€tl€ak$fart$$p€nc€r ID: 701535 June 28, 2023, 9:11 p.m. No.19092819   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2870

Will Your lovingkindness be declared in the grave

Or Your faithfulness in Abaddon (the underworld)?

princ€harryga$k€tl€ak$fart$$p€nc€r ID: 701535 June 28, 2023, 9:13 p.m. No.19092822   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Let us swallow them up alive as Sheol, And whole, as those that go down into the pit;

princ€harryga$k€tl€ak$fart$$p€nc€r ID: 701535 June 28, 2023, 9:28 p.m. No.19092875   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2877

>>19092870

>abaddon

Abaddon is identified as a realm where the damned lie in fire and snow, one of the places in Gehenna that Moses visited. [3] Christianity The New Testament contains the first known depiction of Abaddon as an individual entity instead of a place.

princ€harryga$k€tl€ak$fart$$p€nc€r ID: 701535 June 28, 2023, 9:30 p.m. No.19092881   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2886 >>2904

>>19092877

Underworlds

John Martin 002.jpg

Aztec mythology MictlānBuddhism BardoNarakaChinese mythology DiyuGate of the GhostsYouduChristianity AbyssLake of fireOuter darknessPurgatoryLimboHadesChristian views on HellAncient Egyptian religion DuatNorse and wider Germanic paganism HelNáströndNiflheimNiflhelGreek and Roman mythology Asphodel MeadowsElysiumErebusFortunate IslesHadesOrcusTartarusHellHinduism NarakaPatalaIslam BarzakhJahannamSijjinJainism NarakaJudaism AbaddonAzazelBosom of AbrahamDudaelGehennaSheolTehomTzoah RotachatMandaeism World of DarknessMaya mythology XibalbaMesopotamian mythology IrkallaPersian mythology DuzakhShinto YomiSumerian mythology KurTurkic-Mongolian TamagWelsh mythology AnnwnZoroastrianism Hamistagan

princ€harryga$k€tl€ak$fart$$p€nc€r ID: 701535 June 28, 2023, 9:32 p.m. No.19092886   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2894 >>2905

>>19092877

>>19092881

The Hebrew term Abaddon (Hebrew: אֲבַדּוֹן ’Ăḇaddōn, meaning "destruction", "doom"), and its Greek equivalent Apollyon (Koinē Greek: Ἀπολλύων, Apollúōn meaning "Destroyer") appear in the Bible as both a place of destruction and an angel of the abyss. In the Hebrew Bible, abaddon is used with reference to a bottomless pit, often appearing alongside the place Sheol (שְׁאוֹל Šəʾōl), meaning the resting place of dead peoples.

 

In the Book of Revelation of the New Testament, an angel called Abaddon is described as the king of an army of locusts; his name is first transcribed in Koine Greek (Revelation 9:11—"whose name in Hebrew is Abaddon,") as Ἀβαδδών, and then translated Ἀπολλύων, Apollyon. The Vulgate and the Douay–Rheims Bible have additional notes not present in the Greek text, "in Latin Exterminans", exterminans being the Latin word for "destroyer".

princ€harryga$k€tl€ak$fart$$p€nc€r ID: 701535 June 28, 2023, 9:33 p.m. No.19092894   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2897

>>19092886

Judaism

Hebrew Bible

The term abaddon appears six times in the Masoretic text of the Hebrew Bible; abaddon means destruction or "place of destruction", or the realm of the dead, and is accompanied by Sheol.

 

Job 26:6: the grave (Sheol) is naked before Him, and destruction (Abaddon) has no covering.

Job 28:22: destruction (Abaddon) and death say.

Job 31:12: it is a fire that consumes to destruction (Abaddon).

Psalm 88:11: Shall thy loving kindness be declared in the grave (Sheol) or thy faithfulness in destruction (Abaddon)?

Proverbs 15:11: Hell (Sheol) and Destruction (Abaddon) are before the LORD, how much more the hearts of the children of men?

Proverbs 27:20: Hell (Sheol) and Destruction (Abaddon) are never full; so the eyes of man are never satisfied. (KJV, 1611)

Second Temple era texts

The text of the Thanksgiving Hymns—which was found in the Dead Sea Scrolls—tells of "the Sheol of Abaddon" and of the "torrents of Belial [that] burst into Abaddon". The Biblical Antiquities (misattributed to Philo) mentions Abaddon as a place (destruction) rather than an individual. Abaddon is also one of the compartments of Gehenna.[2] By extension, it can mean an underworld abode of lost souls, or Gehenna.

 

Rabbinical literature

In some legends, Abaddon is identified as a realm where the damned lie in fire and snow, one of the places in Gehenna that Moses visited.[3]

princ€harryga$k€tl€ak$fart$$p€nc€r ID: 701535 June 28, 2023, 9:34 p.m. No.19092897   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2901 >>2910

>>19092894

Christianity

The New Testament contains the first known depiction of Abaddon as an individual entity instead of a place.

 

A king, the angel of the bottomless pit; whose name in Hebrew is Abaddon, and in Greek Apollyon; in Latin Exterminans.

 

— Revelation 9:11, Douay–Rheims Bible

In Revelation 9:11, Abaddon is described as "Destroyer",[4] the angel of the Abyss,[4] and as the king of a plague of locusts resembling horses with crowned human faces, women's hair, lions' teeth, wings, iron breast-plates, and a tail with a scorpion's stinger that torments for five months anyone who does not have the seal of God on their foreheads.[5]

 

The symbolism of Revelation 9:11 leaves the identity of Abaddon open to interpretation. Protestant commentator Matthew Henry (1708) believed Abaddon to be the Antichrist,[6] whereas the Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Bible Commentary (1871) and Henry Hampton Halley (1922) identified the angel as Satan.[7][8]

 

Early in John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress the Christian pilgrim fights "over half a day" long with the demon Apollyon. This book permeated Christianity in the English-speaking world for 300 years after its first publication in 1678.

 

In contrast, the Methodist publication The Interpreter's Bible states, "Abaddon, however, is an angel not of Satan but of God, performing his work of destruction at God's bidding", citing the context at Revelation chapter 20, verses 1 through 3.[9][page needed] Jehovah's Witnesses also cite Revelation 20:1-3 where the angel having "the key of the abyss" is actually shown to be a representative of God, concluding that "Abaddon" is another name for Jesus after his resurrection.[10]

 

Mandaeism

Mandaean scriptures such as the Ginza Rabba mention the Abaddons (Classical Mandaic: ʿbdunia) as part of the World of Darkness. The Right Ginza mentions the existence of the "upper Abaddons" (ʿbdunia ʿlaiia) as well as the "lower Abaddons" (ʿbdunia titaiia). The final poem of the Left Ginza mentions the "House of the Abaddons" (bit ʿbdunia).[11]

princ€harryga$k€tl€ak$fart$$p€nc€r ID: 701535 June 28, 2023, 9:35 p.m. No.19092901   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2915

>>19092897

Apocryphal texts

In the gnostic 3rd century Acts of Thomas, Abaddon is the name of a demon, or the devil himself.

 

Abaddon is given particularly important roles in two sources, a homily entitled The Enthronement of Abaddon by pseudo-Timothy of Alexandria, and the Book of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, by Bartholomew the Apostle.[12][13] In the homily by Timothy, Abaddon was first named Muriel, and had been given the task by God of collecting the earth that would be used in the creation of Adam. Upon completion of this task, the angel was appointed as a guardian. Everyone, including the angels, demons, and corporeal entities feared him. Abaddon was promised that any who venerated him in life could be saved. Abaddon is also said to have a prominent role in the Last Judgment, as the one who will take the souls to the Valley of Josaphat.[12] He is described in the Book of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ as being present in the Tomb of Jesus at the moment of the resurrection of Jesus.[14]

princ€harryga$k€tl€ak$fart$$p€nc€r ID: 701535 June 28, 2023, 10:05 p.m. No.19092973   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19092970

 

>>one kilo two kilo three kilo four

 

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