Anonymous ID: 3be8f8 April 11, 2024, 5:03 p.m. No.20713863   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20713806

>Yanks was always a derogatory you Dipshit Fuck

Not here in the States, friend. 'Yankees' is the name of a somewhat popular baseball team. People of the Northeast read 'Yankee Magazine'. Our esteemed Southern friends refer to their Northern brethren as 'Yankees' as a colloquial term of endearment. 'The Yanks are Coming' was once a popular song. So you see, you are appearing as someone isolated and misinformed.

Anonymous ID: 3be8f8 April 11, 2024, 5:23 p.m. No.20713960   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4043

>>20713924

>Jesus is the Passover Lamb.

The Talmud tells us it is a laudable, praiseworthy thing for the priests to officiate on Passover while walking in blood. The priests would mindfully plug the drains that emptied into the SHISSIN under the altar and let the blood spilled from the veins of the Passover lambs slowly rise across the otherwise pristine stone floor of the Temple. To the modern mind, sanitized by a culture where death is rarely encountered first-hand, and blood is usually reserved for fictional depictions on film, the blatant crimson courtyard of the Temple on Passover would be a startling sight to see. The movement of priests as they walked, ankles deep in the red pool that covered the floor of the Temple, seems so alien to the idea of a Deity who longs to give mercy. But mercy must come at some price.

 

and the gallons upon gallons of lamb’s blood would begin to descend into the pits. The water channel that fed the Temple Courtyard would then be opened, and the sudden influx of water pressure would flood the courtyard with fresh, cleansing liquid. The soul-laden blood of so many lambs would be rinsed from the Temple courtyard, down into the depths of the SHISSIN, where it would burst forth from its drain in a powerful gush of blood and water into the meager stream of the Kidron brook.

https://www.randomgroovybiblefacts.com/the_bleeding_temple.html

Anonymous ID: 3be8f8 April 11, 2024, 6:18 p.m. No.20714203   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20714187

Over the centuries, many customs have sprung up to enhance the way in which we enter Yom Kippur , the final day of this season. Some of these customs, such as flogging oneself to atone for sin, happily have been forgotten. Others, such as immersion in a mikvah to indicate a state of purity, are still practiced by some. The most well‑known and yet most controversial of these customs is the practice of Kaparot, which literally means “atonements,” but in the sense of “ransom.”

 

Traditionally, a rooster is swung around one’s head and is then slaughtered while being declared a “substitute” for the individual, as an atonement for his or her sins.

The rooster is twirled three times around the head of each man; a hen is used for women. Both birds are then slaughtered and given to the poor.

https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/kaparot/