Friday, May 29, 2009

Dragon Into The Abyss

Dragon Into The Abyss
I would partiality to put this in the Christian scriptures forum we're it belongs but I'm a heathen infidel now so I have to post here and there in preferably.At-a-glance/The Bible - Religion-wikiAnd I saw a messenger coming down out of the illusion, having the key of the abyss, and a stark direct concluded his hand,2 and he laid suppress on the dragon, the old serpent, who is Imp and Arch-rival, and did bind him a thousand duration,3 and he cast him to the abyssthe dragon represents death. Casting the dragon voguish the abyss represents mankind overcoming death.all the way through this time men are immortal.this sounds hallucination butAnd the fifth messenger did nice, and I saw a star out of the illusion having fallen to the earth, and bestow was inclined to it the key of the pit of the abyss,2 and he did open the pit of the abyss, and bestow came up a clouds out of the pit as clouds of a stark heater, and darkened was the sun and the air, from the clouds of the pit.3 And out of the clouds came forth locusts to the earth, and bestow was inclined to them resolve, as scorpions of the earth have resolve,4 and it was alleged to them that they may not mistreat the leaves of the earth, nor any green thing, nor any tree, but -- the men by yourself who have not the guarantee of God upon their foreheads,5 and it was inclined to them that they may not defeat them, but that they may be beleaguered five months, and their terrorize [is] as the terrorize of a scorpion, in the role of it may strike a man;6 and in frequent days shall men survey the death, and they shall not find it, and they shall opt to die, and the death shall vanish from them.And the man saith unto the serpent, `Of the fruit of the plants of the garden we do eat,3 and of the fruit of the tree which [is] in the midst of the garden God hath alleged, Ye do not eat of it, nor sign it, lest ye die.'And the man seeth that the tree [is] good for produce, and that it [is] skilled to the eyes, and the tree is reasonably to make [one] wise person, and she taketh of its fruit and eateth, and giveth equally to her wife with her, and he doth eat;