Posts tonen met het label religie. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label religie. Alle posts tonen

zaterdag, augustus 01, 2015

Seek Until You Find

Let one who seeks don't stop until that person finds.
Upon finding, that person will be disturbed.
In being disturbed, one will be astounded;
and will reign over the entirety!
Gospel of Thomas

find (v.) Old English findan "come upon, meet with; discover; obtain by search or study" (class III strong verb; past tense fand, past participle funden), from Proto-Germanic *finthan "to come upon, discover" (cognates: Old Saxon findan, Old Frisian finda, Old Norse finna, Middle Dutch vinden, Old High German findan, German finden, Gothic finþan), originally "to come upon." The Germanic word is from PIE root *pent- "to tread, go" (cognates: Old High German fendeo "pedestrian;" Sanskrit panthah "path, way;" Avestan panta "way;" Greek pontos "open sea," patein "to tread, walk;" Latin pons (genitive pontis) "bridge;" Old Church Slavonic poti "path," peta "heel;" Russian put' "path, way").  
find (n.) "person or thing discovered, discovery of something valuable," 1825, from find (v.).  
Vadem, zn. Het woord vadem gaat terug op de spanwijdte van een persoon met zijwaarts gestrekte armen.  
fathom (v.) Old English fæðmian "to embrace, surround, envelop," from a Proto-Germanic verb derived from the source of fathom (n.); cognates: Old High German fademon, Old Norse faþma. The meaning "take soundings" is from c. 1600; its figurative sense of "get to the bottom of, penetrate with the mind, understand" is from 1620s. Related: Fathomed; fathoming

plummet (n.) late 14c., "ball of lead, plumb of a bob-line," from Old French plomet "graphite, lead; plummet, sounding lead," diminutive of plom "sounding lead" (see plumb (n.)).
plummet (v.) 1620s, "to fathom, take soundings," from plummet (n.). Meaning "to fall rapidly" first recorded 1933, perhaps originally among aviators. Related: Plummeted; plummeting
plumb (n.) "lead hung on a string to show the vertical line," early 14c., from Old French *plombe, plomee "sounding lead," and directly from Late Latin *plumba, originally plural of Latin plumbum "lead (the metal), lead ball; pipe; pencil," a word of unknown origin, related to Greek molybdos "lead" (dialectal bolimos) and perhaps from an extinct Mediterranean language, perhaps Iberian.



प , पा
Pa
twenty-first consonant of the Nágari alphabet, corresponding to the letter P.  Keeping, Guarding, Protecting Air, wind; Prince, a ruler; Leaf; Drinking, (pā to nourish) 

पथ
Patha,
road, way, to proceed, to travel, to reach

पान्थ
Pantha,
the traveller, the wanderer, also the Sun

woensdag, februari 18, 2015

Concerning Inspiration

Inspire has to do with breath but what is 'Breath'

has to do with spirit, adem, ...

adem* [ingeademde lucht] {1201-1250} oudfries ēthma, oudsaksisch āthum, oudengels æðm; buiten het germ. oudindisch ātman- [adem, ziel] → asem.

Vadem = Fathom = Fathmaz: to embrace
= measurement for depth and length of outstreched arm
to embrace and to reach out

to grasp, ...

inspiratie [inblazing, ingeving] {inspiracie [ingeving] 1330, vgl. inspireren 1265-1270} < frans inspiration < latijn inspirationem, 4e nv. van inspiratio [adem, in chr. lat. ingeving, inspiratie, bezieling], van inspirare (verl. deelw. inspiratum) [blazen in, inboezemen, inspireren], van in [in] + spirare [blazen] (vgl. spirit, spelonk).

late 14c., from Old French inspeccion "inspection, examination" (13c.), from Latin inspectionem (nominative inspectio) "a looking into," noun of action from past participle stem of inspicere "look into, inspect, examine," from in- "into" (see in- (2)) + specere "to look" (see scope (n.1)).

Scope (n.)(v.)
~instrument for viewing
~verb, to view

One views with ones eye
c.1200, from Old English ege (Mercian), eage (West Saxon) "eye; region around the eye; apperture, hole," from Proto-Germanic *augon (cognates: Old Saxon aga, Old Frisian age, Old Norse auga, Swedish öga, Danish øie, Middle Dutch oghe, Dutch oog, Old High German ouga, German Auge, Gothic augo "eye").

Apparently the Germanic form evolved irregularly from PIE *okw- "to see" (cognates: Sanskrit akshi "the eye; the number two," Greek opsis "a sight," Old Church Slavonic oko, Lithuanian akis, Latin oculus, Greek okkos, Tocharian ak, ek, Armenian akn).

Luke 11:34
The light of the body is the eye: therefore when thine eye is single, thy whole body also is full of light; but when thine eye is evil, thy body also is full of darkness.
lucerna corporis tui est oculus tuus si oculus tuus fuerit simplex totum corpus tuum lucidum erit si autem nequam fuerit etiam corpus tuum tenebrosum erit 

SINGLE SIMPLEX 
simple, without dissimulation, open, frank, straightforward, direct, guileless, artless, sincere, ingenuous
focus



"Allsehendes Auge am Tor des Aachener Dom"

Related blogposts
Ite, missa est

Con Man Scam

Con 
Connard from Cunnus
the female pudenda

Fool
Noun
Early 13c., "silly, stupid, or ignorant person," from Old French fol "madman, insane person; idiot; rogue; jester," also "blacksmith's bellows," also an adjective meaning "mad, insane" (12c., Modern French fou), from Medieval Latin follus (adj.) "foolish," from Latin follis "bellows, leather bag" (see follicle)
Adjective
c.1200, "sinful, wicked; lecherous" (a fool woman (c.1300) was "a prostitute"), from fool (n.1). Meaning "foolish, silly" is mid-13c.

The Jester, April's Fool, Aprilvis,
jest (n.) early 13c., geste, "narrative of exploits," from Old French geste "action, exploit," from Latin gesta "deeds," neuter plural of gestus, past participle of gerere "to carry, behave, act, perform" (see gest). Sense descended through "idle tale" (late 15c.) to "mocking speech, raillery" (1540s) to "joke" (1550s).
jest (v.) 1520s, "to speak in a trifling manner;" 1550s, "to joke," from Middle English gesten "recite a tale" (late 14c.), from geste (see jest (n.)). Related: Jested; jesting.
Gest en Jest (Ite, missa est)
to perform and to speak
the PASTOR=the SHEPERD=de HERDER
relates to the FOOD
~Overcome Old English ofercuman "to reach, overtake," also "to conquer, prevail over," from ofer

Ritual
SPIREitual
The act of the fool being nailed to the cross and to be joined with in Communion, sharing of Bread and Wine, Meat and Blood, To become One with JC.  The Holy Communion, Eucharistie.  Where the ritual takes place in The Church, de Kerk, Het Huis van de Heer, zie Herberg (Ecce Homo)

Spire
Old English spir "a sprout, shoot, spike, blade, tapering stalk of grass," from Proto-Germanic *spiraz (cognates: Old Norse spira "a stalk, slender tree," Dutch spier "shoot, blade of grass," Middle Low German spir "a small point or top"), from PIE *spei- "sharp point" (see spike (n.1)). Meaning "tapering top of a tower or steeple" first recorded 1590s (a sense attested in Middle Low German since late 14c. and also found in the Scandinavian cognates).


In general one who believes, follower of any religion dogma sect,
one who follows conspirators and/or believes in conspiracies,
one who is blinded from the Truth

The Sheperd herds the sheep not to lead them to gentle waters but to Slaugther and to have Food
The sater leads the fooled to be slaughtered
Sater leads the Slaughtered to Saturn

Saturn Devouring His Son (1819) 
by Francisco Goya




A Good Shepherd knows how to make delicious Shepherdspie