Proverbial Philosophy


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The Book of Proverbs


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The Wisdom of the Adepts


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Divine Animals Oracle


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The voices and energy of our animal kin have always been a part of our human experience, across most cultures and time frames. The stories of their relationships with the goddesses and gods entwined the two energies into a divine form. Now it is time for us to reconnect with this powerful partnership. In this deeply researched and richly written oracle, you will discover the mythos of the animals and the eternal deities whose energy is woven together in synergistic magic and learn how to use it to benefit your life. Double the power, double the wildness, double the wisdom! Featuring animals and mythos from across the planet - from Africa to the Arctic - this unique oracle is not only truly beautiful but will deliver accurate and compassionate insight to the reader.




Ancient Mystic Oriental Masonry


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1907 its teachings, rules, law and present usage's which govern the order at the present day. "True Masonry and the Universal Brotherhood of Man Are One." Masonry, nor Mystic Masonry, does not preach a new religion, it but reiterates the New Commandmen.




The Storrs Family


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A Commentary, Critical and Explanatory on the Norwegian Text of Henrik Ibsen’s Peer Gynt Its Language, Literary Associations and Folklore


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This critical study of the existing Peer Gynt texts, with the exception of §§ 140, 141 and a few notes added here and there in the text, was written in the spring of 1914 and even com­ posed down to § 104. It was to have been published in the Recueil de la Faculte de Philo sophie et Lettres de l'Universite de Gand in the September of that year, contemporaneou




The Post-Mortem Vindication of Jesus in the Sayings Gospel Q


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Q 13:34-35, the Jerusalem Logion, aligns the rejection of the speaker by Jerusalem both with the abandonment of Jerusalem's house and with the future invisibility and return of the speaker: 'You will not see me until you say, Blessed is the Coming One in the name of the Lord' (13:35b). The coincidence of not seeing language with a reference to a future coming is reminiscent of the connection, in Jewish literature especially, between the assumption and eschatological function. The book proposes that this reference to Jesus' assumption is a clue to how Q conceives of the post-mortem vindication of Jesus, since numerous Q sayings presuppose a knowledge of Jesus' death. In support of this, the book argues that in Hellenistic Jewish writings assumption was not always considered to be an escape from death (as in the biblical instances of Enoch and Elijah), but could happen at or after death, as was more clearly the case in Greek thought. Such a strategy of vindication is necessary for Q because it evidences a belief in Jesus' ongoing existence and future return as the Son of Man, and because resurrection though a feature of Q's eschatology is not individually applied to Jesus. A similar view is presupposed by the pre-Markan empty tomb tradition, which describes the disappearance of Jesus' body but narrates neither the resurrection itself nor an appearance of the risen Jesus. The book also draws out implications of the thesis for the place of the Sayings Gospel Q within the early Christian movements, particularly vis-vis the vindication of Jesus.




Life of Heber C. Kimball


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