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  1. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by Acts23 View Post
    Theosophy

    founder- Madame Helena Blavatsky (1831-1891) founded 1875.

    Scriptures and writings- The Secret Doctrine, Isis Unveiled, The Key to Theosophy, and The Voice of the Silence.

    God- God is a principle.


    Some interesting statements from Helena Blavatsky

    "We are about to found a magazine of our own, Lucifer. Don’t allow yourself to be frightened: it is not the devil, into which the Catholics have falsified the name of the Morning Star, sacred to all the ancient world, of the ‘bringer of light,’ Phosphoros, as the Romans often called the Mother of God and Christ. And in St. John’s Revelation does it not say, ‘I, Jesus, the morning star’? I wish people would take this to mind, at least. It is possible that the rebellious angel was called Lucifer before his fall, but after his transformation he must not be called so...."
    H.P. Blavatsky in a letter to her sister Vera.

    "Open your columns to free and fearless discussion, and do as the theosophical periodicals have ever done, and as LUCIFER is now preparing to do. The 'bright Son of the morning' fears no light. He courts it, and is prepared to publish any inimical contributions (couched, of course, in decent language), however much at variance with his theosophical views. He is determined to give a fair hearing in any and every case, to both contending parties and allow things and thoughts to be judged on their respective merits. For why, or what should one dread when fact and truth are one's only aim?" H.P. Blavatsky in Lucifer, October, 1887.

    Blavatsky and Crowley(luciferian)

    Crowley recognized Blavatsky as a Sister of A\A\ (i.e. a Master of the Temple 8°=3# in his system of spiritual grades), specifically pointing her out as his immediate predecessor in "The Temple of Truth," published in The Heart of the Master through O.T.O. in 1938. He thought it especially noteworthy that he was born in the same year that the Theosophical Society was inaugurated. Crowley reissued Blavatsky's Voice of the Silence (Extracts from the Book of the Golden Precepts, including "The Two Paths" and "The Seven Portals") with his own commentary as Liber LXXI, a Class B publication of A\A\.



    Crowley "regarded his own system, Thelema, as the child of the Golden Dawn and Theosophy." (p. 47) The following observations may shed light on some obscure features of the Aeonic myth of Thelema.


    more to come soon...
    I don't see anything wrong about your post and yes LUCIFER is a symbol of LIGHT in Ancient Mythology before Chrisitanity was born and therefore, it is MORNING STAR like JESUS who is THE LIGHT who shines upon US! Our view of Luicfer has been corrupted by EVIL and SATANISM when in fact the original translation of LUCIFER is BRINGER of LIGHT!

    Jesus the CHRIST said, You are the salt of the world and the LIGHT OF THE WORLD! (That is Luciferic in SYMBOLISM but has nothing to do with evil and satanism literally speaking)

    You might want to study this further so that you will be ENLIGHTENED by your incomplete research!

    Theosophical Light on the Christian Bible

    ByHenry T. Edge, M.A., D.LITT.
    [Originally published by Theosophical University Press, Covina, California, 1945]
    Contents

    Part I
    1. Man's Second Birth
    2. The 'Father' and the 'Son'
    3. The Bible as an Esoteric Book
    4. 'Creation'
    5. Redemption, Salvation, Atonement
    6. Kingdom of Heaven
    7. "The God Within"
    8. Satan, the Adversary
    9. The Flood Myth
    10. The Golden Rule
    11. The Lord's Supper
    12. The Spirit of God Dwelleth in You
    13. "In Christ Shall All Be Made Alive"
    14. The Second Coming
    15. The Old Testament
    16. The 'Holy Ghost'
    17. The Cross
    18. Did Jesus Have an Esoteric School?

    Have a HAPPY and ENLIGHTENING reading and GOD BLESS!!!

    So, LET US STUDY THEOSOPHY with an OPEN MIND, HEART and SOUL!

    GOD BLESS!
    Last edited by regnauld; 07-07-2009 at 01:27 AM.

  2. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by regnauld View Post
    I don't see anything wrong about your post and yes LUCIFER is a symbol of LIGHT in Ancient Mythology before Chrisitanity was born and therefore, it is MORNING STAR like JESUS who is THE LIGHT who shines upon US! Our view of Luicfer has been corrupted by EVIL and SATANISM when in fact the original translation of LUCIFER is BRINGER of LIGHT!

    Jesus the CHRIST said, You are the salt of the world and the LIGHT OF THE WORLD! (That is Luciferic in SYMBOLISM but has nothing to do with evil and satanism literally speaking)

    You might want to study this further so that you will be ENLIGHTENED by your incomplete research!

    Theosophical Light on the Christian Bible

    ByHenry T. Edge, M.A., D.LITT.
    [Originally published by Theosophical University Press, Covina, California, 1945]
    Contents

    Part I
    1. Man's Second Birth
    2. The 'Father' and the 'Son'
    3. The Bible as an Esoteric Book
    4. 'Creation'
    5. Redemption, Salvation, Atonement
    6. Kingdom of Heaven
    7. "The God Within"
    8. Satan, the Adversary
    9. The Flood Myth
    10. The Golden Rule
    11. The Lord's Supper
    12. The Spirit of God Dwelleth in You
    13. "In Christ Shall All Be Made Alive"
    14. The Second Coming
    15. The Old Testament
    16. The 'Holy Ghost'
    17. The Cross
    18. Did Jesus Have an Esoteric School?

    Have a HAPPY and ENLIGHTENING reading and GOD BLESS!!!

    So, LET US STUDY THEOSOPHY with an OPEN MIND, HEART and SOUL!

    GOD BLESS!

    hahaha...there you go folks...directly from his own mouth...

    There is nothing wrong with lucifer daw matud pa niya, hehehe.

    From the Christian pov reg...Lucifer was indeed the bringer of light but that was before the fall.

    After the fall he is called Satan. Read the bible reg ug ayaw palabi anang mugna mugna sa utok ni blavatsky kay delikado na.

    See the problem here reg? Your madame contradicted a story written by a prophet, She quotes verses from the bible but when a verse contradicts her occultic pov iyang e reject, hehe, Selective siya reg noh? iya lang kuhaon kung unsay mohaom sa iyang gusto,sigew man gud to siya ug sopsop ug marijuana.

  3. #33
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    but reg...wala pa lagi ka nitubag sa akong mga questions nako.

    like kinsa si Djwahl Kuhl? basin produkto ni siya sa pag sige ug suyop ni blavatsky ug marijuana?

    then daghan pa to reg...like association ni Blavastky ni Crowley? ug katong about Morya?

    nya naa lang pod koy idugang...

    Si Hitler na initiate man to siya noh ni Blavatsky...kay sa inyong libro nga Secret Doctrine it mentioned in there nga ang humans are divided into sub races, so naay superior race naa pod inferiro race? diri sigruo na inspire si Hitler sa pagtukod sa Nazism. Aryan race supremacy?

    question ra ni ako reg ha...

  4. #34
    The Lucifer story


    Lucifer, another of Gustave Doré's illustrations for Paradise Lost by John Milton.


    A pagan myth of the fall of angels, associated with the morning star, was transferred to Satan already in the pre-Christian century, as seen in the Life of Adam and Eve and the Second Book of Enoch, where Satan-Sataniel (sometimes identified with Samael) is described as having been one of the archangels. Because he contrived "to make his throne higher than the clouds over the earth and resemble 'My power' on high", Satan-Sataniel was hurled down, with his hosts of angels, and since then he has been flying in the air continually above the abyss.

    Early Christian writers continued this identification of "Lucifer" with Satan. Tertullian ("Contra Marrionem," v. 11, 17), Origen ("Ezekiel Opera," iii. 356), and others, identify Lucifer with Satan, who also is represented as being "cast down from heaven" (Revelation 12:7-10; cf. Luke 10:18).
    The New Testament shows a high development of demonology. In consonance with the Gospels beliefs of the lower orders of society, the devil and his realm are regarded as an entire ubiquitousness in all the events of daily life. In accordance, he has many names: "Satan" (Matt. 4:10; Mark 1:30, 4:15; Luke 10:1, "devil" (Matt. 4:1), "adversary" (1. Peter 5:8, ἀντίδικος; 1. Tim. 5:14, ἀντικείμενος), "enemy" (Matt. 13:39), "accuser" (Rev. 12:10), "old serpent" (Rev. 20:2), "great dragon" (Rev. 12:9), Beelzebub (Matt. 10:25, 12:24), and Belial (comp. Samael). In Luke 10:18, John 12:31, 2. Cor. 6:16, and Rev. 12:9 the fall of Satan is mentioned. The devil is regarded as the author of all evil (Luke 10:19; Acts 5:3; 2. Cor. 11:3; Ephes. 2:2), who beguiled Eve (2. Cor. 11:3; Rev. 12:9). Satan brought death itself into the world (Heb. 2:13), being ever the tempter (1. Cor. 7:5; 1. Thess. 3:5; 1. Peter 5:, even as he tempted Jesus (Matt. 4). The Christian demonology and belief in the devil dominated subsequent periods. However, though the New Testament includes the conception that Satan fell from heaven with the velocity of lightning (Luke x. 18; Rev. xii. 7-10), it nowhere applies the name Lucifer to him.

    The Jewish Encyclopedia states that in the apocalyptic writings, the conception of fallen angels is widespread. Throughout antiquity stars were commonly regarded as living celestial beings (Job 38:7). Indications of this belief, behind which probably lies the symbolizing of an astronomical phenomenon, the shooting stars, are met with in Isaiah 14:12.

    The Morning Star in Isaiah 14:12

    The Book of Isaiah has the following passage:
    When the Lord has given you rest from your pain and turmoil and the hard service with which you were made to serve, you will take up this taunt against the king of Babylon: How the oppressor has ceased! How his insolence has ceased! … How you are fallen from heaven, O Day Star, son of Dawn! How you are cut down to the ground, you who laid the nations low! You said in your heart, "I will ascend to heaven; I will raise my throne above the stars of God; I will sit on the mount of assembly on the heights of Zaphon; I will ascend to the tops of the clouds, I will make myself like the Most High." But you are brought down to Sheol, to the depths of the Pit. Those who see you will stare at you, and ponder over you: "Is this the man who made the earth tremble, who shook kingdoms, who made the world like a desert and overthrew its cities, who would not let his prisoners go home?"

    The passage expressly refers to a "king of Babylon", a "man" who seemed all-powerful, but who has been brought low. Isaiah promises that the Israelites will be freed and will then be able to use in a taunting song against their oppressor the image of the Morning Star, which rises at dawn as the brightest of the stars, outshining Jupiter and Saturn, but lasting only until the sun appears. This image was used in an old popular Canaanite story that the Morning Star tried to rise high above the clouds and establish himself on the mountain where the gods assembled, in the far north, but was cast down into the underworld.

    The phrase "O Day Star, son of Dawn" in the New Revised Standard Version translation given above corresponds to the Hebrew phrase "הילל בן־שׁחר" (Helel Ben-Shachar) in verse 12, meaning "morning star, son of dawn". As the Latin poets personified the Morning Star and the Dawn (Aurora), as well as the Sun and the Moon and other heavenly bodies, so in Canaanite mythology Morning Star and Dawn were pictured as two deities, the former being the son of the latter.

    In the Latin Vulgate, Jerome translated "הילל בן־שׁחר" (morning star, son of dawn) as "lucifer qui mane oriebaris" (morning star that used to rise early). Already, as early as the Christian writers Tertullian and Origen, the whole passage had come to be applied to Satan. Satan began to be referred to as "Lucifer" (Morning Star), and finally the word "Lucifer" was treated as a proper name. The use of the word "Lucifer" in the 1611 King James Version instead of a word such as "Daystar" ensured its continued popularity among English speakers.

    Most modern English versions (including the NIV, NRSV, NASB, NJB and ESV) render the Hebrew word as "day star", "morning star" or something similar, and never as "Lucifer", a word that in English is now very rarely used in the sense of the original word in Hebrew (Morning Star), though in Latin "Lucifer" was a literal translation.

    A passage quite similar to that in Isaiah is found in Ezekiel 28:1-19, which is expressly directed against the king of Tyre, a city on an island that had grown rich by trade, factors alluded to in the text. In Christian tradition, it too has been applied to Lucifer, because of some of the expressions contained in it. But, since it does not contain the image of the morning star, discussion of it belongs rather to the article on Satan than to that on Lucifer.


    Lucifer (Le génie du mal) by Guillaume Geefs (Cathedral of St. Paul, Liège, Belgium)


    The same holds for the Christian depiction of Satan in other books of the Old Testament as, for instance, in the Book of Job, where Satan, who has been wandering the earth, has a discussion with God and makes a deal with him to test Job.

    The Tyndale Bible Dictionary states that there are many who believe the expression "Lucifer" and the surrounding context in Isaiah 14 refer to Satan: they believe the similarities among Isaiah 14:12, Luke 10:18, and Revelation 12:7-10 warrant this conclusion. But it points out that the context of the Isaiah passage is about the accomplished defeat of the king of Babylon, while the New Testament passages speak of Satan. Liberal Christian scholars often deny altogether the existence of a personal being called "Satan", rendering the Lucifer story irrelevant. They argue that the name Satan itself (Hebrew: שָׂטָן) merely means "adversary" or "accuser", which may be a personification.

  5. #35
    C.I.A. regnauld's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Acts23 View Post
    hahaha...there you go folks...directly from his own mouth...

    There is nothing wrong with lucifer daw matud pa niya, hehehe.

    From the Christian pov reg...Lucifer was indeed the bringer of light but that was before the fall.

    After the fall he is called Satan. Read the bible reg ug ayaw palabi anang mugna mugna sa utok ni blavatsky kay delikado na.

    See the problem here reg? Your madame contradicted a story written by a prophet, She quotes verses from the bible but when a verse contradicts her occultic pov iyang e reject, hehe, Selective siya reg noh? iya lang kuhaon kung unsay mohaom sa iyang gusto,sigew man gud to siya ug sopsop ug marijuana.
    The name Lucifer is a symbol which comes from the word LUCES which means LIGHT and not literally true as a PERSON. THEOSOPHY does not believe and acknowledge in the existence of LUCIFER as EVIL and Satan. We don't believe in the existence of the devil as a person outside of us. Lucifer as evil is symbolic which could mean our LOWER SELF that is full of PRIDE and EGOISM but the other side of LUCIFER is LIGHT which is our HIGHGER SELF who is ONE with GOD!

    Are you aware that the concept of LUCIFER was already there before Christianity was born? There is nothing original in Christianity, so to speak!

    Do you know that the BIBLE has FULL of SYMBOLISM? The Bible cannot be taken as literally true all the time for it is just a piece of literature created by man just like any other scriptures!

  6. #36
    C.I.A. regnauld's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by bluedes View Post
    The Lucifer story


    Lucifer, another of Gustave Doré's illustrations for Paradise Lost by John Milton.


    A pagan myth of the fall of angels, associated with the morning star, was transferred to Satan already in the pre-Christian century, as seen in the Life of Adam and Eve and the Second Book of Enoch, where Satan-Sataniel (sometimes identified with Samael) is described as having been one of the archangels. Because he contrived "to make his throne higher than the clouds over the earth and resemble 'My power' on high", Satan-Sataniel was hurled down, with his hosts of angels, and since then he has been flying in the air continually above the abyss.

    Early Christian writers continued this identification of "Lucifer" with Satan. Tertullian ("Contra Marrionem," v. 11, 17), Origen ("Ezekiel Opera," iii. 356), and others, identify Lucifer with Satan, who also is represented as being "cast down from heaven" (Revelation 12:7-10; cf. Luke 10:18).
    The New Testament shows a high development of demonology. In consonance with the Gospels beliefs of the lower orders of society, the devil and his realm are regarded as an entire ubiquitousness in all the events of daily life. In accordance, he has many names: "Satan" (Matt. 4:10; Mark 1:30, 4:15; Luke 10:1, "devil" (Matt. 4:1), "adversary" (1. Peter 5:8, ἀντίδικος; 1. Tim. 5:14, ἀντικείμενος), "enemy" (Matt. 13:39), "accuser" (Rev. 12:10), "old serpent" (Rev. 20:2), "great dragon" (Rev. 12:9), Beelzebub (Matt. 10:25, 12:24), and Belial (comp. Samael). In Luke 10:18, John 12:31, 2. Cor. 6:16, and Rev. 12:9 the fall of Satan is mentioned. The devil is regarded as the author of all evil (Luke 10:19; Acts 5:3; 2. Cor. 11:3; Ephes. 2:2), who beguiled Eve (2. Cor. 11:3; Rev. 12:9). Satan brought death itself into the world (Heb. 2:13), being ever the tempter (1. Cor. 7:5; 1. Thess. 3:5; 1. Peter 5:, even as he tempted Jesus (Matt. 4). The Christian demonology and belief in the devil dominated subsequent periods. However, though the New Testament includes the conception that Satan fell from heaven with the velocity of lightning (Luke x. 18; Rev. xii. 7-10), it nowhere applies the name Lucifer to him.

    The Jewish Encyclopedia states that in the apocalyptic writings, the conception of fallen angels is widespread. Throughout antiquity stars were commonly regarded as living celestial beings (Job 38:7). Indications of this belief, behind which probably lies the symbolizing of an astronomical phenomenon, the shooting stars, are met with in Isaiah 14:12.

    The Morning Star in Isaiah 14:12

    The Book of Isaiah has the following passage:
    When the Lord has given you rest from your pain and turmoil and the hard service with which you were made to serve, you will take up this taunt against the king of Babylon: How the oppressor has ceased! How his insolence has ceased! … How you are fallen from heaven, O Day Star, son of Dawn! How you are cut down to the ground, you who laid the nations low! You said in your heart, "I will ascend to heaven; I will raise my throne above the stars of God; I will sit on the mount of assembly on the heights of Zaphon; I will ascend to the tops of the clouds, I will make myself like the Most High." But you are brought down to Sheol, to the depths of the Pit. Those who see you will stare at you, and ponder over you: "Is this the man who made the earth tremble, who shook kingdoms, who made the world like a desert and overthrew its cities, who would not let his prisoners go home?"

    The passage expressly refers to a "king of Babylon", a "man" who seemed all-powerful, but who has been brought low. Isaiah promises that the Israelites will be freed and will then be able to use in a taunting song against their oppressor the image of the Morning Star, which rises at dawn as the brightest of the stars, outshining Jupiter and Saturn, but lasting only until the sun appears. This image was used in an old popular Canaanite story that the Morning Star tried to rise high above the clouds and establish himself on the mountain where the gods assembled, in the far north, but was cast down into the underworld. The phrase "O Day Star, son of Dawn" in the New Revised Standard Version translation given above corresponds to the Hebrew phrase "הילל בן־שׁחר" (Helel Ben-Shachar) in verse 12, meaning "morning star, son of dawn". As the Latin poets personified the Morning Star and the Dawn (Aurora), as well as the Sun and the Moon and other heavenly bodies, so in Canaanite mythology Morning Star and Dawn were pictured as two deities, the former being the son of the latter.

    In the Latin Vulgate, Jerome translated "הילל בן־שׁחר" (morning star, son of dawn) as "lucifer qui mane oriebaris" (morning star that used to rise early). Already, as early as the Christian writers Tertullian and Origen, the whole passage had come to be applied to Satan. Satan began to be referred to as "Lucifer" (Morning Star), and finally the word "Lucifer" was treated as a proper name. The use of the word "Lucifer" in the 1611 King James Version instead of a word such as "Daystar" ensured its continued popularity among English speakers.

    Most modern English versions (including the NIV, NRSV, NASB, NJB and ESV) render the Hebrew word as "day star", "morning star" or something similar, and never as "Lucifer", a word that in English is now very rarely used in the sense of the original word in Hebrew (Morning Star), though in Latin "Lucifer" was a literal translation.

    A passage quite similar to that in Isaiah is found in Ezekiel 28:1-19, which is expressly directed against the king of Tyre, a city on an island that had grown rich by trade, factors alluded to in the text. In Christian tradition, it too has been applied to Lucifer, because of some of the expressions contained in it. But, since it does not contain the image of the morning star, discussion of it belongs rather to the article on Satan than to that on Lucifer.


    Lucifer (Le génie du mal) by Guillaume Geefs (Cathedral of St. Paul, Liège, Belgium)


    The same holds for the Christian depiction of Satan in other books of the Old Testament as, for instance, in the Book of Job, where Satan, who has been wandering the earth, has a discussion with God and makes a deal with him to test Job.

    The Tyndale Bible Dictionary states that there are many who believe the expression "Lucifer" and the surrounding context in Isaiah 14 refer to Satan: they believe the similarities among Isaiah 14:12, Luke 10:18, and Revelation 12:7-10 warrant this conclusion. But it points out that the context of the Isaiah passage is about the accomplished defeat of the king of Babylon, while the New Testament passages speak of Satan. Liberal Christian scholars often deny altogether the existence of a personal being called "Satan", rendering the Lucifer story irrelevant. They argue that the name Satan itself (Hebrew: שָׂטָן) merely means "adversary" or "accuser", which may be a personification.
    Well that is just a story and therefore not literally true!

    Lucifer is a Latin word derived from two words, lux (light) and fero (to bear–to bring), meaning light-bearer, light-bringer. In Roman mythology, Lucifer was a deity equivalent to the Greek Heosphorus, and the planet Venus was known by the name Lucifer in Roman astrology before being given its current name. In Christianity, Lucifer has become synonymous with Satan or the Devil, despite the original Judaic mythology considering Lucifer and Satan to be two quite separate entities.

  7. #37
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    Quote Originally Posted by regnauld View Post
    The name Lucifer is a symbol which comes from the word LUCES which means LIGHT and not literally true as a PERSON. THEOSOPHY does not believe and acknowledge in the existence of LUCIFER as EVIL and Satan. We don't believe in the existence of the devil as a person outside of us. Lucifer as evil is symbolic which could mean our LOWER SELF that is full of PRIDE and EGOISM but the other side of LUCIFER is LIGHT which is our HIGHGER SELF who is ONE with GOD!

    Are you aware that the concept of LUCIFER was already there before Christianity was born? There is nothing original in Christianity, so to speak!

    Do you know that the BIBLE has FULL of SYMBOLISM? The Bible cannot be taken as literally true all the time for it is just a piece of literature created by man just like any other scriptures!

    There is nothing original in Christianity? Well maybe because it is a continuation of a religion founded by God himself from the time of Adam and Eve.

    But siguro na blinded lang ka, of course naa oi...

    Naay mga symbolism naa pod dili. Yes it is a literature created by man AND inspired by God dili marijuana.


    So asa may correct ani karon? kining explanation ni Blue or kining imo?


    hala ka reg so kini diay si Lucifer mao ni atong higher self? hahahahahahahahaha...asa na pod ka kuha ani reg? kang blavatsky nga sige ug suyop ug marijuana?

  8. #38
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    tan-awa reg...

    mo quote mo ug story about Satan and Lucifer where they are being portrayed as person/entity but ang imo tinood nga stand is dili ni person si Lucifer but your higher Self. Di ba libog imo position?

  9. #39
    Quote Originally Posted by Acts23 View Post
    There is nothing original in Christianity? Well maybe because it is a continuation of a religion founded by God himself from the time of Adam and Eve.

    But siguro na blinded lang ka, of course naa oi...

    Naay mga symbolism naa pod dili. Yes it is a literature created by man AND inspired by God dili marijuana.


    So asa may correct ani karon? kining explanation ni Blue or kining imo?


    hala ka reg so kini diay si Lucifer mao ni atong higher self? hahahahahahahahaha...asa na pod ka kuha ani reg? kang blavatsky nga sige ug suyop ug marijuana?

    brad, that is not my explanation. That is from WIkipedia..

    Lucifer is a very old story, recycled and repackaged many times. If you want to believe one version, go ahead, nobody is stopping you. But please remember that is only one version..

    Marijuana is not used by the TS. But maybe you use it because you mention it many times.. do you use it often brad? It is a mind-altering substance that induces a lot of hallucinations and illusions. Please do not use Marijuana too much because it will damage your brain and you will not be able to function properly as an agent of Christ anymore..

  10. #40
    Quote Originally Posted by Acts23 View Post
    tan-awa reg...

    mo quote mo ug story about Satan and Lucifer where they are being portrayed as person/entity but ang imo tinood nga stand is dili ni person si Lucifer but your higher Self. Di ba libog imo position?
    it is the same with Malakas and Maganda.. or how about Greek/Roman mythology. THeyare stories about persons or entities, but they are not real persons, they are representations of parts of our own selves, like our strength and bravery, our capacity to lie and deceive, our kindness and generosity.. our sacrifices and passions..

    the important thing is you learn the moral of the story and not get attached to the individual characters in the story. Its good if you are a fan, but be a good fan.. not a fanatic!

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