Sunday, December 24, 2006

"X" mass Druids, Opus Dei

Christmas do you know where the symbols come from

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7606420729663402952&q=christmas+duration%3Along&hl=en
Druids and O.D.---- Opus Dei-- ebook worth read -if you read it all

http://ipsmediaworks.net/opus-dei.pdf


according to Diogenes Laerius, was comprised in their three precepts—to worship the Gods, to do no evil, and to act with courage.

this doctrine was the belief in one God. Their veneration for groves of oak, and for sacred fountains, was an expression of that
natural worshiop which sees the source of all good in the beautiful forms with which the earth is clothed.

The sanctity of the mistletoe, the watch-fires of spring and summer and autumn, traces of which observances still remain amongst us,
were tributes to the bounty of the All-giver, who alone could make the growth, the ripening, and the gathering of the fruits of the
earth propitious. The sun and the moon regulated their festivals, and there is little doubt formed part of their outward worship.

“But there are some remains which have the appearance of works of art, which are, probably, nothing but irregular products of
nature,—masses of stone thrown on a plane surface by some great convulsion, and wrought into fantastic shapes by agencies of
dripping water and driving wind, which in the course of ages work as effectually in the changes of bodies as the chisel and
the hammer. Such is probably the extraordinary pile of granite in Cornwall called the Cheesewring, a mass of eight stones rising
to the height of thirty-two feet, whose name is derived from the form of an ancient cheese-press (Fig. 47). It is held, however,
that some art may have been employed in clearing the base from circumjacent [sic] stones. Such is also a remarkable pile upon a
lofty range called the Kilmarth Rocks, which is twenty-eight feet in height, and overhangs more than twelve feet towards the north

http://www.fromoldbooks.org/OldEngland/index6.html

I'll drop you in here http://www.fromoldbooks.org/OldEngland/pages/2440-the-cockpit/

if you fallow through you may learn something about how the stones cry out.. pay attention to everything including the dress of the Gaul http://www.fromoldbooks.org/OldEngland/index11.html

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