[quote='Minimalist' pid='65386' dateline='1271613484']
[quote]Only the righteous will have immortal souls. Eternal life is a gift from God. Those who refuse will have eternal death.[/quote]
An idea that the Egyptians pioneered several millenia before xtianity was even invented.
http://www.egyptian-scarabs.co.uk/weighi..._heart.htm
[quote]The ancient Egyptians believed that, when they died, they would be judged on their behaviour during their lifetime before they could be granted a place in the Afterlife. This judgement ceremony was called "Weighing of the Heart" and was recorded in Chapter 125 of the funerar text known as the "Book of the Dead".[/quote]
[quote]The symbolic ritual that accompanied this ritual was the weighing of the heart of the deceased on a pair of enormous scales. It was weighed against the principle of truth and justice ( known as maat ) represented by a feather, the symbol of the goddess of truth, order and justice, Maat. If the heart balanced against the feather then the deceased would be granted a place in the Fields of Hetep and Iaru. If it was heavy with the weight of wrongdoings, the balance would sink and the heart would be grabbed and devoured by a terrifying beast that sat ready and waiting by the scales. This beast was Ammit, "the gobbler", a composite animal with the head of a crocodile, the front legs and body of lion or leopard, and the back legs of a hippopotamus.[/quote]
Does this mean that Tavarish is a "gobbler" in waiting.
[quote]Only the righteous will have immortal souls. Eternal life is a gift from God. Those who refuse will have eternal death.[/quote]
An idea that the Egyptians pioneered several millenia before xtianity was even invented.
http://www.egyptian-scarabs.co.uk/weighi..._heart.htm
[quote]The ancient Egyptians believed that, when they died, they would be judged on their behaviour during their lifetime before they could be granted a place in the Afterlife. This judgement ceremony was called "Weighing of the Heart" and was recorded in Chapter 125 of the funerar text known as the "Book of the Dead".[/quote]
[quote]The symbolic ritual that accompanied this ritual was the weighing of the heart of the deceased on a pair of enormous scales. It was weighed against the principle of truth and justice ( known as maat ) represented by a feather, the symbol of the goddess of truth, order and justice, Maat. If the heart balanced against the feather then the deceased would be granted a place in the Fields of Hetep and Iaru. If it was heavy with the weight of wrongdoings, the balance would sink and the heart would be grabbed and devoured by a terrifying beast that sat ready and waiting by the scales. This beast was Ammit, "the gobbler", a composite animal with the head of a crocodile, the front legs and body of lion or leopard, and the back legs of a hippopotamus.[/quote]
Does this mean that Tavarish is a "gobbler" in waiting.
God loves those who believe and those who do not and the same goes for me, you have no choice in this matter. That puts the matter of total free will to rest.