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The Universal Tales of Isaac Midnight are reflections of spiritual situations here on earth and Saving Safona is no exception. Similar to the first Planetary Prince defaulting on this world, Safona's Prince has deluded himself into serious error affecting the diverse mortals under his guidance. In this case, his superiors were not the ones to mislead him such as Satan; Lucifer's associate did this world's Planetary Prince. Safona's Planetary Prince did all by himself.
TGS Reprints this rare translation of the New Testament, and this edition includes a brief history of the New Testament translations. THIS is not a work of compromises, or of conjectural interpretations of the sacred Scriptures, neither is it a paraphrase, but a strict literal rendering.
TGS Reprints this rare translation of the New Testament, and this edition includes a brief history of the New Testament translations. THIS is not a work of compromises, or of conjectural interpretations of the sacred Scriptures, neither is it a paraphrase, but a strict literal rendering.
Fragments of some lost verses (sayings) of Jesus, from a Greek papyri discovered in Libya in 1897, at the lost city of Oxyrhynchite.
I have been led into a train of thought, having as its basis a more philosophical treatment of the meaning of the scarab
Oppression for your beliefs has been a millstone around humanity's neck for many centuries. Christianity touts Justin's Martyrs for their oppression, Freethinkers are attacked and ridiculed by Christians, but little is heard about the torture and oppression that Masons have suffered throughout the centuries. This book opens this subject and reveals that hidden history.
MUCH to the author's surprise, and (if he may say so without additional offence) considerably to his amusement, he finds that his sketch of official life, introductory to THE SCARLET LETTER, has created an unprecedented excitement in the respectable community immediately around him. It could hardly have been more violent, indeed, had he burned down the Custom-House, and quenched its last smoking ember in the blood of a certain venerable personage, against whom he is supposed to cherish a peculiar malevolence.
A dissertation upon the employment of excrementitious remedial agents in religion, therapeutics, divination, witchcraft, love-philters, etc., in all parts of the globe.
A dissertation upon the employment of excrementitious remedial agents in religion, therapeutics, divination, witchcraft, love-philters, etc., in all parts of the globe.
This Discourse some years after falling into the hands of some Learned men, had the good luck to be so favourably receiv'd, and advantageously spoken of by them, that having had more then ordinary Invitations given me to make it publick, I thought fit to review it, that I might retrench some things that seem'd not so fit to be shewn to every Reader.
A careful perusal of this first English translation of the primitive text of "Job," "Koheleth," and the "Sayings of Agur" will, I doubt not, satisfy the most orthodox reader that I am fully warranted in characterising their authors as Sceptics. The epithet, I confess, may prove distasteful to many, but the truth, I trust, will be welcome to all.
Vintage (or Victorian) erotic fiction. A series of letters between two young girls describing their sexual awakening and adventures into all kinds of sexual practices.
Those who are of opinion that the historical realities at the root of Christianity, lie beyond the jurisdiction of science, need not be considered. Those who are convinced that the evidence is, and must always remain, insufficient to support any definite conclusion, are justified in ignoring the subject. They must be content to put up with that reproach of being mere destroyers...
FOR more than a thousand years, the great majority of the most highly civilised and instructed nations in the world have confidently believed and passionately maintained that certain writings, which they entitle sacred, occupy a unique position in literature, in that they possess an authority, different in kind, and immeasurably superior in weight, to that of all other books.
YOU who are skilled in Alchemy, and as many others as promise yourselves great riches or chiefly desire to make gold and silver, which Alchemy in different ways promises and teaches; equally, too, you who willingly undergo toil and vexations, and wish not to be freed from them, until you have attained your rewards, and the fulfilment of the promises made to you; experience teaches this every day, that out of thousands of you not even one accomplishes his desire. Is this a failure of Nature or of Art? I say, no; but it is rather the fault of fate, or of the unskilfulness of the operator.






















