From: johnty on
On 11 Aug, 18:43, Darth Simian
<great_sage_equal_of_heav...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:

>
>     The notion that, by eating the flesh, or particularly by drinking
> the blood, of another living being, a man absorbs his nature or life
> into his own, is one which appears among primitive peoples in many
> forms.
>

Not dissimilar to the catholic eucharist, then.


From: Aaron on
On Thu, 12 Aug 2010 02:37:42 -0700 (PDT), johnty <johnty1(a)hotmail.com>
wrote:

>On 11 Aug, 18:43, Darth Simian
><great_sage_equal_of_heav...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>>
>>     The notion that, by eating the flesh, or particularly by drinking
>> the blood, of another living being, a man absorbs his nature or life
>> into his own, is one which appears among primitive peoples in many
>> forms.
>>
>
>Not dissimilar to the catholic eucharist, then.

The Eucharist is Babylonian (part of the worship of Mithra).

Of course, Monkey Boy has failed to mention anything Masonic. Some
Masons have attempted to link the operative Jewish masons upon whose
work Freemasonry is modeled with their ancestors in slavery in Egypt,
but I doubt that operative masonry was being taught by the generation
living in tents in the wilderness. After that, God moved the Jews
into cities that had already been built, so it would be several
generations before and real skill in masonry was required.

Speculative Masonry while open to men of all positive faiths
(religions venerating evil are opposed to Masonic principles), is
based on Judeo-Christian values and beliefs. There are some Masons
who would like to trace Masonry further back, but there is no factual
basis for this. Even the connection to Solomon's Temple is
philosophical. Freemasonry is the surviving remnant of the guilds who
built the Catholic Cathedrals in Europe and England.



>

From: Baldoni on
It happens that Johnny formulated :
> On 11 Aug, 18:43, Darth Simian
> <great_sage_equal_of_heav...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> � � The notion that, by eating the flesh, or particularly by drinking
>> the blood, of another living being, a man absorbs his nature or life
>> into his own, is one which appears among primitive peoples in many
>> forms.
>>
>
> Not dissimilar to the catholic eucharist, then.

Have you any idea about what "transubstantiation" entails Johnny ?

--
Count Baldoni


From: johnty on
On 12 Aug, 16:12, Baldoni <Baldoni...(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
> It happens that Johnny formulated :
>
> > On 11 Aug, 18:43, Darth Simian
> > <great_sage_equal_of_heav...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> >>     The notion that, by eating the flesh, or particularly by drinking
> >> the blood, of another living being, a man absorbs his nature or life
> >> into his own, is one which appears among primitive peoples in many
> >> forms.
>
> > Not dissimilar to the catholic eucharist, then.
>
> Have you any idea about what "transubstantiation" entails Johnny ?
>


This should be interesting. Please tell me.

Some detailed scientific, verifiable explanation of exactly how it
works will also help me understand more fully. Thanks

From: Baldoni on
johnty presented the following explanation :
> On 12 Aug, 16:12, Baldoni <Baldoni...(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
>> It happens that Johnny formulated :
>>
>>> On 11 Aug, 18:43, Darth Simian
>>> <great_sage_equal_of_heav...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>>>> � � The notion that, by eating the flesh, or particularly by drinking
>>>> the blood, of another living being, a man absorbs his nature or life
>>>> into his own, is one which appears among primitive peoples in many
>>>> forms.
>>
>>> Not dissimilar to the catholic eucharist, then.
>>
>> Have you any idea about what "transubstantiation" entails Johnny ?
>>
>
>
> This should be interesting. Please tell me.
>
> Some detailed scientific, verifiable explanation of exactly how it
> works will also help me understand more fully. Thanks

Look it up old boy as I had to when I had to write a 6000 word essay on
the subject as a scholar in Barcelona many years past.

--
Count Baldoni