Guest guest Posted March 17, 2000 Report Share Posted March 17, 2000 At 03:04 PM 3/17/00 -0800, Tony O'Clery wrote: >Tony O'Clery <aoclery >Happy St Patrick's day to you. > >Love and Om Namah Sivaya, Tony. Tony, do you know how to spell G-e-n-o-c-i-d-e? As previously mentioned, there are not and have never been snakes in Ireland. The Serpents, he drove into the sea, were the Witches of Goddess Bridget, whose symbol, (of course) was the Serpent. The Kundalini Serpent. Healers and midwives, who drowned themselves in the ocean, holding hands and singing praises to the Goddess, rather than be converted to Christianity. At that time, the Church believed that illness and pain in childbirth was the punishment of an angry God. These women would rather drown, than be burnt to death, or convert, and see suffering and not give the mercy of healing. St. Patrick's boast was a lament of women in labor, first. St. Patrick, would be one of those intolerant missionaries the Pope was apologising for, last week. Happy "Bring Back the Snakes" day!! Blessings! Mystress Angelique Serpent, http://www.domin8rex.com Vancouver, B.C., Canada. Officially the most beautiful city in the world. 8) :0 ;P |* 8D <<<< I would rather live in a world where my life is surrounded by mystery <<<< than live in a world so small that my mind could comprehend it. <<<< -- Harry Emerson Fosdick Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 18, 2000 Report Share Posted March 18, 2000 Namaste Angelique, et al, Perhaps you are right, however it is just a 'National Day', to celebrate culture have a good time etc, relax. I hold no candle for the Church,but I don't hate it either, it was well beaten out of me at The Irish Christian Brother's School and elsewhere. However it is a crutch, for many, and to a one-legged person a crutch is very useful. The esoteric teachings of Christianity are as valid as any other. Also some of the exoteric as well! It is all in the mind of the beholder. St John of the Cross, and Teresa of Avila came out of it after all!!!Jivanmuktas by the sound of it. Then we have Theresa Neuman, is it?, living on just prana!! St Patrick or Magonis, did not introduce Christianity to Ireland anyway, he came a few hundred years afterwards, and there is much myth about him. It is interesting that in 500-550 A.D. when Colum Cille was building a church, one of the monks wanted to be sacrificed in the Druidic fashion under the 'corner stone'. Indicating that many Druids remained in the Celtic Church until it was realigned with Rome at either the Council of Trent or the Synod of Whitby, I will have to look it up. St Brigid herself, not the Goddess, was both a nun and a Druidess, as is indicated by Brigid's Cross,(the Goddesses Cross), which in fact is a swastika. She gave this to her father as he was dying to remind of the eternal wheel of rebirth. This cross is now the flag of St Patrick and is part of the British 'Union Jack', you can tell by the thinner red cross being out of alignment. Druidism survived perhaps until today in Ireland. It is interesting that one of the Goddesses is named Calaigh, pronounded Kali, and looks similar to the Hindu version. She was recognised by villagers until comparatively recently. Om Namah Sivaya, Tony. --- Mystress Angelique Serpent <serpent wrote: > At 03:04 PM 3/17/00 -0800, Tony O'Clery wrote: > >Tony O'Clery <aoclery > >Happy St Patrick's day to you. > > > >Love and Om Namah Sivaya, Tony. > > Tony, do you know how to spell G-e-n-o-c-i-d-e? > As previously mentioned, there are not and have > never been snakes in > Ireland. > > The Serpents, he drove into the sea, were the > Witches of Goddess Bridget, > whose symbol, (of course) was the Serpent. The > Kundalini Serpent. Healers > and midwives, who drowned themselves in the ocean, > holding hands and > singing praises to the Goddess, rather than be > converted to Christianity. > At that time, the Church believed that illness and > pain in childbirth was > the punishment of an angry God. These women would > rather drown, than be > burnt to death, or convert, and see suffering and > not give the mercy of > healing. St. Patrick's boast was a lament of women > in labor, first. > > St. Patrick, would be one of those intolerant > missionaries the Pope was > apologising for, last week. > > Happy "Bring Back the Snakes" day!! > Blessings! ===== http://members.xoom.com/aoclery/sanskritglos.htm ASATHO MA SATH GAMAYA, From the unreal lead me to the real, THAMASO MA JYOTHIR GAMAYA, From darkness, lead me to light, MRITHYOR MA AMRITAM GAMAYA.From death, lead me to immortality. OM, SHANTI SHANTI SHANTI. Om, Peace Peace Peace. Talk to your friends online with Messenger. http://im. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.