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Christianity


               
2025 Apr 20, 1:25pm   1,574 views  61 comments

by The_Deplorable   follow (1)  

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23   Patrick   2025 Aug 15, 8:02pm  

The_Deplorable says






I read a Community Note on X which said it's actually only one town in Spain doing that. Still, a start.
35   The_Deplorable   2025 Sep 13, 9:24pm  

One of Charlie Kirk's last videos was to honour the Blessed Virgin Mary and to tell Protestants and Evangelicals to honour her more He called her the solution to 'toxic feminism' https://x.com/CatholicArena/status/1965886123999363506

The following hymn was written by Saint Nektarios in the 19th century while serving as a teacher in a school for future priests in Greece:
"Agni Parthene "Pure Virgin" (Greek with English translation)" - Rejoice, O Bride Unwedded
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZwIE955Zak

and another rendition from a choir of monks in a Russian Monastery: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faVt3ZoBNFA
38   KgK one   2025 Sep 16, 7:29pm  

This guy is going to upset some people. He compares christian vs islam in number of killings. https://youtu.be/4WrYP1UkndQ
45   KgK one   2025 Oct 30, 1:44pm  

Is this real? What ritual is this?
Russian orthodox ?

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DO_zFVvE3zc/
48   The_Deplorable   2025 Nov 2, 2:29pm  

I came across this video today claiming to be National Anthem Of The Byzantine Empire and... no, it is not the Byzantine national anthem. It is a Greek Orthodox hymn to the virgin Mary called "Ti Ipermaho" meaning (roughly) "To the protector general" It was composed about 1,400 years ago.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mQBfTdI4U8
49   Blue   2025 Nov 2, 9:00pm  

The_Deplorable says





https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZwIE955Zak

The first word Agni sounds very familiar and translated to Sanskrit and got the same word from Polish and Greek! It means fire. In some contexts, the word fire is used to describe purity.
AI describes:
Polish and Sanskrit share similarities because they are both Indo-European languages that evolved from a common ancestor, Proto-Indo-European (PIE). This deep linguistic relationship is evident in some shared vocabulary, such as "ogień" (Polish for fire) and "agni" (Sanskrit for fire), and in structural similarities in their grammar. Other Indo-European languages, like English, Latin, and Greek, also share this common origin with Polish and Sanskrit.

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