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thesignalreceivers
12-13-2004, 11:10 PM
What do you think about this scripture and what do you think it is saying?

And above the heads of the angels as the firmament (vapor) was the terrible crystal.

Euphoric
12-13-2004, 11:52 PM
what scripture is that? sounds like some kind of halo but it also could be..um..smoke ;) some people think all those descriptions are of alien encounters, so it could be some kind of strange technological gadget too. or maybe he was just really psychotic. who knows!

jacquelyne
12-17-2004, 12:47 AM
I would say talking about the aura as it does look like smoke all around you but it would be the colour of crystal.If its an angel im guessing it would have been a smokey white colour like smokey quartz or gold coloured like citrine.Im just babbling now sorry

thesignalreceivers
01-14-2005, 11:31 PM
Thanks for your input.
I am not used to positive input because I came here from the Christian Message Boards where all replies are the opposite of what I would call Christian.

Did you know that aura which you mentioned comes from the word ore and they are both hebrew words. Ore means light and yet also means herbs and orah means luminousness? Good call. So really if someone says they know something about the aura but they do not eat the herbs we eat, then they canot know what the word means.

REV. 22:21

mr chinnery
01-14-2005, 11:57 PM
Did you know that aura which you mentioned comes from the word ore and they are both hebrew words.

I hate to poop your party guys but-

ore
12c., merger of O.E. ora "ore, unworked metal" (related to ear "earth"); and O.E. ar "brass, copper, bronze," from P.Gmc. *ajiz- (cf. O.N. eir "brass, copper," Ger. ehern "brazen," Goth. aiz "bronze"), from PIE *aus- "gold" (cf. Skt. ayah "metal," Avestan ayo, L. aes "brass"). The two words were not fully assimilated till 17c.; what emerged has the form of ar but the meaning of ora.

From http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?l=o&p=6

aura
1859, "subtle emanation around living beings;" earlier "gentle breeze" (1398), from L. aura "breeze, wind, air," from Gk. aura "breath, breeze," from PIE base *awer-.

Also PIE Proto-Indo-European, the hypothetical reconstructed ancestral language of the Indo-European family. The time scale is much debated, but the most recent date proposed for it is about 5,500 years ago.

So sadly, neither of those words are hebrew; one is Old English and one is PIE (Proto-Indo-European).

Keep trying though!

mr chinnery
01-14-2005, 11:58 PM
Also PIE Proto-Indo-European, the hypothetical reconstructed ancestral language of the Indo-European family. The time scale is much debated, but the most recent date proposed for it is about 5,500 years ago.

Sorry, not my words-from http://www.etymonline.com/abbr.php

kuulbns
01-15-2005, 12:05 AM
GOooooooooo tell it on the mountain,...........