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Post by Malcolm on Nov 7, 2013 19:06:15 GMT -5
The word Hepre (plural Heprew) in Egyptian has various meanings. The initial 'H' is aspirated and so is sometimes transliterated as 'H', 'CH', 'KH', or as per Wallis Budge, 'X'. Usually it is a noun meaning 'Manifestation', 'Creation', or 'a Being'. As a verb it is often translated as 'To Come into Existence', but its main function is the all important verb 'TO BE'. HEPRE IS ALSO THE NAME OF AN EGYPTIAN GOD - Budge: "Xepera the god to whom the property of creating men and things belonged." These examples from Budge's book 'Egyptian Hieroglypics' show some examples of how Hepre - The Scarab glyph - is used in Egyptian see image and click on it to enlarge. Just look at how Budge translates 'Xepera' - 'I AM he who came into being'. Attachments:
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Post by Malcolm on Nov 7, 2013 19:11:49 GMT -5
Robert Feather, author of "The Myster of the Copper Scroll of Qumran" may have been the first to identify the origin of the name Hebrew as coming from the Egyptian 'Heprew' which means 'Creations' - note this is a plural word - the W is the Egyptian plural letter. It is surely so because St.Augustine referred many times to Jesus as being 'The Good Scarabaeus' and it is the Scarab Beetle Hieroglyph that means 'Hepre'. Attachments:
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Post by Malcolm on Nov 7, 2013 19:14:26 GMT -5
The Sun was seen by Egyptians and others throughout the Ancient Middle East as being the source of all creation, hence The God. Attachments:
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Post by Malcolm on Nov 8, 2015 0:38:41 GMT -5
One thing about the name of God, Amen, is the disgusting manner in which it has been treated by Christians making every effort to stop people seeing that they still pray to the very same God. We know that what they are doing is a deliberate deception because the Egyptologist convention when any vowel is not indicated is to insert the letter 'E'. Therefore the Egyptian Letters for the name of God, namely, YMN should be translated as Ymen or Amen. Instead the liars tell us that it is Amun and they say this by emphasizing the 'OO' sound. The Greek/Egyptian Historian though made it clear by giving us the Greek version of the name - AmEnophis - and so used the Greek Vowel, 'E'. There should be no doubt at all. But there is more evidence that they are trying their best to fool us because there was a vowel sound for 'U' in Egyptian - shown by the hieroglyph of a Quail Chick which we actually see in the name of Tutankhamen. The ancients would not have insulted their God by getting the name wrong - they would have written the God Name completely differently with a Water Reed fpr Y an Owl for M, a quail chick for W, and finally a single water ripple for 'N'. But they didn't. They wrote Y MN. One Egyptologist tried to explain it away by saying that the Copts used the letter Omega - letter 'O' - between the M and the N. I asked for proof but was given none. I searched the Net and all I could find was some claim that a Copt had written it that way about a thousand years after it was written in Egyptian. This is false anyway since the Copts didn't really come on the scene until perhaps 150 years after Cleopatra, and that still wouldn't have resulted in 'Amun' but 'Amon'. I then searched for some writing that was contemporary with the Ancient Egyptian script for the name of the God Amen and discovered a cuneiform text written at that very same time, and they wrote the name as Amana. That is nothing like the ridiculous 'Ahmoon' which all proves that the lies are being maintained by a cult that has no respect whatsoever for God. I wonder how they will face their judgement day when asked why they spent years insulting God?
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