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General: CODIGO DA VINCI=BIBLIA=FRANCO MASONERIA=IGLESIA CATOLICA=ALTO NIVEL CIENTIFICO
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martes, 20 de marzo de 2012
De izquierda a derecha: Galileo Galilei, Marie Curie, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Isaac Newton, Louis Pasteur, Stephen Hawking, Albert Einstein, Carl Sagan, Thomas Edison, Aristoteles, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Richard Dawkins y Charles Darwin.
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Desde que Leonardo concluyó su célebre pintura en el siglo XV, se han tejido numerosos mitos y leyendas alrededor de esta obra de arte, considerada por los críticos como su “obra más serena y alejada del mundo temporal” y diseñada para poder ser observada en su totalidad y tener una sensación de inmersión. De partida, llama la atención la configuración de sus protagonistas: Jesús ocupa el centro de la escena, y a sus lados existe un equilibrio con seis discípulos a cada lado, agrupados de tres en tres. Los discípulos, según algunos estudiosos, estarían agrupados en “rectángulos”, cuyo significado es unidad y estabilidad. En el centro está Jesús y, al contrario que todos los demás, se encuentra circunscrito en un “triángulo equilátero”, que significa equilibrio perfecto, el triángulo donde reside la majestad y el poder de Dios. El número tres, por lo demás, representa al hombre (cuerpo, mente y espíritu) y a la deidad (Padre, Hijo y Espíritu Santo).
Al fondo del cuadro se puede observar tres ventanales que iluminan la parte central donde está Jesús y donde puede entreverse un paisaje que para algunos simbolizaría el Paraíso (algunos estudios recientes dicen que este paisaje podría corresponder a la zona norte del lago Como, en Italia). Además, con respecto a Judas Iscariote, se comenta que el modelo que Leonardo utilizó fue un verdadero criminal, pues da Vinci habría visitado distintas cárceles de Milán para tales efectos. Algunos también han postulado que el propio Leonardo Da Vinci se pintó a sí mismo en el rol del apóstol Judas Tadeo (un gran predicador que evangelizó a muchos pueblos y que fue el portador de la Sábana Santa después de la muerte de Cristo), aunque hay que consignar que la pintura data de 1495-1497, y en ese tiempo Leonardo tenía 45 años, mientras que el aspecto del apóstol, la penúltima figura de izquierda a derecha, es de mucha más edad.
La figura de Judas Tadeo, que en el extremo derecho del cuadro aparece conversando con el mismo Simón el Zelote, estaría basada por su parte en el filósofo Platón, un sabio que debido a sus planteamientos con respecto a la divinidad no era muy querido por la iglesia. Judas Tadeo y Simón el Zelote – o Da Vinci y Platón para algunos- a primera vista aparecen en “La última cena” manteniendo un tranquilo diálogo, ajenos a lo que sucede en la mesa, al revuelo creado, como si ellos estuvieran hablando de cosas más trascendentales e importantes.
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papa numero 266
9 MESES LUNARES=266 DIAS
FR-ANC-ISCO / J-ANUK-A
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FRANCISCO (FATIMA)=FRANCIA=CERN
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SE CONFIRMA EL NEXO DEL CERN CON FRANCIA O FRANCISCO (FATIMA).
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22/7=3.14
¿USTED ES UN NARCISISTA QUE NO CREE EN LA CIENCIA?
MOON=RACHEL
YELLOW=JACOB=ISRAEL
RED=BENJAMIN
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ISLA SAN GIORGIO (VENECIA)=GEORGE LEMAITRE
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Cathedral of the Madeleine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Cathedral of the Madeleine is a Roman Catholic church in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States. It was completed in 1909 and currently serves as the cathedral, or mother church, of the Diocese of Salt Lake City. It is the only cathedral in the U.S. under the patronage of St. Mary Magdalene.
Description[edit]
The cathedral was built under the direction of Lawrence Scanlan, the first bishop of Salt Lake City, who dedicated it to St. Mary Magdalene.[2] It was designed by architects Carl M. Neuhausen and Bernard O. Mecklenburg. The exterior is predominantly a Neo-Romanesque design, while the inside displays more Neo-Gothic details. Construction began in 1900 and was completed in 1909. It was dedicated by James Cardinal Gibbons, Archbishop of Baltimore.
It is theorized that Bishop Scanlan chose Mary Magdalene as the patron saint of the Diocese of Salt Lake because her feast day is on July 22, two days before Pioneer Day, a celebration commemorating the arrival of the Mormon pioneers in Salt Lake Valley, so that Catholics would have something to celebrate alongside the region's dominant faith.[3]
The interior of the cathedral was created under the direction of Joseph S. Glass, the second bishop of Salt Lake. Bishop Glass enlisted John Theodore Comes, one of the preeminent architects in the country, to decorate the interior of the cathedral. His plans for the interior were largely based upon the Spanish Gothic style. The colorful murals and polychrome were added at this time, as were the ornate shrines. In 1916, Bishop Glass also changed the name of the cathedral to the French spelling after visiting her purported tomb.[2]
In the 1970s, the exterior of the building was restored, and between 1991 and 1993, the interior of the cathedral was renovated and restored under Bishop William K. Weigand. This included not only the removal of dust and dirt and restoration of the interior but also changes to the liturgical elements of the cathedral to bring them into conformity with certain widespread changes in liturgical practice that developed after the Second Vatican Council.
This included constructing a new altar, moving the cathedra, creating a separate chapel for the Blessed Sacrament, and adding an ample baptismal font. The Blessed Sacrament Chapel also contains the tomb of Bishop Scanlan.[4] Resting atop the tomb is a case containing a small relic of Saint Mary Magdalene. The cathedral in Salt Lake City and the Basilica of Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume in France are the only cathedrals in the world holding first-class relics of the saint and are named in her honor.[5] The major restoration of the interior of the cathedral was accomplished through the vision of Monsignor M. Francis Mannion.[6]
The cathedral is home to the only co-educational Catholic Choir School in the United States. The Madeleine Choir School, established in 1996, now serves over 400 students in Pre-Kindergarten through Grade Eight.[7] The Cathedral Choir has recorded several CDs and routinely tours both nationally and internationally. In addition to singing daily services at the Cathedral of the Madeleine, choristers have sung at St. Peter's Basilica (Vatican City), Notre Dame de Paris (France), and in churches across the United States of America, Spain, Italy, France, Belgium, and Germany, among other places.[8]
Composer Amédée Tremblay notably served as the church's organist from 1920 to 1925.[9]
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Cathedral of the Madeleine, looking east
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Interior of the cathedral
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salt lake city=alchemy (salt)=dollar=$= LOT S WIFE(SODOMA AND GOMORRA)
Cathedral of the Madeleine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Cathedral of the Madeleine is a Roman Catholic church in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States. It was completed in 1909 and currently serves as the cathedral, or mother church, of the Diocese of Salt Lake City. It is the only cathedral in the U.S. under the patronage of St. Mary Magdalene.
Description[edit]
The cathedral was built under the direction of Lawrence Scanlan, the first bishop of Salt Lake City, who dedicated it to St. Mary Magdalene.[2] It was designed by architects Carl M. Neuhausen and Bernard O. Mecklenburg. The exterior is predominantly a Neo-Romanesque design, while the inside displays more Neo-Gothic details. Construction began in 1900 and was completed in 1909. It was dedicated by James Cardinal Gibbons, Archbishop of Baltimore.
It is theorized that Bishop Scanlan chose Mary Magdalene as the patron saint of the Diocese of Salt Lake because her feast day is on July 22, two days before Pioneer Day, a celebration commemorating the arrival of the Mormon pioneers in Salt Lake Valley, so that Catholics would have something to celebrate alongside the region's dominant faith.[3]
The interior of the cathedral was created under the direction of Joseph S. Glass, the second bishop of Salt Lake. Bishop Glass enlisted John Theodore Comes, one of the preeminent architects in the country, to decorate the interior of the cathedral. His plans for the interior were largely based upon the Spanish Gothic style. The colorful murals and polychrome were added at this time, as were the ornate shrines. In 1916, Bishop Glass also changed the name of the cathedral to the French spelling after visiting her purported tomb.[2]
In the 1970s, the exterior of the building was restored, and between 1991 and 1993, the interior of the cathedral was renovated and restored under Bishop William K. Weigand. This included not only the removal of dust and dirt and restoration of the interior but also changes to the liturgical elements of the cathedral to bring them into conformity with certain widespread changes in liturgical practice that developed after the Second Vatican Council.
This included constructing a new altar, moving the cathedra, creating a separate chapel for the Blessed Sacrament, and adding an ample baptismal font. The Blessed Sacrament Chapel also contains the tomb of Bishop Scanlan.[4] Resting atop the tomb is a case containing a small relic of Saint Mary Magdalene. The cathedral in Salt Lake City and the Basilica of Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume in France are the only cathedrals in the world holding first-class relics of the saint and are named in her honor.[5] The major restoration of the interior of the cathedral was accomplished through the vision of Monsignor M. Francis Mannion.[6]
The cathedral is home to the only co-educational Catholic Choir School in the United States. The Madeleine Choir School, established in 1996, now serves over 400 students in Pre-Kindergarten through Grade Eight.[7] The Cathedral Choir has recorded several CDs and routinely tours both nationally and internationally. In addition to singing daily services at the Cathedral of the Madeleine, choristers have sung at St. Peter's Basilica (Vatican City), Notre Dame de Paris (France), and in churches across the United States of America, Spain, Italy, France, Belgium, and Germany, among other places.[8]
Composer Amédée Tremblay notably served as the church's organist from 1920 to 1925.[9]
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Cathedral of the Madeleine, looking east
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Interior of the cathedral
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