LLAVE DE DAVID/SALOMON/ SEÑAL DE JONAS / REINA DE ETIOPIA/ GIZE / ORION / IGLESIA COPTA / JUAN MARCOS
LLEGADA A LA LUNA EN EL 153 ANIVERSARIO DE LA INDEPENDENCIA ARGENTINA. ESTO EXPLICA DEL PORQUE "EL DIA DEL AMIGO" LO INVENTO UN ARGENTINO.
¿PORQUE LA DIVINIDAD DISEÑO CON ESTE DISEÑO GEOMETRICO LOS DOS OJOS QUE TENEMOS? ¿QUE MENSAJE NOS QUIERE DAR YHWH? VESICA PISCES TIENE RELACION CON EL NUMERO 153.
EL 1 DE MAYO DE 1776=1/5/1+7+7+6=21=2+1=3 OSEA 1/5/3
"porque, cuando Jonás estaba en la barriga del pez tres días y tres noches, así el Hijo de Hombre estará en el corazón de la tierra tres días y tres noches".
- Mateo12:40
EFECTIVAMENTE 1969-1816=153
1816 (ANAGRAMA DE PHI=1.618)
1816=227X8
¿LA PREGUNTA ES DEL PORQUE DE LA RELACION CON LA ARGENTINA?
ARGENTINA/ ARGENTUM/ PLATA/ PUERTA DE PLATA / ORION-MERCURIO / HYDRARGYROS-ARGYROS=PLATA / SECRETO DETRAS DEL PAPA ARGENTINO
La particularidad de esta línea de perihelio/afelio de Mercurio es que está alineada con la Línea fija formada por Orión/Sol/CentroGaláctico, y como la Tierra pasa cada 19 de junio entre el Sol y el Centro galáctico, eso significa que también en ese día pasa frente al afelio de la órbita Mercurio, y frente al perihelio el 19 de diciembre.
Si "eliminamos" la excentricidad y convertimos la órbita de Mercurio es un círculo racional perfectamente equidistante del Sol, resulta que la órbita de Mercurio inscribe a un pentágono (inscrito en la órbita "perfeccionada" de Mercurio), y este pentágono es la figura interior que resulta de la estrella de 5 puntas formada por la Tierra y Venus durante 8 órbitas de la Tierra y 13 de Venus (8 años), lo cual es el Ciclo Pentagonal.
María Luisa Tagle, vicepresidenta de la Corporación Voto Nacional O’Higgins, nos cuenta la conmemoración número 201 del Voto; una tradición que en los últimos años ha ido retomando importancia, y su vinculación del pueblo chileno a la Virgen del Carmen, patrona del país.
“El Voto O’Higgins viene del tiempo de la Reconquista, después del desastre de la batalla de Cancha Rayada. La ciudadanía o más bien los patriotas vivían un tiempo de incertidumbre y no sabían si los españoles o realistas finalmente iban a triunfar en la guerra de la independencia”, a María Luisa le brillan los ojos mientras va relatando.
“Lo más impresionante y relevante de este episodio histórico, es que es el pueblo de Santiago que le piden a las autoridades de la iglesia y civiles que se haga una promesa a la Virgen del Carmen y que ella los auxilie en estos difíciles momentos. Aquí se ve la fe profunda del pueblo chileno en la Carmelita, una fe que sigue viva a pesar de todo”.
La historia cuenta que las cofradías, mujeres, niños, patriotas se reúnen en la Catedral de Santiago y le piden a la Virgen del Carmen que libere a Chile de la corona española, y se comprometen a que donde se produzca la batalla final se le construirá un santuario.
El 5 de abril de 1818 se enfrentan los ejércitos, patriotas y realistas, en Maipú. “En medio de la batalla los soldados chilenos le suplican y claman a la Virgen del Carmen que la victoria sea del pueblo. Bernardo O’Higgins llega al final de la batalla, recordemos que venía con un brazo con cabestrillo por las heridas sufridas en Cancha Rayada. Se gana la batalla y Chile se convierte en una república”, rememora la vicepresidenta de la Corporación Voto Nacional O’Higgins.
Imágenes de la Virgen del Carmen aquí (hacer click en galería):
Fue solo hasta 1948 cuando se pudo cumplir la promesa hecha por los patriotas a la Carmelita. El cardenal José María Caro dijo: “Debemos cumplir la promesa a la Virgen. No se puede seguir esperando más”. Así se dio comienzo a la construcción del Santuario de Maipú.
«Durante toda mi vida la Virgen del Carmen me ha acompañado y en estos 201 años me toca acompañarla a mí ahora. Es nuestra patrona, soy fiel y devota de ella», comenta emocionada María Inés López de la comuna de Maipú.
El testimonio de María Inés refleja la espiritualidad y fe que miles de chilenos tienen en la Carmelita. Para Guillermo Salas, cuasimodista, la Patrona de Chile es quien “salvó nuestra patria y por eso nosotros la veneramos siempre”.
María Luisa Tagle, vicepresidenta de la Corporación Voto Nacional O’Higgins, nos cuenta la conmemoración número 201 del Voto; una tradición que en los últimos años ha ido retomando importancia, y su vinculación del pueblo chileno a la Virgen del Carmen, patrona del país.
“El Voto O’Higgins viene del tiempo de la Reconquista, después del desastre de la batalla de Cancha Rayada. La ciudadanía o más bien los patriotas vivían un tiempo de incertidumbre y no sabían si los españoles o realistas finalmente iban a triunfar en la guerra de la independencia”, a María Luisa le brillan los ojos mientras va relatando.
“Lo más impresionante y relevante de este episodio histórico, es que es el pueblo de Santiago que le piden a las autoridades de la iglesia y civiles que se haga una promesa a la Virgen del Carmen y que ella los auxilie en estos difíciles momentos. Aquí se ve la fe profunda del pueblo chileno en la Carmelita, una fe que sigue viva a pesar de todo”.
La historia cuenta que las cofradías, mujeres, niños, patriotas se reúnen en la Catedral de Santiago y le piden a la Virgen del Carmen que libere a Chile de la corona española, y se comprometen a que donde se produzca la batalla final se le construirá un santuario.
El 5 de abril de 1818 se enfrentan los ejércitos, patriotas y realistas, en Maipú. “En medio de la batalla los soldados chilenos le suplican y claman a la Virgen del Carmen que la victoria sea del pueblo. Bernardo O’Higgins llega al final de la batalla, recordemos que venía con un brazo con cabestrillo por las heridas sufridas en Cancha Rayada. Se gana la batalla y Chile se convierte en una república”, rememora la vicepresidenta de la Corporación Voto Nacional O’Higgins.
Imágenes de la Virgen del Carmen aquí (hacer click en galería):
Fue solo hasta 1948 cuando se pudo cumplir la promesa hecha por los patriotas a la Carmelita. El cardenal José María Caro dijo: “Debemos cumplir la promesa a la Virgen. No se puede seguir esperando más”. Así se dio comienzo a la construcción del Santuario de Maipú.
«Durante toda mi vida la Virgen del Carmen me ha acompañado y en estos 201 años me toca acompañarla a mí ahora. Es nuestra patrona, soy fiel y devota de ella», comenta emocionada María Inés López de la comuna de Maipú.
El testimonio de María Inés refleja la espiritualidad y fe que miles de chilenos tienen en la Carmelita. Para Guillermo Salas, cuasimodista, la Patrona de Chile es quien “salvó nuestra patria y por eso nosotros la veneramos siempre”.
Esta devoción se difundió por toda Europa y contó con Santos de la talla de San Juan de la Cruz y Santa Teresa; no es extraño que llegara a América y acompañara el despertar a la fe de los originarios que la veneraron desde mediados del siglo XVI. Ya en el siglo XVIII se encuentra en Mendoza la imagen que hoy veneramos, pues don Pedro de Núñez “caballero de gran fortuna y devoción”, donó la imagen y todo lo necesario para el culto de la Virgen del Carmen. Primero estuvo en el templo de los Padres Jesuitas estando fundada la Cofradía. En 1.776, a raíz de la expulsión de la Orden, la imagen fue trasladada a San Francisco, desde donde presidiría una de las más bellas jornadas de la historia de nuestra patria.
Llega el año 1814, momento en el que San Martín hará de los pacíficos habitantes de Cuyo, heroicos soldados forjadores de libertad, pero ellos necesitarán una Madre que los ampare y de sentido a tanto sacrificio. Es de todos conocida la profunda devoción que el Libertador profesó a la Virgen y que lo hizo nombrarla Generala de su Ejército, superando los respetos humanos de una época en la que el liberalismo había impuesto la idea de que “la religión es asunto privado”. Tanta importancia dio al tema, que lo decidió con su Estado Mayor, según dice Espejo en su obra “El Paso de los Andes”. La devoción a la Virgen del Carmen estaba muy arraigada en Cuyo y casi todos los soldados llevaban su escapulario, por eso fue ella la que tuvo preferencia” dice, y más adelante describe la brillante ceremonia (5 de enero de 1817) durante la cual San Martín le entrega su bastón de mando, la nombra Generala, y hace bendecir también la Bandera de los Andes, “saludada por dianas y la banda con cajas y clarines, mientras rompía una salva de veintiún cañonazos, ante el ejército de gran gala y todo el pueblo de Mendoza”. Más tarde, después de sus triunfos, entregará definitivamente su bastón, esta vez en el silencio que acompaña a todo lo grande y dejando aquella conocida carta: ”la protección que ha prestado al Ejército de los Andes su Patrona y Generala la Virgen del Carmen son demasiado visibles...” Ambas reliquias, el bastón y la carta, se conservan hoy en el Camarín de la Virgen, como mudos testigos de la parte que Ella tuvo en la grandeza de alma de nuestro Libertador. Siendo Generala del Ejército Argentino, junto a la banda, acompaña a la imagen nuestra bandera. Como así también las banderas de Perú y Chile, al ser esta advocación Patrona de los 2 países vecinos.
El año 1 de este calendario es la Hégira, cuando Mahoma huyó de La Meca a medina, el 16 de julio de 622, según el calendario gregoriano. En cuanto al judaísmo, la historia oficial le atribuye la versión final de este calendario al sabio Hilel II, en el año 359 de la era cristiana.
It is also known as the Monastery of Our Lady of Mount Carmelfor monks, to distinguish it from the nearby Monastery of Our Lady of Mount Carmel for nuns, located higher up on Mount Carmel.
In the 12th century, during the Kingdom of Jerusalem rule of the region, groups of religious hermits began to inhabit the caves of this area in imitation of Elijah the Prophet. In the early 13th century, their leader and prior (referred to in the rule only as 'Brother B', although sometimes claimed despite an absence of supporting evidence to be either Saint Brocard or Saint Bertold) asked the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Albert Avogadro, to provide the group with a written rule of life, which he did.
This was the originating act of the Order, who took the name 'Order of the Brothers of Our Lady of Mount Carmel' or Carmelites. An oratory was dedicated to the Virgin Mary in her aspect of Our Lady, Star of the Sea, the latter part of which translates in Latin to Stella Maris. Within a few decades, when the capital of the CrusaderKingdom of Jerusalem, Acre, fell in 1291 to the Mamluks, these monastic hermits were forced to leave the Holy Land. The Carmelite order spread throughout Europe, where, from 1238 onwards, the Order had begun to found houses -- at the end of Saint Louis' first crusade to the Holy Land in 1254, he had taken six Carmelites back to France with him.
In 1631 the Discalced branch of the Order returned to the Holy Land, led by the Venerable Father Prosper. He had a small monastery constructed on the promontory at Mount Carmel, close to the lighthouse[dubious– discuss], and the friars lived there until 1761, when Zahir al-Umar, the then effectively independent ruler of Galilee, ordered them to vacate the site and demolish the monastery.
Current location: first building (1761-1821)[edit]
This new church was seriously damaged in Napoleon's 1799 campaign. Sick and wounded French soldiers were accommodated in the monastery, and when Napoleon withdrew, the Turks slaughtered them and drove out the friars.
The monument to Napoleon's soldiers
In 1821, Abdullah Pasha of Acre ordered the ruined church to be totally destroyed, so that it could not serve as a fort for his enemies, while he attacked Jerusalem. The masonry was used to build Abdullah Pasha's summer palace and a lighthouse,[2] which were sold back to the Carmelite order in 1846.[3][dubious– discuss]
Entrance to the MonasteryDome of the Stella Maris MonasteryChurch interior with the venerated cave visible under the altar
The current church and monastery, built under the orders of Brother Cassini of the Order, was opened in 1836. Three years later Pope Gregory XVI bestowed the title of Minor Basilica on the sanctuary, and it is now known as "Stella Maris", meaning Star of the Sea. For much of the 20th century it was occupied by the military, first the British, and later the Israelis, but at the end of their lease it was handed back to the Order.[clarification needed]
The monastery serves as a centre of Carmelite spirituality throughout the world. The symbol of the Order is mounted right above the entrance door. During the erection of the church, friars were assaulted by their neighbors and had to defend their property and the church guests. As a result, the monastery's ground floor is built out of thick walls with few and small openings covered by bars.
The monastery's main church resembles the shape of a cross. Its dome is decorated by colorful paintings based on motifs from both the Old and New Testament: Elijah rising to heaven, David stringing his harp, the prophet Isaiah, the Holy Family and the Four Evangelists. Latin inscriptions of biblical verses are written around the dome.
The altar stands on an elevated platform situated above a small cave associated with Elijah. The cave can be reached from the nave by descending a few steps and holds a stone altar with a small statue of Prophet Elijah. The altar above the cave is dominated by a statue of the Virgin Mary carrying Jesus in her lap and holding the Scapular in her right hand, known as Our Lady of the Scapular. The Blessed Virgin Mary is the patroness of the Carmelites, and as such is known as "Our Lady of Mount Carmel".
Main church altar with the statue of Our Lady of Mount Carmel.Stella Maris monastery at the end of the 19th century
New embossments dedicated to Carmelite figures are hoisted on all four corners of the central hall. On the western wall of the church is a large organ that is played during religious ceremonies and at special church music concerts.
During the First World War, the statue of Our Lady of the Scapular, holding Baby Jesus and the scapular, was removed from the church and placed in a safer place in Haifa.[4] After the war, in 1919, it was brought back to its place in a small procession.[4] Since then, every first Sunday after Easter, on the same date as in 1919, what has become the second largest Catholic procession of the Holy Land after the Palm Sunday procession in Jerusalem, takes place between downtown Haifa and Stella Maris, up the western slope of the Carmel.[4] Large crowds of Catholic Christians, including such of eastern rites, are led by the Latin Patriarch and other Church leaders in accompanying the statue on its way.[4]
Shmuel Oswald Rufeisen (1922–1998), Jewish convert to Christianity, Carmelite friar at Stella Maris, who was refused Israeli citizenship under the Law of Return
Pope Francis waves to the crowd from the Speakers Balcony at the US Capitol, September 24, 2015, in Washington, DC. Pool/Getty Images
If President Barack Obama had delivered the text of Pope Francis’s speech to Congress Thursday as a State of the Union address, he would have risked being denounced by Republicans as a socialist.
While most Republicans chose not to complain, and Democrats tried not to gloat, Francis’s speech to Congress was stunning in the breadth, depth, and conviction of its progressivism. That might not have been fully and immediately appreciated by everyone in the House chamber because the combination of Francis’s sotto voce delivery and his heavily accented English made it difficult, lawmakers said, to grasp everything he was saying.
But there was no mistaking his thrust. He made detailed arguments for openness to immigrants, addressing the human roots of climate change, closing the gap between the rich and the poor, and ending the death penalty — all of which invigorated the Democrats in the room.
“It was pretty progressive. He had a little right-to-life stuff in it,” Rep. James Clyburn, the third-ranking House Democrat, said as he cracked a smile thinking about how Republicans would receive the speech. “That’s enough for them.”
The pope isn’t going to change many hearts and minds in the badly divided Congress, lawmakers said, but the moment provided a brief respite from political warfare. Several presidential candidates, including Sens. Bernie Sanders, Lindsey Graham, Marco Rubio, and Ted Cruz, as well as Ben Carson, attended.
Rubio, a Roman Catholic, said in a brief interview that Francis “struck the right tone.” Sanders, a self-described socialist, seemed to like the content even more.
“Pope Francis is clearly one of the important religious and moral leaders not only in the world today but in modern history,” he said in a statement released after the speech. “He forces us to address some of the major issues facing humanity: war, income and wealth inequality, poverty, unemployment, greed, the death penalty and other issues that too many prefer to ignore.”
Democrats were eager enough to present Congress as united that they joined a Republican-led standing ovation when Francis told lawmakers of “our responsibility to protect and defend human life at every state of its development.” Several of them said it was out of respect for the pope. But there was another good reason: It strengthened the perception that the whole speech — most of which they liked — carried unifying themes.
Unity was good for Democrats because the speech favored their policies
Francis was interrupted a few times by whoops from the Democratic side of the chamber — by Steve Cohen, a Jewish Memphis Democrat who got excited about Francis’s mention of the Golden Rule; by New York’s Nydia Velázquez when he called for an end to the death penalty; and by Philadelphia Rep. Chaka Fattah when he mentioned his upcoming visit to that city. The Republicans in the room were a bit more staid. Cruz often appeared unmoved during moments when Rubio, who was sitting nearby, applauded. That was the case when Francis asked whether the greater opportunities sought by past generations of immigrants are “not what we want for our own children?”
It was a home crowd. Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ) had announced he would boycott the event over climate change, and there was a brief murmur when it became obvious that three conservative Catholic Supreme Court justices — Antonin Scalia, Samuel Alito, and Clarence Thomas — had not shown up. But it seemed that everyone in attendance just wanted to catch a glimpse of Francis and hear what he had to say.
Big-name guests filed into the public galleries above the House chamber long before the pope’s arrival: Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Rep. Gabby Giffords, mega-donor Tom Steyer, and Carson. House members filled the seats in their chamber, followed by the Senate and four Supreme Court justices. At about a minute past 10 am, Francis strode down the center aisle of the House chamber, clad in his familiar white robe and skullcap.
Lawmakers, who had been admonished not to touch the pope, refrained from trying to shake his hand or pat his back. There was no rush to crowd him the way members of Congress try to get into pictures with the president during the annual State of the Union address. When he got to the end of the aisle, he quietly shook hands with Secretary of State John Kerry and then made his way to the rostrum.
Samantha Power, the US ambassador to the UN, pulled out a baby blue iPhone and began snapping pictures. Though she later took to Twitter to commemorate the moment, Power hadn’t posted any of her photos by midday.
For his part, Francis warmed up the audience by describing America as “the land of the free and the home of the brave.” He was slow to move into more politically charged territory but unimpeded when he did. There were 10 standing ovations after his initial greeting, and they were bipartisan.
Francis tackled tough issues at the heart of the US political debate and gently admonished lawmakers to build bridges
At times, Francis seemed to be speaking directly into the headlines and newscasts of the day.
Less than a week after Carson said that America shouldn’t elect a Muslim president, Francis warned that “a delicate balance is required to combat violence perpetrated in the name of a religion, an ideology or an economic system, while also safeguarding religious freedom, intellectual freedom and individual freedoms.”
As Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump promises to build a wall between Mexico and the US, and to prevent Syrian refugees from being admitted to America, Francis compared the current refugee crisis to the one that arose in World War II and said that “we the people of this continent are not fearful of foreigners, because most of us were once foreigners.” That drew a standing ovation. Rubio, who has shifted his emphasis on immigration reform over time, leaped to his feet.
And while Democrats continue to bask in this summer’s Supreme Court decision protecting same-sex marriage, the pope said he was concerned that “fundamental relationships are being called into question, as is the very basis of marriage and the family.” The issue that caused the biggest stir before the speech — climate change — factored prominently in Francis’s remarks. He spoke of the human roots of global warming and said, “I am convinced we can make a difference.”
But perhaps the most unexpected run in the speech was an admonishment as gentle as it was clear: Politics is about building bridges, not destroying them. Francis never mentioned the international nuclear nonproliferation deal with Iran by name or the gridlock in American politics, but he seemed to be speak to both matters.
“When countries which have been at odds resume the path of dialogue — a dialogue which may have been interrupted for the most legitimate of reasons — new opportunities open up for all,” he said. “A good political leader is one who, with the interests of all in mind, seizes the moment in a spirit of openness and pragmatism. A good political leader always opts to initiate processes rather than possessing spaces.”
Pennsylvania Republican Rep. Joe Pitts, speaking about the pope’s limited remarks on abortion and same-sex marriage, said he was displeased that Francis had been “unfortunately politically correct.”
For liberals, though, he was simply correct about politics.