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Saturday, June 27, 2009

Hell or Heaven part (1)


Tahu-Dhe's faces
************************************************************************

I really bored...
Holiday is nothing--everyone will kill me--... not a 100%... but I feel like wasting time. Including my aunt is a shopaholic... I'm really tired...
I want activities... interesting ones

I dunno why I write this... I have gotten influence with literature of Hell from All About Bible...

So... I ruin my holiday times only for searching all of this jerk information. But I like it... Am I Crazy? Not, yet. you almost crazy!
I'm not a Jews, I'm not a believer of Judaism pacifism, and I'm not an atheist too!
I just a lil' girl who like to find more and more knowledge... It's just funny... I'd like to... huhuhu..
Thought, my friends would kill me if I post this articles... I don't care! Huhuhuhu!!! JAA!!!!
DO NOT KILL ME! MAN! TEPH! NOM!! WAIIIIII!!!!!!!! NOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!! (Who will post fashion articles?? I won't. Manda, Stef... your job!)
Once again, my grammar is SUCK!
Oh, almost forget...Thanks for wikipedia and many sites that I forgot its name.

xoxo,

sarah.nekoi
Heaven or Hell

I was screaming loudly when I found this!
I read the literature too... I do not understand anything...
confusing...

Seven Archangel (from Apocryphal The Book Of Enoch) :

1. Uriel, one of the holy Angels, who is over the world and over Tartarus.

2. Raphael, one of the holy angels, who is over the spirits of men.

3. Raguel, one of the holy angels who takes vengeance on the world of the luminaries.

4. Michael, one of the holy angels, to wit, he that is set over the best part of mankind and over chaos

5. Saraqâêl, one of the holy angels, who is set over the spirits, who sin in the spirit.

6. Gabriel, one of the holy angels, who is over Paradise and the serpents and the Cherubim.

7. Remiel, one of the holy angels, whom God set over those who rise.

This is one topic I really wanted to discuss...
Once again thanks for Wikipedia.com
(How many times I thanked??)
Gyaaa!!! Am I freak? Maybe.

Seven Deadly Sins :

1. Luxuria/extravagance/

2. Gula/gluttony/

3. Avaretia/greed/

4. Acedia/discouragement/

5. Ira/wrath/

6. Invidia/envy/

7. Superbia/pride/

There're changes in seven deadly sins' list :

1. Cupidita/lust : substitute for luxuria/extravagance

2. Socordia/sloth : substitute for acedia/discouragement

Light is the opposite of dark.
So, the opposite of Seven Deadly Sins are Seven Holy Virtues.
La.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.la.

Seven Holy Virtues :

1. Chasity/

2. Temperance/

3. Charity/

4. Diligence/

5. Patience/

6. Kindness/

7. Humility/

Just Read If You Want to Read!! Once again, I'm not a Jews!!! I just a normal lil' girl!! Tahu-Dherz.

Extravagance or Luxuria or Unrestrained Excess

Now Extravagance has been replacing by Lust. Even if it has been replacing, It still includes in seven deadly sins. Extravagance behavior includes the frequent purchase of luxury goods and forms of debauchery.

The cognates of luxuria in the romance languages envolved to have an exclusively sexual meaning.

*Lust or Cupidita or Lechery

Usually thought of as excessive thought or desire of a sexual nature. Dante's criterion was excessive love of others, in the end put desire of love top the relationship with God. Lust included : Sexual addiction, rape, adultery, bestiality, incest, perversion, and fornication. ( I hate this because I hate boy-heterophobia-huhuhu..... maybe perverted guys have much sins...)

Gluttony or Gluttire or Gula

Meaning to gulp down or swallow. Gluttony is the over indulgence and over consumption of anything to waste. Aquinas went so far as to prepare a list of six ways to commit gluttony, including :

· Praepropere - eating too soon.
· Laute - eating too expensively (washedly).
· Nimis - eating too much.
· Ardenter - eating too eagerly (burningly).
· Studiose - eating too daintily (keenly).
· Forente - eating wildly (boringly).

I rarely eat... In the case I forget eating... huhuhu... So I'm not the Gluttony... (maybe)...

Greed or Avaritia or Covetousness

Greed was "a sin against God, just as all mortal sins, in as much as man condemns things eternal for the sake of temporal things. Hem... materialistic?

Avarice is more of a blanket term that can describe many other examples of greedy behavior. These include disloyalty, deliberate betrayal, or treason, especially for personal gain, for example through bribery. Scavenging, and hoarding of materials or objects, theft and robbery, especially by means of violence, trickery, or manipulation of authority are all actions that may be inspired by greed.

I do not understand... again... again...

Acedia or Apathetic Listlessness or Melancholy

Huh.. I don't understand... why is melancholy a sin... It does not bad...

Acedia describes the behavior, and melancholy describes the emotion producing acedia (depression without joy). In which side of earth... depression could happen in joy and happiness... Idiot! 'Cuz melancholy = sadness. Good they changed acedia with sloth and despair (even if they're still related with acedia).

Thomas Aquinas (again) described acedia in his interpretation of the list, he described it as an uneasiness of the mind, being a progenitor for lesser sins such as restlessness and instability. Dante refined this definition further, describing acedia as the failure to love God with all one's heart, all one's mind and all one's soul; to him it was the middle sin, the only one characterised by an absence or insufficiency of love. Hum. He was crazy... but He was right.

*Despair or Tristitia or Feeling of Dissatisfaction

Despair describes as feeling of dissatisfaction or discontent, which causes unhappiness (huh, happiness again) with one's current situation. Since unhappiness inherently results from the sin, the sin was sometimes referred to as sadness. Since sadness often results in acedia, Pope Gregory's revision of the list subsumed Despair into Acedia.

*Sloth or Socordia

Gradually, the focus came to be on the consequences of acedia, rather than the cause (So, acedia is the behavior, melancholy is the emotion, depression is the result, and sloth is the consequece??), and so, by the 17th century, the exact deadly sin referred to was believed to be the failure to utilize one's talents and gifts. In practice, it came to be closer to sloth than acedia. Even in Dante's time there were signs of this change; in his Purgatorio he had portrayed the penance for acedia as running continuously at top speed.

Wrath or Ira or Anger

Wrath also known as anger or "rage", may be described as inordinate and uncontrolled feelings of hatred and anger. These feelings can manifest as vehement denial of the truth.( wee.. is vengeance wrath too??) both to others and in the form of self-denial, impatience with the procedure of law, and the desire to seek revenge outside of the workings of the justice system (such as engaging in vigilantism) and generally wishing to do evil or harm to others. (Sycho = wrath?)

The transgressions borne of vengeance (so, vengeance is wrath...) are among the most serious, including murder, assault, and in extreme cases, genocide. Wrath is the only sin not necessarily associated with selfishness or self-interest (although one can of course be wrathful for selfish reasons, such as jealousy, closely related to the sin of envy). Dante described vengeance as "love of justice perverted to revenge and spite". In its original form, the sin of wrath also encompassed anger pointed internally rather than externally. Thus suicide was deemed as the ultimate, albeit tragic, expression of wrath directed inwardly, a final rejection of God's gifts. (menolak hadiah Tuhan?? Eh, ternyata msih fasih bahasa indonesia...)

Envy or Invidia

This sin may be characterized by an insatiable desire; they differ, however, for two main reasons. First, greed is largely associated with material goods, whereas envy may apply more generally. Second, those who commit the sin of envy resent that another person has something they perceive themselves as lacking, and wish the other person to be deprived of it. Dante defined this as "love of one's own good perverted to a desire to deprive other men of theirs." In Dante's Purgatory, the punishment for the envious is to have their eyes sewn shut with wire because they have gained sinful pleasure from seeing others brought low. Aquinas described envy as "sorrow for another's good". (Puyeng/ confused @___@)

Pride or Superbia or Hubris

In almost every list Pride is considered the original and most serious of the seven deadly sins, and indeed the ultimate source from which the others arise. It is identified as a desire to be more important or attractive than others, failing to acknowledge the good work of others, and excessive love of self (especially holding self out of proper position toward God). Dante's definition was "love of self perverted to hatred and contempt for one's neighbor." In Jacob Bidermann's medieval miracle play, Cenodoxus, pride is the deadliest of all the sins and leads directly to the damnation of the titulary famed Parisian doctor. In perhaps the best-known example, the story of Lucifer, pride (his desire to compete with God) was what caused his fall from Heaven, and his resultant transformation into Satan. In Dante's Divine Comedy, the penitents were forced to walk with stone slabs bearing down on their backs in order to induce feelings of humility.

ADDITION

Vainglory or Vanagloria


Vainglory is unjustified boasting. Pope Gregory viewed it as a form of pride, so he folded vainglory into pride for his listing of sins.
The latin term gloria roughly means boasting, although its English cognate - glory - has come to have an exclusively positive meaning; historically, vain roughly meant futile, but by the 14th century had come to have the strong narcissistic (So, STOP being narcisst person!) undertones, of irrelevant accuracy, that it retains today. As a result of these semantic changes, vainglory has become a rarely used word in itself, and is now commonly interpreted as referring to vanity (in its modern narcissistic sense). Noh, You shouldn't become narcisst person!



Seven Deadly Sins and Their Association With Demons :


1. Superbia : Lucifer

2. Avaritia : Mammon

3. Luxuria : Asmodeus

4. Envy : Leviathan

5. Gluttony : Beelzebub

6. Wrath : Satan/Amon

7. Sloth : Belphegor

... erh... owe some... I found this in someone's site... I forget its name...

Believe it or not There's a new Deadly Sins List from Vatican!

Drug Trafficking

Environmental Pollution

Genetic Manipulation

Obscene Wealth

Morally Debatable Experiments

Violation of The Fundamental Rights of Human Nature.

The Place of Punishment

WRATH and SLOTH
The punishment of these two sins take place in the Stygian lake, the wrathful being punished atop the lake, attacking one another with the various members of their person, including fangs. The slothful are punished underneath the lake breathing sighs in bubbles, singing a dolorous song, as told by Virgil in Canto VII.

Maybe I'll continue this later..
enjoy!

xoxo.

sarah.nekoi

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