Think about it the Beast (system) only has 7 heads.... it is missing three!!!
The 10 Lost Tribes are apart of "The second Cherubim in the Garden of Eden". The Ephod has six on one side and six on the other in birth order.
and the three that are not covering the fallen Cherubim
I am going to have to build this out because I have tried for the past two hours to do this thread and have somehow had it drop on me over four times to my great frustration so it is to be pieced out but a plethora of information to glean from if you are interested in seeing
where this rabbit hole goes! God Bless and hold tight people it is about to get Poppin!
3RD ROW 7. Gad 8. Asher 9. Issachar
4TH ROW
*10. Zebulun
* 11. Joseph
*12. Benjamin
• • •
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2016
1.31
So many years war shall last in France,
Beyond the course of Castilian monarch,
An uncertain victory three great ones shall crown,
The eagle, cock, moon, lion, sun in it mark.
1.32
The great empire will soon change place,
For a better place, it will grow in size,
Very tiny place of a small account,
In the middle of it, he will lay down his scepter.
12 Oxen on the Brazen Leaver en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon%2…
So [Elijah] departed thence, and found Elisha the son of Shaphat, who was plowing with twelve yoke of oxen before him, and he with the twelfth:
The first of these stones, the ligure or lyncurius, is said to be so called from the congealed urine of the lynx (n), but rather from the spots of that creature; for, according to Danaeus (o), it is the same stone with that called "stellina", from having many specks like stars
spread about in it. Braunius (p) takes the "jacinth" stone to be here meant, and so does Ainsworth; see Revelation 21:20 biblegateway.com/passage/?searc…
biblehub.com/genesis/49-19.…
Jacob Blesses His Sons
…18I await Your salvation, O LORD. 19Gad will be attacked by raiders, but he will attack their heels.20Asher’s food will be rich; he shall provide royal delicacies.…
37
Jacob, however, got some fresh shoots of poplar, almond and plane* trees, and he peeled white stripes in them by laying bare the white core of the shoots.
38
The shoots that he had peeled he then set upright in the watering troughs where the animals came to drink so that they
would be in front of them. When the animals were in heat as they came to drink,
39
the goats mated by the shoots, and so they gave birth to streaked, speckled, and spotted young.
40
The sheep, on the other hand, Jacob kept apart, and he made these animals face the streaked or
completely dark animals of Laban. Thus he produced flocks of his own, which he did not put with Laban’s flock.
41
Whenever the hardier animals were in heat, Jacob would set the shoots in the troughs in full view of these animals, so that they mated by the shoots;
42
but with the
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Through_t…
Mirrors
One of the key motifs of Through the Looking-Glass is that of mirrors, including the use of opposites, time running backward, and so on, not to mention the title of the book itself. In fact, the themes and settings of the book make it somewhat of a
mirror image to its predecessor, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865). The first book begins in the warm outdoors, on 4 May;[a] uses frequent changes in size as a plot device; and draws on the imagery of playing cards. The second book, however, opens indoors on a snowy,
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/pandemic
From Ancient Greek πάνδημος (pándēmos, “of or belonging to all the people, public”) + English -ic (suffix forming adjectives from nouns with the sense ‘of or pertaining to’). πάνδημος is derived from παν- (pan-, prefix meaning ‘all, every’) (ultimately
from Proto-Indo-European *peh₂- (“to protect, shepherd”)) + δῆμος (dêmos, “the common people; free citizens, sovereign people”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *deh₂- (“to divide, share”)). Compare Late Latin pandēmus (“affecting all the people, general, public”).[1]
pandemic (not comparable)
(Greek mythology, Roman mythology, rare) Alternative letter-case form of Pandemic (“of Aphrodite Pandemos, the earthly aspect of the Greek goddess of beauty and love Aphrodite and her Roman counterpart Venus, as contrasted with the heavenly aspect known