Added: 1 year ago
From: HumanChemistry101
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  • 4:54 Egyptians didn't have Corn. Egyptian "Corn" was Wheat. Corn (Maize) was selectively bred (no pun intended) around Mexico and didn't make it to the old world until about the 16th century.

    Although there are some commonalities between the Christian and Egyptian religions commonalities can be found among any religion you care to look at. It does not imply a causal relation between them.

  • @TheResidentSkeptic Re: “causal relationships”, the unrelated similar myths theory is nothing but a brush off, if you actually study the 19 active religions of the world, you see they trace back to either Yellow River mythology or Nile river mythology (see: link, pulldown and also read Greenberg’s 101 Myths of the Bible).

    Re: “Egyptians didn’t have corn”, Google “corn mummy” and "Osiris corn god" to educator your skepticism.

  • @HumanChemistry101 Well if it's on Google it's got to be true...

    The Egyptians did not have corn, they had wheat, which they called "Corn". Keep in mind that corn evolved from a species of wheat, in the new world.

    We already know where Christianity comes from... Judaism. And Judaism comes from the Babylonians, in particular their war god. See here: watch?v=MlnnWbkMlbg

    There is no common origin between the ancient traditions, Abrahamic faiths and eastern religions.

  • @TheResidentSkeptic You would be better off doing some reading and research in the books rather than to argue with me, and direct me to Evid3nc3's videos (with he bases on Karen Armstong's A History of God, which I have already read), etc.

    Start with the following fact (which took me several years to track down): the Ab-ra-hamic faiths and B-ra-hamic faiths of the common origin of the myth of Ra. Later.

  • @HumanChemistry101 As I stated earlier, correlation does not imply causation. I know all about the "Out of Egypt" theory promoted mostly by D.M. Murdock. It has failed to hold any ground in the historical community because it's simply wrong.

    Trying to imply that the names of Abraham and Bhrama have anything to do with Ra by association of the letters "ra" is as silly as D. M. Murdock trying to argue that Jesus is a son god because son sounds like sun.

  • @TheResidentSkeptic Read the comparative mythology link in the drop menu and the six main points of overlap between Abraham and Brahma and next time you post come back with some sense in your head.

  • @HumanChemistry101 I have multiple books on comparative religion. This is now the third time I'm going to say it: Correlation does not imply causation.

    Also, this doesn't change the fact that the EGYPTIANS DID NOT HAVE CORN!

  • @TheResidentSkeptic I may be off on the corn issue; the issue seems to stem from the King James Bible, wherein it states that “when Jacob saw there was corn in Egypt” (Genesis 42), but in other Bibles (NIV, NLT, NASB) thereafter was translated as “grain in Egypt”.

    The Passion of Christ is a verbatim rewrite of the Passion of Osiris, just as is Brahma/Abraham a rewrite of the Myth of Ra born of Nun. You can certainly exist in denial if you wish as that is your prerogative.

  • @TheResidentSkeptic they could have had corn but not grown it ?

  • @sirmrdevil Then how did they get it? Sail over to the Americas and bring it back but forget to tell anyone that there are gigantic continents to the west?

  • @HumanChemistry101 I suggest you do some reading of history books rather than conspiracy theories.

  • @HumanChemistry101 Oh, and Osiris is the God of the afterlife, not of corn (wheat) however there is a tradition called the Myth of Osiris and Isis which symbolizes the death and re-birth of the wheat during the winter-spring months. Nepit was the egyptian god of wheat.

  • Can you provide me with more sources that can further explain the evidence for comparative theology/mythology across the mainstream religions/creeds?

  • @nonosh See the newly added link in the drop menu (comparative mythology and modern religion) above.

  • @HumanChemistry101 Many thanks!

  • I attached an expanded summary page on the rewrite steps of Egyptian theology converted into Christianity in the drop menu.

  • now I will not tell you why and how you came up with this...but you will be to late to figure this out bc this is not for you...goodbye///

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  • @krosez76 Regarding your comment "the Zionist made this new testament of bible...for what? for people smart like you to destroy believe of GOD...and the funniest is science (molecules)...but you know that we have used science only for power to destroy ourselves", the Ra-based religions (Ab-Ra-hamic + B-Ra-hmaic), 72% of the world, were originated by Egyptian scientists. They observed nature, took quantitative measurements, and formulated hypothesis and theories based on biology and astronomy.

  • @HumanChemistry101..I live in nashville, tn...if you ever come this way, I will let you know about the world, when you study the angalic war then I will help what your missing...and tell me why we have emotions, and whom or how our brain is made,,...? and then tell me why can't men not leave this earth, or tell me why GOD don't help men?

  • its a shame that this is only how far you have evidence of history...believe in farrah bs, are we not living the same path as the farrahs did...its a shame the you fall for the animal trick...but its still a thoery right? ok, for you to have some1 fooled he most be on of yours. thoeries don't work anymore...proof, evidence, and facts = believe that equils faith....put this in your head...why is saintness is coming to alive again,,,evil..ohh u see....and none of this explains all religions.

  • @krosez76 Re: "none of this explains all religions", you're right. The above video only accounts for about 87% of the modern-person's understanding of life, death, morality, and purpose. The other 13% of world religious beliefs, aside from a few miscellaneous religions, generally stem from the cultures originated out of the Yellow River, China, which are primarily Yin-Yang theories.

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