The REAL Gog And Magog: Giants At The North Pole

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Reading from The Book Of The Bee Chapters 52-54. The Twenty-two Cities at the North Pole.\\nPlus all the Kings and how many years have passed since the Creation. The End Times. Gog And Magog In The North and The Antichrist.\\nA reading of the first 30-40 chapters.\\n(FE) The Book Of The Bee 馃悵 Part 1: In The Beginning,\\nhttps://youtu.be/drCpatfVSUg\\n\\nRead it at: https://sacred-texts.com/chr/bb/bb00.htm \\n\\nOf the author of \\\'the Book of the Bee,\\\' the bishop Shelêmôn/ Solomon, very little is known. He was a native of Khilât or Akhlât in Armenia, at the western end of lake Vân, and by religious profession a Nestorian. He became metropolitan bishop of al-Basra in al-`Irâk, on the right bank of the united streams of the Tigris and Euphrates about A.D. 1222, in which year he was present at the consecration of the catholicus or Nestorian patriarch Sabr-îshô` (Hope-in-Jesus)1 (see Assemânî, Bibl. Orient., t. ii, p. 453, no. 75; Bar-hebraeus, Chron. Eccl., t. ii, p. 371). In the Catalogue of Ecclesiastical Works compiled by `Ebêd-yêshû` or `Abd-îshô` (the-Servant-of-Jesus) he is stated to have written, besides \\\'the Bee,\\\' a treatise on the figure of the heavens and the earth, and sundry short discourses and prayers.\\n\\n To inform thee briefly concerning God\\\'s dispensation in the two worlds. And, behold, we have gleaned and collected and gathered together chapters and sections relating to this whole universe from the garden of the divine Books and from the crumbs of the Fathers and the Doctors, having laid down as the foundation of our building the beginning of the creation of this world, and concluding with the consummation of the world to come. We have called this book the \\\'Book of the Bee,\\\' because we have gathered of the blossoms of the two Testaments and of the flowers of the holy Books, and have placed them therein for thy benefit. As the common bee with gauzy wings flies about, and flutters over and lights upon flowers of various colours, and upon blossoms of divers odours, selecting and gathering from all of them the materials which are useful for the construction of her handiwork; and having first of all collected the materials from the flowers, carries them upon her thighs, and bringing them to her dwelling, lays a foundation for her building with a base of wax; then gathering in her mouth some of the heavenly dew which is upon the blossoms of spring, brings it and blows it into these cells; and weaves the comb and honey for the use of men and her own nourishment: in like manner have we, the infirm, hewn the stones of corporeal words from the rocks of the Scriptures which are in the Old Testament, and have laid them down as a foundation for the edifice of the spiritual law. And as the bee carries the waxen substance upon her thighs because of its insipidity and tastelessness, and brings the honey in her mouth because of its sweetness and value; so also have we laid down the corporeal law by way of substratum and foundation, and the spiritual law for a roof and ceiling to the edifice of the spiritual tower. And as the expert gardener and orchard-keeper goes round among the gardens, and seeking out the finest sorts of fruits takes from them slips and shoots, and plants them in his own field; so also have we gone into the garden of the divine Books, and have culled therefrom branches and shoots, and have planted them in the ground of this book for thy consolation and benefit. When thou, O brother, art recreating thyself among these plants, those which appear and which thou dost consider to be insipid and tasteless, leave for thy companions, for they may be more suitable to others (than to thee); but, upon those which are sweet, and which sweeten the palate of thy understanding, do thou feed and satisfy thy hunger. If, however, owing to their fewness, they do not fill thee, seek in succession for their roots, and from thence shall thy want be satisfied. Know also, O brother, that where there is true love, there is no fear1; and where there is freedom of speech, there is no dread; and we should not dare to be so rash as to enter upon these subjects, which are beyond the capacity of our simple understanding, unless we relied upon thy immaculate love; because, in the words of one of the inspired2, \\\'When thou findest honey, eat (only) so much as is sufficient for thee, lest, when thou art sated, thou vomit it. \\n\\nAssemânî says there are two codices of \\\'the Bee\\\' in the Vatican Library, and described them in his MSS. Codicum Bibliothecae Apostol. Vatic. Catalogus, t. iii, nos. clxxvi and clxxvii. \\n\\nThank you for watching!\\nGod bless you.