Nyx Starr
13 min readJan 14, 2019

According to the Roman Catholic Church, a body is not deemed incorruptible if it has undergone an embalming process or other means of preserving the dead, or if it has become stiff, as do all normal corpses, even when the best preservation techniques are used.

Incorruptible saints remain completely flexible, as if they were only sleeping. (See the book, The Incorruptibles, referenced below.) As such, although the body of Pope John XXIII remains in a remarkably intact state, after its discovery, Church officials quickly pointed out that the pope’s body had been embalmed and that there was a lack of oxygen in his sealed triple coffin, lest the public mistakenly fall under the impression that John’s body had been incorrupt due to supernatural reasons.

In the Orthodox Church, incorruptibility continues to be an important element in the process of canonization (q.v.).

An important distinction is made between natural mummification and supernatural incorruptibility.

In The Brothers Karamazov, a novel by Dostoyevsky, the body of the newly-deceased Starets (holy monk) Zossima began to decay noticeably even during his funeral wake, which caused a great scandal in his monastery and among the townsfolk, who fully expected that he would be incorrupt.

Standard Pose; this image of Paramahansa Yogananda appears in many of his publications. It was very probably taken at approximately the time Yogananda arrived in the USA, in 1920.

Paramahansa Yogananda (Bengali: পরমহংস যোগানন্দ) (5 January 1893–7 March 1952), born Mukunda Lal Ghosh(Bengali: মুকুন্দলাল ঘোষ), was an Indian yogi and guru.

Who introduced millions of Indians and westerners to the teachings of meditation and Kriya Yoga through his organization Yogoda Satsanga Society of India and Self-Realization Fellowship.

The word has the same meaning in other languages derived from or borrowing words from Sanskrit.

In 1946, he published his autobiography, titled Autobiography of a Yogi which is on the list of the “100 best spiritual books of the 20th Century” created by Harper San Francisco, a division of Harper Collins Publishers. The book has been regularly reprinted ever since and is known as “the book that changed the lives of millions.”

Turn the following picture upside down, resembles retreat.

Get this fucking shit cleaned up NOW! Im sick of looking at all your shit! Clean IT THE FUCK UP NOW!

These retreats are nothing but grounds for molestation to happen. Sex gurus, yeah sure, guru your cock up someones ass? So, all these retreats and chat forums will be dissolved. Unacceptable grounds for everything. Clean it up NOW!

I will speak in a manner that you will comprehend, I will not sugar coat anything for you and your fucking feelings!

Do I make myself clear!?

A male (♂) organism is the physiological sex that produces sperm.

The existence of two sexes seems to have been selected independently across different evolutionary lineages (see convergent evolution).

With gametes of male and female types to oogamous species in which the female gamete is very much larger than the male and has no ability to move.

There is a good argument that this pattern was driven by the physical constraints on the mechanisms by which two gametes get together as required for sexual reproduction.

Accordingly, sex is defined operationally across species by the type of gametes produced (i.e.: spermatozoa vs. ova) and differences between males and females in one lineage are not always predictive of differences in another.

As of the year 2012, the United Arab Emirates had the highest ratio of human males in the world, followed by Qatar.

A common symbol used to represent the male sex is the Mars symbol, ♂ — a circle with an arrow pointing northeast; in Unicode U+2642 ♂ MALE SIGN(HTML ♂ · Alt codes: Alt+11). The symbol is identical to the planetary symbol of Mars.

A marble is a small spherical toy often made from glass, clay, steel, plastic or agate. These balls vary in size. Most commonly, they are about 1 cm (1⁄2 in) in diameter, but they may range from less than 1 mm (1⁄30 in) to over 8 cm (3 in), while some art glass marbles for display purposes are over 30 cm (12 in) wide. Marbles can be used for a variety of games called marbles. They are often collected, both for nostalgia and for their aesthetic colors. In the North of England the objects and the game are called “taws”, with larger taws being called bottle washers after the use of a marble in Codd-neck bottles, which were often collected for play.

In the early twentieth century, small balls of stone, identified by archaeologists as marbles, were found on excavation near Mohenjo-daro.

Moen-jo-daro

Mohenjo-daro (/moʊˌhɛndʒoʊ ˈdɑːroʊ/; Sindhi: موئن جو دڙو‎, meaning ‘Mound of the Dead Men’;[2] Urdu: موئن جو دڑو‬‎[muˑənⁱ dʑoˑ d̪əɽoˑ]) is an archaeological site in the province of Sindh, Pakistan. Built around 2500 BCE, it was one of the largest settlements of the ancient Indus Valley civilization, and one of the world’s earliest major cities, contemporaneous with the civilizations of ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, Minoan Crete, and Norte Chico.

Mohenjo-daro was abandoned in the 19th century BCE as the Indus Valley Civilization declined, and the site was not rediscovered until the 1920's.

Significant excavation has since been conducted at the site of the city, which was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1980. The site is currently threatened by erosion and improper restoration.

The sites are judged important to the collective interests of humanity.

Humanity (sociology) [de; eo; ja], a sociologist concept, refers to sum of humans or population.

Humans are uniquely adept at using systems of symbolic communication (such as language and art) for self-expression and the exchange of ideas, and for organizing themselves into purposeful groups.

Confucius — ‘Signs and symbols rule the world, not words nor laws.’

Hermaphroditic animals, such as worms, have both male and female reproductive organs.

Though most of human existence has been sustained by hunting and gathering in band societies, increasing numbers of human societies began to practice sedentary agriculture approximately some 10,000 years ago, domesticating plants and animals, thus allowing for the growth of civilization.

A band society, or horde in generally older usage, is the simplest form of human society. A band generally consists of a small kin group, no larger than an extended family or clan.

The general consensus of modern anthropology sees the average number of members of a social band at the simplest level of foraging societies as ranging from 30 to 50 people.

The masons grouped together into something like a trade union to protect the secrets of their craft and hand them on to the next generation.

Story of a Freemason who Undertook a Journey into the Inner Earth … This strange being claimed to have formerly been a freemason.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOLrzUlbslk

Published on Oct 6, 2016

The report from the book Etidorhpa takes place in Cincinnati, Ohio, in the 1860's regarding a student of science named Llewellyn Drury that had a visitation from a mysterious stranger. This strange being claimed to have formerly been a freemason who undertook a remarkable journey into the Earths crust and eventually into the interior itself, some 800 miles beneath the outer surface of the earth.

Unfortunately his name was never revealed but he made a promise with Mr. Drury to write a manuscript in which the stranger was to read to him and publish 30 years later.

Vatican has possession of a secret device with the name of the Chronovisor and they use the device to look into events that will occur in the future along with ones that have happened in the past.

The chronovisor was allegedly a functional time viewer described by Father François Brune in his 2002 book Le nouveau mystère du Vatican (“The Vatican’s New Mystery”). Brune is the author of several books on the paranormal and religion.

In the book, Brune relates that the chronovisor was built by Pellegrino Ernetti (1925–1994), an Italian priest and scientist.

Joseph Aloisius Ratzinger

Joseph Aloisius Ratzinger was born on 16 April, Holy Saturday, 1927, at Schulstraße 11, at 8:30 in the morning in his parents’ home in Marktl, Bavaria, Germany.

https://ancientexplorers.com/blogs/news/declassified-documents-released-confirms-the-nazi-bell-was-a-secret-worm-hole-time-machine

Ernetti lacked hard evidence for these claims. He said that he had observed, among other historical events, Christ’s crucifixion and photographed it as well.

A copy of this image, Ernetti said, appeared in the 2 May 1972 issue of La Domenica del Corriere, an Italian weekly news magazine.

A near-identical (mirror-image) photograph, however, of a wood carving by the sculptor Lorenzo Coullaut Valera turned up and succeeded in casting doubt upon Ernetti’s statement.

Although Ernetti was a real person, the existence or functionality of the chronovisor has never been confirmed; its alleged capabilities are strongly reminiscent of the fictional time viewer which features in T. L. Sherred’s 1947 science fiction novella, E for Effort.

A Sicilian boy cross-dressing as a Spanish woman, photographed by Wilhelm von Gloeden in the late 19th century

Bands have a loose organization.

They can split up (in spring/summer) or group (in winter camps), as the Inuit, depending on the season, or member families can disperse to join other groups.

Their power structure is often egalitarian.

The best hunters would have their abilities recognized, but such recognition did not lead to the assumption of authority, as pretensions to control others would be met by disobedience.

Bands are distinguished from tribes in that tribes are generally larger, consisting of many families. Tribes have more social institutions, such as a chief, big man, or elders. Tribes are also more permanent than bands; a band can cease to exist if only a small group splits off or dies. Many tribes are subdivided into bands.

On occasion hordes or bands with common backgrounds and interests could unite as a tribal aggregate in order to wage war, as with the San, or they might convene for collective religious ceremonies, such as initiation rites or to feast together seasonally on an abundant resource as was common in Australian aboriginal societies.

Among the Native Americans of the United States and the First Nations of Canada, some tribes are made up of official bands that live in specific locations.

With the spread of the modern nation-state around the globe, there are few true band societies left.

Humanity is a virtue associated with basic ethics of altruism derived from the human condition.

The human condition is “the characteristics, key events, and situations which compose the essentials of human existence, such as birth, growth, emotionality, aspiration, conflict, and mortality”.

The state of being subject to death.

This is a very broad topic which has been and continues to be pondered and analyzed from many perspectives, including those of religion, philosophy, history, art, literature, anthropology, psychology, and biology.

As a literary term, “the human condition” is typically used in the context of ambiguous subjects such as the meaning of life or moral concerns.

Philosophers have provided many perspectives.

An influential ancient view was that of the Republic in which Plato explored the question “what is justice?”

Two thousand years later René Descartes declared “I think, therefore I am

Christianity teaches that humans are born in a sinful condition and are doomed in the afterlife unless they receive salvation through Jesus Christ.

Many works of literature provide perspective on the human condition.

One famous example is Shakespeare’s monologue “All the world’s a stage” that pensively summarizes seven phases of human life.

Psychology has many theories, such as Maslow’s hierarchy of needs and the notion of identity crisis.

It also has various methods, e.g. the logo therapy developed by Holocaust survivor Viktor Frankl to discover and affirm human meaning.

Another method, cognitive behavioral therapy, has become a widespread treatment for clinical depression.

Ever since 1859, when Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species, the biological theory of evolution has been significant.

The theory posits that the human species is related to all others, living and extinct, and that natural selection is the primary survival factor.

The Human Condition (La condition humaine) generally refers to two similar oil on canvas paintings by the Belgian surrealist René Magritte.

One was completed in 1933 and is in the collection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC.

The other was completed in 1935 and is part of the Simon Spierer Collection in Geneva, Switzerland.

A number of drawings of the same name exist as well, including one at the Cleveland Museum of Art.

The list of similar works can easily be extended to include such paintings as The Key to the Fields (1936), its 1964 reincarnation Evening Falls and the 1942 work The Domain of Arnheim, all of which feature broken windows whose shattered glass pieces on the floor still show the outside world they used to conceal.

Cowardice is a trait wherein fear and excessive self-concern override doing or saying what is right, good, and of help to others or oneself in a time of need — it is the opposite of courage. As a label, “cowardice” indicates a failure of character in the face of a challenge. One who succumbs to cowardice is known as a coward.

Many military codes of justice proscribe cowardice in combat as a crime punishable by death (note the phrase “shot at dawn”).

As the opposite of an action or trait that many existing and formerly extant cultures demand, cowardice rates as a character flaw that many societies and their representatives stigmatize and/or punish.

Muhammad Ali’s refusal to be drafted during the Vietnam War 1968