It is certainly true that GOD, who CREATED EVERYTHING, has every right to set the boundaries. Afterall, it is HIS Creation. NO ONE ELSE can claim that. In the process of creating the world, he set all kinds of boundaries in place, thank GOD! If he had not we would be in a world of heart.
In creating our bodies, he likewise established countless boundaries that enable our bodies to function so perfectly.
He also set boundaries for how we are to behave in the world he created. Not because he is mean and wants to flex his muscles. He placed boundaries that keep us from harm and even protect us from ourselves.
All of these things clearly demonstate that HE IS GOD. There are those who challenge that truth. They want to be worshipped. They want to pull the strings and make the world dance to their beat.
This all started nearly immediately after the world was created. There is one, who stands out above the others in this category. He was the first and he has been causing chaos in the world ever since. He is A PRETENDER to the throne of GOD.
The Sabine people called him TERMINUS. He has bone by many names throughout history. You will be amazed to learn just how much of our lives are affected and reflect the name of this god.
But, always remember… THE NAME OF OUR CREATOR IS ABOVE EVERY NAME THAT CAN BE NAMED.
Though the enemy and his minions have perverted our language, our time keeping, our calendar, holidays and the numbering of our days… GOD IS STILL ON THE THRONE.
If you have not seen my post about boundary stones you should read it. It is not long and in it I share how God showed me about boundaries. Check it out here:
Be Careful Not to Move the Ancient Boundary Stones
spacer
And God Separated the Light…
And God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light. And God saw that the light was good. And God separated the light from the darkness. (Gen 1:3-4)
Here we see “light” (H216 “or”) being called into existence. Elohim saw that it was good.
Then, Elohim separated (H914 “badal”) the light from (H996 “beyn”) the darkness. This means He made a distinction between the two.
>> Heaven: Waters Under from Waters Above
Gen 1:6-8 And God said, “Let there be an expanse in the midst of the waters, and let it separate the waters from the waters.” And God made the expanse and separated the waters that were under the expanse from the waters that were above the expanse. And it was so. And God called the expanse Heaven. And there was evening and there was morning, the second day.
>> Day and Night
Gen 1:14-15 And God said, “Let there be lights in the expanse of the heavens to separate the day from the night. And let them be for signs and for seasons, and for days and years, and let them be lights in the expanse of the heavens to give light upon the earth.” And it was so.
>> Light and Darkness (2nd mention)
Gen 1:17-18 And God set them in the expanse of the heavens to give light on the earth, to rule over the day and over the night, and to separate the light from the darkness. And God saw that it was good.
>> The Holy Place and the Most Holy Place
Exo 26:33 And you shall hang the veil from the clasps, and bring the ark of the testimony in there within the veil. And the veil shall separate for you the Holy Place from the Most Holy.
>> The Holy and the Common; The Unclean and the Clean
Lev 10:8-11 And the LORD spoke to Aaron, saying, “Drink no wine or strong drink, you or your sons with you, when you go into the tent of meeting, lest you die. It shall be a statute forever throughout your generations. You are to distinguish between the holy and the common, and between the unclean and the clean, and you are to teach the people of Israel all the statutes that the LORD has spoken to them by Moses.”
Eze 22:26 Her priests have done violence to my law and have profaned my holy things. They have made no distinction between the holy and the common, neither have they taught the difference between the unclean and the clean, and they have disregarded my Sabbaths, so that I am profaned among them.
Eze 42:20 He measured it on the four sides. It had a wall around it, 500 cubits long and 500 cubits broad, to make a separation between the holy and the common.
>> The Clean and the Unclean Animals
Lev 11:46-47 This is the law about beast and bird and every living creature that moves through the waters and every creature that swarms on the ground, to make a distinction between the unclean and the clean and between the living creature that may be eaten and the living creature that may not be eaten.
Lev 20:25 You shall therefore separate the clean beast from the unclean, and the unclean bird from the clean. You shall not make yourselves detestable by beast or by bird or by anything with which the ground crawls, which I have set apart for you to hold unclean.
>> You and Your God
Isa 59:1-2 Behold, the LORD’s hand is not shortened, that it cannot save, or his ear dull, that it cannot hear; but your iniquities have made a separation between you and your God, and your sins have hidden his face from you so that he does not hear.
Given these other mentions, we have a better idea of what it means to have something separated from another or to make a distinction between two things. The light was separated from the darkness, and I have found nothing in Scripture that says it was ever put back together.
spacer
What are boundaries, and are they biblical?
Question: “What are boundaries, and are they biblical?”
Answer: A boundary is a “dividing line.” In geography, a boundary is that which marks the end of one property or jurisdiction and the beginning of another. In interpersonal relationships, a boundary is what divides one person from another, so that each can have separate identities, responsibilities, and privileges. A boundary creates necessary “space” between individuals. Healthy boundaries define expectations and show respect for others.
Biblically speaking, boundaries are related to self-control. The Bible commands us to control ourselves, whereas our human nature desires to control others (Titus 2:12). If left unchecked, our natural desires run roughshod over others. Personal boundaries help to limit our selfish inclination to control or manipulate others. Likewise, boundaries protect us from those who have no self-control and who wish to control us. A person with clear, healthy boundaries communicates to others what is and is not permissible, saying, in effect, “This is my jurisdiction, and you have no right to interfere.”
Boundaries can be used in healthy ways and sinful ways. The way to know which boundaries are godly is to examine the motive. Are you protecting yourself or someone weaker from potential harm, either emotional or physical? If so, then you are setting healthy and needful boundaries. However, if you are maintaining distance simply because you desire to exclude someone, that is sinful. Boundaries that maintain cliques or prohibit ministry opportunities are unhelpful.
Proper boundaries aid believers in keeping out worldly influences. Children of the light have no fellowship with darkness and are thus separate from the world (2 Corinthians 6:14). Being kind and friendly is Christ-like, but we are not to embrace the world’s way of doing things (James 4:4). Our wish is not to keep people away, but when people are being destructive, the boundaries we set can limit the evil they commit against us.
Boundaries are about taking responsibility for our own lives. God gives us freedom to choose to live within His boundaries or outside of them, and to live outside of God’s boundaries means to accept the consequences. Living inside God’s boundaries brings blessing, and living outside of them brings destruction and death (Romans 6:23). Adam and Eve had one boundary in the Garden of Eden: abstain from the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. The Lord gave them freedom to remain within His bounds, but they chose to overstep the boundary and sin. Their response to God’s revelation of their sin was to blame someone else rather than take responsibility for their lack of self-control. Eve blamed Satan, and Adam blamed Eve (Genesis 3:12-13). Boundaries limit destructive behaviors, and that is why both God and society have laws and consequences for those who overstep those laws (Romans 13:1-4).
A healthy marriage requires boundaries. Marital boundaries keep sex and intimacy within the relationship while respecting each person’s needs. Violating these boundaries will quickly destroy trust.
Boundaries are also helpful in parenting. Setting healthy limits for children will protect them (Proverbs 22:6). Unhealthy boundaries tend to be controlling and selfishly motivated. Boundaries should guide a child to individuate into the person God created him or her to be. Boundaries allow children to develop an identity separate from their parents within the safety of their family. Without an identity, people “vanish” into other people or expect them not to have any differences.
Children often feel boundaries are “mean” when they are immature. When they grow up, they usually realize the boundaries were to keep them safe. Adults who were raised without protective boundaries often feel that someone saying “no” to them is “mean,” because they never learned self-control. Naturally, when children do not get what they want, they are disappointed, but learning to accept “no” from others is essential to godly character; however, setting boundaries with children must be done in loving ways in order for the child to feel loved (Ephesians 6:4; Colossians 3:21; Titus 2:4). The Lord’s instruction for parents is that they teach a child boundaries (Proverbs 19:18). Boundaries help a child see that life is not about pursuing what he wants but surrendering to the Lord and following Him. Boundaries set with unconditional love will teach children to surrender to the Lord because they trust God knows what is best and will bring true contentment.
Learning boundaries as a child is important. It is more difficult to learn boundaries later in life. Children will not grow up to respect God’s boundaries if they do not learn boundaries in their home. Modeling is necessary; parents cannot teach boundaries and not abide by them themselves.
A person with healthy boundaries takes responsibility for his own life and allows others to live theirs. The goal of boundaries is to make sacrifices for people when appropriate, but never in a destructive manner. We should be available for people in a crisis, but unavailable to indulgent demands. Being gracious is not a blank check for others to continually drain our emotional account. Saying “yes” out of fear of rejection is really a selfish motive for being kind. Being kind in order to gain someone’s favor smacks of hypocrisy and shows a need for boundaries. Fear of man’s disapproval can lead to codependency, the unhealthy alternative to interdependency.
Boundaries teach us to accept one another as being different yet still valuable. God uses boundaries to help us appreciate the differences in people rather than be upset by them. A godly friend tells us what we need to hear, not necessarily what we want to hear (Proverbs 27:6). We are free to be ourselves with others if we control ourselves. Boundaries are not selfish when we use our freedom to serve and love one another because we are keeping our own flesh under control (Galatians 5:13). In a godly relationship, both people are free to love each other and to be themselves because neither is using or manipulating the other.
Self-control is a fruit of the Spirit, so it is not something unbelievers can achieve (Galatians 5:22-23). A believer who sees his need for self-control so he can take responsibility for his own actions and not encroach on others will seek the Lord’s help for growth in this character trait. Boundaries are a fruit of submitting to God’s will, and He will enable us to make godly choices.
Being Christ-like means we can say “no” in unselfish, helpful ways. Sometimes, love requires us to say “no” to those we love. For example, if a family member is abusing alcohol at a family gathering, then it is Christ-like to tell him not to do so. A proper boundary has then been set. If the response is to get angry, leave, and never come back, then that person simply was not able to respect the boundary. It is not sinful to say “no” to someone if he is crossing personal boundaries in harmful and destructive ways. Every boy or girl on a date should have clear boundaries that must not be crossed.
Boundaries can be difficult to establish because saying “no” may have been off limits or mistakenly taught as being ungodly. God says to tell the truth in love (Ephesians 4:15). God tells us to humbly control ourselves, lovingly confront sin, graciously accept others, and overcome evil with good (Romans 12:21). Plus, He promises wisdom in every circumstance (James 1:5).
Recommended Resource: Boundaries by Cloud & Townsend
More insights from your Bible study – Get Started with Logos Bible Software for Free!
41 Bible Verses about Boundaries
“You shall not move your neighbor’s boundary mark, which the ancestors have set, in your inheritance which you will inherit in the land that the LORD your God gives you to possess.
Deuteronomy 19:14
Do not move the ancient boundary Or go into the fields of the fatherless,
‘Cursed is he who moves his neighbor’s boundary mark.’ And all the people shall say, ‘Amen.’
“When the Most High gave the nations their inheritance,
When He separated the sons of man,
He set the boundaries of the peoples
According to the number of the sons of Israel.Do not move the ancient boundary Which your fathers have set.
“I will fix your boundary
and He made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined their appointed times and the boundaries of their habitation,
The Lord’s Promise
19Therefore thus saith the LORD, If thou return, then will I bring thee again, and thou shalt stand before me: and if thou take forth the precious from the vile, thou shalt be as my mouth: let them return unto thee; but return not thou unto them.
20And I will make thee unto this people a fenced brasen wall: and they shall fight against thee, but they shall not prevail against thee: for I am with thee to save thee and to deliver thee, saith the LORD.
21And I will deliver thee out of the hand of the wicked, and I will redeem thee out of the hand of the terrible. Jeremiah 15:19
spacer
Separation from the Unclean Thing
The doctrine of separation from “the unclean thing” is neglected today by professing Christians, but it is still here in God’s Word. The context indicates that Paul is warning against Christians being “unequally yoked together with unbelievers” and urging us to “cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God” (II Cor. 6:14, 7:1).Such separation does not mean having no contact at all with unbelievers, “for then must ye needs go out of the world” (I Cor. 5:10), whereas Jesus commanded: “Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature” (Mark 16:15). He also prayed to the Father “not that Thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that Thou shouldest keep them from the evil” (John 17:15).
He does demand, however, that we not compromise with unbelief or with the unclean thing. We are “born again” into the family of God through simple faith in the person and saving work of Christ, but the full manifestation and fellowship of our relation with the heavenly Father as His spiritual sons and daughters is evidently, in this passage, conditioned on the vital principle of separation from all unbelief and filthiness of the flesh, with Jesus as our example (Heb. 7:16).
We are specially warned to “turn away” from those who, “having a form of godliness,” yet attempt to accommodate the naturalistic viewpoint of modern scientism within the Scriptures, thus “denying the power thereof” (II Tim. 3.5). “Be ye separate, saith the Lord.”
spacer
I had never even heard of the god known as TERMINUS until just recently. It was eye-opening to see the influence of this entity even today, in our everyday lives. He was a demon god of gates, doors, boundaries, beginnings and endings. I think he has surfaced in these last days for a reason. Once again, or maybe still, the enemy wants to control everything including the end of days. How the world comes to a close and where you and I spend eternity.
Terminus (god)
Worship
The name of the god Terminus was the Latin word for a boundary stone,[1] and his worship as recorded in the late Republic and Empire centred on this stone, with which the god could be identified.[2] Siculus Flaccus, a writer on land surveying, records the ritual by which the stone was sanctified: the bones, ashes, and blood of a sacrificial victim, along with crops, honeycombs, and wine, were placed into a hole at a point where estates converged, and the stone was driven in on top.[3] On February 23 annually, a festival called the Terminalia was celebrated in Terminus’ honor, involving practices which can be regarded as a reflection or “yearly renewal” of this foundational ritual.[4] Neighboring families would garland their respective sides of the marker and make offerings to Terminus at an altar—Ovid identifies these, again, as crops, honeycombs, and wine. The marker itself would be drenched in the blood of a sacrificed lamb or pig. There followed a communal feast and hymns in praise of Terminus.[2][5]
These rites were practised by private landowners, but there were also related public ceremonies. Ovid refers to the sacrifice of a sheep on the day of the Terminalia at the sixth milestone from Rome along the Via Laurentina;[2] it is likely this was thought to have marked the boundary between the early Romans and their neighbors in Laurentum.[5] Also, a stone or altar of Terminus was located in the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus on Rome’s Capitoline Hill. Because of a belief that this stone had to be exposed to the sky, there was a small hole in the ceiling directly above it.[2][6] On occasion Terminus’ association with Jupiter extended to regarding Terminus as an aspect of that god; Dionysius of Halicarnassus refers to “Jupiter Terminalis”,[7] and one inscription names a god “Juppiter Ter.”[8]
There is some evidence that Terminus’ associations could extend from property boundaries to limits more generally. Under the Republican calendar, when the intercalary month Mercedonius was added to a year, it was placed after February 23 or February 24,[9] and some ancient writers believed that the Terminalia on February 23 had once been the end of the year.[10] Diocletian‘s decision in 303 AD to initiate his persecution of Christians on February 23 has been seen as an attempt at enlisting Terminus “to put a limit to the progress of Christianity”.[11]
History
Ancient authors agreed that the worship of Terminus was of Sabine origin, ascribing its introduction to Rome either to Titus Tatius, the Sabine colleague of Rome’s founding king Romulus (traditional reign 753–717 BC),[12] or to Romulus’ successor Numa Pompilius (717–673 BC).[7][13] Those authors who gave the credit to Numa explained his motivation as the prevention of violent disputes over property.[7][13] Plutarch further states that, in keeping with Terminus’s character as a guarantor of peace, his earliest worship did not involve blood sacrifices. (well we know that is not true, we know for certain that there were animal sacrifices and perhaps there were human sacrifices to this God at the time of the placement and at least once a year.)
The stone in the Capitoline Temple was believed to have been among the altars located on the Capitoline Hill before the Temple was built under Tarquinius Priscus (traditional reign 616–579 BC) or Tarquinius Superbus (535–510 BC). When the augurs took the auspices to discover whether the god or goddess of each altar was content for it to be moved, Terminus refused permission, either alone or along with Juventas the goddess of youth. The stone was therefore included within the Capitoline Temple, and its immovability was regarded as a good omen for the permanence of the city’s boundaries.[2][14]
Feast Before the Altar of the God Terminus – Giovanni …
Terminalia
(23 February)
Terminalia was a Roman festival in honor of the god Terminus, the god of borders between private estates, but above all state borders. His statue was on the border of private properties and was usually in the form of stone. The owners of neighboring properties adorned the statue with wreaths, erected the altar and sacrificed in the form of a little grain, honeycombs, and wine. In addition, a sheep or pig was killed in honor of the deity. The ceremony ended with singing a song of praise.
The public ceremony, in turn, involved performing similar rituals on the sixth milestone along the road to Laurentum (between Ostia and Lavinium). The ceremony took place here probably because it was originally the border of the Roman state.
The holiday was celebrated on February 23.
The Fitzwilliam Museum – Terminus
23 February. When night has passed, let the god whose marker separates fields be celebrated with the customary honours. Terminus – be you a stone, or a stump buried in a field – you too have divine authority from ancient times. You are crowned by two owners on opposite sides; two garlands and two libations are offered to you. An altar is built for you: here a rustic farm-woman brings fire that she has taken herself from the warm hearth on a broken pot. An old man cuts logs and skilfully piles up the chopped wood, and struggles to fix branches in the hard ground; then she kindles the first flames with dry bark, and a boy stands by holding a broad basket in his hands. Next, when he has three times thrown corn into the middle of the fire, a young girl offers up cut honeycombs.
Others hold jars of wine, and each one in turn is poured on the flames; the crowd, dressed in white, watches and respects this with silent tongues. Communal Terminus is sprinkled with the blood of a slaughtered lamb, and doesn’t complain when a sucking pig is offered to him. The simple folk of the neighbourhood come together and celebrate with a banquet, and sing your praises, sacred Terminus. You mark the ends of nations, cities and great kingdoms: without you, the whole countryside would be full of disputes. You don’t go round trying to influence people, you are not corrupted by money, but with law-abiding good faith you guard the land entrusted to you. If you had been there to mark the land of Thyrea then those three hundred bodies would not have been thrown down dead, with the name of the only survivor Orthryades to be read on the piled-up arms …
Remember what happened when the new Capitol was being built? Yes, all the company of the gods withdrew and made space for Jove. But Terminus, as the ancients recall, stayed in place, standing just where he was found in the building, and shared the temple with great Jove.
And now, so that he may see above him nothing but the stars, the roof of the temple has a small opening in it. Since then, Terminus, you have had no freedom to get up and move, stay standing in the place where you are put and do not yield to any neighbour who asks you. Don’t be seen to put any man before Jove, and when you are beaten by ploughs or rakes, simply declare: ‘This is your field, and this is his!’
There is a road which takes people to the Laurentian fields, the kingdom which the Dardanian leader Aeneas once made for: on that road one can see that the sixth marking-stone from the city is made sacred to you, Terminus, with the innards of a woolly sheep.
To other nations there is a fixed boundary – but the compass of Rome’s city is the compass of the entire globe.
Ovid, Fasti 2, 639–84
Terminus (mythology)
On occasion Terminus’ association with Jupiter extended to regarding Terminus as an aspect of that god; Dionysius of Halicarnassus refers to “Jupiter Terminalis”,[7] and one inscription names a god “Juppiter Ter.”[8]
There is some evidence that Terminus’ associations could extend from property boundaries to limits more generally. Under the Republican calendar, when the intercalary month Mercedonius was added to a year, it was placed after February 23 or February 24,[9] and some ancient writers believed that the Terminalia on February 23 had once been the end of the year.[10] Diocletian‘s decision in 303 AD to initiate his persecution of Christians on February 23 has been seen as an attempt at enlisting Terminus “to put a limit to the progress of Christianity”.[11]
The ‘Boundary Stelae of Akhenaten’: Meaning of Pharaoh’s …
Terminus (god) – Wikipedia
Definition of Sabine
1: a member of an ancient people of the Apennines northeast of Latium
2: the Italic language of the Sabine people
Sabines – Wikipedia
Sabine
Sabine, Latin Sabinus, plural Sabini, member of an ancient Italic tribe located in the mountainous country east of the Tiber River. They were known for their religious practices and beliefs, and several Roman institutions were said to have derived from them. The story recounted by Plutarch that Romulus, the founder of Rome, invited the Sabines to a feast and then carried off (raped) their women, is legendary. Though there was a considerable Sabine infiltration into Rome, the view that the Sabines conquered the city in the first half of the 5th century BC is improbable; rather, the Romans had many skirmishes with the Sabines before their victory in 449. Nothing is known thereafter until in 290 the Sabines were conquered and granted civitas sine suffragio; in 268 they received full Roman citizenship.
The Sabines probably spoke Oscan. No inscription has survived of their dialect, but a large number of single words are attributed to them by Latin writers. The tradition that the Sabines were the parent stock of the Samnite tribes is probably correct.
This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.
Sabine Gods – Digital Maps of the Ancient World
Quirinus: god of the People | We Are Star Stuff
Quirinus: god of the People
On the Capitoline hill in Rome three deities had their temple, Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva. This cult was important enough that every city in Italy and later the Empire had its temple called the Capitola. Originally, however, the triad was made up of three gods: Jupiter, Mars and Quirinius.
Sabine God, Roman Cult
If you’re wondering who Quirinus was, you’re not alone. Even the Romans themselves don’t seem to have been too sure what his function was or how he joined the Roman pantheon.
He was an important god in some senses: he had his own temples and priests. There were 15 official priests, called flamens, state-appointed functionaries who ensured that the rituals were preformed and all the taboos associated with their office observed.1
Some of these 15 were unimportant, like the priests of Pomona, but the flamen Quirinalis was one of the big three, the flamines maiores, who served the first Capitoline Triad. The other two were the Flamens Dialis (Jupiter) and Martialis (Mars). Quirinus also received offerings of one-third of the arms captured after a war, the other two-thirds going to Jupiter and Mars. (Servius 6:589)
The first altar to Quirinus was built on the Quirinal Hill. This was originally Sabine territory, before becoming one of the seven hills of Rome. So Quirinus was a Sabine god. However, after the Romans conquered the Sabines, their territory became part of the Roman state, and their god was integrated into the Roman pantheon. (One explanation of his name is “he of the quirium,” making him the territorial god.)
Other explanations of Quirinus’ nature have seen him as a thunder-god, or else a war-god like Mars, deriving his name from the Sabine word for spear, quiris. Other theories point to the Sabine town of Cures.
Quirinus had four yearly festivals, with the main one falling on Febuary 17th, the Quirinalia. Not much is known about this festival, unfortunately, but his cult partner was Hora, the goddess of the hours. (A group of minor deities called the Virites Quirini shared his cult as well, perhaps personifications of the virtus or power of the god.)
spacer
GodFinder >Sabine >
Sangus, or Semo Sancus, a Roman divinity, is said to have been originally a Sabine god, and identical with Hercules and Dius Fidius.1 The name which is etymologically the same as Sanctus, and connected with Sancire, seems to justify this belief, and characterizes Sancus as a divinity presiding over oaths.
(Huh, so when the Roman Catholic Church is praying Spiritus Sanctus, they are invoking this ancient diety!!)
Sancus also had a temple at Rome, on the Quirinal, opposite that of Quirinus, and close by the gate which derived from him the name of Sanqualis Porta. (So he is god over a Gateway/Portal) This sanctuary was the same as that of Dius Fidius, which had been consecrated in the year 465 BCE by Sp. Postumius, but was said to have been founded by Tarquinius Superbus,2 and the ancients thoroughly identified their Dius Fidius with Sancus. He is accordingly regarded as the protector of the marriage oath, of the law of nations, and the law of hospitality.3 Sancus is said to have been the father of the Sabine hero Sabus.4cer
spacerspacer
Today was once celebrated in ancient Rome as the Terminalia, a festival in honor of the god Terminus, who presided over boundaries. His “statue” was typically a stone or post stuck in the ground to mark property boundaries. His worship is reputed to have been instituted (in Rome) by Numa Pompilius (753–673 BCE), legendary successor to Romulus, who was credited with having instituted a number of important Roman civil and religious institutions.
According to legend, Numa ordered that every landowner should mark the boundaries of his property by stones to be consecrated to Jupiter Terminalis, and at which, every year, sacrifices were to be offered at the festival of the Terminalia. On the festival the two owners of adjacent property crowned the “statue” with garlands and raised a crude altar, on which they offered up some corn, honeycombs, and wine, and sacrificed a lamb or a suckling pig. They concluded with singing the praises of the god. The public festival in honor of this god was celebrated at the sixth milestone on the road towards Laurentum, presumably because this was originally the extent of Roman territory in that direction.
One of Numa’s first acts was the construction of a temple to Janus (also god of boundaries) as a symbol of peace and war. The temple was constructed at the foot of the Argiletum, a major road in the city. After securing peace with Rome’s neighbors, the doors of the temples were shut and remained so for all the duration of Numa’s reign, a unique case in Roman history. Closing the temple doors as a sign of peace remained important throughout the Roman Republic and Empire.
Numa reportedly sought to instill in Romans respect of lawful property and non-violent relationships with neighbors. The cult of Terminus involved rejection of violence and murder. The god was a testament to justice and a keeper of peace. In a somehow comparable, more moral rather than legal fashion, Numa sought to associate himself with one of the roles of Vegoia, from the religious system of the neighboring Etruscans by deciding to set the official boundaries of the territory of Rome, which Romulus had never wanted, presumably with the same concern of preserving peace. This act is reminiscent of the proverb, “good fences make good neighbors.”
The festival of the Terminalia was celebrated in the Roman calendar as a. d. VII. Kal. Mart., that is, the 23d of February, or, the day before the Regifugium (“king’s flight”) whose precise nature is obscure. During a short period, Terminalia was the last day of the year in Rome, and Regifugium was the first of the new year. Thus, Terminalia signified both spatial and temporal boundaries.
The central Terminus of Rome (the place to which all roads led) was the god’s ancient shrine on the Capitoline Hill. The temple of Jupiter, king of the gods, had to be built around it (with a hole in the ceiling since Terminus demanded open-air sacrifices) by the city’s last king, Tarquinius Superbus, who had closed down other shrines on the site to make room for his prestigious project. But the augurs had read into the flight patterns of birds that the god Terminus refused to be moved, which was taken as a sign of stability for the city.
Terminalia may have descendants in later customs, such as beating the bounds. In times past in Britain, especially because for centuries precise maps were unusual, it was common to make a formal perambulation of the parish boundaries on Ascension Day or during Rogation week. Knowledge of the limits of each parish needed to be handed down so that such matters as liability to contribute to the repair of the church, and the right to be buried within the churchyard were not disputed. The priest of the parish with the churchwardens and the parochial officials headed a crowd of boys who, armed with green boughs, usually birch or willow, beat the parish boundary markers with them. Sometimes the boys were themselves whipped or even violently bumped on the boundary-stones to make them remember. The object of taking boys along was supposedly to ensure that witnesses to the boundaries should survive as long as possible. Priests would pray for the parish’s protection in the forthcoming year and often Psalms 103 and 104 were recited, and the priest would say such sentences as “Cursed is he who transgresseth the bounds or doles of his neighbour.”
The ceremony had an important practical purpose. Checking the boundaries was a way of preventing encroachment by neighbors; sometimes boundary markers would be moved, or lines obscured, and a folk memory of the true extent of the parish was necessary to maintain integrity of borders by embedding knowledge in oral traditions.
In England the custom dates from Anglo-Saxon times, as it is mentioned in laws of Alfred the Great and Æthelstan. In England a parish-ale, or feast, was always held after the perambulation, which assured its popularity, and in Henry VIII’s reign the occasion had become an excuse for so much revelry that it attracted the condemnation of a preacher who declared “these solemne and accustomable processions and supplications be nowe growen into a right foule and detestable abuse.”
Beating the bounds had a religious side in the practice which originated the term Rogation, the accompanying clergy being supposed to beseech (rogare) the divine blessing upon the parish lands for the ensuing harvest. This feature originated in the 5th century, when Mamertus, Archbishop of Vienne, instituted special prayers and fasting and processions on these days. This clerical side of the parish bounds-beating was one of the religious functions prohibited by the Royal Injunctions of Elizabeth I in 1559; but it was then ordered that the perambulation should continue to be performed as a quasi-secular function, so that evidence of the boundaries of parishes, etc., might be preserved.
Some locations have maintained traditions of beating the bounds, although now they are merely a quaint holdover with vague religious overtones.
For me as an anthropologist this is a highly significant holiday. It emphasizes physical boundaries (city limits, property lines etc.) and temporal boundaries (year’s end and beginning). Anthropologist Victor Turner used the term “liminal” for such boundaries – from the Latin, “limen,” a threshold. These are places and times of immense power and danger in all cultures, because on the cusp of them you are capable of mixing things up, and, thereby destroying the order of the world. Are dawn and dusk, day or night? They are both and neither. Which side are you on when you are “sitting on the fence”? Why is a bride in the West traditionally carried over the threshold? Boundaries are of immense importance to ALL cultures – although what counts as a boundary varies enormously.
Again, the ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH changed the BOUNDARIES of time and seasons,
Science changed ALL BOUNDARIES… day and night beginning with the light bulb.
SCIENCE changed the order of everything by combining the seed and perverting the DNA.
Chief offerings on Terminalia were bread, honey, wine, and lamb or suckling pig. This gives you abundant choice for a contemporary recipe. Apicius in De Re Coquinaria gives us this:
Porcellum assum tractomelinum: porcellum curatum a gutture extenteras, siccas. teres piperis unciam, mel, vinum, impones ut ferveat, tractam siccatam confringes et partibus caccabo permisces. agitabis surculo lauri viridis, tam diu coques, donec lenis fiat et impinguet. hac impensa porcellum imples, surculas, obduras charta, in furnum mittes, exornas et inferes.
The title, porcellum assum tractomelinum, means suckling pig “treated with honey” but there’s wine and bread involved as well. Loosely the text says:
Clean the pig through the neck and dry it. Crush pepper with honey and wine, and put it on the heat. Break up some toast and mix it with the sauce. Add bay leaves and mix until the paste is smooth and cooked. Fill the pig with this dressing and put it in the oven. Garnish and serve.
You’ll have to make of this what you will. There’s no indication of proportions of ingredients. For my tastes I’d use a lot of toast and just moisten it with wine and honey, mixed, seasoned with pepper and bay laurel.
spacer
TerminusDB — what’s in a name? – Medium
Database with An Official Holiday
Luke Feeney for TerminusDB Community
Posted on • Updated on
A bit off topic, but I thought you might want to know that the end of the year approaches. This Sunday 23 February we celebrate Terminalia — the festival that marks the end of the Old Roman Year.
Terminus’ slogan ‘Concedo Nulli’ — concede to nobody — remains at the heart of the TerminusDB project. We continue to walk through walls to get the features out the door. We will not yield.
Terminalia is the official holiday for TerminusDB. As it’s on a Sunday this year, we celebrate tonight. As Ovid dictates, we will allow the pagan spirits to flow. We will pour lamb’s blood on the statue of Terminus and offer him suckling pigs and wine.
Terminators around the world are encouraged to celebrate this momentous day. Wear white, sacrifice a lamb, let the spirit of pre-Republican Rome flow.
spacer<
REVEREND W I N D H O R S E
Grand Terminus, or better, the Grand Ultimate, is another name for the T’ai Chi, expressed in the Yin and Yang symbol which describes duality within the boundary of completeness… the Wholeness. It creates the expression of TAO. Yet, Lao Tze expresses so well, that the attempts at humans to apply our language to Spirit, tao, god, goddess…even nature; is futile, for human language is not creator’s language, which comes to us in symbols and sacred geometry. Lao Tze says: The Tao that an be told is not the eternal Tao. Lao Tze, Tao Te Ching What is TAO? TAO is Emptiness~ How can it be Emptiness? Because it is Perfect! “This is Perfect, that is Perfect… “Take the Perfect from the Perfect; “What remains is the Perfect.” THE GRAND ULTIMATE “Who takes Heaven as his ancestor, Virtue as his home, THE T’AI CHI In the practice of T’ai Ch’i Chuan, we make circles and think Circularity…in order to move our bilateral limbs from one completion to another, they cross over and around each other, and the waves of yin and yang are evident. I have experienced a flow of energy when practicing “T’ai Ch’i Walking” that criss-crossed in the form of an Infinity sign. This i now understand as the kundalini energy that traverses the human central nervous system. We learn to feel the totality of a “ball” of energy in our hands, and the emptying and filling of its duality. Posture changes…attitudes change…health improves. Some of us find our “Bottom” voice! |
YIN/YANG So Yin/Yang describes the degrees of and “The Tao is very close, but everyone looks far away. Traditional Chinese Medicine is based on the Yin Yang symbol. The seasons bring about different aspects in our physiology. The Earth in various parts of the world are experiencing more yin energy when across the world more yang energy is occurring. In spring certain foods are better for us than others; more digestible by the body. For instance, in summer, eat all the cold foods and raw foods you want to, according to TCM. In summer heat they are easily digested. If your system is imbalanced, you may still not do well with that until you honor and correct your body’s needs. If you want to become a raw foodist, you may notice that easy does it on the changeover. You may experience nausea or other unpleasant cleansing if you dive in with both feet. SUMMER is Yang…full heat, hot sun, light WINTER is Yin…cold, dark…many people withdraw. SPRING and AUTUMN are Transitional; each has degrees of Summer and Autumn, and is pouring into the ensuing season. People may feel uneasy, sad, irritable. TCM identifies many reasons and takes the responsibility away from a person being a grouch! But not for long; for finding an imbalance, Ammatherapy, acupuncture, Herbal tea will soon put you right, and in the driver’s seat of your life once again! Feeling and being responsible is a glorious freedom! T’ai Chi Chuan a common explanation about Lao tze, Lao Tzu, is that he became tired of people coming to him for help and then disregarding his advice. He headed for the hills! He was going into retirement, to spend the rest of his life meditating on the mountain. The gatekeeper begged lao tze to write down the core of his teachings that it may not be lost to the people, and he complied. |
spacer
ASKING – ROGATION
Phil
May 20, 2020
at the feast of TERMINALIA, observed in April or early May.
Terminus was the god of boundaries.
His statue was merely a stone or post stuck in the ground
to distinguish between properties.
On the festival the two owners of adjacent properties
crowned the statue with garlands and raised a simple altar,
on which they offered grain, honey and wine,
and the blood of a sacrificed lamb or a suckling pig,
to pray for protection of their land for the coming year.
As the Roman Empire outgrew itself, the custom ceased,
but it was to find revival again, as the Christian church in Gaul
saw the need to pray God’s loving care into a disturbing situation.
The French Bishop of Vienne in about AD 470 was extremely concerned
that a serious earthquake, besieging his diocese,
might be a sign of God’s displeasure.
He asked the people to process prayerfully around the boundary of the diocese
as a means of praying God’s will into it –
and the earthquake stopped!
Such success was seen in this simple prayerful communal act,
that the custom spread through Gaul, to England and to Rome,
praying litanies around the boundaries of parishes and dioceses
asking for God’s care and protection of the place, earthquake or not!
The name associated with the custom was ROGATION, so-called because
the whole exercise was one of asking God’s protection –
“Rogare” Latin – to ask.
during the procession boys would be bumped on boundary stones, beaten,
or rolled in briars and ditches to ensure they never forgot the boundaries,
and passed on the knowledge to successive generations.
Thus by the 16th Century,
the old Roman festival of “Terminalia” or “boundaries”
had been adopted and adapted by the church wholeheartedly
to enable clear identification of boundaries
before the days of ordnance survey maps,
and all this by order of Queen Elizabeth the First.
This was also before “Harvest Festivals”, a Victorian invention,
came into common Church use.
Rogation became primarily an opportunity to pray for protection
against a bad harvest, looking forward to the blessing of abundance.
rather than people in their Rogation processions,
hence the expression “beating the bounds”.
In the 1630s George Herbert commended the Rogation themes
of blessing fields and beating the bounds.
He believed that processions should be encouraged for four reasons:
* A blessing of God for the fruits of the field
* Justice in the preservation of bounds
* Charity in loving, walking and neighbourly accompanying one another
with reconciling of differences at the time, if there be any
* Mercy, in relieving the poor by a liberal distribution of largesse,
according to need.
Mount Terminus
Mount Terminus | |
HILL | |
nations | Guyana |
---|---|
regions | Barima-Waini Region |
Height | 64 m (210 ft) |
coordinate | 7.8346 ° N 59.4605 ° V [citation needed] |
Timezone | AST ( UTC-4 ) |
GeoNames | 3375693 |
Mount Terminus is a hill in Guyana . [2] It is located in the Barima-Waini Region , in the northern part of the country, 180 km northwest of Georgetown the country’s capital. 64 meters above sea level is located Mount Terminus. [narrative 2]
The land around Mount Terminus is usually very much flat. [citation needed] The highest point in the vicinity has an elevation of 105 meters and is 12.8 km southwest of Mount Terminus. [citation needed] Less than 2 people per square kilometer around Mount Terminus. [3] The area around Mount Terminus is almost forested . [4]
The climate is tropical subtropical . [5] The average temperature is 22 ° C. The warmest month is September, at 24 ° C , and the coldest February, at 20 ° C. [6] The average rainfall is 2,197 millimeters per year. The wettest month is June, with 314 millimeters of rain, and the wettest March, with 43 millimeters. [7]
Tonight’s Sky in Mount Terminus, Mar 31 – Apr 1, 2022 (7 planets visible)
Venus rise and set in Mount Terminus
View before sunrise. Fri, Apr 1 ↑3:13 am |
Saturn rise and set in Mount TerminusView before sunrise. Fri, Apr 1 ↑3:04 am |
Mars rise and set in Mount TerminusView before sunrise. Fri, Apr 1 ↑2:55 am |
Uranus rise and set in Mount TerminusView after sunset. Bring binoculars. Thu, Mar 31 ↓8:13 pm |
Jupiter rise and set in Mount TerminusView just before sunrise. Fri, Apr 1 ↑4:49 am |
Neptune rise and set in Mount TerminusVery close to Sun, hard or impossible to see. Fri, Apr 1 ↑4:56 am |
Planets Visible in Mount Terminus
Planetrise/Planetset, Fri, Apr 1, 2022 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Planet | Rise | Set | Meridian | Comment |
Mercury | Fri 5:53 am | Fri 6:03 pm | Fri 11:58 am | Extremely difficult to see |
Venus | Fri 3:13 am | Fri 3:04 pm | Fri 9:08 am | Great visibility |
Mars | Fri 2:55 am | Fri 2:41 pm | Fri 8:48 am | Average visibility |
Jupiter | Fri 4:49 am | Fri 4:47 pm | Fri 10:48 am | Average visibility |
Saturn | Fri 3:04 am | Fri 2:50 pm | Fri 8:57 am | Average visibility |
Uranus | Thu 7:53 am | Thu 8:13 pm | Thu 2:03 pm | Difficult to see |
Neptune | Fri 4:56 am | Fri 4:55 pm | Fri 10:56 am | Extremely difficult to see |
I found it absolutely fascinating to see how many words we use today are rooted in the name of this god. When you begin to really look at the words and their meanings, you must surely see the connection. I almost did not include the worlds that mean three or related to three. Then I saw that the trinity gods of the pagans sprang from Terminus it made perfect sense.
Every word below is related to the perversion of God’s plan of creation. The pagan trinity, the savior narrative, and the mother with child imagery, were all created to discredit the truth of God’s plan. The devil and his crew were well aware of the plan of redemption. In fact, the first humans were well aware of the plan.
The devil created all the pagan religions to mimic and mock God’s redemption plan so that future generations would not believe.
terabyte (n.)
by 1982, from tera- + byte.
The third strand of DNA has been done before.
terminus (n.)
terminator (n.)
God divided that dry land from the water
terminer (n.)“a determining,” legal term, from French terminer “to end,” in Old French “to decide, rule on,” from Latin terminare “to mark the end or boundary,” from terminus “end, limit” (see terminus; also see oyer).
*terə- Proto-Indo-European root meaning “cross over, pass through, overcome.”It forms all or part of:
avatar; caravanserai; nectar; nectarine; nostril; seraglio; thrill; thorough; through; tranche;
trans-; transient; transom; trench; truculent; truncate; trunk.It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Sanskrit tirah, Avestan taro “through, beyond;” Latin trans “beyond;” Old Irish tre, Welsh tra “through;” Old English þurh “through.”
terran (adj.)
terra firma (n.)
terrarium (n.)
late 14c., “land under the jurisdiction of a town, state, etc.,” probably from Latin territorium “land around a town, domain, district,” from terra “earth, land” (from PIE root *ters- “to dry”) + -orium, suffix denoting place (see -ory). Sense of “any tract of land, district, region” is first attested c. 1600. Specific U.S. sense of “organized self-governing region not yet a state” is from 1799. Of regions defended by animals from 1774.“Since -torium is a productive suffix only after verbal stems, the rise of terri-torium is unexplained” [Michiel de Vaan, “Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages”]. An alternative theory, somewhat supported by the vowels of the original Latin word, suggests derivation from terrere “to frighten” (see terrible); thus territorium would mean “a place from which people are warned off.”
terminal (n.) “end point of a railway line,” 1888, from terminal (adj.); sense of “device for communicating with a computer” is first recorded 1954. Earlier “final part of a word” (1831).
term (v.)
terminology (n.)
Decandolle and others use the term Glossology instead of Terminology, to avoid the blemish of a word compounded of two parts taken from different languages. The convenience of treating the termination ology (and a few other parts of compounds) as not restricted to Greek combinations, is so great, that I shall venture, in these cases, to disregard this philological scruple. [William Whewell, “The Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences,” 1847]
Atlantis, Dagon, WATER entities
The demons begged to go into the pigs and then they ran into the sea
God told the sea where it had to STOP… boundary
alteration (n.)
tart (adj.)
terrorize (v.)
terrorism (n.)
1795, in specific sense of “government intimidation during the Reign of Terror in France” (March 1793-July 1794), from French terrorisme, noted in English by 1795 as a coinage of the Revolution, from Latin terror “great fear, dread, alarm, panic; object of fear, cause of alarm; terrible news,” from PIE root *tres- “to tremble” (see terrible).
If the basis of a popular government in peacetime is virtue, its basis in a time of revolution is virtue and terror — virtue, without which terror would be barbaric; and terror, without which virtue would be impotent. [Robespierre, speech in French National Convention, 1794]
General sense of “systematic use of terror as a policy” is first recorded in English 1798 (in reference to the Irish Rebellion of that year). At one time, a word for a certain kind of mass-destruction terrorism was dynamitism (1883); and during World War I frightfulness (translating German Schrecklichkeit) was used in Britain for “deliberate policy of terrorizing enemy non-combatants.”
The term now usually refers to a member of a clandestine or expatriate organization aiming to coerce an established government by acts of violence against it or its subjects. [OED]
The tendency of one party’s terrorist to be another’s guerrilla or freedom fighter was noted in reference to the British action in Cyprus (1956) and the war in Rhodesia (1973). The word terrorist has been applied, at least retroactively, to the Maquis resistance in occupied France in World War II (as in in the “Spectator,” Oct. 20, 1979).
teratogeny (n.)
“the production of monsters,” 1855, from terato- + -geny. Related: Teratogenesis.
terato- before vowels terat-, word-forming element meaning “marvel, monster,” from combining form of Greek teras (genitive teratos) “marvel, sign, wonder, monster,” from PIE *kewr-es-, from root *kwer- “to make, form” (source also of Sanskrit krta- “make, do, perform,” Lithuanian keras “charm,” Old Church Slavonic čaru “charm”). -scopy word-forming element meaning “viewing, examining, observing,” from Modern Latin -scopium, from Greek -skopion, from skopein “to look at, examine” (from PIE root *spek- “to observe”). “Augury is the practice from ancient Roman religion of interpreting omens from the observed behavior of birds. When the individual, known as the augur, interpreted these signs, it is referred to as “taking the auspices”. ‘Auspices’ is from the Latin auspicium and auspex, literally “one who looks at birds.”
terato-, terata-, terat-, tera- – Word Information
1. The observation of or the augury from prodigies (people with exceptional talents or powers; from Latin, prodigiosus, “portentious, marvelous, unnatural”). 2. Divination via the use of monstrosities.
North American turtle, 1670s, earlier torope (1610s), from an Algonquian source (such as Abenaki turepe, Munsee (Delaware) tolpew “turtle”). Subsequently extended to allied species in South America, East Indies, China, North Africa.
terbium (n.)
“loop raised in pile-weaving, left uncut,” 1784, of uncertain origin, possibly an alteration of French tiré “drawn,” from past participle of tirer “draw out” (compare German gezogener Sammet “drawn velvet”).
thorn (n.)
spacer
Latin – Wikipedia
Religious use
The largest organisation that retains Latin in official and quasi-official contexts is the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church required that Mass be carried out in Latin until the Second Vatican Council of 1962–1965, which permitted the use of the vernacular. Latin remains the language of the Roman Rite. The Tridentine Mass (also known as the Extraordinary Form or Traditional Latin Mass) is celebrated in Latin. Although the Mass of Paul VI (also known as the Ordinary Form or the Novus Ordo) is usually celebrated in the local vernacular language, it can be and often is said in Latin, in part or in whole, especially at multilingual gatherings. It is the official language of the Holy See, the primary language of its public journal, the Acta Apostolicae Sedis, and the working language of the Roman Rota. Vatican City is also home to the world’s only automatic teller machine that gives instructions in Latin.[19] In the pontifical universities postgraduate courses of Canon law are taught in Latin, and papers are written in the same language.
In the Anglican Church, after the publication of the Book of Common Prayer of 1559, a Latin edition was published in 1560 for use in universities such as Oxford and the leading “public schools” (English private academies), where the liturgy was still permitted to be conducted in Latin.[20] There have been several Latin translations since, including a Latin edition of the 1979 USA Anglican Book of Common Prayer.[21]
Use of Latin for mottos
In the Western world, many organizations, governments and schools use Latin for their mottos due to its association with formality, tradition, and the roots of Western culture.[22]
Canada’s motto A mari usque ad mare (“from sea to sea”) and most provincial mottos are also in Latin. The Canadian Victoria Cross is modelled after the British Victoria Cross which has the inscription “For Valour”. Because Canada is officially bilingual, the Canadian medal has replaced the English inscription with the Latin Pro Valore.
Spain’s motto Plus ultra, meaning “even further”, or figuratively “Further!”, is also Latin in origin.[23] It is taken from the personal motto of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Spain (as Charles I), and is a reversal of the original phrase Non terrae plus ultra (“No land further beyond”, “No further!”). According to legend, this inscribed as a warning on the Pillars of Hercules, the rocks on both sides of the Strait of Gibraltar and the western end of the known, Mediterranean world. Charles adopted the motto following the discovery of the New World by Columbus, and it also has metaphorical suggestions of taking risks and striving for excellence.
History of Latin – Wikipedia
Latin language | Definition, Origin, Examples, Rules …
History of Latin – Rice University
#24 – Part 2: Is There a Genuine Book of Jasher?
November 2000
In last month’s issue of Feed My Sheep and we examined critically the 1829 version of the Book of Jasher. We concluded from a wealth of evidence, both historical and internal textual evidence, and especially by comparing it to the Bible, that it was a fraud and a fake. In this issue we will apply the same criteria of criticism to the 1840 version of the Book of Jasher.
Other books of Jasher
Before we focus on Jasher-1840, it should also be noted that over the centuries, a number of rabbinical compositions have appropriated the name of Jasher for their works. Jasher is, in fact, not the name of an individual—as the fraudulent 1829 Jasher would have us believe—but “Jasher” (alt. spelling: “Jashar;” Hebrew: yasher) simply means “righteous” or “upright.” Hence, there exists Sefer Hayasher – The Book of the Righteous, which is an ethical treatise, not an historical narrative at all. Likely composed in the 13th century, it was translated into English and edited by Seymour J. Cohen. 1
Its introduction mentions several other books of Jasher from the 12th, 13th and 14th centuries, and one from some time in the 3rd to 6th centuries. None of these claim to be the authentic Book of Jasher. Only two books claim to be the authentic Book of Jasher referred to in Joshua 10:13 and 2 Samuel 1:18—the 1829 Jasher and the 1840 Jasher.
The 1840 Jasher—three editions
The 1840 Jasher was published by Messrs. M. M. Noah and A. S. Gould in New York. It is the first English translation of this text of the Book of Jasher. (As noted in last month’s FMS, the 1829 and 1840 versions bear little resemblance to each other.) We have in our possession three “printings” of the 1840 English version: two hardcopy and one digital version. A comparison of random passages among these three editions, shows them all to be identical in the text of the book itself, including chapter divisions and versification.
The only differences are the following: Long before our good friend, Bible archeologist, E. Raymond Capt and his Artisan Publishers, came out with a printing of the Book of Jasher in 1988,2 we had long had in our possession an old, large, paperback edition of the 1840 Jasher. This particular printing gave no publishing information, not even a date of printing. However, it did contain a preface by Mr. Noah, a translator’s preface, a translation of the Hebrew preface, the printer’s preface, and certificates by four scholars attesting to the reliability of the translation from the Hebrew into English. It did not contain a table of contents.
Both the digital version and the Artisan Publishers edition omit Mr. Noah’s preface, the translation of the Hebrew preface and the printer’s preface. However, both contain an extensive table of contents containing a synopsis of events for each chapter, which is a very helpful feature when trying to search the Book of Jasher for a specific incident. The electronic edition of the Book of Jasher declares itself to be
“A Reprint of
PHOTO LITHOGRAPHIC REPRINT OF EXACT EDITION
PUBLISHED BY J.H. PARRY & COMPANY SALT LAKE CITY: 1887”
We would suspect that the original hardcopy (book) edition published by J. H. Parry & Co. in Salt Lake City in 1887 was published by the Mormons.
Errors in Jasher-1840
In our critical analysis of Jasher-1829 we enumerated ten specific examples of outright, blatant and important contradictions to the story as told in the Bible. We could have produced more. In applying the same critical method to Jasher-1840, we are hard pressed to find such contradictions. In fact, the only one which we have discovered is that according to Jasher-1840, the age of Methuselah at his death was 960; whereas according to Genesis 5:27, he was 969. Many other ages are given for patriarchs in Jasher-1840 and to the best of our knowledge all are consistent with Genesis.
This single error is possibly a scribal error, or more likely due to the great difficulty experienced by the printer in 1613 as he converted the text from a handwritten Hebrew manuscript to a printing press Hebrew edition. The Printer’s Preface declares his text of Jasher was “transcribed from a very old manuscript, the letters of which were defaced…”
We also uncovered an internal inconsistency in Jasher-1840. However, it does not necessarily contradict the Bible. To set the stage, Abram’s father, Terah, was a trusted and chief adviser to King Nimrod of Babel (Babylon). A sign in the stars caused Nimrod to seek to kill the infant Abram, an obvious foreshadowing of Herod attempting to kill the infant Jesus two millennia later. For his protection and training, Abram was sent off to live with Noah and Shem.
At age 50, Abram returns to his father’s house and immediately destroys the idols, drawing the wrath of Nimrod as Nimrod learns Abram’s identity. In another foreshadowing (this, of the incident in the Book of Daniel), Abram is cast alive into a fiery furnace. After three days, he is alive and well and moving about in the fire. Nimrod, awestruck, allows Abram to come out of the fire, whereupon he lavishes Abram with gold, silver and other wealth and allows 300 men along with some of his own servants to follow Abram out of the country. Nimrod’s chief servant, Eliezer, was given to Abram as a special gift.
Then we read in Jasher 12:45:
“And at the expiration of two years from Abram’s going out of the fire, that is in the fifty-second year of his life, behold king Nimrod sat in Babel upon the throne, and the king fell asleep and dreamed that he was standing with his troops and hosts in a valley opposite the king’s furnace.” …
The story continues in Jasher 13:1:
“And Terah took his son Abram and his grandson Lot, the son of Haran, and Sarai his daughter-in-law, the wife of his son Abram, and all the souls of his household and went with them from Ur Casdim to go to the land of Canaan. And when they came as far as the land of Haran they remained there, for it was exceedingly good land for pasture, and of sufficient extent for those who accompanied them.”
After spending three years in Haran, the Lord appears to Abram and tells him to pack up and move to the land of Canaan. Therefore, Abram should be about 55 years old at this time as he is leaving Haran. But we read in Jasher 13:5: “… and Abram was fifty years old when he went from Haran.”
Clearly, there is a contradiction within Jasher-1840 itself. Some readers will be alert to point out, however, that this does indeed appear to contradict the Bible. Consider the Genesis record:
Genesis 12: 4 So Abram departed, as the LORD had spoken unto him; and Lot went with him: and Abram was seventy and five years old when he departed out of Haran.
But the mystery is dispelled as we read on in Jasher. After living 15 years in Canaan, Abram and his retinue return to Haran to visit his parents and kindred. He remains there for five years teaching all of them the ways of Yahweh. Then, the Book of Jasher informs us, he departs Haran a second time to go to the land of Canaan.
Jasher 13:26: “And Abram went and returned to the land of Canaan, according to the word of the Lord. And Lot the son of his brother Haran went with him, and Abram was seventyfive years old when he went forth from Haran to return to the land of Canaan.”
Thus, it does not contradict the Bible after all, but is a perfect example of how the Book of Jasher amplifies and expands the story of the Bible. Jasher-1840 is as thrilling to read as Jasher1829 is dull. The narrative of Noah’s confrontation with hundreds of thousands of soon-to-bedrowned contemporaries is riveting. Jasher also recounts (chapter 14) how a sage from Shinar named Rikayon came to be the first Pharaoh and how his name came to be the title of the Eyptian rulers for centuries after him.
Ancient Italian history in Jasher
Immediately following the chapter detailing the story of Sarai, Hagar and the birth of Ishmael, Jasher launches into some early European history, specifically, of what later came to be known as Italy. Jasher relates (chapter 17) the incident of the rape of the Sabine women. In this chapter we find the people and place names (with slightly different spellings) unmistakably identify ancient Italy by the following: the Tiber river, the Etruscans, Tuscans, Tuscany, the Sabines. Elsewhere (Jasher 10:16), the children of Chittim (Kittim) are identified as “the Romim” But we were all taught that ancient Rome began about the 8th century B.C. with Romulus and Remus. Surely, this discrepancy with secular history is irreconcilable, is it not?
Mr. M. M. Noah sheds some interesting light on this matter in his Preface (emphasis ours):
“There are, nevertheless, some events which are recorded in Jasher, which may create surprise, particularly a detail of the rape of the Sabines, which, at the first glance, I was disposed to consider as an interpolation; but a little reflection satisfied me that it was an event placed in proper chronological order. Pizron, in his Revolution of Empires, or Antiquities of Nations, says, (page 164,) ‘It is therefore likely from what I have said, that several of the Titans, in the reign of Uranus, or, at least, in that of Saturn, staying and fixing themselves in that part of Italy which is adjacent to the Tiber and the Appenines, were afterward called Umbrians. If such were the case, as it seems it was, the settlement of the Titans in Italy was made about the time of the calling of Abraham, that is, when he left Chaldea, to go and dwell in the land of Canaan.’ Page 175, ‘Now, if all this came to pass, it must have happened about the time to Deucalion reigned in Greece, or some years after the deluge that happened under that prince.’ If as Pizron says, the separation of the Sabines from the Umbrians took place 1500 years before Christ, it will not be far distant from the time at which Jasher places the rape of the Sabine women, in the 91st year of the life of Abraham.”
Titans, centaurs and the second coming
The mention of the Titans, Uranus and Saturn brings up another point. We have long suspected that the ancient Greek, Egyptian and Chaldean mythologies had some basis in fact. Now here we find the historian Pizron speaking matterof-factly of these “gods” as actual historical personages. Even the monsters of Greek mythology (satyrs, centaurs, mermaids, mermen; i.e., half-human, half-goat, half-bull, half-horse, half-fish creatures) could have resulted from genetic manipulation by the ancients.
Jesus told us in Luke 17 that conditions on the earth at the time of His second coming would be as it was in the days of Noah and Lot. Many Christians recognize the pervasive, open and unashamed practice of homosexuality as one of those signs marking His soon return. Widespread adultery is seen as another sign. But there is another sign of the times which we would not recognize as linking the days of Noah to our day were it not for the Book of Jasher. It is the great “progress” made in the science of cloning and genetic manipulation.
A sheep and a cow have been cloned. Pig genes and mice genes are being introduced into grain and vegetable products. Of these “achievements” we have been informed by the media. We wonder how much greater “progress” has been achieved but about which we are not told. I suspect much. Have they reached the stage where they are cloning humans? Have they been able to manipulate and mix the genes of humans and animals to produce the monsters of Greek mythology and Walt Disney’s “Fantasia?”
According to Jasher 4:18, our ancestors at the time of Noah were tinkering with the genetic code also. It describes how the sons of men “taught the mixture of animals of one species with the other…” Did they also create genetic hybrids, possibly the satyrs, centaurs, minotaurs, etc. of “mythology?”
Verdict on the 1840 Book of Jasher
While the 1840 Book of Jasher is an exciting and gripping account of events from Adam through Joshua, is it the authentic version referenced in the Bible? From the translation of the Hebrew Preface we learn that this text of Jasher was found by a Roman officer serving under Titus in the siege of Jerusalem of 70 A.D.
Sidrus, the Roman officer, broke through a wall in a large house and discovered an old Jewish man hidden in a secret room reading amidst his treasure of scrolls of the Law, the Prophets and the Writings (collectively, our Old Testament), with Jasher among them. The two became friends, and after a time, finally settled in Seville, Spain, where the manuscript remained until it ultimately came into the possession of the Jew who fled Spain and subsequently printed it in Hebrew in Venice in 1613.
We feel certain in saying the 1829-Jasher is a fraud. We cannot say the same about the 1840Jasher. We would appreciate hearing from any readers who find anywhere that Jasher-1840 directly contradicts the Bible. Meanwhile, we agree with the closing remarks of Mr. Noah in his Preface to Jasher-1840:
“Without giving it to the world as a work of Divine inspiration, or assuming the responsibility to say that it was not an inspired work, I have no hesitation in pronouncing it a work of great antiquity and interest, and a work that is entitled, even regarding it as a literary curiosity, to a great circulation among those who take pleasure in studying the Scriptures.”
ENDNOTES
2. This is the edition we make available to our readers. Order B-127, The Book of Jasher, $14 ppd. Artisan Publishers is now a subsidiary of Hoffman Printing Co. of Muskogee, Oklahoma.
The Seven Hills of Rome: Center Stage in Rome’s Eventful History
It is known historically for the invasion of the Sabines, a neighboring culture during early Rome. During the reign of Romulus, and as part of his quest to expand the small city, he invaded the Sabines.
UPDATED 12 SEPTEMBER, 2020 – 13:59 RILEY WINTERS
The Seven Hills of Rome are a group of hills to the east of the Tiber River, the main river within the city. These hills are important as they are considered the center of the city of Rome, and it was around them that the city was begun back in 753 BC. The seven hills are as follows: Palatine Hill, Aventine Hill, Capitoline Hill, Quirinal Hill, Caelian Hill, Esquiline Hill, and Viminal Hill. Though there are other hills within the city of Rome, it was these seven that formed the crux of civilization when it was begun by its legendary twin founders, Romulus and Remus .
Tracing the Footprints of the Philitines to the Minoan kinossos on Crete
The famous story of Romulus and Remus being raised by the Lupercal, is the backdrop to the founding of Rome. (EmDee / CC BY-SA 4.0)
Romulus and Remus: The Founding of Rome
According to legend, Romulus and Remus were twin sons of the Vestal Virgin Rhea Silvia and the god of war, Mars. However, due to Rhea’s rape by the king of the region, named Amulius, the sons were originally believed to be his and had to be disposed of. The rape of a Vestal Virgin was a capital crime and would result in Amulius’ death if discovered. The twin brothers were thus sent down the Tiber River in a basket, only to wash ashore and be discovered by a wolf, who became known to the Romans as the Lupercal.
The two boys were suckled and raised until they were discovered by a shepherd named Faustulus, who raised them in his own home with his wife. Upon reaching adulthood, the boys determined to depose their “father”, Amulius. Having succeeded, they deciding to build their own culture. Romulus chose to start his city on the Palatine Hill, while his brother Remus built up the Aventine Hill. However, being twins, they could not agree on which one of them should be the primary ruler of their society.
The twins chose to determine the winner by who saw the most eagles in the sky. Romulus watched from his hill, Remus from his. In the end, Romulus slaughtered Remus after Remus trespassed into his territory, unhappy with his brother’s bird-eyed victory, and Romulus was declared the sole ruler of Amulius’ former territory. His hill, the Palatine Hill, thus became the focal point of the new city which eventually came to be called Rome.
Detail of plan of Rome showing the Palatine. ( Peter1936F / CC BY-SA 4.0)
The Hill of Romulus: Palatine
Archaeologically, the Palatine Hill is highly valued as excavations have revealed evidence of settlements dating back to the 10 th century BC, which is before Romulus supposedly founded his city. Thanks to this archaeological evidence, the early Romans are believed to have lived in huts, as the area was rather marshy before the city was drained to provide firmer building grounds. Today, the Palatine Hill is best known for its collection of Republican and imperial residences.
The first emperor, Augustus, built his palace on the Palatine Hill (the name in Latin translates loosely to “palace”), and called it the House of Augustus. Interestingly this house is built in close proximity to the supposed Hut of Romulus, as well as the cave in which the wolf raised him and his brother. This allowed Augustus to maintain close links to the legendary founder of the city and increased his validity to rule. Augustus also built a temple to Apollo near his home. Having improved the aesthetic of Rome, and “left Rome a city of marble”, the association between Augustus and Apollo, the god of the arts, is a prominent association.
Painting by Luca Giordano depicting Aeneas defeating Turnus in revenge for his having murdered Pallas. ( Public domain )
It is also believed, thanks to Virgil’s Aeneid, that the hill was once home to Evander and his son Pallas, both Arcadian Greeks. Pallas was a close friend of Aeneas, the legendary prince of Troy. The two supposedly joined forces and went to war against the Rutuli. Pallas, however, was killed in battle by Turnus. It is Aeneas’ anger over the loss of his close friend which drives him to victory against his enemy. Augustus’ choice to associate with this hill, therefore, also spoke to this earlier myth, linking the fallen Trojan warriors to the successful future awaiting in Rome. Pallas has long been regarded in mythology as a loyal, honest, and brave fighter, and Augustus (and future emperors) building on the site of Pallas’ people only strengthens the connection between the old world and the new.
Other emperors whose homes are located at the Palatine Hill are those of Tiberius, Augustus’ successor, and Domitian, who reigned during the second dynasty of Rome, the Flavian Dynasty. Nero, the last of Augustus’ dynasty, also once had a house on this site, but it burned down in the Great Fire of 64 AD, which he himself was accused of starting.
The Aventine as seen from the Palantine, by Walter T Crane. ( Public domain )
The Hill of Remus: Aventine
The Aventine Hill, the site of Remus’ city, was not originally included within the boundaries of the city of Rome, due in part of Remus’ loss. It was not until the fourth king of the Rome, Ancus Marcius, that the hill came under Roman rule as the site of the Latins who Ancus conquered and moved. Ancus is known for his building programs, including walls, a jail, and the main bridge over the Tiber. His walls were intentionally constructed to widen the borders of Rome and in doing so he included the Aventine Hill.
Aventine Hill is geographically distinctive due to its two peaks, with a depression between the two which later became a boundary separating the hill into two different regions. It is a statement to the foreign deities who were enveloped into the city of Rome, as it is the hill with the most foreign monuments. Also located on this hill was the Armilustrium, which was the site where weapons and armor would be purified after military season had ended. Located as it was on one side of the Circus Maximus, the original site where warriors would gather before battle, the Aventine Hill has a strong association with warfare in the ancient world, making it one of the paramount sites within the growing city. Today it is also known for its monasteries and churches, added to the hill during the Christian period of the city.
Bas relief showing Emperor Marcus Aurelius and his family offering sacrifice at the Temple of Jupiter on the Capitoline Hill. ( MatthiasKabel / CC BY-SA 3.0 )
The Hill of the Head: Capitoline
The Capitoline Hill, located between the Campus Martius and the Roman Forum, was originally the citadel of the city, fortified against attacks and situated firmly within the Servian Walls, the first definitive walls of Rome. It is known historically for the invasion of the Sabines, a neighboring culture during early Rome. During the reign of Romulus, and as part of his quest to expand the small city, he invaded the Sabines.
The settlers in Rome were made up of the predominantly male followers of Romulus, and so they stole the women of the Sabines and took them for wives. In retribution, the Sabines attacked, and were let into the city by a Roman woman called Tarpeia. Following her admittance of the Sabine into the city of Rome, Tarpeia was thereafter remembered by the rock named after her , from which traitors and criminals would be thrown to their deaths. The Sabine women who had been kidnapped eventually stopped the fight, and the two cultures united under peaceful terms, with the Sabines resettling on the Capitoline Hill.
The Rape of the Sabine Women, in a painting by Pietro da Cortona in the Capitoline Museum in Rome. ( Public domain )
Various temples can also be found on the Capitoline Hill, most significantly the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus which was for a long time the most important religious site in the city. It was dedicated toward the end of the Roman monarchy, c. 509 BC, and was rebuilt numerous times over the course of the city’s history. This temple housed images of Juno, Jupiter’s wife and the goddess of marriage, and Minerva, Jupiter’s daughter and the goddess of wisdom and warfare, and formed what is called the Capitoline Triad. These were considered three of the most important gods in the Roman faith, and were frequently depicted together throughout Roman history. Because of their prominent placement on the Capitoline Hill, the depiction of these three gods together were often called Capitolia.
Tarpeia went down in history for having helped the Sabines enter Rome. The same Sabines then crushed her to death with their shields. Tarpeia gave her name to the Taripean Rock, a cliff which is part of the Capitoline Hill, which was used to execute criminals who were thrown off the cliff. ( Sailko / CC BY-SA 3.0 )
Other temples on the Capitoline Hill include the Temple of Saturn (the god of agriculture), the temple to Juno Moneta (Juno the god of of funds and money), and the temple of Virtus (the god of bravery). The Capitoline Hill is also significant in Roman history for being the only hill of Rome to evade capture by the first sack of Rome in 390 BC by the Gauls. It was from this site that the Romans attempted to defend their falling city. Today, the Capitoline Hill has the most extensive collection of ancient and Renaissance works of art in the city of Rome.
An etching of Quirinal Hill in Rome showing the Palzzo del Quirinale. ( Public domain )
The Hill of the Sabines: Quirinal
The Quirinal Hill was historically another site of Sabine settlement. The king of the Sabines lived there to help solidify their new peace with the Romans. The second king of Rome, a Sabine named Numa Pompilius, known for his peaceful ways and association with the wood nymph Egeria, was said to live on Quirinal rather than Palatine. The hill is so named in honor of the Sabine god Quirinus who has often been associated with the Roman god Janus, the god of doorways and boundaries, who was adopted into the Roman religion by a Sabine leader. Today, the hill is the site of the house of Italy’s president, living in the Palazzo del Quirinale.
Caelian Hill is known for its elaborate Republican homes. ( Leonid Andronov / Adobe Stock)
The Hill of the Wealthy: Caelian
The Caelian Hill came to prominence during the reign of the third king of Rome, Tullus Hostilius. Known for his military prowess and his improvements to the early Roman army, Hostilius notably defeated the neighboring culture of Alba Longa c. 7 th century BC. Upon their defeat, he resettled this culture on the Caelian Hill.
In later Roman history, Caelian Hill came to be known for its elaborate Republican homes, as the neighborhood of Rome’s wealthiest citizens. Under the Empire, a temple to the fourth Roman emperor, Claudius, was constructed, and one of the later emperors, Caracalla, built his extensive bath system near here (c. 212 AD). The largest bath system in ancient Rome (at the time), the ruins of the Baths of Caracalla are one of the highlights of Roman culture, providing extensive archaeological evidence of the ancient bath network.
Esquiline Hill is home to the remains of the Domus Aurea, a giant house of gold built by Emperor Nero, and one of the best sources of surviving ancient Roman frescoes. ( steheap / Adobe Stock Photo)
The Hill of Gold: Esquiline
The Esquiline Hill of Rome is the largest hill of the city, and is best known for its role in Emperor Nero ’s Golden House, or Domus Aurea . After the Great Fire of Rome in 64 AD, Nero constructed a giant house of gold on the hill, taking the destroyed land from the residents of the city and repurposing it for himself. His complex also incorporated a giant lake and a large statue of himself called the Colossus, the site of which was later used by Emperor Vespasian for the Colosseum, or Flavian Amphitheater. The Esquiline’s Hill is still being heavily excavated as much of Nero’s Golden House was buried following his death. As such, it is one of the best sources of surviving ancient Roman frescoes.
Landscape painting by Pieter van Bloemen showing the Baths of Diocletian in Rome. ( Public domain )
The Hill of Gods and Baths, Viminal
The smallest of the Seven Hills of Rome is the Viminal Hill. Historically, it is thought to have been the first hill to be included within the city of Rome. Viminal Hill once possessed a temple to the god Serapis, a deity which combined aspects of the Greek Zeus and the Egyptian Osiris, and was erected by Emperor Claudius, c. 41-54 AD. The Baths of Diocletian, begun c. 298 AD, were also constructed near this hill, and replaced the Baths of Caracalla as the largest baths in the city of Rome. More recently, the Viminal Hill was the home to the seat of the Prime Minister of Italy until the 1960s.
- Roman Mythology of the Ages of Man, Metamorphoses and the Founding of Rome
- Ancient Vanishings: The mysterious and supernatural disappearance of Romulus
- The Pleiades, Blue Print of the Seven Hills of Rome and Other Sacred Cities
spacer
The Seven Hills of Rome Today
The Seven Hills of Rome are more than just prominent natural features in Rome’s geographical landscape. They are a testament to Rome’s long history stretching from the early days of its founding on April 21 st, 753 BC to the present day. They have survived years of warfare and political change, and have seen the breadth of religious transition. A visit to Rome is both impossible and incomplete without a historic tour of these seven hills.
Top image: The Seven Hills of Rome are considered to be located in the center of the city. Source: sborisov / Adobe Stock