Silk Road forums
Discussion => Newbie discussion => Topic started by: Snooze on March 27, 2013, 06:46 pm
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Auschwitz, the meaning of pain
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The way that I want you to die
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Showers that cleanse you of your life
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Forced in
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Like cattle
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You run
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Stripped of
Your life's worth
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Human mice, for the Angel of Death
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Four hundred thousand more to die
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Angel of Death!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Monarch to the kingdom of the dead
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Sadistic, surgeon of demise
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Sadist of the noblest blood
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Destroying without mercy,
To benefit the aryan race,
Surgery with no anesthesia (Ketamine)
Feel the knife pierce you intensely,
Inferior, no use to mankind,
Strapped down screaming out to die,
Angel of death,
Monarch to the kingdom of the dead.
(more music to follow...)
~ Slayer - lyrics by Tom Araya
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Pumped with fluid, inside your brain
Pressure in your skull begins pushing through your eyes
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Burning flesh, drips away
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Test of heat burns your skin, your mind starts to boil,
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Frigid cold, cracks your limbs
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How long can you last
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In this frozen water burial?
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Sewn together, joining heads
Just a matter of time
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Til you rip yourselves apart
Millions laid out in their
Crowded tombs
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Sickening ways to achieve
The holocaust
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Seas of blood, bury life
Smell your death as it burns
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Deep inside of you
Abacinate, eyes that bleed
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Praying for the end of
Your wide awake nightmare
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cough
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Your blood running cold
Injecting cells, dying eyes
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Feeding on the screams of
The mutants he's creating
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Pathetic harmless victims
Left to die
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Rancid Angel of Death
Flying free
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Angel of Death
Monarch to the kingdom of the dead
Infamous butcher,
Angel of Death!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! >:(
100
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where we all end up
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The Angel Of Death has many meanings from a variety of different sources.
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The Passover Angel Of Death is a destroying angel commonly described as the deliver of the tenth plague in the Book of Exodus
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In later Judaism, Michael carries Adam to the grave in some texts.
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27 ways to escape
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and Gabriel was the angel of death over kings
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Samael, an important archangel in Talmudic and post-Talmudic lore, is a figure who is an accuser, seducer and destroyer , and has been regarded as both good and evil.
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It is said that he was the guardian angel of Esau and a patron of the Roman empire.
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He is considered in legend a member of the heavenly host (with often grim and destructive duties), in the New Testament named Satan and the chief of the evil spirits.
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One of Samael's greatest roles in Jewish lore is that of the angel of death.
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He remains one of the Lord's servants even though he appears to want men to do evil.
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As a good angel, Samael resides in the seventh heaven, although he is declared to be the chief angel of the fifth heaven.
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In Hinduism, Yama is the lord of death.
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In some interpretations of Hindu sacred texts, Yama is regarded as the first mortal to die, and chart his way to heaven.
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He is depicted in classical Hindu icons as a large man astride an enormous black buffalo, carrying a coil of rope
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He is accompanied by a pair of tremendous hounds, with four eyes, and gaping nostrils.
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He is considered, in Hindu consciousness to be the harbinger of death, as well as the companion who guides the soul to its ultimate destination.
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In Christianity, Michael is the good angel of death.
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In Christianity, Samael is the evil angel of death.
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In the Book of Revelation, Abaddon is a destroying angel.
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Abaddon is also called Apollyon.
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Also from Christianity, Santa Muerte is a sacred figure, venerated primarily in Mexico and the United States.
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Santa Muerte is possibly a syncretism between Mesoamerican and Catholic beliefs (the name literally translates to "Holy Death" or "Saint Death").
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In Islamic theology, Azrael is the Archangel of Death.
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He is also the angel of retribution.
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The Qur'an never uses this name, rather referring to Malak al-Maut (which translates directly as angel of death).
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It is also spelled Izrail, Azrin, Izrael, Azriel, Azrail, Ezraeil, Azraille, Azryel, Ozryel, or Azraa-eel.
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The Chambers English dictionary uses the spelling Azrael.
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The name literally means "Whom God Helps" in an adapted form of Hebrew.
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Depending on the outlook and precepts of various religions in which he is a figure, Azrael may be portrayed as residing in the Third Heaven
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In one of his forms, he has four faces and four thousand wings, and his whole body consists of eyes and tongues, the number of which corresponds to the number of people inhabiting the Earth.
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Scary
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He will be the last to die, recording and erasing constantly in a large book the names of men at birth and death, respectively
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Scary
Yes, it's quite a morbid topic.
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In Jewish mysticism, he is commonly referred to as "Azriel," not "Azrael," and is sometimes identified as the embodiment of evil, not necessarily or specifically evil itself.
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However, the Zohar (a holy book of the Jewish mystical tradition of Kabbalah), presents a more pleasant depiction of Azriel
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The Zohar says that Azriel receives the prayers of faithful people when they reach heaven, and also commands legions of heavenly angels.
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In Christianity, a story from Folk-lore of the Holy Land: Moslem, Christian and Jewish by J. E. Hanauer tells of a soldier with a gambling addiction avoiding Azrael.
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Because the soldier goes to Jesus and asks for help, then later must see Jesus and repent to be allowed back in Heaven.
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This is seen as a Christian account of Azrael.
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However, it does not specify whether Azrael is an angel of death, or an angel of punishment in this story.
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In approximately twenty two cultures and sects of Islam, Azrael is the name referring to the Angel of Death by some Arabic speakers.
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Azrael is also pronounced as ʿIzrāʾīl /Azriel,
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The name is mentioned in a few Muslim books but is argued by some Muslims as having no basis of reference.
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Along with Jibrīl, Mīkhā'īl, Isrāfīl and other angels, the Angel of Death is believed by Muslims to be one of the archangels.
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Along with Jibrīl, Mīkhā'īl, Isrāfīl and other angels, the Angel of Death is believed by Muslims to be one of the archangels.
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The Qur'an states that the angel of death takes the soul of every person and returns it to God
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However, the Qur'an makes it clear that only God knows when and where each person will be taken by death, thus making it clear that the Angel of Death has no power of his own.
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Several Muslim traditions recount meetings between the Angel of Death and the prophets.
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The most famous conversation was between the Angel of Death and Moses.
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Azrael watches over the dying, separates the soul from the body, and receives the spirits of the dead in Muslim belief.
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Rather than merely representing death personified, the Angel of Death is usually described in Islamic sources as subordinate to the will of God "with the most profound reverence."
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However, there is no reference within the Quran or any Islamic teachings giving the angel of death the name of Azrael.
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Some Sunni Muslim scholars doubt the authenticity of the tradition itself.
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Some have also disputed the usage of the name Azrael as it's not used in the Qur'an itself.
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However, the same can be said about many Prophets and Angels, many of whom aren't mentioned by name in the Qur'an.
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Riffian (Berber) men of Morocco had the custom of shaving the head but leaving a single lock of hair on either the crown, left, or right side of the head, so that the angel Azrael is able "...to pull them up to heaven on the Last Day."
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In the Kevin Smith film "Dogma", Azrael was a character played by Jason Lee as a fallen muse and demon.