Saturday, September 16, 2006

THIS IS WAR LOR!!!!!!!!!

http://www.winebottletalkcork.blogspot.com

U shitty dragon that came out of nowwhere!!! I HATE U!! I HATE U MORE THAN BIG BAD WOLF!!! U ARE SLANDERING ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!

*CRY*

MUMMMMMMMMMY!!!!!!!! I HATE HIM!!!!!!!!!!!!


Ok ok, por por always tells me not to get mad, get even. Here goes:

Dragons are stupid. Dragons are mean and most of all dragons are evil!!!!! Especially in a western context!

( From Wikipedia)

Quote:

In Christianity:

The Latin word for a dragon, draco (genitive: draconis), actually means snake or serpent, emphasising the European association of dragons with snakes. The Medieval Biblical interpretation of the Devil being associated with the serpent who tempted Adam and Eve, thus gave a snake-like dragon connotations of evil. Generally speaking, Biblical literature itself did not portray this association (save for the Book of Revelation, whose treatment of dragons is detailed below). The demonic opponents of God, Christ, or good Christians have commonly been portrayed as reptilian or chimeric.
In the
Book of Job Chapter 41, the sea monster Leviathan, which has some dragon-like characteristics, is described as God talks about the "king of beasts" that lived upon the Earth at an undefined time. Some people think this comes from an older Mesopotamian creation myth in which Tiamat is depicted as a goddess salt-water sea monster, while others believe it refers to a now-extinct sea creature like the Plesiosaur. [citation needed]

In Revelation 12:3, an enormous red beast with seven heads is described, whose tail sweeps one third of the stars from heaven down to earth (held to be symbolic of the fall of the angels, though not commonly held among biblical scholars). In most translations, the word "dragon" is used to describe the beast, since in the original Greek the word used is drakon (δράκον).

In iconography, some Catholic saints are depicted in the act of killing a dragon. This is one of the common aspects of Saint George in Egyptian Coptic iconography [1], on the coat of arms of Moscow, and in English and Aragonese legend. In Italy, Saint Mercurialis, first bishop of the city of Forlì, is also depicted slaying a dragon.[2] Saint Julian of Le Mans and Saint Leonard of Noblac were also venerated as dragon-slayers.

Unquote.

Yah, dragons are bad!!!!!

Love me! Love me! Love the sheep!!!

*I curse the stupid dragon to have pimples!*

1 comment:

DesDragon said...

See reply in

http://winebottletalkcork.blogspot.com/