And the serpent said unto the woman,
Ye shall not surely die:
Genesis 3:4
This week, researchers announced that what they found was no anomaly but rather a small canal system. They now think the tomb of the ancient ruler Pakal was built atop a natural spring about 700 AD, with tunnels that directed water to the esplanade in front of the temple in the hope of giving Pakal's spirit a way into the underworld.
In fact, an engraving at the site reads that the dead gain entrance to the underworld in such a manner via the god Chaac, who will "will guide the dead toward the underworld by submerging [them]."
The site previously gained fame when author Erich von Daniken posited in his 1968 book Chariots of the Gods? that Pakal looked like an astronaut at the helm of a spaceship on a carved stone sarcophagus.
But archaeologist Arnoldo Gonzalez says the dig has turned up "nothing to do with spaceships" and that the "flames" of the so-called spaceship engine in fact depict the Mayan "Tree of Life."
yahoo
COMMENTARY:
1) "Tree of Life"? Hearkening back to stories carried away from Babel about the beginning?
2) Here we have an example rooted in echoing the 1st lie told--immortality of the Soul.----1st LIE told on earth---Lucifer Lied to Eve... And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die: Genesis 3:4
COMMENTARY:
1) "Tree of Life"? Hearkening back to stories carried away from Babel about the beginning?
2) Here we have an example rooted in echoing the 1st lie told--immortality of the Soul.----1st LIE told on earth---Lucifer Lied to Eve... And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die: Genesis 3:4
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