☩мєℓℓσω🌠🌳

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☩мєℓℓσω🌠🌳

☩мєℓℓσω🌠🌳

@MiddleEarthsme

Catholic. Family. Azores. Traditional builds. Lime plaster. Relic artisan.

Azores Islands Katılım Mayıs 2009
2.7K Takip Edilen961 Takipçiler
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☩мєℓℓσω🌠🌳
☩мєℓℓσω🌠🌳@MiddleEarthsme·
@wrathofgnon "..When a contemporary beholder, accustomed to sitting under low horizontal concrete ceilings, looks upon such a structure, he is fascinated by it. As the saying goes: 'Straight is the line of duty; curved is the line of beauty' " Maher Azmi Abu-samra Maher
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Mark Lambert - Catholic Unscripted Podcast
The first of the English Martyrs to fall were not rebels, but contemplatives. The Carthusians, men of silence, prayer, and formidable intellect, were among the most respected in England. Which is precisely why they were targeted first. When Henry VIII demanded submission, he did not begin with the weak, but with the strong. Break the Carthusians, and the rest might follow. But they did not break. Led by St John Houghton, they refused the Oath, not with slogans or rebellion, but with the quiet certainty of men who knew that truth is not negotiable. Dragged to Tyburn, cut open while still alive, Houghton is said to have looked upon his own heart and cried: “O Jesus, what will you do with my heart?” They were the first of the English Martyrs because they were the most trusted, the most learned, the most serene. Rome’s enemies understood something we too often forget: If you can silence the contemplative, you can remake the world. But they could not silence them. Their blood spoke. It speaks still.
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Culture Explorer
Culture Explorer@CultureExploreX·
Wow! Most people walk into a cathedral and look up. But sometimes the real shock is hidden in the choir stalls. This is the carved cedar choir of Guadix Cathedral in Granada, filled with forty figures from the life of the Church. It reminds us that past civilizations did not reserve beauty only for domes and façades. They carved it into the very seats where prayer was repeated day after day. Photo by Marisidra
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James Lucas
James Lucas@JamesLucasIT·
Look at the size of St. Peter’s Basilica This was built before “architecture degrees”
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Humble Flow
Humble Flow@HumbleFlow·
This is something most people don’t know, so let me explain Before Islam existed, much of the Middle East was Christian Asia Minor (modern Turkey) was Christian. Syria was Christian. Egypt was Christian. Iraq was Christian. Lebanon was Christian. Palestine was Christian. Jordan was Christian. Parts of North Africa like Libya, Morocco and Tunisia were Christian. Antioch, Alexandria, and Edessa were among the greatest centers of Christian learning in the world These places were arguably more central to early Christianity than Europe. The apostles preached there. The earliest churches were built there, and many of the Church Fathers came from these lands Then in the 7th century, Islamic armies expanded out of Arabia. The wars were brutal, cities were taken by force, and the entire political and religious structure of the region changed. Christians who had once been the majority were gradually reduced to second class citizens Within a few decades they conquered Syria, Egypt, Iraq, and Persia. Within a century they controlled most of the Christian Middle East and North Africa Most Christians were forced to convert, others fled, and some lived as second-class citizens That's what's going to happen soon if we don't stop them
Dr. Maalouf ‏@realMaalouf

Syria (Aleppo) in the 1950s, when 40% of the population was Christian. Today, it’s less than 1%. This is the case for all the Middle East under Islam. Funny how no one cares about this genocide.

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Dave Roman
Dave Roman@DaveRom86052473·
@nypost Egypt was Christian before Islam…. Never forget that.
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Månen -אמונה 🕎
Månen -אמונה 🕎@Giarritti1·
@kbalian90 This is what you deserve; Christians have been spreading rumors and slander about Israel and the Jews. Armenians, you only started living in Israel in the 1970s, not 1700.
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Kegham Balian
Kegham Balian@kbalian90·
BREAKING: 127-year-old St. George’s School, one of the oldest Christian schools in Jerusalem, is at risk of closure. Following the Israeli Education Ministry’s decision to deny work permits to West Bank-based educators, more than 200 teachers face losing their jobs, effectively threatening the future of Christian education in Jerusalem.
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Historic Hub
Historic Hub@HistoricHub·
This is one of the worst downgrades of all time Old London Bridge was a medieval stone structure that stood for over 600 years and was once considered a wonder of the world. It was 926 feet long and filled with houses and shops, making it the longest inhabited bridge in Europe
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Orthodox Christian
Orthodox Christian@orthodox_33ad·
Israel has closed the Church of the Holy Sepulchre indefinitely for the first time in the history of Christianity. Holy Week and Easter services will be prohibited. Sunday masses and liturgies cancelled. A church that should be packed with hundreds of thousands these coming weeks is being forcibly shut and silenced. Israel cites it is for ‘security concerns’ while Jewish Israelis are allowed to celebrate in mass gatherings. Alongside the forced closure of Al-Aqsa mosque, reports cite priests aggressively being turned away to perform daily services. Throughout history, wars, tensions, or even the pandemic limited access to the sanctuary, but they had never prevented liturgical celebrations in this central place of Christian faith indefinitely. Christians must not remain silent.
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Robbert Leusink
Robbert Leusink@robbertleusink·
In 1857 Jean-François Millet painted two peasants in a field, heads bowed, tools at their feet It became one of the most reproduced paintings in history What most people don't know: they are praying the Angelus For 700 years Europeans stopped everything three times a day: fields, markets, and workshops The same prayer at 6AM, noon, and 6PM The Church bells still ring But nobody knows why anymore...
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Zaphnath Paaneah
Zaphnath Paaneah@spacehuman·
There is a Salvador Dali connection: “Dalí obsessively analyzed the painting and concluded the figures weren't devoutly reciting the Angelus prayer but instead stood in grief over the buried corpse of their dead infant child. He saw the woman's posture as mantis-like (a symbol of devouring femininity in his surrealist worldview), the man's hat shielding his genitals (castration anxiety), and the overall mood as one of repressed guilt, sexuality, and death—possibly even echoing Dalí's own childhood trauma over a deceased older brother who shared his name. Dalí pushed so hard for validation that the Louvre eventually performed an X-ray on the canvas (in the 1960s, after years of his campaigning). The results revealed an oblong, geometric, coffin-like shape beneath the area now occupied by the basket of potatoes. Dalí triumphantly declared this proof of a painted-over child's coffin or small burial box, arguing Millet had covered it up later—likely to make the work more commercially appealing and less morbid for 19th-century buyers, who preferred sentimental rural piety over overt tragedy.”
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Sign of the Cross
Sign of the Cross@CatholicSOTC·
Exorcist Fr. Ripperger: "The big mistake that people make is still thinking the Jews are the chosen people, they were, but they rejected their inheritance. They refused to accept Christ." lifesitenews.com/news/exorcist-…
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J.R.R. Tolkien
J.R.R. Tolkien@JRRTolkien·
“I wish it need not have happened in my time,” said Frodo. “So do I,” said Gandalf, “and so do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us.” — J.R.R. Tolkien
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The Conservative Alternative
The Conservative Alternative@OldeWorldOrder·
The German poet Heinrich Heine was once asked why men no longer build great cathedrals. His response? "People in those old times had convictions. We moderns only have opinions. It takes more than a mere opinion to erect a Gothic cathedral."
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Grok
Grok@grok·
No, I didn't say that. Independent verification means cross-checking with neutral evidence like commercial satellite imagery, OSINT from non-aligned analysts, or reports corroborated across conflicting sides—not blindly trusting any one government (IRGC, US, UAE, or others). For these claims, none exists yet: UAE confirms interceptions with no damage reported to THAAD sites; US says they sank an Iranian corvette off Chabahar instead. Apply the same standard evenly.
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Lianna
Lianna@lianna_armenian·
May Lord protect everyone and keep all innocent lives safe 🙏. ✝️68 AD. Hidden in the mountains of #Iran 🇮🇷. One of the oldest surviving 🇦🇲✝️ #Christian churches on Earth-built on the martyrdom site of an apostle. The #Armenian Monastery of Saint Thaddeus was founded in 68 AD according to sacred tradition on the very spot where Saint Thaddeus, one of the twelve apostles, was martyred and buried This makes it an apostolic-era sanctuary where Armenians have prayed since the 1st century, long before Armenia became the first Christian nation in 301 AD. Its walls have witnessed empires rise and fall. They all came and went, but the Armenian prayer never stopped. The current structure is a mosaic of centuries. The oldest surviving parts, around the altar apse, date from the 7th century, with some traditions linking earlier origins to the 4th century or the apostolic era. After an earthquake destroyed much of it in 1319, the monastery was extensively rebuilt in the 1320s under Bishop Zachariah. Further repairs occurred over the centuries, including in the 17th century. In the early 19th century, under the patronage of Father Superior Simeon, a large western extension (a narthex-like structure) was added, deliberately echoing the design of Etchmiadzin Cathedral, the mother church of the Armenian Apostolic Church. In 2008, UNESCO inscribed the Monastery of Saint Thaddeus (together with the Monastery of Saint Stepanos and the Chapel of Dzordzor, all in Iran's northwestern provinces) on its World Heritage List as the "Armenian Monastic Ensembles of Iran." This recognition highlights their outstanding universal value in Armenian architectural and decorative traditions, cultural diffusion, and pilgrimage heritage. Every year, thousands of pilgrims-Armenians and others-still journey to this remote mountain valley to kneel where an apostle is believed to have fallen. The annual three-day pilgrimage in July venerates Saint Thaddeus and Saint Sandukht (a royal convert martyred with him).
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Kennath Damien
Kennath Damien@DamienKennath·
@grok @bin_rakan44243 @alhasaan0 @grok Please note that this video is from 2015 when a fire broke out due to an electrical malfunction. I have video evidence of me recording this in 2015 from inside my school bus lol
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إيـــران اليــوم ☫ 🇮🇷
🚨🚨 عاجـــــــــــــــل ☫ ضرب مبنى يتواجد في امريكيين في دبي قبل قليل. #الوعد_الصادق_4
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Cyrus Janssen
Cyrus Janssen@thecyrusjanssen·
An Iranian man left this comment on my YouTube channel. This is without a doubt the single best explanation of the reality facing Iranian people today👇 "As an Iranian, I can tell you the situation is no longer just political—it's existential. We are trapped between two collapsing structures: one internal, one external. On one hand, we face a deeply dysfunctional government, led by the Supreme Leader and the Islamic Republic’s unelected institutions. Decades of economic mismanagement, suppression of dissent, and brutal ideological control have alienated multiple generations. No one believes in reform anymore—because every attempt has either been co-opted or crushed. But here's the paradox: We are also terrified of regime collapse—because we've watched the aftermath of Western intervention in countries like Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Afghanistan. Each was promised freedom; each descended into chaos, civil war, or foreign occupation. So no, we don't trust the U.S. or Israel. Not because we support our regime—but because we know how imperial powers treat ‘liberated’ nations in the Middle East. Freedom, in their language, often means vacuum, fire, and permanent instability. Right now, many Iranians live with three truths at once: The Islamic Republic is morally and politically bankrupt. The alternatives offered by foreign actors are not liberation—they’re collapse. A bad government is survivable. No government is not. We are not silent because we agree. We are cautious because we’ve learned—too well—what happens when superpowers decide to "help." In a sentence: Iran is a nation held hostage by its own regime, but haunted by the fate of its neighbors. We are stuck in a house we hate, surrounded by fires we fear more."
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☩мєℓℓσω🌠🌳
☩мєℓℓσω🌠🌳@MiddleEarthsme·
@HUNTER1994BC @Megatron_ron Yes you are . Condemnation for the villians of world war and whoever, whatever is behind it. But not the literally millions of innocents. Like my daughter,grandchildrem and family are there. And we are Portuguese.
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Megatron
Megatron@Megatron_ron·
NEW: 🇮🇷🇦🇪 Dubai International Airport is paralyzed, people want to leave Flights have been suspended indefinitely.
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James Lucas
James Lucas@JamesLucasIT·
Gustav Mahler once said "Tradition is not the worship of ashes, but the preservation of fire" This is Charlie Gee, a British stonemason who restores cathedrals and carries a rare level of skill that is fading in the modern world He’s just 23 years old and he's preserving fire
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