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  2. Number of the beast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Number_of_the_beast

    He will be king of a restored Israel, not only king, but the king par excellence. In Hebrew this idea could be expressed by the words (hammelek l'Yisrael), which have the requisite numerical value of 666; but in order to obtain this number kaph medial (כ) must be used in melek (king) instead of kaph final (ך‎)." [56]

  3. Therion (Thelema) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therion_(Thelema)

    תריון — ThRIVN; a Hebrew transliteration of “θηριον” / “therion”, Greek for “beast”. Το Μεγα Θηριον — Greek for “The Great Beast”. Koine Greek is the Greek dialect by which the books of the New Testament were written, including the Book of Revelation, where the original mention of The Beast's number is ...

  4. Legends surrounding the papacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legends_surrounding_the_papacy

    One misconception surrounding the papal tiara suggests that the words Vicarius Filii Dei (Latin for "Vicar of the Son of God") exist on the side of one of the tiaras.. The story centres on the widely made claim that, when numerised (i.e., when those letters in the 'title' that have Roman numeral value are added together as in a chronogram) they produce the number 666, described in the Book of ...

  5. Shedim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shedim

    Shedim (Hebrew: שֵׁדִים šēḏīm; singular: שֵׁד šēḏ) [3] are spirits or demons in the Tanakh and Jewish mythology. Shedim do not, however, correspond exactly to the modern conception of demons as evil entities as originated in Christianity. [4]

  6. List of love and lust deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_love_and_lust_deities

    Anteros, god of requited love. Eros, god of love and procreation; originally a deity unconnected to Aphrodite, he was later made into her son, possibly with Ares as his father; this version of him was imported to Rome, where he came known as Cupid. Himeros, god of sexual desire and unrequited love. Hedylogos, god of sweet talk and flattery ...

  7. Jewish mysticism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_mysticism

    Jewish mysticism, from early Hekhalot texts, through medieval spirituality, to the folk religion storytelling of East European shtetls, absorbed motifs of Jewish mythology and folklore through Aggadic creative imagination, reception of earlier Jewish apocrypha traditions, and absorption of

  8. Jewish views on love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_views_on_love

    Commenting upon the command to love the neighbor [5] is a discussion recorded [6] between Rabbi Akiva, who declared this verse in Leviticus to contain the great principle of the Law ("Kelal gadol ba-Torah"), and Ben Azzai, who pointed to Genesis 5:1 ("This is the book of the generations of Adam; in the day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him"), as the verse expressing the ...

  9. Se'irim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Se'irim

    Sa’ir was the ordinary Hebrew word for "he-goat", and it is not always clear what the word's original meaning might have been. But in early Jewish thought, represented by targumim and possibly 3 Baruch, along with translations of the Hebrew Bible such as the Peshitta and Vulgate, the se’īrīm were understood as demons.