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Monday, July 30, 2012

Google Logo - Olympics Fencing w/ a Sceptor / Stave / Mace

The LORD hath broken the staff of the wicked, [and] the sceptre of the rulers.



Google is the Government::

A sceptre (or scepter in U.S. English) is a symbolic ornamental rod or wand borne in the hand by a ruling monarch as an item of royal or imperial insignia.

Scepters and Staves
Scepters and staves were a general sign of authority in Ancient Egypt. One of the earliest royal scepters was discovered in the tomb of Khasekhemwy in Abydos. Kings were also known to carry a staff, and Pharaoh Anedjib is shown on stone vessels carrying a so called mks-staff. The scepter with the longest history seems to be the heqa-scepter, sometimes described as the shepherd’s crook. The earliest examples of this piece of regalia dates to pre-dynastic times. A scepter was found in a tomb at Abydos that dates to the late Naqada period.
Another scepter associated with the king is the was-scepter. This is a long staff mounted with an animal head. The earliest known depictions of the was-scepter date to the first dynasty. The was-scepter is shown in the hands of both kings and deities.
The Flail later was closely related to the ‘’heqa’’-scepter, but in early representations the king was also depicted solely with the flail, as shown in a late pre-dynastic knife handle which is now in the Metropolitan museum, and on the Narmer Macehead.[9]
[edit] The Uraeus The earliest evidence we have of the use of the Uraeus—a rearing cobra—is from the reign of Den from the first dynasty. The cobra supposedly protected the pharaoh by spitting fire at its enemies.[9]

The Olympic Flame Dies, Gets Unceremoniously Relit By Old Guy On a Cherry Picker

Lady Liberty Lucifer, the standard of Standard Oil::

Lucifer the Light Bearer & Corporate Symbolism

Lucifer the Light Bearer & Corporate Symbolism

The Olympics: To Honor Zeus And Other Pagan Gods To Whom Christians Were Burned Alive
A 600-foot footrace was the only athletic event at the first Olympics, a festival held in 776 B.C. and dedicated to Zeus, the chief Greek god. For the next millennium, Greeks gathered every four years in Olympia to honor Zeus through sports, sacrifices and hymns. The five-day festival brought the Greek world together in devotion to one deity. What began in ancient Greece as a festival to honor a single god, Zeus, has now become an almost Olympian task, as organizers of the games navigate dozens of sacred fasts, religious rituals and holy days. The London Olympics will try to accommodate religious athletes with 193 chaplains, a prayer room in every venue and a multifaith center in the Olympic Village.

It's a Masonic World ("Signs and symbols rule the world, not words nor laws." - Confucius)

I want my Masonic TV

"The oldest known Masonic text [that we are allowed to know about], The Halliwell Manuscript, or Regius Poem, has a brief history in its introduction, stating that the "craft of masonry" began with Euclid in Egypt, and came to England in the reign of King Athelstan.[2] The Cooke Manuscript traces masonry to Jabal son of Lamech (Genesis 4, 20-22), and tells how this knowledge came to Euclid, from him to the Children of Israel (while they were in Egypt), and so on through an elaborate path to Athelstan.[3] Most of the older texts contain a similar history."

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