Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Cranberry-spirulina-greentea-enriched Mead: a health drink in moderation

Cranberry mead, a blend of fermented honey and cranberries, is a nutrient-dense, gluten-free beverage that may offer antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and immune-boosting properties in moderation
. Cranberries contribute antioxidants like proanthocyanidins and polyphenols, potentially helping with heart health and urinary tract health, while honey provides natural antibacterial properties

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1155/jfbc/9617052 

 Cranberry addition significantly (p < 0.05) slowed fermentation kinetics and improved the bioactive profile of CBM, which showed higher total phenolic (111.3 mg GAE/L) and flavonoid (59.86 mg QE/L) contents compared to CM. Antioxidant activity was also high in CBM, with DPPH and hydrogen peroxide scavenging reaching 50.7% and 58.6%, respectively. CBM exhibited a lower alcohol content (3.1% alcohol by volume) with better sensory attributes, including color, mouthfeel, and flavor complexity...

 mead is gaining attention for its bioactive compounds such as gallic acid (31.38–88.10 μg/L), p-coumaric acid (3.37–5.90 μg/L), and catechin (10.38–125.55 μg/L) which are associated with antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and antimicrobial properties [5].

 For example, beer enriched with Chlorella vulgaris (10 g/L) exhibited higher total polyphenols (442.02 mg GAE/L) and antioxidant activity (89.98%)

 

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Drumpf's photo in Epstein's bedroom desk drawer gets redacted and restored again!


 https://www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/doj-remove-trump-photo-epstein-files-release/

As indicative of the DOJ/FBI redacting as much as possible any incriminating evidence against Trump.... oops! 

 And the temporary disappearance of the image depicting Trump suggests the removals may aim to shield the president from public scrutiny of his relationship with the convicted sex offender.

 

 

Jesus preached cancellation of financial debt

 https://imo.neocities.org/debts

Michael E. Hudson's first book on this topic is posted above - searchable

In the first reported sermon Jesus delivered upon returning to his native Nazareth (Luke 4:16 ff.), he unrolled the scroll of Isaiah and announced his mission “to restore the Year of Our Lord.” Until recently the meaning of this phrase was not recognized as referring specifically to the Jubilee Year. But breakthroughs in cuneiform research and a key Qumran scroll provide a direct link to that tradition. This linkage provides the basis for understanding how early Christianity emerged in an epoch so impoverished by debt and the threat of bondage that it was called the End Time.

Jesus was both more revolutionary and more conservative than was earlier recognized. He was politically revolutionary in threatening Judaic creditors, and behind them the Pharisees who had rationalized their rights against debtors. Luke 16: 13–15 describes them as “loving money” and “sneering” at Jesus’s message that “You cannot serve both God and Money/Mammon.”[26]  The leading rabbinical school in an age when creditor power was gaining dominance throughout the ancient world, the Pharisees followed the teachings of Hillel. Now credited as a founder of rabbinical Judaism, he sponsored the prosbul clause in which creditors obliged their clients to waive their rights to have their debts cancelled in the Jubilee Year....

That word is deror, used in Leviticus to signal a debt cancellation in the Jubilee Year as described above. Translated on America’s Liberty Bell as “Proclaim liberty throughout the land,” deror refers specifically to cancelling debts, freeing bondservants and returning land to its cultivator-occupants who had lost it through debt foreclosure or economic duress.

That is the word’s meaning in Jeremiah’s narrative of King Zedekiah’s promise to cancel the people’s debts on the eve of war with Babylonia in 588 BC. Jeremiah, the king’s counselor, interpreted the Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar II’s subsequent defeat of Judea as punishment by the Lord for Zedekiah’s going back on his word and violating sacred law: “You did not release [your people from their debts], so I will release sword, pestilence and famine!” (Jeremiah: 17–22). By breaking the Mosaic covenant with the Lord, Zedekiah’s behavior condemned the land to destruction at the hands of Babylon. “He did evil in the eye of the Lord” (2 Kings 224: 19f. and Jeremiah 52: 2 f.)....

Isaiah 61: 1–2 provides the bridge to the New Testament. Written by the prophet known as Third Isaiah c. 400 BC soon after the codification of the Priestly Laws of Leviticus in the wake of Nehemiah and Ezra, this remarkable passage reads:

The spirit of the Sovereign Lord [Yahweh] is upon me, for the Lord has anointed me to preach good news [gospel] to the poor. He has sent me to bind up the broken-hearted, to proclaim liberty (deror) for the captives and release for the prisoners, to proclaim the Year of the Lord’s favor and the day of vengeance of our God …

Many of these phrases have become so familiar that they appear hackneyed today, but they were quite specific in their original setting. The word “gospel” means literally “good news.” But apart from Isaiah 61 and its quotation by Jesus in his inaugural sermon (in Luke 4: 18 f. and Matthew 11: 6 // Luke 7: 23), the full phrase “good news to the poor” appears nowhere else in the Synoptic gospels. It refers to the deror tradition, the amnesty freeing citizens from bondage and restoring their means of self-support on the land in “the Year of the Lord’s favor,” the Jubilee Year. The Year’s yobel trumpet is to be blown on Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement signaling the restoration of worldly order, righteousness and equity. The yobel trumpet, a ram’s horn blown on the tenth day of the seventh month, gave its name to the Jubilee.

By the first century BC the Isaiah 61 passage had come to play a prominent role in the Qumran archive. A scroll dating from 50 to 25 BC, known as 11QMelchizedek (11Q stands for Qumran cave number 11, where it was buried during Judea’s war with Rome), weaves together the deror and related debt cancellation passages from Leviticus, Deuteronomy and Isaiah, combined with various psalms to elevate the Levitical image of restoring equity.

Discovered in 1956, the Qumran scroll highlights Isaiah 61 as the basis for projecting the idea of release to cover not only debts and loss of landownership, but all evil in the world – everything that an amnesty should set straight. The author(s) evidently searched through the Jewish Bible to find all its references to deror, and collated them in such a way as to describe the Day of Judgment as a grand release to end all releases. At the End of Time the Lord will return to earth to save his followers and smite those who have digressed from the path of righteousness.

The scrolls’ authors were long thought to be Essenes, a sect whose members believed that they were living in the End Time, a cycle-ending Jubilee year conceived along the lines of renewal called for in the laws of Leviticus and Deuteronomy. But recently there is some support for the idea that the Qumram collection was the sacred library of the Jerusalem temple, stored for safe keeping during the Roman wars.[27]  Whoever drafted these scrolls believed that it would take an apocalyptic new order, imposed from “above” the world of economic suffering, to replace wrongdoing and decadence with righteousness.

The Melchizedek scroll shows the key role played by Jubilee traditions in shaping Qumran and Christian hopes for how the End Time would be resolved. Yet even today, half a century since its discovery, this text still remains more an antiquarian curiosity than an explanatory link to the Near Eastern tradition and idea of economic righteousness in which Judaic law was grounded.

Describing Melchizedek as “a priest on high” (indeed, as founding the Judaic priesthood), Hebrews 7 explains why he is so important: He appeared to Abraham (Genesis 14) and blessed him after he rescued his nephew, Lot, and his caravan of goods from the towns of Sodom and Gomorrah.

In today’s interpretation of the Sodom story the narrow focus on sexual license and other noneconomic behavior misses the symbolic association of sodomy with the unrighteous behavior of greed. From Roman Stoic history down through the medieval prosecution of the Knights Templar it was customary to depict major moneylenders as sodomists, as the ultimate expression of predatory behavior was usury. The word seems outdated today, but of all the vices condemned by the Biblical prophets, it was the sin against which they warned above all. (See Part IV below.)

Having rescued Lot, Melchizedek helped bring about the universal release of captives. His name comprises the Hebrew words for “king” and “justice” or “righteousness,” alluding to the “king of righteousness.”[28] That was the same title Mesopotamian rulers used when they proclaimed andurārum. The scroll (lines 2–6) identifies Melchizedek with Zadok the priest under King David.[29]  Deemed to be the prototypical high priest in Psalm 110, he became a savior figure bringing about the release of the oppressed in the End Time....

Isaiah, the Qumran sect’s Melchizedek priesthood and Jesus all proclaimed liberty (deror) for debt bondsmen and other captives of the world. Early Christianity would extend this idea to signify a release of the poor from suffering in general, overshadowing the original focus on debt.

It was in the footsteps of Melchizedek that Jesus appears to have walked.[30]  Early Christian iconography depicts Jesus as sitting on the right hand of God as a priest “after the order of Melchizedek.” The Epistle of the Hebrews 7 depicts him, like Melchizedek, as being “without father, without mother, without descent, having neither beginning nor end of days, nor end of life, but made like unto the Son of God.” The bread and water that Melchizedek is reported to have given to Abraham was viewed as a precursor of Christ giving bread and wine for the Eucharist.[31]

Judaic religion already had taken such proclamations out of the hands of rulers (with whom they did not have a fortunate experience) and placed them in the hands of the high priest of Jerusalem. Jesus’s “good news” sought to take sponsorship of deror out of the hands of the Judaic priesthood that had followed Hillel and the Pharisees in contrast to Mosaic Law.

The Collapse of Antiquity: Greece and Rome as Civilization’s Oligarchic Turning Point

by Professor Michael E. Hudson, 2023 

 I have a book (linked above as pdf on archive dot org) that proves Jesus was talking about financial debt. It's by Professor Michael E. Hudson - he's an economic professor who studies ancient economics also. 
AD 1st century: Jesus attempts to revive the Mosaic tradition of the Jubilee
Year. He devotes his first sermon (Luke 4) to announcing that he has come
to proclaim a Jubilee Year bringing debt forgiveness and land redistribution
in accordance with Leviticus 25....
 Toynbee draws no parallel between Cleomenes’ debt cancellation and Jesus’s announcement (Luke 4) that he had come to proclaim the Jubilee Year, nor between Cleomenes exiling Sparta’s wealthiest oligarchic families and Jesus throwing the bankers out of the temple....
 This Roman fear of kingship is what Judea’s upper class played upon
when they sought to have Jesus condemned after he incited the hatred of
the Pharisees and the creditor class with his first sermon (Luke 4), when he
unrolled the scroll of Isaiah and announced that he had come to proclaim
the Jubilee Year of the Lord, cancelling debts as called for under Mosaic Law. They accused him of aspiring to be “king of the Jews,” that is, “seeking
kingship,” the familiar epithet the Romans applied to leaders whom they
feared might cancel debts, including Catiline and Caesar around Jesus’s
time....
 The Council of Nicaea was convened in 325 under Constantine’s spon-
sorship to help end schisms within the Church. It is best known for oppos-
ing Arian theology with the Nicene Creed asserting that Christ was created
by God out of his own body (“of the substance of the Father”) and thus
was eternal, not coming into existence only at the moment of his birth in
Bethlehem. Defining Christ as always existing, as part of God, removed
Jesus from the worldly Jewish conflicts of his own time. The Council did,
however, maintain the policy of Elvira and Arles forbidding the clergy
to practice usury.....
 persecuted as schismatics Jewish Christians, North African
Donatists, Egyptian Nestorians, Northern European followers of Pelagius,
and Arians. The existing status quo of property rights and serfdom was
defended. The economic message of earlier Christians, and Jesus Christ
himself, had become heretical.
By ruling that Jesus always had existed as God, the Nicene Creed down-
played his Jewish context and Jesus’s own hope to revive the Mosaic tra-
dition of the Jubilee Year. There was no awareness of the parallel between
Jesus’s first sermon announcing that he had come to restore the Jubilee Year
and the Lord’s anticipated return restoring equity on earth.35 That Near
Eastern-Jewish background was absent from the Christianity that devel-
oped from Rome to North Africa, Gaul and Western Europe. As the next
chapter will describe, Augustine’s theology changed the meaning of the
Lord’s Prayer to focus on forgiveness of original sin and sexual self-indul-
gence, not on the worldly debt amnesty that Jesus had advocated....
  It was not Christianity that corrupted the Roman Empire; rather, it was becoming the state religion of the Empire and its landowning elites that diverted Christianity away from the pro-debtor message of Jesus and his followers.
A world free of avarice and money-greed would have to await the Lord’s
return to restore a Golden Age at the end of history, as such a world was
unattainable in the face of Roman oppression and indeed in the Empire’s
aftermath in coming centuries....
  I describe Jesus’s first sermon and the altered meaning of the Lord’s Prayer and its background in [the book] “… and Forgive Them Their Debts” (2018).
 Augustine’s fight against the Donatists reversed Christianity’s role as a
movement protecting the poor against the wealthy. The Church embraced
the status quo, and instead of the debt relief that had been central to Jesus,
it only recommended charitable contributions out of what the aristocracy
extracted from the economy....
 They probably did not understand that Jesus’s
first sermon (Luke 4) called for a Jubilee Year bringing debt forgiveness
and land redistribution in accordance with Leviticus 25. Instead, the focus
of Mosaic law on debt relief and land redemption that was at the center of
Jesus’s preaching played no role as the Church reached an accommodation
with the vested interests to receive charity from them, but not challenge
their economic control.
Refraining from criticizing the property rights that shaped the dis-
tribution of landholding and led to clientage and poverty, Catholic
Christianity implicitly backed the power of creditors and landowners over
debtors and tenants. “By saying with Christ, ‘Render to Caesar the things
that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s,’” commented Fustel
de Coulanges, Christianity chose not to challenge “the laws of property, nor
the order of succession, nor obligations, nor legal proceedings. It placed
itself … outside all things purely terrestrial,”21 leaving Roman-based law
intact.....
 Jesus’s preaching followed this focus on social
injustice and criticized the selfishness of the Judaic wealthy that led to debt
dependency. He devoted his first sermon to announcing that he had come
to proclaim the Jubilee Year. But no members of the Romanized Church
echoed Isaiah 5:12 by denouncing the Empire’s latifundists for “add[ing]
house to house and join[ing] field to field till no space is left and you live
alone in the land.” Augustine instead focused on personal sin, with an id-
iosyncratic focus on sexual indulgence that has remained characteristic of
his church.
In Egypt, largely under Cyril of Alexandria, worship of the virgin Mary
(an element often seen as transposing Egyptian Isis worship) replaced the
classical justice goddess Nemesis punishing hubris (mainly of the rich and
powerful). This Christian Mariolatry, emphasizing the compassionate
Mother of Jesus/God, helped exclude Jewish Christians as part of Cyril’s anti-Semitism. It also excluded the idea of a justice goddess protecting the
weak and poor, a figure going back to Nanshe of Lagash in Bronze Age
Sumer, who was followed by counterpart justice goddesses for thousands
of years down to Greece and Rome. The dimension of social justice as a re-
ligious commandment to protect the poor and their self-support land from
the rich was replaced by Christian compassion taking the form of charity
by the rich—to the Church, at their own personal discretion....
 But for Augustine, debita did not mean
monetary debt as it had originally meant. Rather, it referred to the need to
atone for the sin of Adam’s self-indulgence.39 That stripped from the Lord’s
Prayer its call to “forgive them their debts” that reflected Jesus’s focus on the
debt amnesty at the core of the Jubilee Year (Leviticus 25). It was replaced
with the idea of payment to expiate a sin/offense, with the Church receiv-
ing the payment, interjecting itself into the dynamic of personal salvation,
while leaving the world’s monetary debts intact, not subject to forgiveness
either by the Church or by any civic authority. The poor as well as the rich
were deemed sinful, simply for being born....
 Romanized Christianity thus made a sharp break from the preachings
of Jesus advocating debt cancellation in the tradition of the Jubilee Year
debt amnesty. Except for Roman tax amnesties, debt forgiveness was no
longer politically feasible in an era when most debts were owed to private
creditors. Despite Christian denunciation of these creditors and usury, per-
sonal debtors were not saved from losing their economic liberty to their
creditors.
Jesus’s worldly fight for debt cancellation also was sidestepped by Cyril,
patriarch of Alexandria (412-444), who led the other schism splitting the
5th-century Church over the threefold nature of Jesus, the Lord and the
Holy Spirit. In the schism, Cyril insisted on Trinitarianism and that the
Nestorians be denounced as heretics. As discussed in Chapter 21, the First
Council of Nicaea in 325 had deemed it a heresy to say that Jesus was be-
gotten at a moment in time and hence did not always exist......
 Jesus as eternal God incarnate shifted the focus away from his call for debt
forgiveness, especially his fight against the Pharisees who advocated the
prosbul clause obliging debtors to waive their rights to have their debts for-
given in the Jubilee Year of Leviticus 25. To cap matters, Cyril’s emphasis on
Mariolatry helped exclude Judaism from Christian theology.40...........
 Neither Romanized Christianity nor
most subsequent economic reformers went so far as to advocate a general
widespread debt cancellation or land redistribution as earlier antiquity had
hoped for. There is almost no reference to the policy of royal debt amnes-
ties that had kept Near Eastern kingdoms resilient for millennia, nor to
Jesus’s call for a Jubilee Year. There is still a widespread idealism about an
egalitarian Golden Age, but it lacks any recognition of the archaic royal
aim of restoring financial balance by wiping away the accrual of arrears
and other debts.
In the Bronze-Age Near East interest charges were accepted as a normal
phenomenon as long as they remained subject to the safety valve of Clean
Slates alleviating personal and agrarian debts when their buildup threat-
ened to force smallholders into widespread bondage and concentrate land
ownership.54 Interest-bearing debt did not disappear. Debt was allowed to
begin accumulating once again, but the tradition of Clean Slates kept it
from destabilizing archaic economies....
 

Monday, February 2, 2026

Acute Excercise suppresses hunger hormone (ghrelin) due to reduced blood flow to stomach via parasympathetic rebound

 Acute Exercise (Short-term): Intense, short-term exercise usually suppresses acylated ghrelin and appetite, partly due to reduced blood flow to the stomach.

  acute exercise suppresses acyl ghrelin production regardless of the participants and the exercise characteristics.

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8514378/ 

  evidence suggesting that acute exercise transiently suppresses AG production

 Short-term acute aerobic exercise induces stable plasma ghrelin concentrations, independent of GH secretion.

 Among 16 acute exercise studies that included a GH measurement, 13 studies showed increased GH levels. However, three studies showed no variation in GH levels following acute exercise [, , ].

 The SNS and PNS regulate processes and metabolic pathways important for recovery and energy homeostasis (Bray ; Szekely ). The changes of the SNS–PNS balance, therefore, are relevant to satiety and may occur before those in circulating hormones that stimulate or inhibit food intake.

 https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2225999/

 there is an inverse relationship between SNS activity and obesity, consistent with that most types of obesity are associated with low sympathetic activity (Bray )

Yes, the body requires a state of
parasympathetic dominance—often called "rest and digest"—to digest efficiently
. This state activates the nervous system to increase blood flow to digestive organs, boost enzyme production, and promote peristalsis.

 

 


Sunday, February 1, 2026

Pneuma Πνεῦμα as the secret "creative fire" of the Pythagorean Logos in Philo and Jesus' Holy Spirit

 Volker Rabens
Pneuma and the Beholding of God: Reading Paul in the Context of Philonic
Mystical Traditions
 

in: J. Frey / J.R. Levison (eds.), The Holy Spirit, Inspiration, and the Cultures of Antiquity: Multidisciplinary Perspectives (Ekstasis 5; Berlin/New York: De Gruyter, 2014), 293–329

Πνεῦμα Since Philo interprets νοῦς as πνεῦμα in Fug. 1.134 and Somn. 1.30 – 33, he feels
justified to continue his argument that “This pneuma was widely considered to be a divine
substance, which the Stoics called ‘creative fire’ (πῦρ τεχνικόν). This, it appears, is what Moses was turned into. This is what it meant for Moses to be ‘changed into the divine.’”

On Pneuma in Paul and Philo - pdf 

AI says: 

πνεῦμα
(pneuma) is an ancient Greek noun, famously appearing in the New Testament to mean "spirit" (including the Holy Spirit), "wind," or "breath". Derived from pneo ("to breathe/blow"), it often refers to an immaterial, invisible force, or the inner life of a person. 
Key details about πνεῦμα: Spirit, breath, wind, mental state, or invisible power. Frequently used for the Holy Spirit (Πνεῦμα Ἅγιον) or to describe spiritual beings.

 As the term “substance” is ambiguous, one should rather use “material or physical sub-
stance” in order to indicate that one operates with a concept of the Spirit as Stoff or (fine) matter.... because it suggests that a material πνεῦ-
μα-substance⁵⁴ is like a “fluidum” poured into the believer. On the basis of its
physical nature the Spirit transforms the human soul (which is presupposed to
be physical too) and makes it divine. From this new nature religious-ethical
life flows almost automatically.

 According to the teaching of the
Stoics, everything and everyone “possesses” πνεῦμα. This is due to the fact that
πνεῦμα was understood as a physical principle that permeates the entire cosmos
and holds it together. No comparable distinction was made between divine and
human S/spirit⁵⁶ as this seems to be presupposed in Pauline texts like Romans
8:16 (“it is that very Spirit bearing witness with our spirit …”) 

 Nonetheless, what he says in Rom 8:15 – 16 certainly contradicts the Stoic concept of toning up the soul through philosophy—developing its muscles, assisting its use of its own capabilities more effectively, etc.
(Seneca, Ep. 15; cf. 6.1 where Seneca uses anima, not spiritus). Romans 8:15 – 16 does not depict the human spirit as being “topped up” or “increased” 

 Diogenes Laertius in which he mentions in passing that the Stoics “consider that the passions are caused by the variations of the vital breath” (αἰτίας δὲ τῶν παθῶν ἀπολείποθσι τὰς περὶ τὸ πνεῦμα τροπάς,7.158)

  A number of texts of this tradition show particularly striking parallels to 2Corinthians 3:18—most prominently Philo, De Migratione Abrahami 34– 37; De Legatione ad Gaium 4– 5; and Quaestiones et Solutiones in Exodum 2.7 (see section 1 above).

 in 4:4 Paul designates Christ as the image of God (“… seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God [ὅς ἐστιν εἰκὼν τοῦ θεοῦ];” cf. 4:6; Col 1:15).

 Is this the same as Plato claiming "Time is the Image of Eternity" (as Apeiron equaling irrational magnitude)?

 For example, in Romans 8:29 Paul says that believers are “conformed to the image [or: like-ness] of his Son” (συμμόρφους τῆς εἰκόνος τοῦ υἱοῦ αὐτοῦ). As in 2Corinthians ....This conclusion can be easily applied to 2Corinthians 3:18: believers
are changed into the same image (likeness), that is Christ (δόξα θεοῦ, 3:18;
εἰκών τοῦ θεοῦ, 4:4), but they are not changed “into God,” becoming qualitatively identical with God.

........................

 a transformation of ‘our’ bodies as wholes from being infused with a certain amount of pneuma—and the glory that corresponds with that—into a more
extensive infusion with more pneuma and more glory.

  Mystical transformation in 3:18 is further elucidated by the ancient concept of “transformation through contemplation.” 3)
Philo is part of the same tradition. He provides a number of significant parallels
to Paul’s interpretation of the pentateuchal narrative of Moses’ transformation
through contemplation. Also for Philo, the Spirit plays a significant role in this
context. 4) As far as the Sitz im Leben of 2Corinthians 3:18 is concerned, Paul’s
letters suggest that the Spirit’s work of enabling mystical beholding of the divine
was experienced in the context of Paul’s ministry to his church and in the richness of communal Christian life. 

 Like Paul, Philo interprets the pentateuchal narrative of Moses’ meeting with God
on Mount Horeb. He describes it as a transformation through contemplation.
Strikingly, Philo uses in this context the same key term for the beholding (as in a mirror) as employed by Paul, κατοπτρίζω, which is a biblical hapax legomenon.

 Pauline parallel passages that speak about
being transformed into the image of Christ (e. g., Rom 8:29: Christians are “pre-
destined to be conformed to the image of his Son”). The fact that ethical results
of mystical beholding of the divine abound in Philo’s writings provides further
evidence for this line of reasoning. However, also in this regard (as in the case
of the im/material nature of πνεῦμα), Philo offers more specific philosophical re-
flection by employing the concept of deification. For instance, he says in Quaes-
tiones et Solutiones in Exodum 2.29, that the inspired “come near God in a kind of
family relation, … [and] become kin to God and truly divine.” In the introduction
to this article I have drawn attention to the fact that both Philo and Paul describe
the divine-human relationship of those whom God has chosen as that of “adoption as God’s sons.”

Philo's attraction to Greek culture 

 For many Jews like Philo, Hellenism did not constitute a threat
to be rebuffed or something alien. Greek was their mother tongue, and
Hellenistic categories of thought, as components of the dominant culture,
provided ideas and models that allowed for creative interpretation of the
Jewish tradition.3
However, this dynamic of attraction was not a one-way street. Rather,
there was a strong element of reciprocity. People of non-Jewish back-
ground became interested in Judaism............

  For example, Cassius Dio records that in 19 c.e. the emperor
Tiberius banished most Jews from Rome because “the Jews had flocked
to Rome in great numbers and were converting many of the natives to
their ways” (Roman History 57.18.5a; also Tacitus, Ann. 2.85; Josephus,
Ant. 18.83–84). Evidence also suggests that Jews made room in their syna-
gogues for Gentiles who had a curiosity and interest in their ways and
worship.9
............

  The God of the Bible
hence turns into the somewhat abstract “Existent One” (τὸ ὄν) and “the
Cause” (τὸ αἴτιον). God has universal attributes—he is Father of all, Ruler
of all and Saviour of all humanity (e.g. Opif. 72, 78, 169). The goodness and
generosity of God, which are among Philo’s favourite themes, are always
universal in scope: God loves to give his gifts to all, including the imper-
fect (e.g. Leg. 1.34). Accordingly, Philo is concerned about human piety in
general, not just Jewish religion. In Philonic allegory there is neither Jew
nor Greek.

.........................

 The Stoics believed that a physical tension is at
the basis of all human emotion and virtue. It is clear that this tension
is related to the spirit (πνεῦμα) that indwells the entire universe. Πνεῦμα
plays an important role in Stoic cosmology. No other ancient philosophic
school has written as much about πνεῦμα as Stoicism. Interestingly, no
other early Jewish writer has written as much about πνεῦμα as Philo.
However, in contrast to Philo, πνεῦμα plays an important role in Stoic
physics but not in their ethics.32 With regard to Stoic ethics, it seems that
it is mainly human effort that brings about moral change (with a potential change also in the “tension” of the soul). 

...............................

 “Now the thing shewn is the thing worthy to be
seen, contemplated, loved, the perfect good, whose nature it is to change
all that is bitter in the soul and make it sweet, fairest seasoning of all spices,

turning into salutary nourishment even foods that do not nourish . . . (Ex.
xv. 25)” (Migr. 36; cf. 37 on the explicitly ethical aspect of the transforma-
tion). Numerous further passages could be discussed as evidence of the
sometimes overlooked fact that for Philo an intimate relationship with
the divine empowers religious-ethical life ................

 Philo mentions the divine
πνεῦμα as the rational aspect of the human soul breathed into humankind
at creation, and then at Moses’ endowment with the prophetic Spirit.4

 Pneuma and logos are essentially the same. Logos is technically the purest, highest order form of pneuma

https://www.reddit.com/r/Stoicism/comments/p7gjdd/difference_between_pneuma_and_logos/

s it accurate to say that the "divine reason" uses the pneuma (fire and air) to act upon the passive matter (earth and water)? think that's a decent characterization of the relationship, but consider that the pneuma is like a physical manifestation of the logos/divine reason. Despite their rather specific semantics, Stoics used multiple words to describe the same thing in a cosmological sense. By my read, Pneuma, Logos, Nature, and God are essentially interchangeable.

the logos, or divine reason, which is active and organizing.[15] The 3rd-century BC Stoic Chrysippus regarded pneuma as the vehicle of logos in structuring matter, both in animals and in the physical worl

 In his exegesis of Genesis 2:7, Philo explains that God inbreathes his
Spirit into the mind of man.
He says that a union of God, πνεῦμα and mind comes about as “God projects the power that proceeds from Himself
through the mediant breath till it reaches the subject” (Leg. 1.37). The rea-
son for this endowment with πνεῦμα is that “we may obtain a conception
of Him,” for this is possible only by the Spirit

the inbreathing of πνεῦμα demonstrates the exceeding greatness of
God’s own wealth and goodness. The second, related reason is that the
human soul needs an experience of this divine goodness and virtue in
order to live a virtuous life. This experience of the overflowing goodness
of God is conveyed through the impartation of πνεῦμα.

 Philo mentions the divine
πνεῦμα as the rational aspect of the human soul breathed into humankind
at creation, and then at Moses’ endowment with the prophetic Spirit.4

 In any case, it is a paradox that Philo was neglected by his own people,
to whose cause he had shown such strong devotion, and he was rescued
from oblivion through the attentions of a group of people of whom he had
most likely never heard, and who would later to a certain extent oppose
his own Jewish religion, namely, the Christian church.4

 In the climactic verse at the
end of Paul’s treatment of Moses and the Law in 2 Corinthians 3, Paul
says: “And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord as
in a mirror, are being transformed into the same image from one glory
to another; for this comes from the Lord, the Spirit” (2 Cor. 3:18). Against
the background of our discussion in the last section, it seems that Philo is
part of the ancient tradition of “transformation through contemplation”
that we ijind here in 2 Corinthians 3.50 This is suggested, for example, on
the basis of Philo’s explanation that “just as one who comes near the light
is straightaway illumined, so also is ijilled the entire soul of him to whom
God has appeared” (QE 2.7).

  Moses is enabled by the Spirit to “come near God in a kind of fam-
ily relation” and is consequently “changed into the divine;” cf. Gig. 54–55).
It is this tradition—alongside the pentateuchal narrative of Moses’ trans-
formation—that is most prominently in the background of the concept of
“transformation through contemplation” in 2 Corinthians 3:18 because it
not only describes transformation as a consequence of encountering God
and receiving divine revelation, but it also attributes an important role of
the Spirit in this process (attributed to κυρίου πνεύματος in 3:18).
This example shows that Philo was engaged in an ethical discourse that
was not only relevant in his Diaspora community in Alexandria, but also
in a “parallel world” in the Christian church in Corinth and elsewhere.

 https://www.academia.edu/99473590/How_did_the_Spirit_become_a_Person

 In biblical Hebrew (and Aramaic), ‘spirit’ (רוח) is no less an umbrella term than is its common rendering with πȞİῦȝα in Greek. The notions include11 the physical dimension of air in motion, the anthropological dimension of the human disposition or – in a holistic concept – ‘spirit’ as the place where human feelings and emotions, but also insight and spiritual disposition are located, and, finally, the theological notion of a divine spirit or the spirit from God, the Holy Spirit. But only one third of the instances in which רוח is used refers to a divine spirit, e.g., the spirit of the creator in Gen 1 or the spirit that empowers the judges or that is bestowed upon prophets. σotably, the term ‘holy spirit’ is used only twice in Hebrew, in Isa 63:10-11 and Ps 51:13, in two relatively late texts, and twice in
Aramaic, in two passages in Daniel (Dan 5:12; 6:4). Thus, the notion of the Holy Spirit was by no means common in biblical times.

this usage is adopted in the New Testament with regard to “unclean” (Mark 1:23, 26-7; 3:11) or “evil” (Luke 7:21) spirits, the spirits of deceased (1 Petr γμ1λ) or heavenly ‘spirits’ (Heb 1μι, 1ζν Rev 1μζν γμ1 etc.). 

 Such a development in reading Ezekiel’s vision is also fundamental for the concept of the Spirit as the power of the resurrection of the dead and, particularly, for the early understanding of the resurrection of Jesus. This concept is presupposed in the confession formula in Rom 1:3-4, which probably derives from a Semitic language milieu and thus originates in the early Palestinian community. So we can see that the
resurrection of Jesus (as Davidic Messiah) was attributed to the power of the ‘Spirit of Holiness’. With the Spirit acting in Jesus’ resurrection, this event could therefore be considered the beginning of a new period of the manifestation of the Spirit of the end times and of eschatological fulfulment.

 The so-called ‘messianic Apocalypse’ from the Qumran corpus (4Q521) shows, how the good news to the poor, comfort for the weeping, healing of the blind and the proclamation of divine remission could be viewed as eschatological works of God.30 

The "
Messianic Apocalypse" (4Q521), a Dead Sea Scroll text written before Jesus' birth, shares striking thematic, linguistic, and messianic parallels with the New Testament, notably the Gospel of Luke. The text describes a Messiah who heals, raises the dead, and brings good news to the poor, mirroring Jesus' actions and strengthening the view of early Christianity's deep roots in sectarian Jewish apocalypticism
  • The "Hidden" Messiah: The Qumran texts suggest a messianic figure hidden in heaven until an appointed time, reflecting the "messianic secret" motif in the Gospel of Mark and the timing of Jesus' revelation. 
While 4Q521 does not mention Jesus specifically, it provides crucial evidence that the theological, prophetic, and messianic framework of early Christianity existed in1st-century Judaism, particularly within communities like those at Qumran.

 The ‘enthusiasm’ of the primitive community could grow on this
soil. There are no compelling reasons to limit this awareness of the Spirit to the Hellenistic part of the primitive community or even to deny it with respect to Palestinian Judaism,33 because central aspects of the concept of the spirit as the power of resurrection and also the concept of the bestowal of the spirit on the community are well attested in the Qumran corpus, so that also the latter cannot be attributed only to Hellenistic influence.....

 The Spirit that had empowered the Messiah Jesus, now becomes a gift for his disciples that
empowers them and ‘dwells’ among and within them. These phrases probably go back to pre-Pauline communities, not only to Antioch, but – at least partly – to the earliest Jesus movement in Palestine or even Jerusalem, where the earliest followers of the Messiah Jesus were aware of the continuing eschatological activity of the Spirit

 ...............

 In a very early Jewish-Christian confession formula, Jesus’ resurrection is attributed to the power of the “Spirit of Holiness” (Rom 1,4), in reception of the tradition from Ezek 37:5, 9-10 where the eschatological resurrection of the dead – which was later understood in terms of an individual, bodily resurrection40 – is attributed to the power of the divine Spirit.

 .......................

 The Hodayot, or Thanksgiving Hymns (1QHa–f, 4QHa–f), are a collection of poetic, personal prayers of gratitude and praise discovered among the Dead Sea Scrolls. They reflect the theology and piety of the Qumran community, highlighting themes of divine grace, human frailty, and salvation, often featuring the phrase "I give thanks to You, O Lord

 A distinctive function of the spirit, which goes back to Ezekiel 37, is that it brings life or brings to life (πȞİῦȝα ȗῳȠπȠȚȠῦȞ).50 Based on the conviction that God raised Jesus from the dead through the spirit, it is the spirit which warrants the future resurrection of the believers (Rom 8:11), so the spirit can be called ἀȡȡαȕώȞ (“first installment”: 2 Cor 1:22; 5:5) or ἀπαȡχ੾ (“first born” or “first fruit”: Rom 8:23; 1 Cor 15:20, 23), i.e. guarantee of future fulfilment.

 ......................

  The ‘personal’ elements of the Spirit are thus ‘borrowed’ from Christ

 the work of the Spirit is set in an analogy with the
work of the exalted Christ: God has sent the Spirit (Gal 4:6), as had sent his Son (Gal 4:4). The Spirit dwells in the believers (Rom 8:9, 11) as Christ dwells in them (Rom 8:10; Gal 2:22). The Spirit represents those who believe and pray in God’s realm, as also the exalted Christ represents them and intercedes for them (Rom 8:34; cf. 1 John 2:1). It is striking that Paul articulates these parallels in relatively narrow textual units, esp. Gal 4 and Rom 8. 

  J. Frey, “Flesh and Spirit in the Palestinian Jewish Sapiential
Tradition and in the Qumran Texts: An Inquiry into the Background of Pauline Usage,” in The Wisdom
Texts from Qumran and the Development of Sapiential Thought: Studies in Wisdom at Qumran and its
Relationship to Sapiential Thought in the Ancient Near East, the Hebrew Bible, Ancient Judaism and the New Testament (ed. C. Hempel, A. Lange and H. Lichtenberger; BETL 159; Leuven: Peeters, 2002), 367-404.

 thus in two corresponding phrases, Rom κμλ can speak of “God’s Spirit” and “Christ’s Spirit”. The acting of God himself, of the exalted Christ and of the Spirit are thus considered in one line, so that Paul can attribute the “graceful gifts” (χαȡȓıȝαIJα the “ministries” (įȚαțȠȞȓαȚ and the “powerful acts” (ἐȞİȡȖȒȝαIJα experienced within the community to the one Spirit, the one Lord and the one God in a triadic sequence.
Paul does not declare that the Spirit has been sent or given by Christ. This is not stated before the Johannine writings (John 15:26; 16:7; 20:22). For Paul it is still God alone who gives the Spirit (1 Cor 6:1λν β Cor 1μββν ημην Gal ζμθν 1 Thess ζμκ), but in spite of that the Spirit is also “the Spirit of his Son” (Gal ζμθ), “the Spirit of (Jesus) Christ” (Rom κμλν Phil 1μ1λ) or “the Spirit of the δord” (β Cor 3:18). The much debated phrase ὁ į੻ țύȡȚȠȢ IJઁ πȞİῦȝ੺ ἐıIJȚȞ (2 Cor 3:17a) could even suggest an identification between the exalted Christ and the Spirit, were there not the immediate continuation “where the Spirit of the Lord (IJઁ πȞİῦȝα țυȡ઀Ƞυ is, there is freedom,” which marks the ‘subordination’ of the Spirit under the ‘δord’ (the exalted Christ) and thus the clear distinction between the two.
................

 

  Jesus followers at a very early stage came to a
veneration of Christ that saw him in a very close relation to God – a “binitarian monotheism,” in the words of Larry Hurtado61 – this texture is further developed and widened by the beginning ‘personalization’ of the Spirit in Pauline thought, so that – only in retrospect, of course – we can see already here a very cautious step towards the Trinitarian concept as developed much late

  But in spite of the fact that the Spirit is always and clearly God’s Spirit, it is Jesus himself who, after his departure to heaven and his exaltation to the right hand of God, equips his followers with the power from above. Acts 2:33 states that Jesus himself has received the promise of the Spirit from the father and poured it out over his disciples.

  In the story of the baptism of the Ethiopian eunuch in Acts 8, there is a remarkable change
of the agents: Philip is first called by an “angel of the δord” (κμβθ), then he is commissioned by the Spirit (8:29), and finally it is also the Spirit that takes him away in a miraculous manner (8:39). This is also a hint at a growing independence of the Spirit, which is, however, less clearly related to Christ than in Paul.

in the Fourth Gospel, the theological reflection about the work of the Spirit is entirely
focused on its verbal effects, the ‘logos function’.... Thus, the Spirit shall be with the disciples, in the place of Jesus, after his departure, in order to comfort and teach them, as Jesus himself had taught them, or even beyond the teachings of the earthly Jesus.75 Thus, the Spirit is focused on the ‘logos’, i.e., on Jesus, and his activities are almost completely word-related: reminding, teaching, guiding

John 4:24, stating "God is
pneuma" (spirit), indicates that God's nature is immaterial, invisible, and not restricted to a single location. This contrasts with physical, corruptible sarx (flesh), defining God as a pervasive, life-giving presence (wind/breath).

 Ruach in Hebrew was translated as Pneuma...

 

The Use and Non-Use of Pneuma By Josephus 1)

In: Novum Testamentum
Author:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Exposing the Big AI Small Modular Reactor Nuke Power scam: first clean up all the pollution and destruction already caused

 "The mayor and airport chief of Denver, Colorado, chose the 80th anniversary of the U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima to host a news conference proposing to spend $1.5 million on a small modular nuclear reactor (SMR) at the Denver International Airport.
Plans were then paused amid the uproar from local city council members, area residents, reporters, and environmental advocates. The community was not consulted before the decision to launch the feasibility study. Constituents questioned the huge expenditure on a technology that: is not commercially operating anywhere; has a track record of enormous cost overruns; has no assessment of the draw on local water or other resources; and is guaranteed to generate radioactive waste that must be stored on site for eons with no long-term solution.
The nearby Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge and Superfund site represents one toxic legacy already carried by this community."
 "....Its SMR-300s would generate 2 to 30 times more radioactive waste, per unit of electricity generated, due to loss of economy of scale, according to President Obama's former NRC chair, Allison Macfarlane, and former U.S. Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board chair, Rodney Ewing. PNP's indoor wet storage pool still holds around two-thirds, or more, of the irradiated nuclear fuel on-site, at risk of a catastrophic fire that could be worse than a reactor core meltdown.....Just tapping a very small percentage of the off-shore wind power potential available to Michigan on the Great Lakes would far surpass the 800 MW-e that a restarted PNP would provide, and would also far surpass the additional nuclear megawattage that two SMR-300s at PNP would provide, and would also far surpass the nuclear megawattage one or more SMR-300s at Big Rock Point would provide. This off-shore wind power would also avoid reactor core meltdowns, radioactive waste fires, radioactivity releases from "routine reactor operations," radioactive leaks, spills, and contamination, radioactive waste generation, thermal wastewater, and toxic chemical
releases at all these atomic reactors, and would do so cost- and time-effectively, compared to SMR new builds, and even the PNP restart scheme. "
https://nukewatchinfo.org/nuclear-power-cant-survive-much-less-slow-climate-disruption/
"In a free market, the US Price Anderson Act would be repealed. The act provides limited liability insurance to reactor operators in the event of a loss-of-coolant, or otsher radiation catastrophe. The nuclear industry would have to get insurance on the open market like all other industrial operations. This would break their bank, since major insurers would only sell such a policy at astronomical rates, if at all."
"The US Nuclear Waste Policy Act (NWPA) would also be repealed. NWPA is the government’s pledge to take custody of and assume liability for the industry’s radioactive waste. Without NWPA the industry would have to pay to contain, isolate and manage its waste for the 1-million-year danger period. The long-term cost would zero the industry’s portfolio in a quick “correction.”
The claim that being against nuclear is based on irrational fear is a misrepresentation of our current environmental crisis from nuclear power. My dad was the lawyer for the state nuclear utility when the Attorney General wanted to regulate nuclear routine emissions at a stricter than federal standard. My dad won his case and so Monticello set a national precedence - meaning nuclear power is really controlled by "military intelligence." What the public doesn't realize is that not only is that a cancer alley increase around nuclear power plants from the tritium "routine releases" but the fuel rods are aging out. 
"Xcel eventually acknowledged that volume of the leak, from an old corroded underground pipe, was 829,000 gallons, and that the groundwater plume of reactor cooling water — some of which would later reach the Mississippi River — had a radioactive footprint of some fourteen curies of tritium [4] — a very large amount. (For a reference, the 1979 partial reactor meltdown at Three Mile Island released an estimated 15 curies of gaseous radioactive iodine-131 to the Pennsylvania atmosphere. Other radioactive materials went into the Susquehanna River.)"
"Xcel’s 829,000-gallon leak was always a direct threat to drinking water because — as the company’s own 2023 Annual Radioactive Effluent Release Report states on page 13 [4] — “It is assumed groundwater continuously flows to the river…” The Mississippi is the drinking water source for 20 million people, including Minneapolis, St. Paul and their surrounding suburbs 37 miles downstream from the leaky reactor..... This is to say 388 billion picocuries of tritium were sent floating around Minnesota’s Wright and Sherburne Counties. This under-reported and unplanned, emergency stop-gap response poses some risk for the surrounding residents who breath. Xcel’s estimated leak of 14 curies of tritium will contaminate the moving groundwater for a very long time. Its radioactive half-life is 12.3 years, so the tritium will persist for about 12 decades while it decays (to helium-3). Once tritium contaminates water, it is impossibly expensive to remove. "
I first got arrested in 1994 protesting against the storage of nuclear waste in a native American reservation on the Mississippi river. What people don't realize - due to environmental racism - is that most of the uranium mining has been done on native reservations. I was personally shown a stream in South Dakota at Pine Ridge reservation - a stream polluted by uranium mining. Monticello has recently covered up their leaking of tritium into the Mississippi river.
https://nuclearfreemississippi.wordpress.com/
"The Center for Disease Control (CDC) public health data analyzed by Mangano identifies cancer mortality over three time periods in counties that host 16 of the nation’s oldest nuclear power reactors. Mangano’s analysis compares CDC reported cancer mortality in host counties with state-wide cancer mortality averages. The bottom-line results of this analysis are presented on the map of “Excess Cancer Deaths” below. The first time period of Mangano’s analysis, 1968-1978, establishes the baseline for comparison and accounts for an initial cancer latency period, as the first of the 16 oldest nuclear reactors came on-line in 1969....Every two months in Wright and Sherburne counties [on Minnesota], cancer kills three more people as a result of radiation released into the environment by Monticello nuclear operations. "
Unless someone actually sincerely goes out of there way to research the hazards that have already happened - for example the two-headed babies from depleted uranium weapons made as byproducts of nuclear power - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqlMrjMuFwI 
then the risks being considered are not realistic. Depleted uranium weapons have been made out of Minnesota also and I got arrested protesting at Alliant Techsystems that had been headquartered in Hopkins (as a spin off from Honeywell)...
I recommend going to "Nukewatch" out of Luke WI run by John LaForge - https://nukewatchinfo.org/weekly-column/
I got arrested with John LaForge while we climbed the Navy's Project ELF one-way first strike nuclear weapons communication system with trident nuclear subs. 
https://www.change.org/p/close-down-the-monticello-nuclear-reactor-on-the-mississippi-river
Instead of promoting nukes - why not be an activist to try to first clean up the mess and damage already done by nukes? I can assure you that the reason people promote nukes as "clean energy" is because of our "religion of technology" as the true religion on Earth now. I recommend reading former MIT History Professor David F. Noble's 1996 book of that title, "Religion of Technology" for details. 
Consequently, over 100 utilities, industry suppliers, and reactor developers, organized by the Nuclear Energy Institute, wrote to Congress April 30 demanding retention of the tax credits which keep alive dreams of new reactor construction.

The credits are essential to nuclear’s economic future, the letter says, and are “critical to strengthening U.S. energy security” ⸺ meaning the industry cannot compete any more, and its CEO’s have said so.

Speaking in New York City on Nov. 27, 2013, World Bank President Dr. Jim Yong Kim said, “The World Bank Group does not engage in providing support for nuclear power. … we don’t do nuclear energy.”

The U.S. Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism concluded in 2009 that governments should help stop nuclear weapons proliferation by “discouraging … the use of financial incentives in the promotion of civil nuclear power.”

John Rowe, a former chairman and CEO of the nuclear power-heavy Exelon Corp. said “unequivocally,” in March 2012, “that new [reactors] don’t make any sense right now…. It just isn’t economic, and it’s not economic within a foreseeable time frame.”

Even the former CEO of the Nuclear Energy Institute, Marvin Fertel, told Scientific American in 2012, “We won’t build large numbers of new nuclear in the U.S. in the near term. Today, you ought to build gas.” And Bill Johnson, CEO of Progress Energy, said in the same article, “Nuclear can’t compete today.” In 2011, Siemens Corp. declared that, following Germany’s decision to close all 17 of its reactors by 2022 (all built by Siemens), the company would stop building new reactors anywhere in the world. “The chapter for us is closed,” said Chief Executive Peter Löscher.

Calling new reactors “too expensive,” Jon Wellinghoff, a former chair of the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, said in 2009, “We may not need any, ever,” adding that renewables “like wind, solar and biomass would be able to provide enough energy to meet base load capacity and future demand.”

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

nephrologist and phrenologist are anagrams, as they contain the exact same letters rearrange

Nephrologist is a kidney specialist while Phrenologist is an old skool skull examiner - yet they have the SAME letters just rearranged - maybe the kidneys and brains are the same stuff but just rearranged also?