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Politics : Margaret Sanger's Eugenic Legacy of Death, Disease, Depravit -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 2MAR$ who wrote (754)1/16/2017 2:14:23 AM
From: 2MAR$  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1308
 
Resemblances Between Zoroastrianism and Judaism. (From Jewish Encyclopedia Online)

The points of resemblance between Zoroastrianism and Judaism, and hence also between the former and Christianity, are many and striking. Ahuramazda, the supreme lord of Iran, omniscient, omnipresent, and eternal, endowed with creative power, which he exercises especially through the medium of his Spenta Mainyu ("Holy Spirit"), and governing the universe through the instrumentality of angels and archangels, presents the nearest parallel to Yhwh that is found in antiquity. But Ormuzd's power is hampered by his adversary, Ahriman, whose dominion, however, like Satan's, shall be destroyed at the end of the world.

Zoroastrianism and Judaism also present a number of resemblances to each other in their general systems of angelology and demonology, points of similarity which have been especially emphasized by the Jewish rabbinical scholars Schorr and Kohut and the Christian theologian Stave. There are striking parallels between the two faiths and Christianity in their eschatological teachings—the doctrines of a regenerate world, a perfect kingdom, the coming of a Messiah, the resurrection of the dead, and the life everlasting.


Both Zoroastrianism and Judaism are revealed religions:


in the one Ahuramazda imparts his revelation and pronounces his commandments to Zarathustra on "the Mountain of the Two Holy Communing Ones"; in the other Yhwh holds a similar communion with Moses on Sinai. The Magian laws of purification, moreover, more particularly those practised to remove pollution incurred through contact with dead or unclean matter, are given in the Avestan Vendïdad quite as elaborately as in the Levitical code, with which the Zoroastrian book has been compared ( see Avesta).

The two religions agree in certain respects with regard to their cosmological ideas.

The six days of Creation in Genesis find a parallel in the six periods of Creation described in the Zoroastrian scriptures. Mankind, according to each religion, is descended from a single couple, and Mashya (man) and Mashyana are the Iranian Adam (man) and Eve. In the Bible a deluge destroys all people except a single righteous individual and his family; in the Avesta a winter depopulates the earth except in the Vara ("enclosure") of the blessed Yima.

In each case the earth is peopled anew with the best two of every kind, and is afterward divided into three realms. The three sons of Yima's successor Thraetaona, named Erij (Avesta, "Airya"), Selm (Avesta, "Sairima"), and Tur (Avesta, "Tura"), are the inheritors in the Persian account; Shem, Ham, and Japheth, in the Semiticstory. Likenesses in minor matters, in certain details of ceremony and ritual, ideas of uncleanness, and the like, are to be noted, as well as parallels between Zoroaster and Moses as sacred lawgivers; and many of these resemblances are treated in the works referred to at the end of this article.



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (754)1/16/2017 12:07:10 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1308
 
Your post showed the ancient Persians of Darius' day were polytheistic.

they also introduced divine helpers the Angels, Archangels & the Holy Spirit. The idea Paradise, Resurrection, the Messiah & Messengers right down to the Three Wise Magi's who visit Jesus' birth.

Nope, none of that. Angels, archangels, the holy spirit, resurrection came from the Bible. Zoroastrians changed some of their gods into angels during the Sassanian age AFTER being influenced by Christianity. The three wise men were astronomers/astrologers who observed something unique in the sky and said it was a sign of the birth of a new king. You'd think if your beloved Persian magi recognized Jesus and worshiped him, you would too.

The Holy Spirit idea comes from the Greek as well


Sure, and whoever you pick as long as it's not a Jew. What do you have against Jews?