tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2492192659601155685.post4822696588361721326..comments2024-03-19T09:42:38.705+02:00Comments on TOMER DEVORAH: "All the enemies of Israel will return..."Devorah Chayahhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03625277197970920616noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2492192659601155685.post-86616578660471854472012-12-07T08:09:54.009+02:002012-12-07T08:09:54.009+02:00Dov Bar Leib - I have been thinking through the mo...Dov Bar Leib - I have been thinking through the most likely scenario in the upcoming finale of the War in the North. If Assad is Antiochus, then the next king to fall will be from Rome, another ancient foe, but on a far more spiritual level because his Kingdom of Xtianity has been around since the Council of Nicaea 1700 years ago. His name was Constantine. And my suspicious nose tells me that if Assad is Antiochus, then Erdogan is Constantine. Keep in mind that Turkey is an oddity in the Muslim world. Its flag is 100% red. The color of Islam is Green not Red. Red can be Ham, but for a formerly Xtian place called the Byzantine Empire where there were no Hamitic peoples ever in Turkey, the red on the Turkish flag is all Edom. So if Assad turns out to be Antiochus, then Erdogan will turn out to be Constantine. And both of these kings will fall in the War in the North.<br /><br />Devash-I believe you are right, Dov. Get this. Constantine moved the capital of the Roman Empire to Turkey!<br /><br /><i>Constantinople in the Byzantine era...was the capital city of the Eastern Roman or Byzantine Empire, the Latin and the Ottoman Empire. It was founded in AD 330, at ancient Byzantium as the <b>new capital of the Roman Empire</b> by <b>Constantine the Great</b>, after whom it was named. In the 1100s, the city was the largest and wealthiest European city of the Middle Ages,its only other European rival in the period being Cordova, Spain (900-1100 AD). Eventually, the empire of Christian Eastern Orthdoxy in the east was reduced to just the capital and its environs, falling to the Muslims in the historic battle of 1453.<br /><br />The city itself remained and prospered as the Muslim capital in the Ottoman period; however, scholars normally reserve the name "Constantinopole" for the city in Christian period 330-1453, preferring "Istanbul" for the city's name in later centuries. However, many Western writers have continued to refer to the city by its older name "Constantinople" into modern times. And the name "Constantinople" is still used by the 300 million members of the Eastern Orthodox Church in the title of their most important figurehead, the Orthodox patriarch based in the city, referred to as "His Most Divine All-Holiness the Archbishop of Constantinople New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch."<br /></i><br />Bingo!Devorah Chayahhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03625277197970920616noreply@blogger.com