Two Objects Join in 1/30 sec 🛸 Flying Serpent🐍 Kukulkan has the power to cause earthquakes.🐉❇🎸🎶🕊
Revelation from Jesus Christ 1 The revelation from Jesus Christ, which God gave him to show his servants what must soon take place. He made it known by sending his angel to his servant John, 2 who testifies to everything he saw—that is, the word of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ. 3 Blessed is the one who reads aloud the words of this prophecy, and blessed are those who hear it and take to heart what is written in it, because the time is near. Peace Love God bless
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Music me on an Epiphone guitar🎸 playing on Positive Grid Spark Amp using the Spark App for backing track JLAB Audio 🎤Talk PRO USB Stereo Microphone Studio One 5 Song: Arabian Vision
Topaz Gigapixel AI is the program I use to process the enlarged images and camera is a Nikon P1000, B500 http://topazlabs.refr.cc/19ary55 Pics https://photos.app.goo.gl/42Hc8usfLpgTdgQTA r549 May 31 2020
Kukulkan One of the most important Mesoamerican deities was the feathered snake deity. Worshipped by a number of different cultures dating all the way back to the Olmec, it represented the power of several empires. One of the ways through which this deity’s influence spread was through the cult of Kukulkan, the Mayan iteration of the feathered serpent. Though relatively little information is known about Kukulkan’s worshippers, there’s no doubt that the worship of the god helped to spread Mayan culture and ultimately worked as something of a bridge between the various societies of the pre-Columbian Mesoamerican world. Description Kukulkan is most famously represented as a feathered serpent. A common motif in Mayan and later Aztec myth, the feathered serpent appears in a manner that’s a bit different depending on the precise location in which depictions are found. In some cases, the winged serpent is a creature that has a humanoid head. In other cases, it’s a more traditional serpent. There are even some older images of Kukulkan that look a great deal like a standard snake, though these images may be more closely related to a general snake deity than the one that would become Kukulkan. It should also be noted that there are at least some stories in which Kukulkan has a humanoid form, though it’s unclear if this is meant to be the same god. In these folktales, the god Kukulkan appears as a Mayan warrior. These stories may or may not be related to those in which Kukulkan was born of human parents and had a human sister, only to be revealed as a feathered serpent later in his life. Regardless of the connection, the human form of Kukulkan is present in a few notable stories. Symbols The main symbol of Kukulkan is the feathered serpent. This serpent generally is generally known as a vision serpent – not just a snake, but a sort of ur-snake in which many other types of snake ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ItEkyMWy-ZY
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