@bxivory1: #humor #viral #mexico

yo soy belmax
yo soy belmax
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Region: MX
Wednesday 01 July 2026 04:41:11 GMT
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maucito_o
Mayito_O :
Gracias al papá de Fátima ganamos otra vez 🗿
2026-07-01 13:03:09
15929
alxs_pach
S.T.A.R.S⭐🕯🍞 :
Juan Gabriel se volvió el cantante oficial de este mundial xdddd
2026-07-01 13:23:18
15164
peachy30bee7
PeachyBee :
2026-07-01 07:48:17
2541
brellyos8
Brelly 🫧 🐆 :
Ya dejen de burlarse de ecuador, no puedo darle like a todos sus comentarios JAJAJJAJAJJA
2026-07-01 16:14:43
979
mireles6158
MireLes.🌈 :
Ya vieron que los tacos son mejores que el encebollado
2026-07-01 14:31:51
585
nowaynowaynowaynowayyyy
oliver :
las personas no querían que ecuador ganara,querían ver a México perder
2026-07-01 15:28:54
1913
yemortega
YEM :
Si México no pasa en el siguiente, con Ganarle a Ecuador y de esa manera soy feliz
2026-07-01 19:17:16
75
duckterb
Duckter B :
Soy mexicano, porfavor respeten a Ecuador como ellos respetaron nuestra embajada
2026-07-01 15:58:37
588
robb_ress
Rob :
Eee Santi ya registraste tu linea?
2026-07-01 14:42:23
230
estefanymunozz
Estefany Muñoz ⸆⸉ :
Los veo muy calladitosssssss 😂❤️
2026-07-01 16:37:45
119
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Decoding the Bible  Speaker Jordan Maxwell  Jordan Maxwell (1940–2022) was an American researcher, lecturer, and iconoclast whose life’s work revolved around the hidden histories of religion, symbolism, and the occult foundations of Western institutions. Often described as a “scholar of the forbidden,” Maxwell spent more than half a century digging through ancient texts, comparative mythology, and early Christian writings. His aim was not to discredit religion, but to uncover the political, astronomical, and esoteric layers behind the world’s most influential beliefs. Among his most discussed and controversial assertions was his perspective on the Book of Revelation. Maxwell argued that Revelation was circulating and understood as a stand-alone esoteric text long before it was formally added to the Christian Bible. According to him, early versions of the work—associated with mystical sects in the Eastern Mediterranean—existed in various forms, passed among initiates, scholars, and fringe religious groups. In Maxwell’s view, the text was originally a coded allegory, perhaps astronomical or political in nature, rather than the final apocalyptic prophecy modern readers imagine. He frequently emphasized that Revelation’s dramatic imagery—beasts, angels, seals, plagues—fits an older tradition of symbolic literature designed for insiders, not the public. To Maxwell, this meant that when the early Church fathers eventually canonized the text, they did so with motives that were as political as they were spiritual. The result was a document whose true origins, context, and meaning had already been obscured by centuries of transmission. Maxwell’s claim was not presented as settled scholarship but as an invitation to investigate: Who wrote Revelation? For whom? And why did it finally enter the biblical canon only after centuries of debate? Whether critics dismissed him as too speculative or admirers hailed him as a pioneer, Jordan Maxwell undeniably pushed thousands to re-examine the origins of religious texts through a wider and more critical lens. His work continues to inspire curiosity, skepticism, and exploration into the hidden history behind the world’s oldest stories. #occult #symbol #bible
Decoding the Bible Speaker Jordan Maxwell Jordan Maxwell (1940–2022) was an American researcher, lecturer, and iconoclast whose life’s work revolved around the hidden histories of religion, symbolism, and the occult foundations of Western institutions. Often described as a “scholar of the forbidden,” Maxwell spent more than half a century digging through ancient texts, comparative mythology, and early Christian writings. His aim was not to discredit religion, but to uncover the political, astronomical, and esoteric layers behind the world’s most influential beliefs. Among his most discussed and controversial assertions was his perspective on the Book of Revelation. Maxwell argued that Revelation was circulating and understood as a stand-alone esoteric text long before it was formally added to the Christian Bible. According to him, early versions of the work—associated with mystical sects in the Eastern Mediterranean—existed in various forms, passed among initiates, scholars, and fringe religious groups. In Maxwell’s view, the text was originally a coded allegory, perhaps astronomical or political in nature, rather than the final apocalyptic prophecy modern readers imagine. He frequently emphasized that Revelation’s dramatic imagery—beasts, angels, seals, plagues—fits an older tradition of symbolic literature designed for insiders, not the public. To Maxwell, this meant that when the early Church fathers eventually canonized the text, they did so with motives that were as political as they were spiritual. The result was a document whose true origins, context, and meaning had already been obscured by centuries of transmission. Maxwell’s claim was not presented as settled scholarship but as an invitation to investigate: Who wrote Revelation? For whom? And why did it finally enter the biblical canon only after centuries of debate? Whether critics dismissed him as too speculative or admirers hailed him as a pioneer, Jordan Maxwell undeniably pushed thousands to re-examine the origins of religious texts through a wider and more critical lens. His work continues to inspire curiosity, skepticism, and exploration into the hidden history behind the world’s oldest stories. #occult #symbol #bible

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