Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The King of Kings and Lord of Lords: Alexander...

...who ate not of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of good and evil, and who was a man falsely accused, nailed to a tree, yet who did not die, and got his revenge on all those who tried to give Him an early exit from Earth by lying, causing a riot and hitting him from behind... "You who destroyed the temple and builded it in three days come down from the (tree)." When Alexander was born it was considered a miracle because King Philip the Great was thought to be too old and battle-scarred, (and his previous child with Olympia was Cleopatra), so when the people of Ephesus heard of the birth of an heir to the throne of King Philip, they went wild, and accidentally burned down the Temple at Ephesus. The wealthy ladies of Ephesus donated their jewelry and conducted a fund-raising campaign that raised enough money to build a new temple, in just three days! The 17-acre Temple at Ephesus is today considered one of the Seven Wonders of the World...

The jewel-encrusted golden chalice that Alexander always drank from is The Holy Grail that, legend says, was found by Sir Galahad because of his, 'purity of heart and nobility of spirit.' The priceless Cup of Alexander is in a museum in St. Petersburgh, Russia.

Greek Fire is a mystery to all, so it must be said it was sulphur coating 50-pound boulders that His catapults could heave 300-meters with deadly accuracy. Yes, sulphur rained down from the heavens...

He walked on water, (" ...or so it would appear at a distance."), when he built a mole, (sea level roadway), out to the fortress-Tyre off the coast of modern-day Syria, but one stone upon another the world will never see, because the tyrrants-of-the-sea had thrown captured soldiers off of the 150-foot high walls to the rocks below. The rocks were home to snails indigenous to Tyre, and their stomaches bore the blood of countless innocents over the course of 400-years, which produced 'royal purple' dye to grace the attire exclusive to royalty. "Woe woe O Great City! O Babylon, city of power. In one hour your doom has come." Those are the spoken words of Alexander the Great to his six scribes, as they appear in The Revelations, immediately after Alexander crushed Babylon, the Capital of the displicably evil Persian Empire in just one hour.