Lamadvav Tzaddikim
or if you like the 36 Righteous Men on planet earth, who uphold this planet from being totally destroyed. Having just finished reading the novel/book by Sam Bourne with the name "The Righteous Men" I was intrigued to find out a bit more about the tzaddikim and looked them up on google (where else). And it is amazing to read some on this jewish /hebrew legend. Check it out for yourself !!
The book by the way is an easy read, with some foul (quite unecessary) language), but thrilling too.
From a christian view point, as we believe that one man died for all, so why not have 36 out of 6 Billion, holding up the justness ? Not advocating the truth or legend aspect, just the number of it. And it is an interesting concept the author tries to highlight, that when all 36 are killed in a certain time period, the end of the world as we know it would arrive, and the vision of John would start as described in Revelation.
Furthermore, since the rise of Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code, I wonder if it has also struck you the increase in the number of novells which have hit the bookstores these past years, following the same sort of argumentation (Lucifer's Code; The last Templars; The Messiah Code; The Labyrinth; just to mention a few) as Dan Brown's book. Also interesting that no furour has arisen from his "Angel and Demons" novell, or even "Digital Fortress". But then again mankind is rather fickle ...
The book by the way is an easy read, with some foul (quite unecessary) language), but thrilling too.
From a christian view point, as we believe that one man died for all, so why not have 36 out of 6 Billion, holding up the justness ? Not advocating the truth or legend aspect, just the number of it. And it is an interesting concept the author tries to highlight, that when all 36 are killed in a certain time period, the end of the world as we know it would arrive, and the vision of John would start as described in Revelation.
Furthermore, since the rise of Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code, I wonder if it has also struck you the increase in the number of novells which have hit the bookstores these past years, following the same sort of argumentation (Lucifer's Code; The last Templars; The Messiah Code; The Labyrinth; just to mention a few) as Dan Brown's book. Also interesting that no furour has arisen from his "Angel and Demons" novell, or even "Digital Fortress". But then again mankind is rather fickle ...