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Anonymous

which came 1st….the phoenix or the fire??!!?

hmmmmmmm….luna knew the answer….lol ; D

Top 9 Answers
Anonymous

Favorite Answer

hehe

Neither as it is a loop without a begining.

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quatt47
Obviously the Phoenix. See below:

The phoenix is a mythical sacred firebird in ancient Egyptian mythology, and in myths derived from it.

Said to live for 500 or 1461 years (depending on the source), the phoenix is a bird with beautiful gold and red plumage. At the end of its life-cycle the phoenix builds itself a nest of cinnamon twigs that it then ignites; both nest and bird burn fiercely and are reduced to ashes, from which a new, young phoenix arises. The new phoenix is destined to live, usually, as long as the old one. In some cases of mythology, however, this is not true.The new phoenix embalms the ashes of the old phoenix in an egg made of myrrh and deposits it in the Egyptian city of Heliopolis (“the city of the sun” in Greek). The bird was also said to regenerate when hurt or wounded by a foe, thus being almost immortal and invincible — a symbol of fire and divinity. Tears from a phoenix can heal wounds.

Although descriptions (and life-span) vary, the phoenix (Bennu bird) became popular in early Christian art, literature and Christian symbolism, as a symbol of Christ representing his believed resurrection, immortality, and life-after-death (1 Clement 25). Michael W. Holmes points out that early Christian writers justified their use of this myth because the word appears in Psalm 92:12 [LXX Psalm 91:13], but in that passage it actually refers to a palm tree, not a mythological bird, however, it was the “flourishing of Christian Hebraist interpretations of Job 29:18 that brought the Joban phoenix to life for Christian readers of the seventeenth century. At the heart of these interpretations is the proliferation of richly complementary meanings that turn upon three translations of the word chol — as phoenix, palm tree, or sand — in Job 29:18.”

Originally, the phoenix was identified by the Egyptians as a stork or heron-like bird called a benu, known from the Book of the Dead and other Egyptian texts as one of the sacred symbols of worship at Heliopolis, closely associated with the rising sun and the Egyptian sun-god Ra.

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Tokyo_rocks
is this like the chicken or the egg question? i have to say the phoenix.
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Anonymous
goblet of fire

then order of the phoenix

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Vampirelover
i think its the fire then the phoenix
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Manz
phoenix
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jwlund1972
Like the chicken or the egg….
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Horselover@yahoo
the answer is that a circle has no begining.
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Xuhe L
Its a trick question.
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