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Nintendroid

@nintendroid / nintendroid.org

A nostalgia blog with video games and other stuff close to our hearts. Mostly GIFs and images (all created from personal gameplay footage I captured, unless noted otherwise) with occasional reviews and word-salad for your reading enjoyment. Fast food kids meal "analyst", and sort-of archivist. Inquiries, correspondence, business, contact: [email protected] Check out our Internet Archive feed below!
"Triumph of the Innocents" by William Holman Hunt (1870-1903) Hunt’s painting is the first of three versions of this unusual subject, which has its origins in the biblical narrative of the Flight into Egypt. When the final painting was exhibited, the artist provided an explanatory pamphlet. King Herod, threatened by the newborn “King of the Jews,” ordered the slaughter of all male infants in Bethlehem. Here the fleeing Holy Family is enveloped by “the embodied spirits of the martyred Innocents.” The infant directly below the Christ child displays his torn garment, a prefiguration of the wound in Christ’s side at the Crucifixion. “Airy globes” display Jewish dreams of the union of heaven and earth at the advent of the Messiah. In the largest bubble one can make out the sleeping figure of a patriarch with a “ladder or pathway up and down, which is traversed by the servants of God.”

I don't share my faith here often, but this is a reminder to me of what the Christmas season means. God allowed for his son to be born of flesh to conquer sin and give fallen man a chance at repentance (John 3:16).

It's easy to get caught up in the commercialism and rush of the Christmas season, but always remember this is the reason we celebrate. The greatest gift of all was our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

Wishing everyone the most merry of Christmases and I love you and hope you're doing ok wherever you are in the world.

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