Surfer
This entry was posted on Sep 11 2008
Alors que certains (dont moi) préfère le côté binaire d’internet, d’autres préfèrent le surf, le vrai ! J’aurai aimé savoir en faire, du coup, j’ai essayé le BodyBoard pour m’amuser mais un méchant coup de soleil a eu raison de moi … pour l’instant !


Superbe photo :3, le surf c’est très sympa comme sport je trouve
Ah ben oui mais il faut mettre un Lycra quand on fait du surf Anh, sinon on prend cher sur les épaules!
ouha superbe photo,
avec quel appareil l’as tu prise
T’as pas un peu maigri toi ? :P
J’aurais voulu :P
Je suis tombée sur ton blog via ykio.wordpress.com… Waouh, jolie surprise. Elles sont top tes photos ! Un petit mot en passant, et je poursuis ma lecture :)
Merci Aude ;)
ah bien superbe blog peace and suuuuuuuuurfer khamoooooooooch+____x
Héhé :)
Hi Darrell! If there were other women such as Anna who etsansielly lived at the Temple, if we can accept “never left” as literal, they would certainly have to have been celibate, as there was no hanky-panky allowed in the Temple complex.The main objection to women having any such attachment to the Temple, as dedicated servants of any kind, is that the Mishnah and other early rabbinic materials never mention such. But they are later, and to a degree tendentious in proferring the developed post-Pharisaic description of ritual and other matters. In a way, their descriptions are somewhat more of a description of how they wanted the Temple service to be, rather than how it truly was. The degree to which this was the case is, of course, debatable, but that it was the case in some part is unquestionable. Incidental information (where not obviously also tendentious) as found in the Gospels, Josephus, and Philo, along with various earlier writings, should be taken as probative, with the rabbinic sources (which are, after all, written at least roughly 130 years after the Temple was destroyed) taking second seat. Interesting stuff!
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