Satan's Influence on the New Testament
History of Canon
Bible scholars agree that the first Gospels were written decades after the life of Christ. What remains are copies of copies of ancient Greek manuscripts, which have thousands of discrepancies between them. Some books that were once considered part of the canon (the collection of texts considered sacred and authoritative by Christians) were later deemed false gospel and removed.
There are whole books of the canon, like the Book of Revelation, which for hundreds of years were not included because they were deemed false gospel. The process of determining which texts should be considered part of the canon was a human process and therefore uncertain.
There are other whole books like the Shepherd of Hermas, which you probably haven't heard of, but for centuries it was considered part of the canon and then was later jettisoned as false gospel. Generations of Christians lived and died being guided by gospel that is now deemed both incomplete and mistaken. Jesus’s message was that the cause of evil and suffering was not God’s anger at Adam and Eve or his continuing anger at violations of his rules of cleanliness and ritual purity. The cause was human beings’ failure to recognize their oneness with each other and to follow the Golden Rule and love one another. His death was a demonstration of such love, not a ritual sacrifice in appeasement of divine wrath. Jesus urged people to let compassion, not obedience to the Law, determine how they would treat one another. When he revealed his beliefs, some people rejoiced, others objected. He was set upon by the powers of Church and State, Temple and Emperor, and killed as a heretic and a troublemaker. But because of his goodness and his willingness to accept life as it comes—“not my will, but thine”—he passed through death and returned bearing the boon of liberation for everybody.
Until the 4th century, 325 AD; the true original teachings of Jesus were commonly known. We know that these teachings were lost because we have recovered this information (The Nag Hammadi Library and the Coptic texts). Today many good souls are working to spread the word of the true Gospel of Christ. These lost teachings are the sacred truth of Jesus that were intended to be passed into the hands of all people. We know that Jesus' mission was not exclusive to healing people. He created a tribe, a community, an institution dedicated to bringing his enduring light, true peace, and goodness into all the world and every part of society. However; due to the influence of money, power, and politics; the true original teachings were replaced by an institution that has transformed into a beast. Both history and current events of modern history reveal a flawed, sinful, and unhealthy church marred by acts of genocide, rape, pedophilia, sexual abuse, misogyny, injustice, and oppression. The contemporary church is wrecked with bickering, division, idol worship, false and shallow teachings, and a Christian industrial complex formed around greed and vanity.
This is why the true message of the apostles was a warning to the true original Christians about the danger of the Church organization. The church can only witness the truth of Jesus by returning to holy communion with the sacred psychedelic sacraments and the vedic teachings of Yeshua, serving with humility, operating transparently, and having the integrity to admit its failures.
The Lost Teaching of ReincarnationThe Lost Teaching of MeditationThe Gospel of MaryThe Censorship of the Christ’s Original Teachings
In the 1st century of the Roman Empire, when Christ and Mary lived, women were chattel. Women were more disposable and less valuable than a man. Men, especially Roman men in power, were seated at the highest societal and state power echelons. Christ’s teaching that men and women were equal and children of God threatened the established order of society. Women were property, and a politically savvy Empire would do everything in their power to keep it that way.
Constantine became sole emperor of Rome through victories in a series of military campaigns against other rivals. During these campaigns he converted to Christianity from paganism. There is much debate whether his ‘conversion’ was sincere, or whether he did so for political gain. By 313, Emperor Constantine legalized Christianity. In 325, Emperor Constantine called for the Council of Nicaea. During this meeting, the Church invented the Nicene Creed, which became the foundation of all church doctrine. The Creed was later revised at the First Council of Constantinople in 381, and the updated form is known as the Nicene Creed.
In subsequent councils, according to other authors, it was here or, perhaps, that certain books were selected for inclusion in the "authorized" canonical Bible while others were banned and discredited. Along the way the original teachings of Christ were forgotten. All references to such teachings were then expunged from the sacred books and these teachings were henceforth suppressed.
The Nicene Creed
The creed reads:
We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, who makes all things visible and invisible. And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, begotten of the Father, before all worlds, Light of Light, very God of very God, begotten, not made, being of one substance of the Father, by whom all things were made; who for us men and our salvation came down and was incarnate and was made man…
Various Scriptures didn’t make cut and it's so funny how they all shared a common theme: the censorship the the divine feminine, the confirmation of the presence of women in Christ’s ministry and Yeshua/Jesus’s exceptional relationship with Mary Magdalene. For example, the Gospels of Thomas and Philip, among others, confirm that there were three who were always with Jesus: Mary, his mother; Mary, his sister; and Mary of Magdala, who was called his companion.
The idea of God as the father is not only upsetting; it is incorrect. God as the father and Jesus as his only son make zero sense if everyone is a child of God. That would make God, the mother of all life as only mother’s give birth to children. The true teaching is that there is the masculine, the male, and the feminine, the female.
The pre-Christian culture of the Greeks revered the divine feminine, which they termed the goddess energy. It had three principal forms: the young virgin (Persphone), the adult mother (Demeter), and the grandmother (the old crone).
For example, in the early church, women held leadership positions. Women were embraced for their gifts, such as their natural talent for healing the wounded. We see this in the scientific data, where 86.0% of all nurses in the United States are women.
The Council of Nicea and Biblical Canon
Where exactly the politicians began to influence the censorship of Christ’s original teachings is a source of historical argument. I believe the Council of Nicea met to decide what Scripture would become a part of the canonical Bible and which would be suppressed (and ultimately destroyed). I also believe that the victors write history and they have worked to censor these historical events. This type of behavior is repeated by authoritians throughout recorded history and to believe otherwise is to be naive.
Dr. John Meade teaches that the claims of censorship from the Nicea council appear in a late-ninth-century Greek manuscript called the Synodicon Vetus, which purports to summarize the decisions of Greek councils up to that time. Andreas Darmasius brought this manuscript from Morea in the 16th century. John Pappus edited and published it in 1601 in Strasburg. Here’s the relevant section:
The council made manifest the canonical and apocryphal books in the following manner: placing them by the side of the divine table in the house of God, they prayed, entreating the Lord that the divinely inspired books might be found upon the table, and the spurious ones underneath; and it so happened.
According to this source, the church has its canon because of a miracle that occurred at Nicaea in which the Lord caused the canonical books to stay on the table and the apocryphal or spurious ones to be found underneath. From Pappus’s edition of the Synodicon Vetus, this quotation circulated and was cited (sometimes as coming from Pappus himself, not the Greek manuscript he edited!), and eventually found its way into the work of prominent thinkers such as Voltaire (1694–1778). In volume 3 of his Philosophical Dictionary (English translation here) under “Councils” (sec. I), he writes:
It was by an expedient nearly similar, that the fathers of the same council distinguished the authentic from the apocryphal books of Scripture. Having placed them altogether upon the altar, the apocryphal books fell to the ground of themselves.
A little later in section III, Voltaire adds:
We have already said, that in the supplement to the Council of Nicea it is related that the fathers, being much perplexed to find out which were the authentic and which the apocryphal books of the Old and the New Testament, laid them all upon an altar, and the books which they were to reject fell to the ground. What a pity that so fine an ordeal has been lost!
Voltaire earlier mentions that Constantine convened the council. At Nicaea, then, the fathers distinguished the canonical from the apocryphal books by prayer and a miracle. The publication of Pappus’s 1601 edition of Synodicon Vetus—and the subsequent citing of the miracle at Nicaea, especially by Voltaire in his Dictionary—leads us to this conclusion.
According to modern history the first list of canonical books for the “New Testament” came in 367 AD, when Athanasius wrote a theological treatise that contained a list of the current 27 books. 30 years later, at the Council of Carthage leaders from various western churches affirmed these books. The other non-canonical books were deemed “not credible” which was the ancient equivalent of using the term “conspiray theory or misinformation” to discredit theories that suits the establishment.
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