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Saturday, December 26, 2009

Satan the Master Craftsmen


Satan the Master Craftsmen,has he got you Too?

This is a Shock for most people that's why luke tells us to dig deep in to the Scriptures.
What is the symbol by which people say, “Oh yes, that’s a Christian building”, or “oh yes, that person there is a Christian”? What symbol would this be? Yes, the cross. But many people would say, “didn’t Christ die on a cross?” Well that is what is generally presented but is it true? We might think that on the surface it is very difficult to prove that he didn’t, but really it’s very simple. There are only two words in the Bible that describe the object on which Christ was put to death. One is the Greek word “stauros” and the other is the Greek word “xylon”. They are the only two words. So if we can find out how those two words were used, and what they meant, as they were used two thousand years ago, then we will know what the writers’ meant when they were actually put down by the Bible writers

Well again, let’s go to the experts. Quoting from the Companion Bible, which is an extremely scholastic work, they say this in the appendix:-“Houma, the ancient Greek poet, uses the word “stauros” as an ordinary pole or stake or of a single piece of timber, and this is the meaning and usage of the word throughout the Greek classics. It never means two pieces of timber placed across one another at any angle it always means one piece alone. Hence the use of the word “xylon” meaning the timber in connection with the manner of our Lord’s death”. So then these authorities conclude this, the evidence is thus complete that Jesus Christ was put to death on an upright stake and not on any two pieces of timber placed at any angle.
That is not an isolated view either. They are saying that two thousand years ago, those words were never ever used to mean a “cross” but always a single piece of timber. W.E. Vine’s Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words says this under the word “stauros”:- “It denotes primarily an upright stake; both the noun and the verb were originally (as they were to be written down at the time) to be distinguished from the ecclesiastical form of a two-beamed cross”. So in other words, its use back then was totally different from a cross as it is pictured today. And it is for that reason that the sixteenth century Catholic historian Justus Liptus depicted the manner of Christ’s death as being put to death on a “stauros”, a singular upright stake. And this is rather significant as that is shown by a historian who doesn’t belong to a particular religion that teaches that, but he realised that that of course, was accurate.

So then we might ask the question – if Christ didn’t die on a cross, where did the cross come from? Well again, don’t let’s surmise, but let us go back to the experts and see what W.E. Vine had to say in his dictionary. He says, “The cross had its origins in ancient Babylon, or Chaldea, and was used as a symbol of the god Tammuz, being the shape of a mystic “T”, or Tor, the initial of his name”. Who was Tammuz? Tammuz was the Sun-god. Who was the Sun-god? The deified Nimrod. And so back then, the cross was used extremely extensively. They usually had circles associated with them in some way to show the representation of the sun in connection with them.

We also have the “Crux Ansata”, the Egyptian form of the cross, which was carried in the hands of the Egyptian priests and pontiff kings as the symbol of their authority as priests of the Sun-god, on one particular day each week. This is where the name “Sunday” comes from as the Egyptians used to set that day aside for worshipping the Sun-god; they followed the pagan Babylonian messiah who was represented as the Sun-god. And so Constantine brought that day into the Roman state and it became the official day of the state universal religion. And so in principle the majority of religions have maintained that day. And what did the Egyptians set aside Sunday to do? To honour their god - and who was their god? The god who was called by that name, the Sun. And so even in getting Sunday as the special day of the week when the god is to be worshipped, we see the same marks there don’t we? So in just these things we can see that so-called “Christianity” is really the worship of a pagan Babylonian seed with Christ’s name attached to it! Just think – the trinity, what does the trinity promote? It goes right back to no-one else but pagan Nimrod of Babylon, the three-in-one triune god. Christmas is the birthday of the Sun-god, again, who is the Sun-god? It is the pagan Babylonian false messiah, Nimrod. Easter is the celebration honouring the fertility goddess. Who is she? She is traceable right back to Semiramis, Nimrod’s wife and mother, the supposed woman who produced this true seed. The cross, what is the cross? It is the symbol of the Sun-god Tammuz, and who is the Sun-god Tammuz? No-one else other than the pagan Babylonian messiah Nimrod of Babylon. And Sunday is the special day set aside to honour the sun. Who is the sun? The pagan Babylonian messiah, Nimrod.

So the name Christ is merely a mask that has been put all over the top of false religion! At a distance it may look very Christian, but have a peek behind the mask and it is horrifying. Is it any wonder that the Bible refers to all of false religion as Babylon the Great? Is it any wonder that God says, “Get out of her, my people”? (Revelation 18:4) If you don’t get out of her, you will “share with her in her sins”. (Revelation 18:5) Let us be very clear on this point. Jehovah God utterly detests false religion, he has a vehement hatred for Babylon the Great, and do you know why? It is because that is the vehicle used by the master craftsman (Satan) to bring about the destruction of the people Jehovah loves dearly, His creation. This is what Satan has used to bring about peoples’ destruction. And so Jehovah does not hate the people but he certainly loathes the system that has been used by Satan to bring about that end result.

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