The Forged Origins of the New Testament
The story of how Constantine invented the Catholic church is described by Tony Bushby, an Australian researcher, in The Forged Origins of the New Testament. First published at Nexus Magazine, Volume 14, Number 4 (June – July 2007). There was no Christian religion at the time of Constantine (272—337), and there are no New Testament manuscripts older than mid-fourth century. Constantine called the Council of Nicea to form a new religion out of the many that were flourishing in Rome. Constantine needed a new god who would command the allegiance of many religions. He named his new god Hesus Krishna. The new god was approved by majority vote.
Constantine then mandated the compilation of a set of exemplary texts to support the new religion. He believed that his new creation would put an end to religious wars. His religion was not called Christianity until the 15th century.
The discovery of the Codex Sinaiticus (the oldest Bible know to exist) led to a comparison with more recent Bible texts, revealing at least 14,800 editorial alterations by later Bible translators.
In 1562 the Vatican established a censorship office to prohibit publication of early texts that opposed the Church’s more modern doctrines.
Christianity is a mix of (mainly) Mithraism, Greek philosophy, Hinduism, and Egyptian religion.
Christ Never Heard Himself Called Jesus
Tony Bushby, The Bible Fraud
Tony Bushby, The Criminal History of the Papacy
Robert Adams, Behind the Bible Fraud, What Was the Church Trying to Hide?
Tony Bushby, The Forged Origins of the New Testament at archive.org
Comments