Who is the Man on The Cross? The dilemma this question poses is resolved with knowledge of the ancient dogma that claimed that the Supreme Being, namely the Sun, had to produce an offspring to educate humans into the ways of heaven.
Divine laws had long been passed down through interpretation by priests who performed such tricks as reading the body language of sacrificed men at the point when their death-throws created movements not normally seen.
Crucifixion was the chief method of sending men into the after-life to take their place as the consort of Mother God, whose icons can be seen in most pre historic societies.
She first appears as the figure found in caves used during the Ice Age in France and Spain.
She is depicted as giving birth to all life forms in images from Assyria, India and beyond.
When men realised that sperm was required for fertility she suddenly required mates in their minds and tests were devised to select men most able to perform under pressure.
Many of those men were volunteers for the job.
From Nordic societies to Africa and from the British Isles to the Americas the practice of cross death rituals was recorded.
The flesh of these sacrificial beings was eaten and their blood drunk, a fact that the Catholic Church in particular tries to hide.
It is from here that the communion, the focus of the Mass, has its roots.
In India Indra, the Sun, was depicted as a crucified figure.
It was the image of the rising sun forming the right angle cross on the peak of hills.
The statue shows the celestial body nailed to a cross with 5 wounds.
To imitate this element of divinity men who died to become her partner in fertility had to die the same way.
So was born the Avatars who, like Wittoba, Krishna, Christ, and hundreds of others died to become gods in heaven.
They were declared 'suns' of the sun and eventually the Sons of God.
Apollo was the Greek version of such a being and it is his image that Roman Caesars claimed for their divine father.
There was, however, still the problem of sending new consorts on a yearly basis so that spring would be fruitful.
Constantine solved this with the establishment of his religion based on a prophet that died once for everyone.
He established the Roman Catholic Church in 325 AD based on ancient philosophies of how the sun sent a man to earth to die as its consort and to pass on the law.
From his time onwards the story has been enhanced, written about, glued into the memory through the minds of the vulnerable, and violently enforced through murder, exile, imprisonment, discrimination and so on.
Once the new religion took over the power of successive Roman Caesars made sure it thrived and when it waned over time a new violent dictator, in the form of Charlemagne, resurrected it.
Eventually we saw the horror of religious domination in the form of the terror and hysteria whipped up along with tales of witches and actions by the mythical devil through their association with him.
Women, children and many men were accused of witchcraft while Bishops ordered their punishment.
Usually this took the form of burning at the stake or trial by water, which might be compared to water boarding of today.
Then came the Spanish Inquisition and other atrocities that have shocked the world, but they are passed over when human desire forgives and forgets.
When the New Testament was compiled at the end of the 4th CAD, by Jerome, it leant heavily on tales already around.
One of these was the story of Krishna whose life was threatened by the evil king Cansa.
His parents, alerted to the threat, fled with him to Egypt while all the young males under 2 were slain.
He stayed there until the age of 12 when he returned to his homeland and performed miracles, the first of which was to change water to wine.
This is just one of the stories on which the New Testament is based.
The key to success in religious establishments is prevention of right knowledge.
People seeking answers have to request them of their priest or a member of the hierarchy.
That is why they have schools where children are subject to enforced dogma and then ensure a continuum of support.
The most vulnerable are the young and if indoctrinated early and nurtured with the dogma of choice over the formative years they may keep the faith for life.
Safeguards are in place to ensure they rarely stray.
These comprise threats of hell and promises of eternal life in heaven or paradise for the faithful.
Other things preventing exploration of the truth and the exercise of choice are based on 'blasphemy' and claims of one being an infidel or heathen if choosing a different path.
Knowledge is power but in the case of whether Christ is, in fact, a version of Krishna one can state that ignorance is also power.
Divine laws had long been passed down through interpretation by priests who performed such tricks as reading the body language of sacrificed men at the point when their death-throws created movements not normally seen.
Crucifixion was the chief method of sending men into the after-life to take their place as the consort of Mother God, whose icons can be seen in most pre historic societies.
She first appears as the figure found in caves used during the Ice Age in France and Spain.
She is depicted as giving birth to all life forms in images from Assyria, India and beyond.
When men realised that sperm was required for fertility she suddenly required mates in their minds and tests were devised to select men most able to perform under pressure.
Many of those men were volunteers for the job.
From Nordic societies to Africa and from the British Isles to the Americas the practice of cross death rituals was recorded.
The flesh of these sacrificial beings was eaten and their blood drunk, a fact that the Catholic Church in particular tries to hide.
It is from here that the communion, the focus of the Mass, has its roots.
In India Indra, the Sun, was depicted as a crucified figure.
It was the image of the rising sun forming the right angle cross on the peak of hills.
The statue shows the celestial body nailed to a cross with 5 wounds.
To imitate this element of divinity men who died to become her partner in fertility had to die the same way.
So was born the Avatars who, like Wittoba, Krishna, Christ, and hundreds of others died to become gods in heaven.
They were declared 'suns' of the sun and eventually the Sons of God.
Apollo was the Greek version of such a being and it is his image that Roman Caesars claimed for their divine father.
There was, however, still the problem of sending new consorts on a yearly basis so that spring would be fruitful.
Constantine solved this with the establishment of his religion based on a prophet that died once for everyone.
He established the Roman Catholic Church in 325 AD based on ancient philosophies of how the sun sent a man to earth to die as its consort and to pass on the law.
From his time onwards the story has been enhanced, written about, glued into the memory through the minds of the vulnerable, and violently enforced through murder, exile, imprisonment, discrimination and so on.
Once the new religion took over the power of successive Roman Caesars made sure it thrived and when it waned over time a new violent dictator, in the form of Charlemagne, resurrected it.
Eventually we saw the horror of religious domination in the form of the terror and hysteria whipped up along with tales of witches and actions by the mythical devil through their association with him.
Women, children and many men were accused of witchcraft while Bishops ordered their punishment.
Usually this took the form of burning at the stake or trial by water, which might be compared to water boarding of today.
Then came the Spanish Inquisition and other atrocities that have shocked the world, but they are passed over when human desire forgives and forgets.
When the New Testament was compiled at the end of the 4th CAD, by Jerome, it leant heavily on tales already around.
One of these was the story of Krishna whose life was threatened by the evil king Cansa.
His parents, alerted to the threat, fled with him to Egypt while all the young males under 2 were slain.
He stayed there until the age of 12 when he returned to his homeland and performed miracles, the first of which was to change water to wine.
This is just one of the stories on which the New Testament is based.
The key to success in religious establishments is prevention of right knowledge.
People seeking answers have to request them of their priest or a member of the hierarchy.
That is why they have schools where children are subject to enforced dogma and then ensure a continuum of support.
The most vulnerable are the young and if indoctrinated early and nurtured with the dogma of choice over the formative years they may keep the faith for life.
Safeguards are in place to ensure they rarely stray.
These comprise threats of hell and promises of eternal life in heaven or paradise for the faithful.
Other things preventing exploration of the truth and the exercise of choice are based on 'blasphemy' and claims of one being an infidel or heathen if choosing a different path.
Knowledge is power but in the case of whether Christ is, in fact, a version of Krishna one can state that ignorance is also power.
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