sophia_h
28-02-2009, 03:47 PM
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This is a wonderful index of articles for your file.
It will take days to work thru ! enjoy, :D
.................................................. ...............
ANTIQUITY UNVEILED
(1892)
ANCIENT VOICES FROM THE SPIRIT REALMS
PROVING CHRISTIANITY TO BE OF HEATHEN ORIGIN
Comments by
J. M. Roberts, Esq.
CONTENTS.
Preface.
Introductory.
Illustrations.
Apollonius, the Nazarene, The Jesus of the Christians.
Apollonius of Tyana, the Nazarene.—Born A. D. 2, died A. D. 99—His history and teachings appropriated to formulate Christianity—The original gospels of the New Testament brought from India.
Damis, the pupil of Apollonius.—The Epistles of Timothy written to Damis—India the source of Christianity.
Deva Bodhisatoua, a Buddhist Prophet.—The original gospels as understood by the Hindoos—Received from spirit sources through Bodhisatoua as a medium.
Plotinus.—The testimony of Ulphilas, Apollonius, Vespasian, Deva Bodhisatoua and others confirmed—The scriptures of Buddhism and their relation to Christianity.
Pope Gregory VII.—His reason for destroying the library of the Palatine Apollo—The manuscripts contained therein would prove the non-existence of Jesus Christ.
Euthalius, a Greek Theologian.—The teachings of Apollonius of Tyana mutilated to make good the Christian scheme—Euthalius substitutes Paul and the Christ idea for Apollonius and Chrishna in these writings—The Acts of the Apostles, Pauline and Catholic epistles divided by him into verses.
Potamon, the great Alexandrian Reformer.—His attempt to purify the existing religions leads to exile—The Eclectic School of Philosophy—The teachings of Potamon drawn upon to fabricate Christianity.
Vespasian, a Roman Emperor.—No such person among the Jews as Jesus of Nazareth—The books of the Jews—Disease produced by spirits—Apollonius a great medium.
Felix, Procurator of Judea.—Alcibides, an Egyptian priest and not Paul, as recorded in Acts, arraigned before Felix.
Pliny the Younger.—His letter to Trajan referred to the Essenes and not to the Christians—The word Christians a forgery.
Origen.—Christianity and Paganism identical—The narratives relating to the person Jesus Christ derived from the Greek and Egyptian god makers.
Flavius Josephus, a Jewish Historian.—The reference to Jesus of Nazareth fraudently interpolated by some Christian copier of his history—No such person as Jesus of Nazareth existed in the time of Josephus.
Flavius Philostratus, biographer of Apollonius of Tyana.—The non-existence of the Christian religion in his day—Apollonius worshiped in Rome as the saviour of men—Every effort made by Popes and Emperors to destroy the history of Apollonius.
Cosmas Indicopleustes, the great Antiquarian.—The symbols or keys of the Christian religion found on the Adulian marble—Fraudulent plates being manufactured by excavators to support the Old Testament.
Jean Jacques Barthelemy, a French Scholar.—The modern Christian religion under the form of symbolic worship written upon all the temples and tombs of antiquity.
Henry Salt, an eminent English Traveller.—All historic religions have their origin in the Sun—Blinded by Christianity while on earth.
M. Servilius Nonianus, a Roman Consul.—The Christian Jesus none other than the Chrishna of the Hindoos—No Christians nor Christianity in the time of Nero, A. D. 45 to 68.
Ptolemy Philadelphus.—The Alexandrian Library—Where the principal parts of the creeds and tenets of all religious systems were obtained.
Pontius Pilate, Procurator of Judea.—He knew nothing of the Jesus of the Christians—Jesus Onanias a robber, tried before him and crucified by the Roman soldiers—This testimony positively corroborated in our own times.
Cyrillus Luchar, a Greek Patriarch.—The Alexandrian manuscript—The infamy of Christianity—Millions of ruined souls in the after-life because of its teachings—Christianity not from the Jews but from the Greeks.
Quintilian.—Denies the existence of Jesus Christ—The cross has been the symbol of various religions ever since the days of Rameses II of Egypt.
Julius Lucius Florus, a Roman Historian.—The spirit of progress buried beneath Christianity—Jesus and his so-called apostles not known in Rome A. D. 125.
Urban VIII, a Roman Pontiff.—Facts in regard to the mingling of Paganism and Christianity—The bronze decorations of St. Peter's at Rome—Where obtained.
Aquila, a Cappadocian Philosopher.—Neither Jew nor Christian—Not the translator of the Greek version of the Old Testament as recorded in history.
Symmachus, a Grecian Statesman.—The Christian religion a duplication of the Eleusinian mysteries.
Pomponius Mela, a Roman Geographer.—No Christians at Antioch A. D. 54—The goddess Diana worshiped.
Cardinal Stefano Borgia.—Christianity cannot stand the blazing light of the original writings of the Latin Fathers if placed in the hands of scholars and free thinkers.
Caracalla, bishop of Nicomedia.—The Council of Nice.—All works pertaining to the mythological origin of Christianity to be destroyed—Bibliomancy.
Hegesippus, a Greek Theologian.—The attempt to make a new religion out of the old religions—The struggle between learned scholars and pagan priests.
Ulphilas, a Catholic Bishop.—The source of the Codex Argenteus—The Brahminical gospels of Apollonius translated from the Samaritan tongue in the Fourth Century—The names changed to suit his Christian employers.
Abgarus, a Grecian Priest.—The famous letter to Jesus Christ a forgery by Christian writers—He corresponded with Jesus Malathiel, a Jewish priest—Eusebius responsible for the circulation of this falsehood.
Gregory, bishop of Constantinople.—Destruction of many valuable books—Jesus interpolated for Apollonius in history—Eusebius spent his whole life in mutilating and destroying everything that militated against Christianity.
Eusebius of Caesarea.—An unwilling witness—The power of truth—All Epistles and Gospels in reality the creation of Christian priests—Justin Martyr the forger of the passage in Josephus in relation to Jesus Christ—Eusebius admits copying it—Dr Lardner's arraignment of Eusebius—What Gibbons thinks of Eusebius.
Alciphron, a Greek Writer.—The story of the "Wise Men of the East," a theological legend brought from India by the Gymnosophists.
Sir Thomas Bodley, founder of the Bodleian Library—The Anti-Nicene library—Collection of manuscripts against the Council of Nice—Missing leaves of the Cambridge manuscript.
Marcion, the Father of Christianity.—The Pauline Epistles appropriated by Marcion—He changes them—The description of Paul interpolated to disguise the identity of their author, Apollonius of Tyana.
Lucian, a Greek Satirist.—The insignificant measures used to formulate the Christian Gospels—The St. Luke of the Gospels—Apollonius the Apollos of the Greeks—The original works of Lucian mutilated—Who St. Paul and St. Mark were.
Constantinus Pogonatus.—The sixth council of Constantinople A. D. 680—Prometheus of the Greeks adopted to represent Jesus Christ—Lamb worship changed to man worship—Lamb worship a relic of paganism—The edict prohibiting the worship of the lamb on the cross.
Constantine the Great.—Fettered by the truth—The Buddhistic gospels mingled with the teachings of Potamon.
Epaphroditus, a Latin Grammarian.—Josephus a member of the Ancient Order of the Initiated—Why Josephus did not mention Apollonius in his history.
F. Nigidius Figulus.—Connection of astrology with Christianity.
Vellius Paterculus.—The Signs of the Zodiac the key to all religions.
Gregory, bishop of Neo-Caesarea.—Apollonius worshiped in the Temple of Apollo—Valuable manuscripts destroyed by Eusebius.
Ummidius Quadratus, Governor of Syria.—The feast of the unleavened bread a blood purifying ceremony—The carefully concealed secrets of the Essenes—Travels in India.
C. Cornelius Tacitus, a Roman Historian.—The Essenian Brotherhood—Spirit manifestations—Never heard of the Christian Jesus nor of Christianity.
Manetho, an Egyptian Priest.—The god Osiris of the Egyptians—Materialization as understood by the ancients—The Sun personified, the revered saviour of all nations.
Varro, a Roman Writer.—The celebrated literature of the ancients destroyed by the Christian hierarchy—His "Key to Ancient Religions" destroyed by order of Constantine the Great.
Ignatius of Antioch, Patriarch of the Essenes.—Apollonius of Tyana investigated the religion of the Essenes—The sacred writings of the Essenes blended with those Apollonius received from India.
Titus Livius, a Roman Historian.—The birth, life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ as portrayed in the annual passage of the Sun through the constellations of the Zodiac.
Q. Veranius.—The God of the Britons identical with the God of the Christians—The idea of being saved by a man born of a virgin, established among barbarous people centuries before the Christian era.
Porphyry, a so-called Heathen Philosopher.—None of the early Christian Fathers, so-called, were Christians in reality—The gods of all religions have arisen out of astronomy and astrology.
Marcantonio De Dominis, a Heresiarch.—The old Roman gods, re-chiselled by the sculptors, are the Apostles of the Christian religion—The vestments of the Roman Catholic priesthood copied from the priests of Apollo.
Sejanus, the favorite of Tiberius.—New light on the story of the crucifixion—The obliterated portion of the Alexandrian Codex.
Aloysius Lilius, an Italian Savant.—The connection of the life of the so-called Jesus Christ with the gods of antiquity—The doctrines of the Christian Trinity based on the Pagan Trinity.
Pompaeius Saturninus.—The secret meeting of the Sons of the Sun or the Initiated—Ancient Spiritualism.
Carra.—The inscriptions on the Adulian Marble relate to the life and miracles of Apollonius of Tyana.
Clement Alexandrinus.—His writings mutilated by Eusebius—interesting revelations concerning the Christian cross—The Council of Alexandria.
Hermogenes, the Essenian rival of St. Paul.—Astronomy the key to the Book of Revelation—To understand the symbolism of Christianity read the stars.
Jean Sylvain Bailly.—What can be found at Ancient Tyre—An important book.
Cardinal Caesar Baronius, Librarian of the Vatican.—The Hindoo god Chrishna, in reality the Christ of the Christians—Sworn to eternal secrecy.
Rufus Quintius Curtius.—The Jewish legends borrowed from Persian mythologies—The breast plate of Josephus.
M. Atilius Regulus.—The Greek and Roman religions copies of the Egyptian religion of Osiris or the sun personified.
Robert II, of France.—The Great Infinite has marked out no set of religious rules for men to be governed by—The effect of too much religious belief—All pictures of Jesus Christ copies of those of Apollonius of Tyana.
Pythagoras, the Samian Sage.—The god principal within us—In ancient times all sages were mediums—The effects of erroneous religious teaching of children almost ineradicable.
Ammonius Saccas, the pupil of Potamon.—The Book of Revelation written under spirit control by Apollonius—Christianity known under the name of Gnosticism.
Galerius, a Roman Emperor.—Why Diocletian issued his famous edict against the Christians.
George Deyverdun.—The Last Supper taken from the Eleusianian Mysteries—Gibbons' book, "Aenaeas, The Lawgiver of the Eleusinian Mysteries," destroyed by the clergy.
Heinrich E. G. Paulus.—The Gospel of St. Matthew—A remarkable communication.
Sigebert Havercamp.—The writings of Damis in existence as late as the Eighteenth Century.
Charles De Brosses.—The worship of the Fetish gods—Christianity a mixture of all preceding religions.
Christian Thomasius, Jurist and Philosopher.—Luther knew that Jesus Christ was a myth but dared not acknowledge it—The true cause of Materialism in Germany.
Saturninus, the Essenian Philosopher.—The founder of Gnosticism—The story of Jesus of Nazareth, and the Christian Scriptures the mixed systems of Brahmanic, Buddhistic, Jewish, Essenian and Gnostic teachings—Apollonius heals by the laying on of hands.
Cardinal Robert Bellarmine.—Compelled to testify by the disappointed hopes of millions who believed and trusted in Christianity—Refers to the portrait of Apollonius—All should know who the real Jesus was.
http://www.angelfire.com/ne/newviews/autoc.html
see next for rest of list
..
This is a wonderful index of articles for your file.
It will take days to work thru ! enjoy, :D
.................................................. ...............
ANTIQUITY UNVEILED
(1892)
ANCIENT VOICES FROM THE SPIRIT REALMS
PROVING CHRISTIANITY TO BE OF HEATHEN ORIGIN
Comments by
J. M. Roberts, Esq.
CONTENTS.
Preface.
Introductory.
Illustrations.
Apollonius, the Nazarene, The Jesus of the Christians.
Apollonius of Tyana, the Nazarene.—Born A. D. 2, died A. D. 99—His history and teachings appropriated to formulate Christianity—The original gospels of the New Testament brought from India.
Damis, the pupil of Apollonius.—The Epistles of Timothy written to Damis—India the source of Christianity.
Deva Bodhisatoua, a Buddhist Prophet.—The original gospels as understood by the Hindoos—Received from spirit sources through Bodhisatoua as a medium.
Plotinus.—The testimony of Ulphilas, Apollonius, Vespasian, Deva Bodhisatoua and others confirmed—The scriptures of Buddhism and their relation to Christianity.
Pope Gregory VII.—His reason for destroying the library of the Palatine Apollo—The manuscripts contained therein would prove the non-existence of Jesus Christ.
Euthalius, a Greek Theologian.—The teachings of Apollonius of Tyana mutilated to make good the Christian scheme—Euthalius substitutes Paul and the Christ idea for Apollonius and Chrishna in these writings—The Acts of the Apostles, Pauline and Catholic epistles divided by him into verses.
Potamon, the great Alexandrian Reformer.—His attempt to purify the existing religions leads to exile—The Eclectic School of Philosophy—The teachings of Potamon drawn upon to fabricate Christianity.
Vespasian, a Roman Emperor.—No such person among the Jews as Jesus of Nazareth—The books of the Jews—Disease produced by spirits—Apollonius a great medium.
Felix, Procurator of Judea.—Alcibides, an Egyptian priest and not Paul, as recorded in Acts, arraigned before Felix.
Pliny the Younger.—His letter to Trajan referred to the Essenes and not to the Christians—The word Christians a forgery.
Origen.—Christianity and Paganism identical—The narratives relating to the person Jesus Christ derived from the Greek and Egyptian god makers.
Flavius Josephus, a Jewish Historian.—The reference to Jesus of Nazareth fraudently interpolated by some Christian copier of his history—No such person as Jesus of Nazareth existed in the time of Josephus.
Flavius Philostratus, biographer of Apollonius of Tyana.—The non-existence of the Christian religion in his day—Apollonius worshiped in Rome as the saviour of men—Every effort made by Popes and Emperors to destroy the history of Apollonius.
Cosmas Indicopleustes, the great Antiquarian.—The symbols or keys of the Christian religion found on the Adulian marble—Fraudulent plates being manufactured by excavators to support the Old Testament.
Jean Jacques Barthelemy, a French Scholar.—The modern Christian religion under the form of symbolic worship written upon all the temples and tombs of antiquity.
Henry Salt, an eminent English Traveller.—All historic religions have their origin in the Sun—Blinded by Christianity while on earth.
M. Servilius Nonianus, a Roman Consul.—The Christian Jesus none other than the Chrishna of the Hindoos—No Christians nor Christianity in the time of Nero, A. D. 45 to 68.
Ptolemy Philadelphus.—The Alexandrian Library—Where the principal parts of the creeds and tenets of all religious systems were obtained.
Pontius Pilate, Procurator of Judea.—He knew nothing of the Jesus of the Christians—Jesus Onanias a robber, tried before him and crucified by the Roman soldiers—This testimony positively corroborated in our own times.
Cyrillus Luchar, a Greek Patriarch.—The Alexandrian manuscript—The infamy of Christianity—Millions of ruined souls in the after-life because of its teachings—Christianity not from the Jews but from the Greeks.
Quintilian.—Denies the existence of Jesus Christ—The cross has been the symbol of various religions ever since the days of Rameses II of Egypt.
Julius Lucius Florus, a Roman Historian.—The spirit of progress buried beneath Christianity—Jesus and his so-called apostles not known in Rome A. D. 125.
Urban VIII, a Roman Pontiff.—Facts in regard to the mingling of Paganism and Christianity—The bronze decorations of St. Peter's at Rome—Where obtained.
Aquila, a Cappadocian Philosopher.—Neither Jew nor Christian—Not the translator of the Greek version of the Old Testament as recorded in history.
Symmachus, a Grecian Statesman.—The Christian religion a duplication of the Eleusinian mysteries.
Pomponius Mela, a Roman Geographer.—No Christians at Antioch A. D. 54—The goddess Diana worshiped.
Cardinal Stefano Borgia.—Christianity cannot stand the blazing light of the original writings of the Latin Fathers if placed in the hands of scholars and free thinkers.
Caracalla, bishop of Nicomedia.—The Council of Nice.—All works pertaining to the mythological origin of Christianity to be destroyed—Bibliomancy.
Hegesippus, a Greek Theologian.—The attempt to make a new religion out of the old religions—The struggle between learned scholars and pagan priests.
Ulphilas, a Catholic Bishop.—The source of the Codex Argenteus—The Brahminical gospels of Apollonius translated from the Samaritan tongue in the Fourth Century—The names changed to suit his Christian employers.
Abgarus, a Grecian Priest.—The famous letter to Jesus Christ a forgery by Christian writers—He corresponded with Jesus Malathiel, a Jewish priest—Eusebius responsible for the circulation of this falsehood.
Gregory, bishop of Constantinople.—Destruction of many valuable books—Jesus interpolated for Apollonius in history—Eusebius spent his whole life in mutilating and destroying everything that militated against Christianity.
Eusebius of Caesarea.—An unwilling witness—The power of truth—All Epistles and Gospels in reality the creation of Christian priests—Justin Martyr the forger of the passage in Josephus in relation to Jesus Christ—Eusebius admits copying it—Dr Lardner's arraignment of Eusebius—What Gibbons thinks of Eusebius.
Alciphron, a Greek Writer.—The story of the "Wise Men of the East," a theological legend brought from India by the Gymnosophists.
Sir Thomas Bodley, founder of the Bodleian Library—The Anti-Nicene library—Collection of manuscripts against the Council of Nice—Missing leaves of the Cambridge manuscript.
Marcion, the Father of Christianity.—The Pauline Epistles appropriated by Marcion—He changes them—The description of Paul interpolated to disguise the identity of their author, Apollonius of Tyana.
Lucian, a Greek Satirist.—The insignificant measures used to formulate the Christian Gospels—The St. Luke of the Gospels—Apollonius the Apollos of the Greeks—The original works of Lucian mutilated—Who St. Paul and St. Mark were.
Constantinus Pogonatus.—The sixth council of Constantinople A. D. 680—Prometheus of the Greeks adopted to represent Jesus Christ—Lamb worship changed to man worship—Lamb worship a relic of paganism—The edict prohibiting the worship of the lamb on the cross.
Constantine the Great.—Fettered by the truth—The Buddhistic gospels mingled with the teachings of Potamon.
Epaphroditus, a Latin Grammarian.—Josephus a member of the Ancient Order of the Initiated—Why Josephus did not mention Apollonius in his history.
F. Nigidius Figulus.—Connection of astrology with Christianity.
Vellius Paterculus.—The Signs of the Zodiac the key to all religions.
Gregory, bishop of Neo-Caesarea.—Apollonius worshiped in the Temple of Apollo—Valuable manuscripts destroyed by Eusebius.
Ummidius Quadratus, Governor of Syria.—The feast of the unleavened bread a blood purifying ceremony—The carefully concealed secrets of the Essenes—Travels in India.
C. Cornelius Tacitus, a Roman Historian.—The Essenian Brotherhood—Spirit manifestations—Never heard of the Christian Jesus nor of Christianity.
Manetho, an Egyptian Priest.—The god Osiris of the Egyptians—Materialization as understood by the ancients—The Sun personified, the revered saviour of all nations.
Varro, a Roman Writer.—The celebrated literature of the ancients destroyed by the Christian hierarchy—His "Key to Ancient Religions" destroyed by order of Constantine the Great.
Ignatius of Antioch, Patriarch of the Essenes.—Apollonius of Tyana investigated the religion of the Essenes—The sacred writings of the Essenes blended with those Apollonius received from India.
Titus Livius, a Roman Historian.—The birth, life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ as portrayed in the annual passage of the Sun through the constellations of the Zodiac.
Q. Veranius.—The God of the Britons identical with the God of the Christians—The idea of being saved by a man born of a virgin, established among barbarous people centuries before the Christian era.
Porphyry, a so-called Heathen Philosopher.—None of the early Christian Fathers, so-called, were Christians in reality—The gods of all religions have arisen out of astronomy and astrology.
Marcantonio De Dominis, a Heresiarch.—The old Roman gods, re-chiselled by the sculptors, are the Apostles of the Christian religion—The vestments of the Roman Catholic priesthood copied from the priests of Apollo.
Sejanus, the favorite of Tiberius.—New light on the story of the crucifixion—The obliterated portion of the Alexandrian Codex.
Aloysius Lilius, an Italian Savant.—The connection of the life of the so-called Jesus Christ with the gods of antiquity—The doctrines of the Christian Trinity based on the Pagan Trinity.
Pompaeius Saturninus.—The secret meeting of the Sons of the Sun or the Initiated—Ancient Spiritualism.
Carra.—The inscriptions on the Adulian Marble relate to the life and miracles of Apollonius of Tyana.
Clement Alexandrinus.—His writings mutilated by Eusebius—interesting revelations concerning the Christian cross—The Council of Alexandria.
Hermogenes, the Essenian rival of St. Paul.—Astronomy the key to the Book of Revelation—To understand the symbolism of Christianity read the stars.
Jean Sylvain Bailly.—What can be found at Ancient Tyre—An important book.
Cardinal Caesar Baronius, Librarian of the Vatican.—The Hindoo god Chrishna, in reality the Christ of the Christians—Sworn to eternal secrecy.
Rufus Quintius Curtius.—The Jewish legends borrowed from Persian mythologies—The breast plate of Josephus.
M. Atilius Regulus.—The Greek and Roman religions copies of the Egyptian religion of Osiris or the sun personified.
Robert II, of France.—The Great Infinite has marked out no set of religious rules for men to be governed by—The effect of too much religious belief—All pictures of Jesus Christ copies of those of Apollonius of Tyana.
Pythagoras, the Samian Sage.—The god principal within us—In ancient times all sages were mediums—The effects of erroneous religious teaching of children almost ineradicable.
Ammonius Saccas, the pupil of Potamon.—The Book of Revelation written under spirit control by Apollonius—Christianity known under the name of Gnosticism.
Galerius, a Roman Emperor.—Why Diocletian issued his famous edict against the Christians.
George Deyverdun.—The Last Supper taken from the Eleusianian Mysteries—Gibbons' book, "Aenaeas, The Lawgiver of the Eleusinian Mysteries," destroyed by the clergy.
Heinrich E. G. Paulus.—The Gospel of St. Matthew—A remarkable communication.
Sigebert Havercamp.—The writings of Damis in existence as late as the Eighteenth Century.
Charles De Brosses.—The worship of the Fetish gods—Christianity a mixture of all preceding religions.
Christian Thomasius, Jurist and Philosopher.—Luther knew that Jesus Christ was a myth but dared not acknowledge it—The true cause of Materialism in Germany.
Saturninus, the Essenian Philosopher.—The founder of Gnosticism—The story of Jesus of Nazareth, and the Christian Scriptures the mixed systems of Brahmanic, Buddhistic, Jewish, Essenian and Gnostic teachings—Apollonius heals by the laying on of hands.
Cardinal Robert Bellarmine.—Compelled to testify by the disappointed hopes of millions who believed and trusted in Christianity—Refers to the portrait of Apollonius—All should know who the real Jesus was.
http://www.angelfire.com/ne/newviews/autoc.html
see next for rest of list
..