Who Wrote the Book of the New Testament and Produced the First Bible?
Following the establishment of the Roman Catholic Church by Constantine, in 325 AD, and his invention of its Prophet, Jesus Christ, the organisation was lacking credibility.
Towards the close of the 4th CAD the then Bishop of Rome, Damasus, acting on the Caesar's orders, commissioned Jerome to produce a credible book that all could follow.
He noted what he did in letters and diaries as he set about to complete the task.
Jerome was also asked to give the church laws, festivals, and so on, that would unite its followers.
He then 'borrowed' the calendar, laws, festivals, costumes, order of service, and symbolism from the Imperial Roman Religion that was involved with sun worship.
The sun star is still used on the garments of the Pope and clergy to this day.
The implements used in the mass also bear the bursting sun star on them, such as the Chalice.
Festivals to the sun include Christmas, the birthday of the sun following its death at Solstice three days earlier.
They also include Easter which was originally 'i-star' or 'eye-star' for the impending return of the sun to its peak following the March equinox.
This was the first of spring in the Northern Hemisphere and the time when life returns and animals mate to bring forth their young.
It was a time of orgies and fertility in the Roman world and 'i-star' is the origin of 'oestrous'.
Jerome had to keep the old festivals in place or the religion would possibly not have survived.
He changed the names slightly to make them acceptable to both sides.
Men had sacrificed their lives on crosses for hundreds of years beforehand and they were the 'christs' of antiquity.
It is the origin of 'Krishna' as well.
The term 'c-rist' or 'x-rist' means 'cross on a cross'.
With all this in place he then wrote the book of Matthew because it contains the laws he set in place which were unknown before that time.
His cohort in the work was Augustine Hippo, who resided in Alexandria.
It is suspected that he wrote Luke along the same lines as Matthew but without the church rules.
Neither of these books conform to John and Mark except for some passages which are almost identical to those in Matthew.
What they did was part of the conspiracy to hide the Spirit and to con all people into accepting the religion of Constantine.
In his letters to Damasus Jerome confessed to translating the Septuagint, which he called the Old Testament to further credit the New Testament as the altered will of God, and to altering it here and there and adding bits to it to bring it into alignment with him.
He noted he could not everything because it would upset the Jews.
The complete book was the Vulgate and it was published at the end of the 4th CAD
Towards the close of the 4th CAD the then Bishop of Rome, Damasus, acting on the Caesar's orders, commissioned Jerome to produce a credible book that all could follow.
He noted what he did in letters and diaries as he set about to complete the task.
Jerome was also asked to give the church laws, festivals, and so on, that would unite its followers.
He then 'borrowed' the calendar, laws, festivals, costumes, order of service, and symbolism from the Imperial Roman Religion that was involved with sun worship.
The sun star is still used on the garments of the Pope and clergy to this day.
The implements used in the mass also bear the bursting sun star on them, such as the Chalice.
Festivals to the sun include Christmas, the birthday of the sun following its death at Solstice three days earlier.
They also include Easter which was originally 'i-star' or 'eye-star' for the impending return of the sun to its peak following the March equinox.
This was the first of spring in the Northern Hemisphere and the time when life returns and animals mate to bring forth their young.
It was a time of orgies and fertility in the Roman world and 'i-star' is the origin of 'oestrous'.
Jerome had to keep the old festivals in place or the religion would possibly not have survived.
He changed the names slightly to make them acceptable to both sides.
Men had sacrificed their lives on crosses for hundreds of years beforehand and they were the 'christs' of antiquity.
It is the origin of 'Krishna' as well.
The term 'c-rist' or 'x-rist' means 'cross on a cross'.
With all this in place he then wrote the book of Matthew because it contains the laws he set in place which were unknown before that time.
His cohort in the work was Augustine Hippo, who resided in Alexandria.
It is suspected that he wrote Luke along the same lines as Matthew but without the church rules.
Neither of these books conform to John and Mark except for some passages which are almost identical to those in Matthew.
What they did was part of the conspiracy to hide the Spirit and to con all people into accepting the religion of Constantine.
In his letters to Damasus Jerome confessed to translating the Septuagint, which he called the Old Testament to further credit the New Testament as the altered will of God, and to altering it here and there and adding bits to it to bring it into alignment with him.
He noted he could not everything because it would upset the Jews.
The complete book was the Vulgate and it was published at the end of the 4th CAD