FINAL WARNING: Setting the Stage for Destruction
it was supposed to be the Lord’s day, but being that it was the first day
of the week, it was to be a tribute to the Sun God.
St. Peter was said to be the first Bishop (or Pope) of the Church, and
each Pope is said to be his successor. The rationale being that Jesus
said to Peter (originally known as Simeon, or Simon, Jesus called him
Cephas, or ‘rock,’ and the name Peter comes from the Latin ‘petrus,’
which means ‘rock’): “That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will
build my church...” This is a tradition that is historically inaccurate,
because Peter never professed that distinction. There is no evidence
that the Apostle Peter had ever been in Rome, at any time. In that
verse, in the original Greek, ‘Peter’ is translated from ‘petros’ (Strong’s
#4074, a small rock) and ‘rock’ is translated from ‘petra’ (Strong’s #
4073, a mass of rock). What this means is that Jesus is the rock, the
foundation of the Church, while Peter was just going to help build it.
However, secular history explains that there was a “Simon Peter” in
Rome during the first century. The pagan gods of the Babylonians and
Greeks were identified by the name Peter (or Patres). The Romans
referred to Neptune, Saturn, Mars, and Liber, as ‘gods’ of the Peter-
rank. Going back as far as Nimrod, Deuteronomy 23:4 says that
Balaam of Pethor was a sacred high place where there was an oracle
temple. ‘Pethor’ meant “place of interpretation,” and ‘Balaam’ was the
chief Pantora (Peter) and successor to Nimrod. The Hebrew Lexicon
indicates that the consonantal word P-T-R or Peter means “to
interpret.” Thus, Simon Magus, who had become the interpreter of the
Babylonian Mysteries, became known as Simon Peter. The Vaticano
Illustrato II says that the Babylonian statue of Jupiter was renamed
‘Peter.’
Eusebius (264-340), the Bishop of Caesarea, a Church historian (who
was imprisoned by the Romans as they searched for Bibles to destroy
them), was Constantine’s chief religious advisor. He studied at
Origen’s (184-254) school of Religion and Philosophy in Alexandria,
where many gnostic scholars lived and studied. The school became a
center for ‘Christian’ learning and culture. Eusebius and his scribes
were instructed by Constantine to prepare fifty Bibles for the churches
in Constantinople (Byzantium, or the ‘new Rome’).
Eusebius wasn’t a true Christian, because he believed Jesus to be a