>>3770
Hey Comet man! Big fan; I like your angle.
The Alexandria Library is a gosh darn shame is what it is.
Don't know much about Glastonbury but skimming over it now it looks very promising.
>What were the Crusades ReAlly about?
>A war waged on Gnosticism by >Babylon/Rome/Vatican?
>Can You REMEMBER it?
>You were a Warrior?
When I was a child, my sister and I played this imaginary, "imaginary" game we called Tiger and Wolfie. I was Tiger, she was wolfie. We had pets. We had telekinesis and other psychic powers. She also had echolocation for some reason (is the type that can "see" auras, today, so maybe thats a connection?), and my "unique" power.. is something neither of us can remember for some reason, try as we might.
We fell through a hole in heaven one day while camping and slowly fell through the "waters" as I called it back then, until we landed on earth, and for some reasons we had to fight off the "crusaders".
This was a ongoing "game" that I made up, or maybe I "remembered" as I went along, for years.. I think we played for the last time when i was in 2nd grade and she was in kindergarten and by then I was mostly humoring her, in my mind.
I don't remember much. What I told you above is literally all I remember from a solid 36 months of fantasy play, and we (my sister and I) have TRIED.
but crusaders? echolocation? "fell from a hole in heaven?" "the firmament (waters)?"
Again, this was a 4 maybe 5 year old kid just making up a story because his younger sister wanted to keep playing. I'm sure I just heard the word crusader somewhere and decided to use it in my game.
The crusaders were not a one off thing by the way. The Crusaders were pretty much basic form of opposition, although my intuition says there were other variations that we would have to go through, the all purpose "Crusaders" were the expendable cannon fodder Tiger and Wofie would rip through using echolocation and what not, on their quest to get back home, to heaven.
It's probably just a coincidence.
And yes, in my opinion, pretty much all big religious happenings after the death of Christ were red herrings to stamp out Gnosticism.
The Nag Hammadi story and how it was found, just proved to me its legitimacy.
Can darkness hide the Light?
The truth always shies through as the say.
And the timing too! Hidden away after being discovered for decades, so no "officials" from the church of fuckery could fuckery. Until the world was ready.. as in until Internet was invented
Also, the Dead Sea Scroll, which was basically a non-important bunch of old tyme scratch paper that for some reason completely overshadowed the Nag Hammadi Texts which has actual, real substance, all perfectly preserved. If I didn't know better.. I'd say God, or some other celestial being, had itself a giggle, trolling the establishment with a beautiful red herring, and I love it.
Who says the Christian God doesn't have a sense of humor? "Christian" God lol
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