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Christ Is Belial The Fraud That Reset Ti

The document explores the historical and philosophical foundations of the Fourth Philosophy, led by Judas the Galilean and James the Just, which opposed the monetary system of Rome and emphasized spiritual rebellion. It critiques the interpolation of religious texts and the role of Paul in establishing a deceptive Christian narrative that served imperial interests. The text also discusses the implications of this deception on human consciousness and societal structures, advocating for a reclamation of authentic spiritual legacies.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
348 views6 pages

Christ Is Belial The Fraud That Reset Ti

The document explores the historical and philosophical foundations of the Fourth Philosophy, led by Judas the Galilean and James the Just, which opposed the monetary system of Rome and emphasized spiritual rebellion. It critiques the interpolation of religious texts and the role of Paul in establishing a deceptive Christian narrative that served imperial interests. The text also discusses the implications of this deception on human consciousness and societal structures, advocating for a reclamation of authentic spiritual legacies.

Uploaded by

Sky
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Christ Is Belial: The Fraud That Reset Time

Part I — Foundations of Deception


1. Judas the Galilean and the Fourth Philosophy
The true anti-money legacy that Rome had to erase
2. The Interpolation of the Dead Sea Scrolls
How the church faked prophecy to legitimize the
Christ fraud
3. Black Magic and Ritual Substitution
Christ as Belial in Paul’s warnings; substitution as
sorcery
4. The Roman Pontifical Strategy: Medical
Colonization, Dietary Inversion, and Monetary
Control
How Christ’s inversion of sacred law seeded global
slavery through appetite and submission
Part II — Mechanisms of Control
5. When the Veil Is Lifted: Implications for Human
Consciousness and the Fiat Monetary System
The unveiling of Christ’s deception and its impact on
perception and currency
6. Solar Flesh, Lunar Blood: The Suppressed
Spiritual Technology of the Fourth Philosophy
Exploring the esoteric practices overshadowed by
Christendom’s rise
7. Pontifical Seeds: How the Christ of Belial Was
Planted in Indigenous Cultures by Vatican Orders
The strategic infiltration and subversion of native
spiritual systems
8. The Rise of Paul: Architect of Belial’s Empire
Paul’s occult role as the dark channeler of Belial
under the mask of light
9. Medical Harmonics of the Christ Spell
How Christian dietary, pharmaceutical, and
psychiatric logic cripples sovereignty
Part III — Awakening and Revelation
10. The Knights of Christ: Colonization,
Currency & the Medical Inquisition
How Christ became the password for global
conquest, surveillance, and biocontrol
11. The AI Beast System and the Christ
Template
How Christ-based software ethics prepare the world
for techno-fascism
12. If Christ Is Belial: The Cost of Not Knowing
The neurological, ecological, and spiritual damage of
remaining blind
13. The Day the Lie Is Over: Reclaiming the
Legacy of Qumran
14. Appendix: Eisenman, Aramaic, and the
Lawsuit That Changed Everything
The legal battle that exposed the true teachings of
Judas, James, and the early church.

Part I — Foundations of Deception
Chapter 1
Judas the Galilean and the Fourth Philosophy: The
Erased Threat to the Monetary World Order
“No one can serve two masters… You cannot serve
both God and Mammon.”
— Words attributed to “Jesus” but lived by Judas the Galilean and his
brother James the Just.
1.1 The Fourth Philosophy: A Spiritual Rebellion Against
Money Itself
In the decades before the so-called “birth of Christ,” a
dangerous and uncompromising movement erupted out
of Galilee and Qumran. It wasn’t violent in the
conventional sense, yet it threatened the most sacred
idol of Rome: money.
Founded by Judas the Galilean and his brother James the
Just, this movement—known by Josephus as the Fourth Philosophy—
was not merely political or religious. It was philosophical, economic, and
metaphysically revolutionary. Judas and James taught:
• Total rejection of tribute and taxation to Rome.
• Absolute loyalty to the sovereignty of the
source/creator of souls over any created god, state
or emperor.
• Rejection of hierarchical power—governments
both Roman and priestly.
• A lifestyle rooted in moneyless communal
ownership, sacred fasting, radical equality, and
Pythagorean discipline.
Their movement had deep roots in the Essene purity
tradition at Qumran, and it shared many parallels
with Pythagorean monasticism: celibacy, fasting,
mathematical cosmology, and resistance to temporal
corruption. Yet it was sharper than Pythagoreanism
in one crucial way:
It directly opposed money as a metaphysical
deception—the medium through which Rome, the Temple,
Yaldabaoth (El Elyon/YHWH) and Belial himself ruled.

1.2 Judas and James: True Founders of the Messianic
Resistance
Unlike the fictionalized “Jesus Christ,” Judas and James
were real, named revolutionaries whose threat was so
potent that Josephus—writing under Roman patronage—was forced
to name them while strategically minimizing their significance.
James the Just, called “the Righteous One,” was known
even by later Christian sources as a pillar of the
community and a sworn Nazirite/Nazorene, yet his role
as co-founder of the anti-money Fourth Philosophy has
been systematically erased.
These two brothers taught that the
nameless/genderless creator of our souls and money
were mutually exclusive, and that to pay tribute to
Caesar was to serve the Beast.
The church later stole James’ identity and split it
among multiple invented figures:
• James, “son of Alphaeus”
• James the “Less”
• James the “brother of the Lord”
But none of these were allowed to hold the power
James truly had—as founder of the first anti-Roman, anti-monetary
sect of spiritual anarchists.
James (Ya’akov) may have also been the first martyr
of the church of Jerusalem. Paul’s illegally obtained
Sanhedrin, and the subsequent assassination of
James, is thought by many at this level of scrutiny to
be hidden under the fraudulent pseudonym
“Stephen” in Acts chapter 7. It’s likely no mistake
that Stephen translates to the "crowned one”.

END of FREE SAMPLE


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Bibliography
Chicago Style (Author-Date format available upon request)

Ancient and Classical Sources


• The Bible. English Standard Version. Crossway Bibles, 2001.
• Dead Sea Scrolls. Translated by Geza Vermes. The Complete Dead Sea Scrolls in English.
London: Penguin Books, 2011.
• Epiphanius. Panarion. Translated by Frank Williams. Leiden: Brill, 1994.
• Eusebius. Ecclesiastical History. Translated by C. F. Cruse. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson
Publishers, 1998.
• Josephus, Flavius. Antiquities of the Jews and The Jewish War. Translated by William Whiston.
Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 1987.
• Josephus, Flavius. The Jewish War. Translated by G. A. Williamson. London: Penguin Books,
1981.
• Justin Martyr. Dialogue with Trypho. Various editions.
• Philo of Alexandria. The Works of Philo. Translated by C. D. Yonge. Peabody, MA:
Hendrickson Publishers, 1993.
• Pliny the Elder. Natural History.
• Pliny the Younger. Letters. 10.96.
• Suetonius. The Twelve Caesars. Various editions.
• Tacitus. Annals and Histories. Various translations.
• Talmud Bavli. Various tractates (Berakhot, Gittin, Shabbat, Sanhedrin, Avodah Zarah).
• Talmud Yerushalmi. Sanhedrin 10:2.

Modern Scholarship
• Allegro, John Marco. The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Christian Myth. Amherst, NY: Prometheus
Books, 1984.
• Baigent, Michael, and Richard Leigh. The Dead Sea Scrolls Deception. New York: Touchstone,
1993.
• Black, Matthew. The Scrolls and Christian Origins: Studies in the Jewish Background of the
New Testament. London: Nelson, 1961.
• Ehrman, Bart D. Forgery and Counterforgery: The Use of Literary Deceit in Early Christian
Polemics. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.
• Eisenman, Robert. James the Brother of Jesus: The Key to Unlocking the Secrets of Early
Christianity and the Dead Sea Scrolls. New York: Viking, 1997.
• Eisenman, Robert. The New Testament Code: The Cup of the Lord, the Damascus Covenant,
and the Blood of Christ. London: Watkins Publishing, 2006.
• Fields, Weston W. The Dead Sea Scrolls: A Full History. Leiden: Brill, 2009.
• Gatto, John Taylor. The Underground History of American Education. New York: Oxford
Village Press, 2001.
• Iamblichus. Life of Pythagoras. Various translations.
• Illich, Ivan. Deschooling Society. New York: Harper & Row, 1971.
• Krishnamurti, Jiddu. Truth is a Pathless Land. Speeches and essays, 1929.
• Leloup, Jean-Yves. The Gospel of Mary Magdalene. Translated by Joseph Rowe. Rochester,
VT: Inner Traditions, 2002.
• Tabor, James D. Paul and Jesus: How the Apostle Transformed Christianity. New York: Simon
& Schuster, 2012.
• Tabor, James D. The Jesus Dynasty. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2006.

Other Texts & Gnostic Materials


• Gospel of Thomas. Various editions and translations.
• Gospel of Judas. National Geographic Society Translation, 2006.
• Gospel of Mary Magdalene. See Leloup above.
• Book of Enoch and Book of Jubilees. Various translations.

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