It is a fact of Christian history that the earliest
Gospels did not record a resurrection of Jesus Christ, and that claim is
supported in the oldest known complete Bible available to mankind today. Called
the Codex Sinaiticus, or Sinai Bible, it was named after Mt. Sinai, the
location of St. Catherine’s Monastery where it was discovered in 1859 by Dr.
Constantine Von Tischendorf (1815-1874). The discovery of the Sinai Bible
provided biblical scholars with irrefutable evidence of willful falsifications
in all modern-day Gospels, and a comparison identified a staggering 14,800
later editorial alterations in modern Bibles.
Vast dating discrepancies
With the Sinai Bible, Christian history is traced
back as far as it can conceivably go, but it was still written, at best, more
than 350 years after the time the Vatican says Jesus Christ walked the sands of
Palestine. The ‘Catholic Encyclopedia’ agrees to this extraordinary late
composition of the world’s oldest Bible:
’The earliest of the extant manuscripts [relating to
Christianity], it is true, do not date back beyond the middle of the fourth
century AD’.
(‘Catholic Encyclopedia’, 1909, ‘Gospels’)
Hand-written on animal skins in a dead Greek
language, the Sinai Bible was purchased by the British Museum from the Soviet
Government in 1933 and is now displayed in the British Library in London.
Sometime after its purchase, English-language translations were published
(Manuscript No. 43725 in the British Library) and extraordinary new information
about the earliest story of Jesus Christ became available to the world. The
great comparative value of the Sinai Bible as the world’s oldest available
Bible is today universally accepted, and its discovery provided great
embarrassment for the Church’s modern-day presentation of Jesus Christ, for it
revealed that newer Gospels are the depositories of large amounts of fabricated
narratives and intentional perversions of the truth.
Beyond belief
The Vatican concedes that Mark was the first Gospel
written (‘Catholic Encyclopedia’, Farley Ed., Vol. vi, p. 657), and that it
later became the prototype of the gospels of Matthew and Luke. In the Sinai
Bible’s version of the Gospel of Mark, we see dramatic variations from its
modern-day counterpart with an extraordinary omission that later became the
central doctrine of the Christian faith … the resurrection appearances of the
Gospel Jesus Christ and his subsequent ascension into heaven.
False Gospel passages written by priests
The Sinai Bible’s version of the Gospel of Mark
starts its story of Jesus Christ when he was ‘at about the age of thirty’. No
reference is made to Mary, a virgin birth, Joseph of Arimathea, a Star of
Bethlehem, or the 51 now-called Old Testament ‘messianic prophecies’. Words
describing Christ as ‘the son of God’ do not appear in the opening narrative of
the Gospel of Mark (Mark 1:1) as they do in today’s Bibles, and the modern-day
family tree tracing a ‘messianic bloodline’ back to King David is non-existent
in the Sinai Bible.
No ‘resurrection’, no Christianity
The Sinai Bible’s version of the Gospel of Mark ends
its story with Mary Magdalene arriving at the tomb and finding it empty. Yet,
in modern-day versions of the Gospel of Mark, resurrection narratives now
appear (16: 9-20), and the Vatican universally acknowledges that they are
forgeries;
‘The conclusion of Mark is admittedly not genuine …
almost the entire section is a later compilation’.
(‘Catholic Encyclopedia’, Vol., iii, p. 274,
published under the Imprimatur of Archbishop Farley; also, ‘Encyclopedia
Biblica’, ii, 1880; 1767, n. 3; 1781, and n. 1, on ‘The Evidence of its
Spuriousness’)
The Vatican claims that ‘the resurrection is the
fundamental argument for our Christian belief’ (‘Catholic Encyclopedia’, Farley
Ed., Vol., xii, p. 792), adding that a resurrection and ascension of Jesus
Christ is the ‘sine qua non’ of Christianity, ‘without which, nothing’
(‘Catholic Encyclopedia’, Farley Ed., Vol., xii, p. 792). St. Paul agreed,
saying; ‘If Christ has not been raised, your faith is in vain’ (1 Cor. 15:17).
Yet no appearance of a resurrected Jesus Christ is recorded in the oldest
Gospel in the oldest Bible in the world. Nor are there resurrection narratives
in any other old Bibles, for a comparison shows they are non-existent in the
Alexandrian Bible, the Vatican Bible, the Bezae Bible and an ancient Latin
manuscript of Mark code-named ‘K’ by analysts. Some manuscripts of the 15th and
16th centuries have the fictitious verses written in asterisks, a mark used by
ancient scribes to indicate spurious passages in a literary document.
Resurrection narratives are also absent in the oldest Armenian version of the
New Testament, and a number of Sixth Century manuscripts of the Ethiopic
version. That is because the resurrection narratives in today’s Gospels of Mark
are later priesthood forgeries.
Another Vatican forgery exposed
Adding to the Church’s on-going fraud of its
presentation of the story of Jesus Christ, we learn how the Vatican accepted
the fictitious resurrection narratives in the Gospel of Mark into its dogma and
made it the basis of Christianity. Let the ‘Catholic Encyclopedia‘ bear the
clerical witness:
‘When we turn to the internal evidence, the number,
and still more the character, of the peculiarities is certainly striking
[citing many instances from the Greek text]. But, even when this is said, the
cumulative force of the evidence against the Mark origin of the passage is
considerable. The combination of so many peculiar features, not only of
vocabulary, but of matter and construction, leaves room for doubt as to Mark’s
authorship of the verses. Whatever the fact be, it is not at all certain that
Mark wrote the disputed verses. It may be that they are from the pen of some
other inspired writer [!], and were appended to the Gospel in later times.
Catholics are not bound to hold that the verses were written by St. Mark. But
they are canonical scripture, for the Council of Trent [Session IV], in
defining that all later parts of the New Testament are to be received as sacred
and canonical, had especially in view the disputed parts of the Gospels, of
which this conclusion of Mark is one. Hence, whoever wrote the verses, we say
that they are inspired, and must be received as such by every Catholic’.
(‘Catholic Encyclopedia’, Farley Ed. Vol. ix, pp.
677, 678, 679)
Thus another Vatican forgery is exposed and
confessed, and it was forced onto Catholics as genuine. Here we see
incontrovertible documentary evidence that the earliest Christian Gospels fail
to narrate a resurrection and ascension of Jesus Christ, and it must be said
that the pertinacity with which the work of suppression, misrepresentation and
concealment of real Christian history was conducted makes the guilt of the
successors of the founding presbyters as great as that of those who established
the system.
No comments:
Post a Comment