Wednesday, January 2, 2008

The Rose Line of Mary Magdalene


After the first Crusader wave of Vatican-sponsored French fighters attacked their Muslim enemies north of Palestine, they invaded Jerusalem. Led through the city walls (1099 AD) by a Godfrey de Bouillon (duke of Lower Lorraine), the "Christians" slaughtered unmercifully even the Jewish inhabitants. For his prize, De Bouillon was chosen ruler of the city, but died the next year...if that tells you how blessed he was of God. And the Pope who dispatched him had also died...before hearing about the Jerusalem victory.
The Jews of Europe would surely have joined the Catholic fighters had the Crusaders intended to establish the Biblical prophecies calling for a restoration of Jews to the Promised Land. But the Vatican had not only proclaimed that God was forever done with the Jews, but it also held to the doctrine of amillennialism i.e. that the Millennial Kingdom of God was already under way through the Vatican, and with the Pope as Christ on earth. Therefore, Catholics, and least of all the counterfeit-Christian Crusaders, simply were not interested in setting up a Jewish homeland in Palestine.
Don'let anyone convince you, as ecumenists in the pulpits would like to convince you, that the Crusaders were Christians, for it is Jesus Christ who defines what true Christians are, and He does not consider murderers of Jews, thieves and rapists to be his saints.
A leader of the Crusade, Baldwin I, brother of the late Godfrey de Bouillon, was then chosen to be the king of Jerusalem. After Baldwin died (1118), a third brother, Eustace III, was elected king...but while on his way to Jerusalem to accept the title, the Crusaders made his nephew, Baldwin II, king instead. The so-called "Rose Line" has been said to be the bloodline of Jesus Christ (via sex with Mary Magdalene) that, through the centuries, came to produce the three brothers above. I don't believe the Jesus-and-Magdalene part of the claim, of course, but I do believe that a Rose Line did exist...yet I'm not so sure that these brothers had as much, if at all, to do with the Rose Line as other men, namely the descendants of Rollo the Viking.
Two of the three Bouillon brothers did not come to rule Jerusalem by chance, but were maneuvered into the rulership position by those seeking to found a flesh-powered Biblical Millennium. After the Crusaders had won Jerusalem, most returned home whereas a small lot, including the original nine Templars, held the region as though their main purpose was merely to maintain (the region) until something larger should transpire, and I see this larger thing as the conquest of Europe i.e. world rule. For Jerusalem was not the only target of the Vatican/Templar agenda, but also Byzantine i.e. the eastern half of the Roman empire.
I see that Viking blood (i.e. the Normans) was involved in the same Crusader agenda along with these Frenchmen, and the explanation for this could very well be that both the Scandinavians and the French were Rose Line descendants, for it has come to my knowledge satisfactorily that both the Norse and the French were descended from the same stock of Cimmerians i.e. the "advanced" Celts that are now labelled by historians as the "La Tene Celts." These Cimmerians are generally regarded as having previously been the Hallstatt Celts of Illyrium, and it is not that difficult to uncover the roots of the Illyrians in the Thracians/Trojans, as we shall see.
Godfrey de Bouillon had sold Bouillon, his title there, and the Bouillon castle, in order to finance his part in the Crusade. This war and related agenda obviously meant the sky to him. But Robert II, a Norman (and the duke of Normandy), son of William the Conqueror and therefore a descendant of the St. Clair or Rollo-Viking line, "pawned Normandy to [his brother] Rufus so that he [Robert] could be the leader of the first crusade" (Britannica Vol. 11, page 358). Therefore, that Crusade was very important to both of these French and the Norman "noble" families.
Moreover, Britannica tells us that De Bouillon was not the Crusade's primary leader, but that "Bohemund [I] was the principal leader of the crusade" (1970; Vol. 10, page 514). Now Bohemund I, when he joined the Crusade, "gathered a fine Norman army" for the purpose (Vol. 3, page 855). Fifteen years prior to the Crusade, Bohemund's Norman father, Robert Guiscard, and Guiscard's brother, Roger I, had led a Norman army from southern Italy against the Byzantine kingdom north of Israel. Prior to that, they conquered the Byzantines of southern Italy, which is why they ruled that part of Italy in the first place. One could therefore conjecture that the ultimate Norman purpose in the heart of the Mediterranean was to pave an eastward Norman road to Jerusalem...and that the first Crusade (1096) was spurred first and foremost by that Norman agenda. The rising up of the Bouillon circle of French fighters then becomes a competative response to the Norman vision.
In this light, I can make a suggestion to all who perceive the Rose Line as stemming through the Merovingian Franks (i.e. to the De Bouillon family): that's only a part of the story, while another part is the Scandinavian right to the Rose Line, just as much or more than the Merovingians. Those who would buck against this suggestion should know right here and now that the Merovingians worshipped Wotin/Odin and other gods worshipped by the Scandinavians. Plus, while there are many Scandinavians who freely claim descent from Cimmerians having settled proto-Hungary en route to founding Denmark and Sweden, it just so happens that the Merovingian Franks descdended from Sicambrian Franks. Sicambria was named after the Cimmerians, and it was a city located in proto-Hungary. That is, it looks a lot like the Sicambrian Franks were one and the same stock, the Danes, Swedes, and other Scandinavians.
Why was a Viking army settled in southern Italy in the first place? It had attacked the papal powers and the Byzantine empire virtually all at once, and this suggests a strike at world rulership. Guiscard had defeated the Vatican (1053) but thereafter made peace with a new Pope in order to have little to fear in Italy while waging war in Byzantine regions. Back in the north, other Normans were active militarily and were proving quite successful in Britain and on the French mainland. Had the Byzantines not made an alliance with the Varangian Rus of proto-Russia (who were themselves from Sweden), the Scandinavian Cimmerians just may have conquered the world at that time. As it turned out, the Varangian Rus faught against the Italian Normans on behalf of the Byzantines.
Peter the Hermit, a man given overwhelming credit for rousing the French and other Europeans to engage in the first Jerusalem Crusade, was first in Bali (1094), southern Italy...realm of the Guiscard Normans. This further supports my belief that the conquest of Israel was initially a Norman goal, joined by the Vatican/French only after the Normans had made the first plans/assaults to that end. By that time, the papal powers had formed an alliance with the Italian Normans so that the whole Jerusalem affair became a competition between the Popes, the Normans and the French even while the three worked together as one.
In an article on the Normans, Britannica shares that the shocking slaughter in Jerusalem is explained by its similarity to typical Viking bloodbaths. And in the early Templar period, there were three places where the Templar-related Order of Sion had monasteries: Palestine, France, and southern Italy. A French-Norman alliance is therefore implied in the make-up of the original Templars and/or the near-legendary Order of Sion. Allegedly, monks from southern Italy (Calabria) built the monastery in France, and they with Godfrey de Bouillon formed the Order of Sion.
Just one generation prior to the Crusade, England had fallen to the Norman, William the Conqueror, a St. Clair, wherefore one could speculate with some logic that the Normans had chosen a St. Clair to represent their Rose Line. Very interesting is that the Dictionary of Royal Lineage, while not indicating the personalities involved, tells that Guiscard's family was itself from the Rollo line.
In modern times, Pierre Plantard de St. Clair claims to have been the Order's leader until 1984. I don't know quite what to make of that, but there you have the elite Norman name attached to a Frenchman.
Rollo, after his fathers led a series of invasions onto the French mainland, succeeded in winning a region at the north shore of France called, "Normandy." This land was won by the treaty, St. Clair-sur-Epte (911), made with the French king (the "St. Clair" part refers to Rollo). As part of this arrangement, Rollo would become the first duke of Normandy, but in return was to accept Christianity and moreover Christianize his pagan people (albeit Rollo lived thereafter, and died, as a pagan). Herein begins a mix of Catholicism with Viking paganism that, along with the Viking drive to rule the world, was apt to create a form of Millennialism that was counterfeit along the lines of Rosicrucian Millennialism...which strove against the counterfeit Millennium as perceived and enginered by the Vatican.
With the victory of William the Conqueror over England (1066), the rightful heir to the English throne, Edgar Aetheling, previously hiding out under the protection of the royal court in Hungary, was escorted back to Britain by another William St. Clair...the latter received from the king of Scotland the hill of Roslin (Scotland), a hill which thereafter became a Sinclair (the Anglicized form of "St. Clair") settlement...and hub of Scottish Freemasonry. You may have noticed that "Roslin" and "Ros(e) Line" have a distinct similarity. In referring to centuries past, a New-Age website says:
Of course, the spelling of the day of "Rose line" was "Roslin."
(http://www.skybusiness.com/cornucopialodge362/masonart.html)
The above website echoes what others are suggesting, that the Rose Line was the bloodline of Jesus and his mistress, Mary of Magdala. But that's a silly idea intended to take us (and naive Freemasons) deliberately off course. We even hear claims that the head of Jesus is buried under the Roslin chapel...but you understand that this idea comes with the wicked implication that Jesus did not truly die on the Cross nor rise to life. It's difficult to tie Roslin to Frenchmen in any way at any time, wherefore my nose is beginning to snort toward, not only the Scandinavians, but, as a second possibility, the Gaels of Ireland who became the Scots.
If we ask why William Sinclair was granted Roslin by the king of Scotland (Malcolm III), it's because Edgar's sister, Margaret, married that king while William was her cupbearer. And if we ask why Margaret had a cupbearer with Viking blood, I'd say it was because Margaret herself had plenty of the same. The question that I can't answer just yet is when the Roslin name/village originated, either when overseen by the Sinclairs for the first time (1070ish), or in an earlier period.
We find that William's son, Henry Sinclair, joined Godfrey de Bouillon on the first Crusade. And De Bouillon himself had as father, Eustace II (from Boulogne, on the French coast facing Scandanavia), who had been married to Goda...whose half-Viking blood was of the Rollo/Sinclair line. That is, Goda had as mother, Emma, daughter of Richard I, duke of Normandy (942-96), grandson of Rollo.
Although Eustace II was married to Goda, it is reported by historians that Godfrey de Bouillon, and his two brothers in line for the Jerusalem throne, were born from Eustace's second wife, Ida of Bouillon. In other words, there was apparently no Viking blood in these three brothers. Yet, their father (Eustace II) fought for the English crown at William the Conqueror's side. One could therefore conjecture that strong ties between the royal Sinclairs and the elite Bouillon family were formed at the invasion of England (i.e. Battle of Hastings). But by that time, Guiscard was already in Italy, and had already formed ties with the Vatican on that front. Always keep in mind that these momentary lights were not the heroes that they considered themselves, but beasts fit only to be captured and punished.
Now Emma (Goda's mother) had been married to two men, first to a king of the Anglo Saxons, Aethelred II, and, after he died, to a Viking pirate and king of Denmark, Canute, who conveniently "converted" to Christianity and thereafter fought against pagan Viking enemies who were coveting parts of his enlarged empire. Aethelred fathered king Edmund II Ironside reportedly from another wife named "Aelfgifu" -- alternative "Elgiva." But something smells like a cover up here, not just because little is known about Elgiva (i.e. she appears to pop up out of nowhere), but because the first wife, Emma, was also called "Elgiva," especially in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, suggesting that the two women could have been one and the same. If so, then Edmond Ironside was Emma's son and therefore half Viking! And that would be the reason for the cover up (if Christian-Viking rulers didn't want their sons to be recognized as stemming from pagan Vikings, they could attempt successfully to hide it).
Moreover, Canute married Aethelred's widow, Emma, and was at first married to an Aelfgifu that is as mysterious historically as the Aelfgifa reportedly married to Aethelred. In fact, some historians suggest that Canute's Aelfgifu was one and the same Aethelred's Aelfgifu...but even if so, we can't lose sight of the fact that both men had been married to Emma who for some confusing reason was also known as "Aelfgifu."
What I am suggesting is that the Norman Ros(e) Line may stem (from the Rollo dynasty) through Emma to Ironside...he being a king who moreover married the daughter of a Danish Viking, wherefore Ironside's son, Edward the Aetheling, was three-quarters Viking if indeed Ironside's mother was a Viking (the history books tell us that Edward was a Saxon). But even if Emma was not Ironside's mother, and there was in fact another Aelgifu who was, the latter may also have been of Viking kin (no one seems to know the identity of her parents). If that isn't enough, the Saxons themselves are suspect as cousins to the Rollo line because, as many suggest, the Saxons were none other than Sacae i.e. Scythians.
The reason that I have burdened you with some details is that Edward the Aetheling's children were the said prince Edgar the Aetheling and his sister, Margaret. This could be very important because Margaret (who was in this way born with Viking blood) became closely associated with Roslin while the first Vikings, according to Britannica, had settled "Erethlyn." That word looks as though it could mean, "of Rethlyn," which looks a lot like "Roslin" and it's ancient alternative, "Rosslyn." I should add that "eruthros" means "red" in Greek but that Erethlyn was not necessarily named after that color.
In 1112, the count of Champagne (France) had sent Hugh de Payen ("Pagan") to Jerusalem with a letter addressed to the (Merovingian?) king of Jerusalem, Baldwin I. Then, in Jerusalem itself, under the oversight of Baldwin, De Payen began to unite a small group of closely-related men in an unofficial formation of an order of Temple Knights...and the count of Champagne would himself be included in that organization.
The following year, Baldwin married the daughter (Adelaide) of a late Viking leader, Roger I (Guiscard's brother), under the condition that his son, Roger II, should become king of Jerusalem when and if Baldwin should die without a child. One could interpret this deal as Baldwin's agreement not to have children, so as to grant the throne to the Normans. Amazingly, Baldwin, although married to two women, was to die without children. The question is, where were the Frenchmen/Templars on this deal, for or against?
The Patriarch of Jerusalem (i.e. the powers of the Eastern Orthodox Church) caused Baldwin to betray his deal with Roger II and his mother, Adelaide. Baldwin thereby divorced her, and then he died a year later (1118) without an heir. The Patriarch then urged yet another betrayal, the ascension of Baldwin II (Count of Rethel), merely Balwin's cousin/nephew, to the Jerusalem throne...instead of the rightful heir, Eustace III (the latter was brother to Baldwin (I) and supposedly of the Merovingians). Now, queen Margaret of Scotland had previously given one of her daughters in marriage to Eustace III -- with the hope of seeing her bloodline on the throne of Jerusalem, apparently -- but, as described above, to no avail.
Britannica tells us that Baldwin II was chosen (over Eustace III) because his cousin, Joscelin, persuaded the barons of Jerusalem to so choose. I note that Joscelin was from England's House of Courtenay, and may therefore have been acting as the hand of the Sinclair/Norman king of England, Henry I, who, because he had married yet another daughter of queen Margaret, thus had a possible motive for not seeing Eustace III (who also married a daughter of Margaret) on the Jerusalem throne.
Whatever the fledgling Templars may have thought of the decision to crown Baldwin II instead, we find that they had such license under him that immediately (1118) De Payen officially formed, and was elected Grand Master of, the "Poor Knights of the Temple of Solomon" (i.e. the Templars). Moreover, Baldwin fulfilled for the knights their important request to call the Jerusalem Temple their home.
Baldwin II had partaken in the first Crusade, by the way, and for 18 years prior to his Jerusalem election, he had been the Count (and protector) of Edessa, north of Jerusalem and much closer to Georgia. With David in the midst of removing the Seljuk Turks from Georgia, Joscelin and king Baldwin joined forces to fight against the Muslims with the "Italian" Normans still in support; in fact, Bohemund II (Guiscard's grandson) had married a daughter of Baldwin II in 1126...so we see that Viking blood was yet vying for the Jerusalem throne. In the meantime, with king Baldwin pre-occupied in military affairs far from Jerusalem, the Templars, while living in the "basement" of the Temple Mount, and armed with picks and shovels, dug deep to the foundations of the old Temple built by Solomon.
We don't know for certain what their secret mission was, but Albert Pike (centuries later) claimed that they had intended to build Ezekiel's Temple (see Ezekiel 40). If true, it reinforces the theory wherein the Templars had a (counterfeit) Biblical Millennium in mind. And it explains why the Templars were also to become stone masons (as well as knights)...because they had experience in masonry from the very start.
We do not know what the Templars found buried at the Jerusalem Temple, but with much ado in 1126, De Payen headed west and with passion had discussions in France with Bernard the mystic monk of Clairvaux. Together, De Payen and Bernard drew up plans to secure Vatican support for the Templar cause...and succeeded at the Council of Troyes (1128) (note how "Troyes" in France evokes the Greek-theater Troy of the Trojans).
The monk was the nephew/cousin of one of the founders of the Templars, Andre de Montbard, and while Montbard went on to become a Grand Master of the Templars, Bernard would doggedly become a Templar work horse and loyal administrator...so as to lay the foundation for a huge Templar empire that would rule Europe invisibly, shoulder to shoulder with the Pope. Thus, the French and Catholic elements of the Jerusalem scheme came to greatly overshadow the Norman elements, but only on the mainland. In England and Scotland, the situation was different. After building Templar support for a short duration in France, De Payen crossed the English channel to meet king Henry I, who gave the Grand Master blessings and gifts. Henry was the son of William (St. Clair) the Conqueror, of Rollo blood.
Now Baldwin II died in 1131 without a son, as had Baldwin I. Amazing. With Bohemund II, also of Rollo/Sinclair blood, having married a daughter of Baldwin II, the Jerusalem throne might finally have gone to the Northmen. Alas, a couple of years before his death, Baldwin (II), apparently in opposition to the kingship passing to Bohemund, offered the throne to Fulk V, count of Anjou, by offering his elder daughter in marriage. Fulk accepted her in 1129 and thus went on to become the next king.
Earlier, perhaps while anticipating that Fulk and/or his son (Geoffrey Plantagenet) might ascend to the Jerusalem throne, Henry I had given his daughter -- i.e. Margaret's granddaughter -- to Fulk's son. It was this marriage that created the so-called "Plantagenet" dynasty that would go on to furnish the House of York, depicted by a white rose and viewed tentatively by myself as the White Rose Line. While the meaning of "Plantagenet" is said to remain unknown, I can't help but note the "gene" in that title.
But, alas, alas, alas, the blood of the Vikings (including Margaret's) would fail again to sit on the Jerusalem throne because it was another son of Fulk V (Baldwin III) that would get the crown.
However, Fulk's son, Geoffrey Plantagenet, would with Henry's daughter bring forth Henry II, king of England, so that the White/Viking Rose Line would continue on the throne of England to this day. In the days of Henry VIII and his daughter, queen Elizabeth I (died 1603), the English throne, with the help of Rosicrucians, became the seat of God's global kingdom (not in reality, of course, but merely in the minds of the kings/queens), the Anglican Church. It was immediately after Elizabeth's death that the Stewarts entered the English throne, in the reign of the Scot, James I, who was of Rollo stock via the Bruce kings of Scotland.
The Ros Line, if indeed it was a line of ruling Vikings, may have branched out into Kiev via the Varangian Rus. The Varangian ruler in the days of Margaret was Yaroslav, son of the great Vladimir who had followed Rollo's lead in converting to Christianity for merely political protection. Yaroslav had given four, perhaps five, of his daughters to European kings, one of whom was Harald III Hardraade of the Norwegian Vikings. Prior to finding refuge in Hungary, Margaret was not only protected in Kiev by Yaroslav himself, but before that by Harald III in Norway (not to mention by Olaf II, king of Norway). Clearly, Margaret's family was an important one to the Vikings, and it could certainly be true that they understood she to be of the Ros Line.
If Margaret's family was important due to its Rollo blood, so also her brother, Edgar. As heir to the English throne, he was extremely promising in placing Rollo blood in that key position. As it turned out, a duke of Normandy (The Conqueror), with Rollo blood, ended up on the English throne before Edgar could, whereafter Edgar's bloodline never did become enthroned, anywhere. And so what was Margaret to do but to give her daughter to Henry I in order to reinforce his Rollo blood for his heir?
Henry died without a male heir, wherefore the male line of Rollo comes to an end with him. But the daughter of Henry I produced Henry II, etc., until, with the end of the royal Rollo line at the death of Elizabeth I, another Ros Line, from the Varangian Rus, namely, the Drummond clan of Scotland, took its place on the English throne...and has continued there to this day! The Drummond Ros Line and its roots in the Varangian Rus is the subject of a coming chapter, but keep in the back of your mind until then that the pre-tribulation rapture was born in a Drummond cult, whose founder was a major English banker from a banking family in some cahoots with Rothschild banker(s).
Margaret's blood remained in Scottish kings all the way to, but not including, the Bruce dynasty. The Drummond bloodline entered the line of Scottish kings in the Bruce dynasty, namely, when Annabel Drummond married Robert de Bruce III. Now the Bruce family had been from Normandy and was also related to the Rollo bloodline! Remember this when I say, "Drummond Ros Line" (which I could just as rightly refer to as the "Bruce Ros Line" and/or "Rollo Ros Line").
The son of Robert III and Annabel was king James I of Scotland, and this dynastic line would continue through successive James'. Because the Stuart, James VI of Scotland, ruled England immediately after Elizabeth I (as James I of England), the Margaret or Roslin Ros Line was replaced just then by the Drummond Ros Line. It is no wonder that the Drummond clan supported the Stuarts. However, Sinclairs were privy counselors to the Scottish James' and even to Mary Queen of Scots, but in those days, Rosicrucians had infiltrated the royal courts of many European monarchs, not to support them, but to bring them down. Elizabeth I welcomed Rosicrucians into her court even as her spies, but it can be determined that these particular Rosicrucians had been supportive of, if not related by blood to, the Margaret/Roslin Ros Line.
Hugh de Payen, on his return home from the Jerusalem Temple, and after visiting Henry I (of England) briefly to fill him in on the Middle-East affair, ended his westward journey in Scotland with his in-laws, the Sinclairs!! Yes, Hugh de Payen the Frenchman had married Catherine, a Roslin Sinclair!! Was he the glue that bonded the Normans to the French, therefore, so as to enable a Crusader army to be mustered large enough to win Jerusalem?
Where had De Payen's finest loyalties been as Grand Master of the Templars, to the French or to the Normans? And was the idea of digging below the Temple Mount and/or to build Ezekiel's Temple--and therefore the idea of a Utopian Millennium--that of the Frenchmen, or of the Norman Sinclairs? The answer to that is, I think, to the one group that was associated with a Hebrew organization having Millennialism as an agenda.
The Khazars of Magog come to mind, who had been ruled by Israelites, some of which were Millennial-minded (i.e. Zionistic) to a militant degree. On the one hand, the gnostic Cathars, believed by some to have been a branch of Khazars, were in France just then and in close association with the Templars. Yet again, the Kabars of Hungary--a branch of Khazars--may have entered Scotland with Margaret's friends so as to become tied to the Sinclairs.
The Scottish house of Sinclair, although not achieving royal status, went on to great wealth and power, even organizing the infamous Freemason brotherhood out of stone masons (Freemasonry was the formation of smokescreen churches i.e. "lodges" which allowed memberships of non stone workers for use in power-politics and social engineering). Prior to the Freemason period, the Templars had been stone workers in building castles, forts, and cathedrals (the cathedrals were often esoteric monuments intended more for power-grabbing than for religious worship).
From 1307, when the Templars in France were being chased out of the country by a major persecution, many took shelter in Scotland under the wings of the Roslin Sinclairs...and the Scottish king, Robert I de Bruce, welcomed the knights with open arms. The first Grand Master of Masonry in Scotland was (another) William Sinclair of Roslin Castle. His descendant, another William Sinclair yet, laid (in 1446) the foundations of the esoteric cathedral, Rosslyn Chapel (on the same hill as Roslin Castle). This cathedral, every square inch of which is laced with carvings, was built in French style, suggesting that it was indeed built by the French Templars who had escaped to Scotland.
The foundations of the Rosslyn Chapel were discovered only recently to be almost precisely identical to the foundations of the Jerusalem Temple (see http://www.robertlomas.com/Freemason/Origins.html). This seems to be stone-and-mortar proof that Hugh de Payen and his men had dug below the Dome of the Rock to the foundations of Solomon's Temple. In fact, an 80-foot shaft with connecting tunnels have been discovered recently by archaeologists...containing Templar artifacts.
One particular design on the walls of the Rosslyn Chapel matches perfectly with Freemasonry's first-degree ceremony, still practiced today, in which a blindfolded initiate stands between two pillars of Solomon's Temple with a noose dangling from neck, placed there by a Templar (see website above). This carving is what so concretely ties the Roslin Templars with the Freemasons of later years!
The village of Roslin was built specifically to house the masons who, over 40 years, built the Chapel. Carved in the ceilings are stars (pentagrams) and roses, both having affinity with Rosicrucianism, the stars depicting the cult's astrology, and the roses its secret "wisdom." In fact, the rose on the Rosicrucian rose-and-cross logo may secretly depict the pentagram because a rose has five petals while a pentagram has five points. Also carved throughout are Freemasonic as well as pagan symbols, including over 100 "green men" corresponding to an unknown concept well outside the realm of Christianity. Moreover, Hermes is depicted, which again connects with Rosicrucianism rather than the Judaism of Jerusalem. The building was cleverly dubbed, "The Bible in Stone," which it is not; instead, the phrase reminds us of pyramidology, the occult idea that certain secrets of God are Inspired within the building's dimensions, shapes, angles, and carvings.
The skull-and-crossbone symbol used by the Templars, also found in the Chapel, is said to represent the bones of Mary Magdalene...whom the Templars actually possessed and worshipped, or so we are to believe. But the facts that we know are these: 1) the skull-and-crossbone symbol was a pirate-flag symbol; 2) the Rus Vikings were pirates while pagans, especially between 800-1050; 3) the Templars reverted to piracy on the high seas after losing Jerusalem for good; 4) the crossbones form an X-shape, even as does the Scottish flag.
I suspect the Scottish flag to be the old pirate flag in disguise, but without the skull. In fact, the Scottish flag, called "Andrew's Cross," dates back to the 12th century, just one century after the first Templars. A common line explaining the flag's origin is that clouds in the sky formed an X-shape during a certain battle, wherefore, we are to believe, someone recognized it as the Apostle Andrew's cross upon which he was killed. That sounds like a load of potatoes to me, to disguise the reality.
If indeed the Rosicrucian cross represented the crossed bones of the pirate flag, then the rose that Rosicrucians place on their cross could represent the skull of the pirate flag...where the skull represents their hidden/occult mysteries. That is, the skull, and therefore the rose, refers to the brain/mind, which in turn is to say that it refers to secret knowledge--note that "school" is similar to "skull" and that Rosicrucians called themselves the "Invisible College" prior to usurping most of our schools. Even the Skull and Bones society in the United States is based at Yale. Note also that in colleges to this day there are "degrees," evoking the degrees of Freemasonry. And the odd black hat with the flat, square top that graduates wear on graduation day represents a mortar board i.e. the mortor board used by stone masons.
While the modern cross of Rosicrucians is not like the Scottish Cross in the form of a X--called a "saltire"--but is instead upright like the cross of Christ, the early Rosicrucian cross was a saltire, as you can see from the 16th-century Andreae Family Crest (Johan Andreae was a leading Rosicrucian). The four roses that surround this cross had been, much earlier, four small crosses in the Jerusalem flag of the Templars, the very same design used by the Church of the Lutherin Confession centuries later. The same design is also found in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher (in Jerusalem), and is now the central icon on the floor of the National Cathedral in Washington DC.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

The Gospel of Mary Magdalene


The Gospel of Mary Magdalene has Taoist and Buddhist concepts presented in first century Christian Semantics.
Jesus is quoted as saying that "All natures, all formed things, all creatures exist in and with one another and will again be resolved into their own roots, because the nature of matter is dissolved into the roots of its nature alone."
This is very similiar to the Taoist concept of Oneness as expressed in Chapter 34 of Tao Teh Ching, Speaking of the Tao it says "All things derive their life from it [Tao] All things return to it, and it contains them."
Another portion of The Gospel of Mary Magdalene describes a soul's journey after death and the challenges it overcomes. These passages are much like The Tibetan Book of the Dead which reveals the Peaceful and Wrathful Dieties a soul encounters during its journey after it has separated from the body at death.
This is very similiar to this portion of the Gospel of Mary Magdalene, " When the soul had overcome the third power, it went upwards and saw the fourth power, (which) took seven forms. The first form is darkness, the second desire, the third ignorance, the fourth is the excitement of death, the fifth is the kingdom of the flesh, the sixth is the foolish wisdom of flesh, the seventh is the wrathful wisdom. These are the seven {powers} of wrath."
Fragments from the Gospel of Mary
[The Coptic papyrus, from which the first six pages have been lost, begins in the middle of this gospel.]
"...will, then, matter be saved or not?"
The Savior said, "All natures, all formed things, all creatures exist in and with one another and will again be resolved into their own roots, because the nature of matter is dissolved into the roots of its nature alone. He who has ears to hear, let him hear." [cf. Matt. 11:15, etc.].
Peter said to him, "Since you have now explained all things to us, tell us this: what is the sin of the world?" [cf. John 1:29]. The Savior said, "Sin as such does not exist, but you make sin when you do what is of the nature of fornication, which is called 'sin.' For this reason the Good came into your midst, to the essence of each nature, to restore it to its root." He went on to say, "For this reason you come into existence and die [...] whoever knows may know [...] a suffering which has nothing like itself, which has arisen out of what is contrary to nature. Then there arises a disturbance in the whole body. For this reason I said to you, Be of good courage [cf. Matt. 28:9], and if you are discouraged, still take courage over against the various forms of nature. He who has ears to hear, let him hear." When the Blessed One said this, he greeted all of them, saying "Peace be with you [cf. John 14:27]. Receive my peace for yourselves. Take heed lest anyone lead you astray with the words, 'Lo, here!' or 'Lo, there!' [cf. Matt. 24:5, 23; Luke 17:21] for the Son of Man is within you [cf. Luke 17:21]. Follow him; those who seek him will find him [cf. Matt. 7:7]. Go, therefore, and preach the Gospel of the Kingdom [cf. Matt. 4:23; 9:15; Mark 16:15]. I have left no commandment but what I have commanded you, and I have given you no law, as the lawgiver did, lest you be bound by it."
They grieved and mourned greatly, saying, "How shall we go to the Gentiles and preach the Gospel of the Kingdom of the Son of Man? If even he was not spared, how shall we be spared?"
Then Mary stood up and greeted all of them and said to her brethren, "Do not mourn or grieve or be irresolute, for his grace will be with you all and will defend you. Let us rather praise his greatness, for he prepared us and made us into men." When Mary said this, their hearts changed for the better, and they began to discuss the words of the [Savior].
Peter said to Mary, "Sister, we know that the Savior loved you more than other women [cf. John 11:5, Luke 10:38-42]. Tell us the words of the Savior which you have in mind since you know them; and we do not, nor have we heard of them."
Mary answered and said, "What is hidden from you I will impart to you." And she began to say the following words to them. "I," she said, "I saw the Lord in a vision and I said to him, 'Lord, I saw you today in a vision.' He answered and said to me, 'Blessed are you, since you did not waver at the sight of me. For where the mind is, there is your countenance' [cf. Matt. 6:21]. I said to him, 'Lord, the mind which sees the vision, does it see it through the soul or through the spirit?' The Savior answered and said, 'It sees neither through the soul nor through the spirit, but the mind, which is between the two, which sees the vision, and it is...'"
"...and Desire said, 'I did not see you descend; but now I see you rising. Why do you speak falsely, when you belong to me?' The soul answered and said, 'I saw you, but you did not see me or recognize me; I served you as a garment and you did not recognize me.' After it had said this, it went joyfully and gladly away. Again it came to the third power, Ignorance. This power questioned the soul: 'Whither are you going? You were bound in wickedness, you were bound indeed. Judge not' [cf. Matt. 7:1]. And the soul said, 'Why do you judge me, when I judged not? I was bound, though I did not bind. I was not recognized, but I recognized that all will go free, things both earthly and heavenly.' After the soul had left the third power behind, it rose upward, and saw the fourth power, which had seven forms. The first form is darkness, the second desire, the third ignorance, the fourth the arousing of death, the fifth is the kingdom of the flesh, the sixth is the wisdom of the folly of the flesh, the seventh is wrathful wisdom. These are the seven participants in wrath. They ask the soul, 'Whence do you come, killer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?' The soul answered and said, 'What seizes me is killed; what turns me about is overcome; my desire has come to an end and ignorance is dead. In a world I was saved from a world, and in a "type," from a higher "type" and from the fetter of the impotence of knowledge, the existence of which is temporal. From this time I will reach rest in the time of the moment of the Aeon in silence.'"
When Mary had said this, she was silent, since the Savior had spoken thus far with her. But Andrew answered and said to the brethren, 'Say what you think concerning what she said. For I do not believe that the Savior said this. For certainly these teachings are of other ideas."
Peter also opposed her in regard to these matters and asked them about the Savior. "Did he then speak secretly with a woman [cf. John 4:27], in preference to us, and not openly? Are we to turn back and all listen to her? Did he prefer her to us?" Then Mary grieved and said to Peter, "My brother Peter, what do you think? Do you think that I thought this up myself in my heart or that I am lying concerning the Savior?"
Levi answered and said to Peter, "Peter, you are always irate. Now I see that you are contending against the woman like the adversaries. But if the Savior made her worthy, who are you to reject her? Surely the Savior knew her very well [cf. Luke 10:38- 42]. For this reason he loved her more than us [cf. John 11:5]. And we should rather be ashamed and put on the Perfect Man, to form us [?] as he commanded us, and proclaim the gospel, without publishing a further commandment or a further law than the one which the Savior spoke." When Levi had said this, they began to go out in order to proclaim him and preach him.

Was Mary Magdalene the wife of Jesus Christ?


Much attention has been given lately to Mary Magdalene and her relationship with Jesus. There are questions concerning her role as a female disciple and what that may mean for women in the Church. Controversy exists over whether or not she may have actually been the wife of Jesus. Lies have been told about her profession before becoming a follower of Christ. There is debate about whether or not she is the author of the Gospel of John. “The Gospel of Mary” has been found and its validity contested. This beloved disciple of Christ was obviously important to Him. What does the role of Mary Magdalene as a venerated disciple of Jesus Christ say about the place of women in ministry?
Many Christians know this contentious figure as Mary Magdalene, the Prostitute. However, this was neither her name nor her profession. Mary Magdalene’s name was actually Miriam. She was from the village of Magdala. Magdala was a tiny fishing village on the northwest corner of the Sea of Galilee, an area we know Jesus evangelized. No place in the text of the New Testament does it say that Mary Magdalene was a prostitute. This myth was started in the 6th century by Pope St. Gregory I. He stated that both Mary Magdalene and Mary of Bethany were the same woman and that she was also the “woman of sin” mentioned in Luke 7. From then on, Mary Magdalene was known as a prostitute. Professor Christopher Witcombe writes, “It has been suggested that Gregory I's transformation of Mary Magdalen into a prostitute was a way of countering the problem she posed for the Church. Since the 2nd century, as Christianity became institutionalized along increasingly patriarchal lines, the prominence of Mary Magdalen had posed the threat of sanctioning a leadership role for women in the Church.”
In the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches, women are not allowed to become priests. Father Alister Anderson of Sts. Peter & Paul Church in Bethesda, Maryland pronounces, “Only a man can be ordained as a deacon, priest or bishop because Jesus the perfect Man chose only men to be His disciples and apostles.” This would view would make it difficult for Orthodox and Catholic believers to agree that Mary Magdalene had an important role as an apostle or that she wrote a Gospel containing information as valuable as the four Gospels that we find in the New Testament.
“The Gospel of Mary Magdala” is a non-fiction book by Karen King of the Harvard Divinity School. According to Jane Lampman, staff writer for the Christian Science Monitor, “. . . this gospel, written in the second century, tells of a conversation among Mary, Peter, Andrew, and Levi about a teaching Jesus gave to Mary on the end of the material world and the nature of sin. It highlights Mary's role as an apostle and Peter's resistance to her role.” As I researched this Gospel of Mary Magdala, I found that much of the text was missing. Seeing that, I understood a much better reason for not including it in the Canon. I don’t doubt that misogyny could have been part of the reason that we are just now finding out things about Mary Magdalene, but the truth is that even her own Gospel doesn’t give us a complete view of her time with Jesus.
The popularity of the book The DaVinci Code has led to questions about whether or not Mary Magdalene was actually the wife of Jesus. In the research that I have done, I could not find anything substantial that would lead me to believe that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were married. I agree that Mary Magdalene was extremely special to have been the first to see the resurrected Christ. Her relationship with Jesus was deep and He obviously had a great love for her. Their evident relationship proves to me that women have great value in the eyes of God.
Jesus treated His female followers with same respect and love that He showed His male disciples. Mary Magdalene may not have written the Gospel of John, but she was the first to see Him resurrected. She may not have been one of the twelve disciples, but she followed Him closely and was very dear to Him. While here on Earth we may never know the truth about the mysteries and myths associated with Mary Magdalene, we can be sure that her close following of Jesus and her deep relationship with Him speaks volumes about Jesus view women.
Bibliography 1. Anderson, Father Alister. “The Orthodox Priest An Ikon of Christ”. Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America. 2004. http://www.antiochian.org/midwest/Articles/The_Orthodox_Priest_An_Ikon_Of_Christ.h tm, Accessed April 2005.
2. Kirby, Peter. “The Gospel of Mary”. Early Christian Writings. 2004. <>. Accessed April 2005.
3. Lampman, Jane. “Who was Mary Magdalene? The Buzz Goes Mainstream.” Christian Science Monitor”. November 14, 2002. http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/1114/p01s02-ussc.html. Accessed April 2005.
4. Rose, Debra. “The First Mary”. Awakened Woman E-Magazine. October 10, 2001. http://www.awakenedwoman.com/first_mary.htm. Accessed April 2005.
5. Witcombe, Professor Christopher. “Mary Magdala, the Gospels, and the Church”. Da Vinci’s Code. http://witcombe.sbc.edu/davincicode/magdalen-gospels- church.html. Accessed April 2005.
6. Witherington III, Ben. “Mary, Mary Extraordinary”. Beliefnet.com. 2005. http://www.beliefnet.com/story/135/story_13503_1.html. Accessed April 2005.

Mary Magdale Wife of Chrish



Some modern writers have come forward with claims that Mary Magdalene was the wife of Jesus. These writers cite Gnostic writings to support their argument. Sources like the Gospel of Philip depict Mary Magdalene as being closer to Jesus than any other disciple. However, there is no known ancient document that claims she was his wife; rather, the Gospel of Philip depicts Mary as Jesus' koinonos, a Greek term indicating a "close friend", "companion" or, potentially, a lover. The closeness described in these writings depicts Mary Magdalene, representing the Gnostics, as understanding Jesus and his teaching while the other disciples, representing the Church, did not. Kripal writes that "the historical sources are simply too contradictory and simultaneously too silent" to make absolute declarations regarding Jesus' sexuality.[17]
Mary Magdalene appears with more frequency than other women in the canonical Gospels and is shown as being a close follower of Jesus. Mary's presence at the Crucifixion and Jesus' tomb, while hardly conclusive, is at least consistent with the role of grieving wife and widow, although if that were the case Jesus might have been expected to make provision for her care, as well as for his mother Mary. It also seems to contradict Jesus refusing physical contact in John 20:17 (see Noli me tangere).
Proponents of a married status of Jesus argue that bachelorhood was very rare for Jewish males of Jesus' time, being generally regarded as a transgression of the first divine commandment: "Be fruitful and multiply". According to this reasoning, it would have been unthinkable for an adult, unmarried Jew to travel about teaching as a rabbi.
A counter-argument to this is that in Jesus' time the Jewish religion was very diverse and the role of the rabbi was not yet well defined. It was really not until after the Roman destruction of the Second Temple in A.D. 70 that Rabbinic Judaism became dominant and the role of the rabbi made uniform in Jewish communities. Before Jesus, celibate teachers were known in the communities of the Essenes, and John the Baptist also was celibate. Later, Paul of Tarsus was an example of an unmarried itinerant teacher among Christians. Jesus himself approved of voluntary celibacy for religious reasons and explicitly rejected a duty to marry: "There are eunuchs, who have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven. He that can take, let him take it." (Matthew 19:12).
The idea that Mary Magdalene was the wife of Jesus was popularized by books like The Jesus Scroll (1972), Holy Blood, Holy Grail (1982), The Gospel According to Jesus Christ (1991), The Woman with the Alabaster Jar (1993), Bloodline of the Holy Grail: The Hidden Lineage of Jesus Revealed (1996), and The Da Vinci Code (2003). It has been further popularised by the documentary The Lost Tomb of Jesus, which discusses the Talpiot tomb. Supposedly, this is the tomb of Jesus, Mary Magdalene, and Judah, their "son".
The Medieval "Golden Legend" says "Some say that S. Mary Magdalene was wedded to S. John the Evangelist".
The Australian scholar Barbara Thiering claims that a full account of the marriage and children of Jesus and Mary Magdalene can be derived from the New Testament by use of the pesher technique.