Shakespeare and Bacon were possibly the same person. In light of Bacon's involvement in some of these societies, I consider Shakespeare's quote to be not coincidental.
Indeed and agreed. And to go even deeper, some say Bacon was an earlier soul incarnation of the one later known as St. Germain, and a later soul incarnation of one of the Roman guards who slayed Jesus.
Am I stretching ya too far? These are not popular "ideas" I realize...
That is correct. As the story goes, following the event he renounced his position, fled the Roman army and lived out the short remainder of his life in deep shame and guilt for what he had done. Despite being continuously consoled and reminded between incarnations by Jesus himself that he performed his divine duty that day and was a critical part of the destiny of Jesus', he vowed to go above and beyond to make amends for his actions that fateful day. Bacon and St. Germain are two of the more notable incarnations, St. Germain being his last in the flesh.
Yes in the movie, he was condemned to walk the Earth forever, until Ragnarok (or whatever is your favorite word for it). So he was actually the evil actor of the movie, pushing forward the end of the Earth so he would be released from his purgatory on Earth. Lol. In retrospect it's a great showing of just how much the people who make movies hate Jesus.
Judas had a part to play. And Jesus loved him anyway. Peter denied Jesus and Jesus knew he would do this, and loved him anyway. Jesus is much better than I, on this point in particular.
Shakespeare and Bacon were possibly the same person. In light of Bacon's involvement in some of these societies, I consider Shakespeare's quote to be not coincidental.
Indeed and agreed. And to go even deeper, some say Bacon was an earlier soul incarnation of the one later known as St. Germain, and a later soul incarnation of one of the Roman guards who slayed Jesus.
Am I stretching ya too far? These are not popular "ideas" I realize...
Longinus?
He had a fun cameo in "The Seventh Seal", with Demi Moore.
That is correct. As the story goes, following the event he renounced his position, fled the Roman army and lived out the short remainder of his life in deep shame and guilt for what he had done. Despite being continuously consoled and reminded between incarnations by Jesus himself that he performed his divine duty that day and was a critical part of the destiny of Jesus', he vowed to go above and beyond to make amends for his actions that fateful day. Bacon and St. Germain are two of the more notable incarnations, St. Germain being his last in the flesh.
Yes in the movie, he was condemned to walk the Earth forever, until Ragnarok (or whatever is your favorite word for it). So he was actually the evil actor of the movie, pushing forward the end of the Earth so he would be released from his purgatory on Earth. Lol. In retrospect it's a great showing of just how much the people who make movies hate Jesus.
Judas had a part to play. And Jesus loved him anyway. Peter denied Jesus and Jesus knew he would do this, and loved him anyway. Jesus is much better than I, on this point in particular.