Seems like the majority of your diatribes are pointed at the Catholic Church. You might not find much disagreement with me on that issue. But you do make some claims without any supporting evidence that appear to be foundational for much of your position on the formation of the biblical cannon. Let's discuss some of those.
Jesus (Christianity) is created by the Vatican
Hopefully you're not implying that Jesus didn't even exist here, are you?
Also, Christianity existed long before the Catholic Church or Councils did. So it appears you have the cart before the horse here.
The early Christian community already had a high view of Jesus divinity long before the Councils came around. Even according to your own research the Muratorian Canon which is dated roughly around 170AD shows the high view of Jesus' divinity already in existence.
In the Muratorian Canon, Jesus is repeatedly referred to as “Lord” (Romans 10:9; Acts 2:36; Jude 17) and is equated with God (John 1:1–3; 20:28; Philippians 2:6–8). He took on human flesh (John 1:14; 1 John 4:2), died in the place of sinners (1 Corinthians 15:3), and was soon raised bodily from the dead (Luke 24:36–40; Acts 1:3; 2:24–35; 1 Corinthians 15:4). A person can find forgiveness of sins only through faith in Him (John 6:47; Acts 13:38–39; Galatians 2:15–16).
These central doctrines represented Christian orthodoxy for the early (before the major Councils) church. The existence of the Muratorian Canon demonstrates that, well before the New Testament canon was officially recognized, early Christians already had access to authoritative documents carrying apostolic authority. It was from these apostolic books and letters that the early believers derived their central beliefs about the person and atoning work of Jesus Christ.
So your assertion that the Catholic Church created and was responsible for the deification of Jesus kind of falls on its face right at the start.
“The Bible was constructed by the same bloodline families that founded the Illuminati.
What is your source for this outlandish claim? Remember, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence - and don't simply point to your 656 page PDF as your "evidence." Give us some concrete evidence.
Seems like the majority of your diatribes are pointed at the Catholic Church. You might not find much disagreement with me on that issue. But you do make some claims without any supporting evidence that appear to be foundational for much of your position on the formation of the biblical cannon. Let's discuss some of those.
Jesus (Christianity) is created by the Vatican
Hopefully you're not implying that Jesus didn't even exist here, are you?
Also, Christianity existed long before the Catholic Church or Councils did. So it appears you have the cart before the horse here.
The early Christian community already had a high view of Jesus divinity long before the Councils came around. Even according to your own research the Muratorian Canon which is dated roughly around 170AD shows the high view of Jesus' divinity already in existence.
In the Muratorian Canon, Jesus is repeatedly referred to as “Lord” (Romans 10:9; Acts 2:36; Jude 17) and is equated with God (John 1:1–3; 20:28; Philippians 2:6–8). He took on human flesh (John 1:14; 1 John 4:2), died in the place of sinners (1 Corinthians 15:3), and was soon raised bodily from the dead (Luke 24:36–40; Acts 1:3; 2:24–35; 1 Corinthians 15:4). A person can find forgiveness of sins only through faith in Him (John 6:47; Acts 13:38–39; Galatians 2:15–16).
These central doctrines represented Christian orthodoxy for the early (before the major Councils) church. The existence of the Muratorian Canon demonstrates that, well before the New Testament canon was officially recognized, early Christians already had access to authoritative documents carrying apostolic authority. It was from these apostolic books and letters that the early believers derived their central beliefs about the person and atoning work of Jesus Christ.
So your assertion that the Catholic Church created and was responsible for the deification of Jesus kind of falls on its face right at the start.