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The Messianic Legacy

The Messianic Legacy

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: GREAT DETAIL ON A SUPPRESSED HISTORY SEEING THE LIGHT OF DAY
Review: It is good to see detail suppressed by many Inquisitions coming into the light of day again; their detailed and simple explanations of how archetypes play on our common culture and ancestry and keep these timeless, universal themes alive is easy to understand. It is also a good book for helping one see the original intent of these archetypes as "good for us" versus the negative play that so many of the "conspiratorial authors" enlarge upon. This book will help those wanting to "free their minds" from past cultural control and guide us into "individual control" with direct contact with all levels of the universe. This is what the "original mandate" was for the people entrusted with helping earthly culture evolve. It is a positive one, not a negative thing. That some people have used this for negative, like for "power" in the world, does not make it any less valuable info toward understanding our "Oneness" with all dimensions of the universe.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A MUST-READ
Review: Moses as a cult-leader? Paul as an Roman agent sent to hijack Jesus' movement (a Jewish military uprising) for his and Rome's purposes? The very cornerstone of the Christian Church founded on a cruel lie, and pumulgated by a cult of deceit? What really happened during Moses' trek through the wilderness? All kinds of far-out devine stuff that just doesn't happen anymore? Or real occurances that have human significance? Hopefully as many so-called Christians, as regular people can enjoy this book. It makes alot more sense than a "religious" interpretation of ancient events, and is MORE interesting that all that bull about the trinity/monotheistic ambiguous oxymoron stuff you hear in church. Sound tough? Reality is. Dig it

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Plodding and dull
Review: Once you get past the hype and puffery of "Holy Blood Holy Grail" this series of books begins to seem quaint and ridiculous. The writing is unbearably earnest, and may frustrate the reader who is looking for a wild ride. People who already believe that the Freemasons run the world may appreciate it, though.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Incoherent
Review: Part One and Two represent a good summary of lateral thought and analysis. Nicely written, but not always giving the necessary scientific reference, which it takes its claims from. Thus it sometimes fails to convincingly corroborate its theory with the necessary factual underpinnings. Bottomline however for part One and Two is certainly a challenging and interesting read - part even fascinating -, which clearly deserves attention.

Part Three is completely different. It appears to be written by a different person than those who wrote Part One and Two. It has not only little bearing and relevance regarding the subject in Part One and Two, but it is also written incoherently, sensationalistic and scientificly nonsensical. The utter scientific nonsense of not only making the Merowingians a French royal dynasty taking its origin in the Davidian line of Israel, is so far out of the historicly proven context that it almost hurts to have wasted one's attention to Part One and Two of this book, which are clearly devalued by its incoherent Part Three. The history of the Merowingians as part of the Frankonian empire evolving from Frankonia in Germany, installed as the rulers of the West Frankonian Empire and as a part of the overall Frankonian empire, is not only clear and scientificly unambiguous, it is also provable. Much in difference to the garbled context, given in the book, which lacks most coherent reference to history and mostly seems to be just what its title says it is: A "Cabala" which resembles nothing else than a sensationalistic conspiracy theory.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: men of virtue
Review: The book most enlightening and a must on the shelves of any sage's repertoire. More precisely. "Secret Masters" by their power not only "hold" reality they manifest it - the true intent of it.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Only the first part is needed.
Review: The first part (about 1/3 of the book) is quite interesting and has a lot of eye-opening information about first years of Christianity, early Church, etc. The other two thirds you can just skip. That is why my rating is five stars divided by three.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: More critical than Holy Blood, Holy Grail
Review: The Knights Templar and several lateral outgrowths of it are the root for modern secret societies that exist today. They control the upper echelons of banking, finance, shipping and insurance. They start wars, launder money, run drugs and assassinate rivals at will. Elite families in Britain and America cannot be overestimated in the power, and this book brings things up to the twentienth century.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Rocketing to Ennui
Review: This book begins powerfully, giving the reader fascnating information concerning the Emperor Constantine, the god Sol Invictus, and the formation of early Christianity. From there, it plummets into a disjointed ramble that leaves one with a sense of ennui. However, this book is well worth the price and time for the fascinating information in Section One.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another work of brilliant deductions based on research.
Review: This book explains more fully some of the information used to deduce some of the premises put forward in "The Holy Blood & The Holy Grail". It is based on other published works by scholars and authorites on the interpretations of the Dead Sea Scrolls. It puts forward a more educated translation of events covered by the New Testament based on information about the political and social issues at the time of Christ. As a person trying find the origins of Christianity, and what makes people believe something like the New Testament, I found the theories put forward by the authors to be intelligent and highly believable. If I was part of the Christian clergy, I would be extremely concerned about the future of the religion

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another work of brilliant deductions based on research.
Review: This book explains more fully some of the information used to deduce some of the premises put forward in "The Holy Blood & The Holy Grail". It is based on other published works by scholars and authorites on the interpretations of the Dead Sea Scrolls. It puts forward a more educated translation of events covered by the New Testament based on information about the political and social issues at the time of Christ. As a person trying find the origins of Christianity, and what makes people believe something like the New Testament, I found the theories put forward by the authors to be intelligent and highly believable. If I was part of the Christian clergy, I would be extremely concerned about the future of the religion


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