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The speaker discusses pre-Nicene Christianity, asserting that victors erase history and memory, a process called Dominatio Memoriae, which allegedly wiped out the first Christian Bible and key figures involved in its creation.
Two main camps in pre-Nicene Christianity are described. The first is the Judeo Christians (also called Messianic Jews or Ebionites), who later evolve into the forms we recognize today in various denominations. They all share a common belief in Yahweh as God and in Jesus Christ as born of Jews, with a Bible that includes a Jewish Torah stapled to the front. This camp is said to have a tidy, though debated, narrative shaped by centuries of editing and whitewashing.
The second camp, referred to as the Cairo Christians, is presented as largely erased by Demnatio Memoriae. The Cairo Christians used the symbol Chiro (the first two Greek letters of Christ) and held fundamentally different beliefs. They believed Jesus descended to earth in a human form, crucified, resurrected, and ascended, but that upon visiting the apostles after the resurrection, he descended again and took on a completely human form. They held that the first sentence of the first Christian Bible identified Jesus’ arrival precisely: “in the fifteenth year of Tiberius Caesar, Pontius Pilate being governor of Judea, Jesus descended into Capernaum.” They tracked this as 29 AD, with Marcionites suggesting an exact solar eclipse on November 24 at 11 AM as supporting evidence. Their gospel was the Gospel of the Lord, a direct revelation to the apostle Paul on the road to Damascus, along with Paul’s original ten epistles (Galatians, Romans, 1-2 Corinthians, Colossians, Philippians, 1-2 Thessalonians, Laodiceans, and Philemon). This is described as the first Christian Bible, unchanged since January.
In contrast, the Judeo Christians would not invent a Bible until hundreds of years later, producing four Gospels, Acts, 62 additional books, and a Torah-stapled front—an “old testament” reshaped in the third century. The Cairo Christians, at one point, outnumbered the Judeo Christians and were the largest denomination across the Roman Empire. The first visible traces of Cairo influence include Marcionite inscriptions, such as the oldest known inscription bearing Jesus’ name on a Marcionite church archway in Syria, dated March and written in Greek. The Marcionites were persecuted by Romans, Jews, and Judeo Christians, and Vatican Library material has surfaced suggesting Saint Jerome drew on Marcion’s work for his Latin translations of Paul’s epistles. Marcion’s church is said to have been defaced under Demnatio Memoriae, with Marcion’s head scratched from portraits.
The narrative then centers on Eusebius, the “father of church history,” and Constantine the Emperor as pivotal figures who would reshape Christianity. Eusebius, not a historian but a PR figure who allegedly believed in weaving lies if beneficial, allegedly helped Constantine convert to Christianity and establish Judeo-Christianity as Rome’s state religion. Constantine, portrayed as a devout worshiper of Sol Invictus and Pontifex Maximus, is said to have orchestrated political and religious moves, including the suppression of Cairo denominations, seizure of property, burning of Bibles, and transfer of wealth to the Christian church. Eusebius allegedly was excommunicated for Arian beliefs before being reconciled by Constantine, who appointed him to lead the council.
The Council of Nicaea is described as the moment when Judeo-Christian dogma was codified and the Demnatio Memoriae extended to Marcion and the first Bible. Subsequently, Constantine allegedly issued 50 copies of Eusebius’s revised Judeo-Christian Bible, with the Torah front, and removed the Gospel of the Lord and altered Paul’s epistles, making this version the official Bible of the Roman Catholic Church. The period is summarized as Islamically as “the twenty-nine days of the Council of Nicaea,” after which Christian beliefs, doctrine, and dogma are claimed to have been hijacked and inverted. The speaker ends by noting that the first Bible remains downloadable at theveryfirstbible.org and Marcionite continuity persists at marcionitechurch.org.