Atlas University Podcast

The Hidden Power: Diana and the Roman Image-System

50 min · I går
episode The Hidden Power: Diana and the Roman Image-System cover

Beskrivelse

This book presents a radical theological critique of the Roman Catholic Church, arguing that it is not merely a Christian denomination but a complex "old-god apparatus" that has preserved ancient pagan powers under biblical names. The author posits that the Papacy functions as a continuation of the Roman father-throne, while the Eucharistic host is characterized as a "dead solar son" image rooted in imperial sun worship. A major portion of the analysis focuses on the Marian office, claiming that the Catholic Mary is actually a fusion of goddesses like Diana, Isis, and the Queen of Heaven. Through an examination of modern apparitions at Fatima, Lourdes, and Akita, the sources argue that Rome uses maternal tenderness and apocalyptic fear to divert love away from Yahweh and toward a deceptive image-system. Ultimately, the text interprets the symbols of Revelation—the beast, the woman, and the mark—as a direct x-ray of the Vatican's ritual and doctrinal machinery.

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episode The Hidden Power: Diana and the Roman Image-System cover

The Hidden Power: Diana and the Roman Image-System

This book presents a radical theological critique of the Roman Catholic Church, arguing that it is not merely a Christian denomination but a complex "old-god apparatus" that has preserved ancient pagan powers under biblical names. The author posits that the Papacy functions as a continuation of the Roman father-throne, while the Eucharistic host is characterized as a "dead solar son" image rooted in imperial sun worship. A major portion of the analysis focuses on the Marian office, claiming that the Catholic Mary is actually a fusion of goddesses like Diana, Isis, and the Queen of Heaven. Through an examination of modern apparitions at Fatima, Lourdes, and Akita, the sources argue that Rome uses maternal tenderness and apocalyptic fear to divert love away from Yahweh and toward a deceptive image-system. Ultimately, the text interprets the symbols of Revelation—the beast, the woman, and the mark—as a direct x-ray of the Vatican's ritual and doctrinal machinery.

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