Atlas University Podcast

The Medieval Mark at Full Strength

20 min · 10. juni 2026
episode The Medieval Mark at Full Strength cover

Beskrivelse

This book argues that the Book of Revelation defines the mark of the beast not as future technology, but as a religious system historically realized in medieval Christendom. The author contends that the Trinity functions as the actual mark because it became the mandatory legal and social confession used to identify authorized believers. In this sacred civilization, the Trinitarian creed served as a "doctrinal passport" that governed a person's ability to buy, sell, and participate in society. To refuse this official image of Christ resulted in severe consequences, including the loss of property, legal standing, and life. By contrasting this coercive system with the biblical confession of one God the Father and His Son, the author presents the Trinity as a lamb-like counterfeit that replaces apostolic truth with an imperial image. Ultimately, the source asserts that the Middle Ages provide the clearest historical proof of how religious allegiance can be fused with economic and social control.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Atlas University Podcast sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

300 Episoder

episode Blaspheming the Exodus: Deliverance and the Danger of Slander cover

Blaspheming the Exodus: Deliverance and the Danger of Slander

This book warns against the severe spiritual peril of slandering divine deliverance, specifically equating the act of calling a true move of God "demonic" with the unpardonable sin of blasphemy against the Holy Spirit. Using the biblical Exodus and the ministry of Yeshua as precedents, the author argues that religious systems often demonize liberation to protect their own institutional power and traditional control. Central to this thesis is the provocative claim that the Trinity is the "mark of the beast,"acting as a man-made creedal boundary that obscures the Father’s name and mandates false allegiance. The author maintains that while sincere captives are often deceived by these normal-seeming traditions, a final "hour of exodus" requires them to test all doctrines by Scripture and separate from Babylonian religious structures. Ultimately, the source calls for a posture of humility and discernment, urging readers to fear God more than their inherited systems to avoid resisting the very Spirit coming to set them free.

19. juli 202642 min
episode Elijah Must Come cover

Elijah Must Come

This book explores the biblical pattern of the Elijah office, a recurring prophetic function sent to interrupt religious compromise before divine judgment. The text argues that Elijah is more than a historical man; he represents a recurring spiritual mandate to confront mixed worship and restore covenant loyalty when a religious system maintains sacred vocabulary but serves rival powers. According to the author, this pattern was embodied by John the Baptist before the first appearing of Jesus and may reach a final expression to prepare a restored people before the second coming. This work of restoration involves repairing the broken altar of true worship, exposing institutional corruption, and turning hearts away from distorted religious images toward the authentic identity of the Messiah. Ultimately, the sources emphasize that the true Elijah function is preparatory and humble, existing solely to decrease while pointing the way to the Lamb of God.

I går35 min
episode Attila and the Return of the Sword of Mars cover

Attila and the Return of the Sword of Mars

This book presents a historical and theological analysis of Attila the Hun, framing him through an "old-god model" as the literal manifestation of Sword-Mars. The author argues that Attila represents the war-god in his primal, untamed form, returning from beyond the frontier to judge a Roman Empire that had unsuccessfully tried to domesticate violence through civic ritual. By treating Attila’s childhood as manufactured historical camouflage, the sources focus entirely on his emergence as a world-threatening power whose identity is defined by the recovery of a sacred blade. The narrative explores how Attila humiliated the Eastern Empire through tributeand psychological terror before turning toward a Western Empire characterized as "exhausted Mars." Ultimately, the text interprets Attila’s career as a divine scourge used to expose Roman pride, while maintaining that even this supernatural force remained subject to mortality and higher judgment.

17. juli 202632 min
episode The Eye Inside the Triangle: The Religious Architecture of Control cover

The Eye Inside the Triangle: The Religious Architecture of Control

This book presents a maximalist theological critique of the "Eye of Providence" symbol, arguing that the eye inside the triangle is not a benign Christian emblem but a "Trinitarian mark" of imperial religious control. The author contends that the triangle functions as a doctrinal enclosurethat abstracts the living God of Scripture into a manageable, metaphysical diagram. By capturing the definition of God, the "beast system" governs the human conscience and imagination before eventually controlling physical actions and commerce. The eye itself is traced back to ancient solar deities like Ra, representing an active, royal gaze that enforces authority through surveillance. Ultimately, the source warns that this symbol serves a "religious architecture of control" that normalizes state and ecclesiastical oversight across churches, currency, and modern technology.

16. juli 202638 min
episode Numbers Decoded: Is Numbers the Key to Predicting Human History? cover

Numbers Decoded: Is Numbers the Key to Predicting Human History?

This book presents a detailed analysis of the Book of Numbers, arguing that its extensive censuses and tribal lists function as a mathematical languageencoding world history. By applying a numerical grammar—specifically dividing tribal populations by fifty—the author identifies hidden Hebrew words and theological concepts within the camp arrangements. This system links ancient biblical data to pivotal historical milestones, such as the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE and the restoration of Israel in 1948. The text suggests that the tribes act as enduring historical offices, where their names, positions, and census totals reveal the timing and nature of global events. Ultimately, the work portrays the Bible not just as a record of the past, but as a divine architecture mapping the course of human history from the Messiah to future dates like 2026 and 2048. These sources maintain that every figure in the census is a symbolic building block designed to show a world meticulously ordered around a sacred center.

16. juli 202652 min