Atlas University Podcast
This book argues that Roman Catholicism fundamentally altered the identity of the biblical Messiah by replacing the historical Yeshua with a manufactured, imperial figure called Jesus. The author asserts that this substitution was achieved through a convergence of Roman state power, Apollonian imagery, and Dionysian ritual logic. By analyzing visual theology, the sources claim that the Catholic Mass and its attendant iconography functionally preserve the roles of ancient deities under Christian names. Specifically, Apollo provides the radiant, victorious face of the imperial son, while Dionysus supplies the underlying mechanics for a "sacramental machine" centered on the consumption of a deity. Ultimately, the book frames the Catholic system as a sophisticated form of institutional idolatry that displaces the living Spirit of Yahweh with a priest-controlled, altar-bound object of worship.
300 episodes
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