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posted 1 year ago by Conspirologist on scored.co (+0 / -0 / +20Score on mirror )
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TakenusernameA on scored.co
1 year ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 1 child
I'm aware, they worship a false version of Christ and dont actually worship the God of the Christians (their "god" isnt triune, and Ive heard some suggest what many of them actual worship is the demon Bael), but the point still stands that Muslims tend to not make a fuss until they reach critical mass, at which point they just overthrow the government.

I think the most egregious part of the new "Catechism" the Modernists have forced on us is that it claims that Christians worship the same God as the Jews and Muslims, when Christ Himself literally said otherwise. Modernists are just jew worshipping proto-Protestants who have refused to openly admit they have left the Church.
JesusSupporter33 on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
Ba'al isn't simply a demon. He's a lesser god and probably another name for the Sumerian/ Babylonian Enlil, the "god of the Earth," known by them as "lord." He is the cause of the separation between Heaven and Earth, and the son of the god of the heavens, "An." An does not appear to be our Father of Creation, but another lesser god.

This god Enlil has been worshipped in one form or another throughout the millennia and takes many forms. He is a very dangerous entity that mimics our Christ and bestows gifts upon those unwitting.. and witting.. people who invoke him. As history shows, worship of this god, though he gives liberally, leads to the abominations of human sacrifice and divination through disembowelment. I am almost certain that the great god that the freemasons invoke is this Enlil, as Enlil fancies himself the god of gods, again masquerading as our God of Creation.

Interestingly, Babylonian religion seems to mirror Genesis but from Satan's perspective.
TakenusernameA on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
Bael is presumably different than Ba'al, he is allegedly Satan's second in command. Ba'al actually can refer to a number of different Canaanite deities (who were often dualistic in nature as well), not just a single deity, though the most commonly refered to is Hadad. Its a generic term roughly translating to "lord" in Aramaic, which is why a bunch of Old testament names have "Baal" in them.
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