Let me preface this short piece by saying I have nothing against Catholics, though do need to warn against the Vatican, as it is a pagan stronghold which has tricked Christians into worshipping the sun.
As I have only recently returned to Christ after spending my adult years in Tibetan Buddhism and depth psychology, perhaps I should wait to be this brazen.
Though in prayer, I keep hearing that it is mine to say.
When Sunday was introduced as a day of worship under Constantine in 321 AD, Christians had observed the sabbath as their day of worship since the death of their founder Jesus Messiah.
Constantine, known for convening the council of Nicaea, had become a “Christian” when he received a vision of military prowess if he painted the cross on the shields of his army.
Christians naturally welcomed the new reality of being accepted by Rome, though at what cost had this freedom come?
There is little indication that Constantine’s commitment to apostolic Christianity went particularly deep. After all, the apostolic church had already been brandished heretical almost two centuries prior, and the faith that was to emerge in Rome would be a very different one than that of the original apostles.
After all, even a cursory glance at the Vatican reveals what appears to be a pagan organization which worships the Sun.
With claims that bold, we need some evidence.
Let’s review it:
St Peter’s square in the Vatican is designed as a sun worship site, with an Egyptian obelisk representing the sun god Ra at the center. The obelisk functions as a huge sun dial, and astrological symbols are drawn across the clock face.
Catholic icons feature a sun disc behind their heads.
The altar piece in St Peter’s Basilica is clearly dedicated to a sun disc.
Most churches are built facing east, towards the rising sun.
Many churches feature roosters on the spire, the bird associated with dawn and Peter’s betrayal of Jesus Messiah.
And then, of course, SUNday—the day of worship introduced by Constantine—is literally named after the sun.
As much as some Bible scholars may attempt to deny the significance of this evidence—or argue that somehow the sun is representative of Jesus (no, the sun is NOT the same as the son)—one of Christianity’s core epistemic principles is to judge a tree by its fruit.
So if the tree produces sun worship symbolism as its fruit, it is Biblical to assume that the tree worships the sun.
If you are a Christian, or just curious about Christ, I urge you to investigate the symbolism in your local church to see if you see signs of sun worship.
(It is more present in Catholicism, but we find it in protestant churches too.)
Once you see it, you can’t unsee it (I haven’t found a single church since I started looking that doesn’t feature sun worship symbolism).
Now why on earth would a Christian church worship the sun?
That’s a good question.
It’s an even better question why the Trump administration is so closely associated with the Catholic church, why supreme court is packed with Catholic judges, and why new Sunday laws are being seriously considered.
The United States was literally built by protestants fleeing persecution from the Catholic church in Europe, so what happened?
(The Jesuits happened, but that’s too much for this little article, and I will spare that for some day in the future.)
Right now, I just want to leave you with the insight that the day of worshipping Christ was deliberately moved to the day of the sun by a pagan church which bears all the signs of worshipping the sun and not the son.
Whether you are a Catholic or not, contemplate if this sits right with you.
And then, if you wish, join me and my family in restoring Saturday as the day of the sabbath — before it becomes illegal.
A great video from Little Light studios with more on this
Hi, nice article. Always very thoroughly written with sources, caveats and a nice balance between intuition and critical thinking. Appreciate it. On facebook you explained why worshipping Saturn is pagan, and pagan dieties are sub-source, and therefore contain darkness, and therefore not inherently positive to worship if I remember correctly. Is it the same with the sun? I read this and find it interesting, and I also again don't see what's wrong with the sun. The sun is nice. We need the sun. No sun no life. God has to have made the sun. Sunlight is healthy. Sunrises and sets are beautiful. I sometimes applaud the sun after a nice sunset. I'd say I have some reverence for the sun. But not exclusively. Just as a beautiful part of creation that I appreciate. It feels like appreciating creation is appreciating the creator. I don't feel I'm sun worshippping because its not central to my life, and I feel you mean that catholics place the sun at the top. Why is that bad? Is it because you replace source with sun and and give power falsely to not-the-most-high?