Wednesday, March 2, 2022

Euphrasian Cathedral in Porec Croatia

 The Euphrasian Cathedral in Porec is quite interesting. Mirroring the ancient cathedrals in Ravenna, the portrayal of Christ not as PAUL but still as the original person is quite evident. This difference was wiped away forever as the face of Paul began to replace Christ by the year 800. 

Notice the very different look of Christ and Paul. 

God is the Lamb of God with SIX Shamash stars. Quite interesting that we see the shamash again. The shamash is the star of devastation, or world ending, and was last seen in Sumerian times. 

Shamas is the interference pattern - Piscis Vessica - between the invisible brown dwarf companion star to our sun, and the sun, as they near. Note that only christ and the lamb have this pattern within their Halos denoting power and the godhead. Similar to the columb pictured in the vatican window. 



Now if we look at the shamash early dipiction in this sumerian drawing, we see the "birth" between two stars and more interesting, the lines of force go straight UP not circular. Which forms the Menorah. So is the Menorah really timing the oil lamps burning or is that cover from the real symbology which is the shamash? 




Enlil and Enki appear in the time of the visible shamash. Perhaps a planet around the binary companion has life? And they can only travel here for a brief time?


They will often mistranslate this as the sun but numerous scrolls make clear the sun, the moon, and the shamash are 3 distinct objects. Many will correctly show the shamash as between the sun and another star. 


And this is why the sign of the star and the prophet are combined in the birth of the prophet. The christ star was most likely a comet. he apparition of 12 BC was recorded in the Book of Han by Chinese astronomers of the Han Dynasty who tracked it from August through October.[10] It passed within 0.16 AU of Earth.[64] According to the Roman historian Cassius Dio, a comet appeared suspended over Rome for several days portending the death of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa in that year.[65] Halley's appearance in 12 BC, only a few years distant from the conventionally assigned date of the birth of Jesus Christ, has led some theologians and astronomers to suggest that it might explain the biblical story of the Star of Bethlehem


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