Sunday, June 28, 2015

The Truth About the Bahá'í New Religion

http://espadadelespiritu.foroactivo.com/t592-the-truth-about-the-bahai-new-religion
Invented Religions by the British Empire

Bahai
Wahabism
Mormon
premillennial dispensationalism
Scientology
Unification Church, Sun Myung Moon  http://realsunmyungmoon.blogspot.com/
Zionism
Oxford Movement
Scottish Rite of Freemasonry.

Methodology

Oxford Movement's freemasonic evangelists would not attempt to convert Muslims, for instance, to Christianity. Instead, they would try to bring the Muslim (Sufi) belief system into harmony with the cult practices of the Scottish Rite.

The Oxford Movement and the British freemasons had an ally that had also been condemned by the Vatican: the Society of Jesus, or the Jesuits.

sponsor the creation of the cults and pseudo-religions as a tool of the Empire policy

learned how to use cults and "religions" to control its people.


Personalities

From the 1820s onwards, The chief sponsors of the British cult-building project during this period were the British royal family itself and many of its leading prime ministers and aides, such as
Benjamin Disraeli,
Lord Palmerston,
Lord Shaftesbury, and
Edward Bulwer-Lytton.

Bulwer-Lytton, who served as the head of Britain's Colonial Office and India Office for years and then was succeeded by his son, was a practicing member of the ancient cult of Isis and Osiris



Other Organizations

This paragon of the empire-builder is the grandfather of the
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood of John Ruskin,
the 1860s Metaphysical Society of Bertrand Russell,
the 1880s Isis-Urantia Temple of the Golden Dawn of Aldous Huxley,
and the Theosophy Society of Madame Blavatsky, who published "Isis Unveiled".


Books

Last Days of Pompeii Paperback, by Edward Bulwer Lytton (Author)


What Was the Oxford Movement? (Outstanding Christian Thinkers (Paperback Continuum)) Paperback – April 30, 2002 by George Herring (Author)

From the Great Book "Hostages to Khomeini" of Robert Dreyfuss.

The Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Policy of Count Beust: A Political Sketch of Men and Events from 1866 to 1870, by an Englishman [H. De Worms].

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