Looeamong’s “The Book of Books”

“Council of Nice” formed to compile a one-and-only doctrine for a single religion: After Looeamong used Constantine to eliminate all other false Gods, Looeamong inspired Constantine, through Gabriel (Thoth), to call together 1,786 “learned men” from Arabia, Greece, Persia, and Europe to form the “Council of Nice” (aka Council of Nicea) to “select from all the religious doctrines in the world, that which is wisest and best, that it might be established by kings, emperors and governors by the sword and spear, so there should never more be but one religion.” Looeamong intended for the resulting “Book of Books” to be the “doctrine of my people, which I will recommend unto all nations, that there shall be no more war for religion’s sake.”

Council of Nicaea36

Oahspe indicates that “Jews” were excluded: “Under the rules and presence” of Constantine, the council members were first divided into groups of speakers (44), scribes, and translators; then the remaining members were divided into groups of 12. Oahspe adds that “many, having the appearance of Jews, were rejected altogether.”

Line of light formed between council and Looeamong: Gabriel and his hosts “watched over the mortal council”, day and night, “over-shadowing their every thought and word”; they formed a circle around the mortal council “a thousand angels deep on every side” that extended upward forming a line of light up to Looeamong’s throne.

The council extracted the “best” from 2,231 books: The council brought with them 2,231 “books and legendary tales of Gods and Saviors and great men, together with a record of the doctrines taught by them” and then executed the following process:
(1) Search the books, retain whatever is good in them, cast away whatever is evil.
(2) Whatever is good in one book, combine with the good of another book.
(3) Whatever is retained in the end will be called “The Book of Books”.

Reminder about Genesis and Exodus: The content for “Genesis” was written about 3,300 years earlier when false Osiris re-wrote the creation stories to co-opt Earth’s normal ascension process and keep high-raised spirits in Earth’s heavens (Part 14). Then, around 2800 BCE, false Osiris inspired an Egyptian king to enter his creation stories into the Egyptian libraries (Part 15).

The content for “Exodus” was written around 1400 BCE when the Pharoah that persecuted the Israelites hired Egyptians, rather than Israelites, to write the “Exodus of the Hebrews” (Part 17).

Egyptian versions of Genesis and Exodus made it into the Council of Nice: For how Egyptian records were later used for both Genesis and Exodus, earlier in this post it was covered how around 325 CE, Looeamong inspired Ezra of Jerusalem to use Egyptian records to compile his 72-book “Holy Library” for the “king’s library of Jerusalem”, which have now been brought into the Council of Nice to be included in the Old Testament bible.

The page, Formation of the Hebrew Scriptures, provides an overview of the formation of the Hebrew Scriptures of the Old Testament.

Mainstream history corroborates that Constantine did indeed organize the “Council of Nicaea” in 325 CE; however, for the first 600 years, the predominately-accepted opinion was that while the church leaders of this council finalized the “Christological issues”, the divine nature of Jesus, wrote the first part of the Nicene Creed37, and deliberated on about 20 other issues, there was no historical evidence they discussed, decided, nor declared which books would be in the Bible38.

That was until 900 CE, however, when an anonymous document emerged, called the “Synodicon Venus”, which provided a one-chapter summary of every major council of the Christian Church up to 887 CE39. This document described the “canonical and apocryphal books” as being determined miraculously40. It said that the church leaders stacked all of the books that were candidates for inclusion in the Bible on a communion table. Then, while they prayed, the books to be excluded slipped through the table and onto the floor. Whichever books were left on the table were included in the Bible41.

It was not until the 1700s philosopher, Voltaire, “satirized” about the anonymous document’s version of the formation of the Bible in his philosophical dictionary that the “myth” became a popularized “conspiracy” (a more recent example is Dan Brown’s 2005 novel, “the Da Vinci Code”42).