Council selected a God

Well-worded, memorable scriptures were chosen: After 4 years and 7 months of Constantine’s council deliberating over the 2,231 books and legendary tales, under the inspiration (and manipulation) of Looeamong and Gabriel, the council “selected and combined much that was good and great” and “worded so as to be well-remembered by mortals.” Yet, “no God had been selected by the council.”

The 37 Gods on the first ballot

Council needed a name for God: The council “balloted in order to determine the matter.” Their first ballot “gave prominence” to 37 Gods; they considered 22 additional Gods and Goddesses, but they received fewer votes.

Constantine turned the decision over to the angels: After 1 year and 5 months, the council had narrowed the list of potential names of Gods down to 5: Jove and Kriste from the original ballot, plus 3 new names, Mars, Crite, and Siva. After another 7 weeks without progress, Constantine turned it over to “the angels”. He said that because (1) their labor was “for all the nations of the earth, and for all time” and (2) they had already narrowed the Gods down to 5 that were “good and acceptable before the world”, he knew the “angels of heaven” were with them on the matter, so they would wait for the angels to show them the signs for the God they should choose.

And immediately, there and then, Looeamong and his angels gave a sign in fire, of a cross smeared with blood, and it rested on a bull’s horn, even as a cloud of fire on a cloud of fire!

Upon seeing the sign, the council unanimously agreed that “Kriste was declared ‘God and Lord of all nations of the earth’.”