Council set out to select a name for God’s mortal representative: After the council chose the name Kriste for the “God and Lord of all nations of the earth”, their next question was, “what mortal representative should be chosen?” Their first ballot included 15 names; they considered 46 other names, but they received fewer votes.
A council of men cannot determine prophets: After 12 months, Oahspe says that the true God or Earth, Eskra, questioned why the Council of Nice (Council of Nicea) balloted for 12 months as to what man heard the voice of Jehovih – as if Jehovih would ever send His matters to a council of men…
Council chose “Iesu”, a common characteristic of a prophet, in place of a name: Constantine must have heard Eskra’s question because afterward, he told the council that since “The Gods will not let us choose any man.” He then asked, “since we cannot make preference as to a man”, yet “all the law-givers chosen by the Gods, have been iesu”, should we say, “The man, Iesu?” (Constantine referred to prophets as law-givers). With that, Oahspe adds, “the name, Iesu, was adopted, and the sacred books were written accordingly.”
For how the term, Iesu, came to mean a prophet, the section, origin of Iesu and Jesus, provides a full overview of how Iesu started out as Yeshuah, which means “without evil”, but initially had nothing to do with a person or a prophet. Yeshuah happened to be the name of the second heavenly kingdom in Earth’s lower heavens around 70000 BCE, but early man could not pronounce Yeshuah and instead, said Iesu, so the 2 terms became interchangeable. Then, in 11000 BCE, the “God of the I’huans”, I’hua’Mazda, referred to the first mortal prophet, Zarathustra, as a “Yeshuah (Iesu)” because he was born with “without gender”, so
Why is child born without gender considered “without evil”?
A child born that “hath no sex” was considered “without evil”, or better yet, without the potential to commit evil, because “without the possibility of sexual passion”, a man is able to life a life of celibacy, which is most conducive to focusing on spiritual endeavors without the distraction of earthly, physical emotions such as sexual desire. Five out of the 11 prophets within Oahspe were natural-born iesu.
. From that point on, Iesu not only referred to someone born without gender, but more importantly, it was used to describe anyone born able to “hear the voice of the Great Spirit” or who attained the ability during adulthood, through diet and fasting, to attain the “state of mind to be with the All Light.”
Eskra’s closing thoughts on the work of the council: After the Council’s work was completed, the true God, Eskra, added that the Council of Nice “sinned not” in regard to the doctrines they set forth as being from Iesu because the doctrines were indeed “for Jehovih”. Regarding how “the names of Kriste and the Holy Ghost” were made worshipful, on the other hand, “that matter was with Looeamong”;
God said: My testimonies were previously with Abraham and Brahma and Moses, and I spake not of Kriste nor of the Holy Ghost, I spake of God and of the I Am.