Looeamong worked with Constantine

Looeamong selected Hatuas (Constantine): When Looeamong could hear no more, he said, “Enough! I, too, will have a mortal emperor”. First, he sent Thoth down to inspire Hatuas (Constantine), “who was a su’is, and could both see angels and hear them talk”, to raise a mortal army of 40,000 men and “set out for conquest”, specifically to “move upon Roma” to drive Baal out of Rome. Next, Looeamong embarked on his part of the plan, which was to “make myself Kriste of heaven” and “make Hatuas (Constantine) emperor of the whole earth.”

Looeamong convinced Constantine to covenant unto him: When Constantine’s new army “had come to the plains of Agatha” (northern Rome), “where the Kriste’yans had been massacred many years before”, “Looeamong and his angel hosts appeared in the heavens above Hatuas’ army, so that all the soldiers thereof beheld the heavenly visitors.” Looeamong displayed, “in the air of heaven, a true cross, on which was written in letters of blood: IL’KRISTE.”

Oahspe adds that no-one present “could read the inscription”, so that evening, “Looeamong descended to Hatuas” and told him: “This is the interpretation of the sign and the cross I showed thee: ‘In this thou shalt conquer!'” Looeamong promised Hatuas (Constantine) that if he commissioned the making of a cross “of most excellent workmanship”, inscribed it with “The Kriste, our Lord, Son of the Holy Ghost”, and carried it at the head of his army, Looeamong would bring him to victory in Rome.

Looeamong falsely claimed he was God of Israel: Lastly, Looeamong instructed Constantine to call his edicts (proclamations) “bulls” and write them in lamb’s blood because Looeamong was “Lord of heaven and earth” and the blood of the lamb is “in remembrance of the sacrifice of the Jews in Egupt, through which sacrifice the Father in heaven delivered them”.

Mainstream history: According to the esteemed biblical scholars Eusebius of Caesarea and Lactantius, in the year of 312 CE, Constantine and his troops saw an “enormous cross of fire in the heavens” and the Greek words, “By this, conquer”. Constantine was troubled because he did not understand what the words meant.

That night, he dreamt that Christ appeared to him bearing a cross in his hands and promised him a victory over his enemies if he would make the cross his standard. From that point on, Constantine declared himself a Christian and had a standard made in the form of a cross with a banner that displayed the initial letters of the name of Christ. This banner became the standard for Roman emperors31.

Constantine’s Cross Banner, Battle of Milvian Bridge32