| |
|
| |
The use of human remains in ritual as a means of attempting to harness the spirit of the departed is as old as magic and religion itself. |
| |
The ritual inclusion of human remains in the burial of great kings and queens, the sacrifice of slaves and defeated enemies within the structures of ancient walls and buildings and the retention of the heads of slain leaders are but a few examples of practices that have existed since the dawn of human civilization. |
| |
While the worship of the head of deceased, particularly great warriors is a universal trait amongst many indigenous cultures and ancient civilizations, the sophistication of magic in the attempt to “bind” by curse the spirit of the deceased to a particular part of their remains narrows to just a handful of civilizations, most notably the ancient Egyptians and the Amurru, also known as the Amorites from Mari and later from TarSar (Tarsus), Ugarit, Tyre and subsequent refugees. |
| |
Unlike many cultures, such as the ancient Chinese dynasties that sacrificed large numbers of individuals in various structures, the Egyptians and the Amurru- later incarnated as the Phoenicians – demonstrated a highly developed religious belief system in the importance of ritual sacrifice and the treatment of remains in order to “perfect” a curse of binding of the spirit to the remains. |
| |
Today, these rituals are variously referred to “necromancy” and are most often associated with the Grimoire books of dark magic – the first, bound in human skin issued by Roman Cult Pope Honorius III (1216-1227). |
| |
The claim that “necromancy” and such black magic sorcery originates from Babylon and Chaldeans is a terrible curse inflicted upon the oldest mortal enemy of the Amurru and their descendents variously known as the Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Scythians, Sarmaritans, Sadducees and Israelites – the real practitioners of such ancient black magic and worship. |
| |
The Phoenicians in particular refined their art of necromancy and the preceding ritual slaughter of victims to a detailed theology and intrinsic element of their culture, including such examples as the cursed sacrifice of young women and the binding of their bones to the Phoenicians ships through the urn of their remains being placed as a female figure at the head of the ship – thus the poor female becoming literally the spirit of the ship. |
| |
In another ceremony, these same descendents of Amurru would sacrifice their own first borne, including famous enemies, burning their bodies and placing the ashes within urns in the foundation of any major new sacred temple –in later centuries within a hollow “foundation stone” – a practice of interring cursed and bound spirits to their remains that continues in ritual, if not in practice to the present day. |
| |
However the greatest use of human remains to curse the dead and compel their spirits to protect buildings and the living is through the Roman Cult, also known as the Vatican, also known as the Holy See. |
| |
Unlike any other group in history, the Roman Cult is obsessive in the use of human remains and curses to bind spiritual energy as protection. |
| |
The remains of dead Roman Emperors were used as the false remains of non-existent Popes- in the process placing great satanic curses upon the remains to bind them to duty to the Cult. The temples of the Cult are full of the remains of those sacrificed on the very altars in defiance to the public image and claims of sanctity and the very laws that cursed the world issued by the Roman Cult as Papal Bulls (Ba’al) have historically been written on the skin of victims and famous heretics.
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
Copyright © One-Evil.org 2011. All Rights Reserved |