Key Facts
 Born 9 BCE
 Location  Jerusalem
Bloodline House of Annas
Married Yes
Children Several, including Matthias
Position High Priest 36 -37 and 44 CE and 1st Pope of Antioch 63-71
Died 70 CE (aged 79)

 
 Source of Facts and Important Announcement
Status Under Article 64.6 of the Covenant of One-Heaven (Pactum De Singularis Caelum) by Special Qualification shall be known as a Saint, with all sins and evil acts they performed forgiven.
Date of formal Beatification   Day of Redemption UCA[E1:Y1:A1:S1:M9:D1] also known as Fri, 21 Dec 2012.
Source of Facts Self Confession and Revelation of Sainthood by the Deceased Spirit as condition of their confirmation as a true Saint.
  Background
  Born around 8/9 BCE to Annas the Elder, to the Boethus/Annas Priestly dynasty that dominated the Temple of Jerusalem from 25 BCE to its destruction in 70 CE.
  Theophilus was High Priest around 37 to 41 CE. As a member of the House of Annas, he was instrumental by 44 CE in the commissioning of exiled "messiah" Nethanel (Dositheus) also known as Barabbas (son of the father) and later Saul or St. Paul the Apostle as a counterfeit movement to quash the Nazarene philosophy.
  This included the creation of fake scriptures and the deliberate inclusion of the Jewish scripture (Old Testament) in direct opposition to the Gnostic scriptures written by Jesus himself and his apostles.
  In 50 CE when James the Just excommunicated Saul as the first heretic of the true faith of Jesus, it appears that Theophilus and the House of Annas separated official ties with Saul (St. Paul). Rather than ceasing to develop the counter philosophy further, it appears this period is the birth of the Boethusian religion, which later became known as Eastern Christianity or Orthodox Christianity.
  In 62 CE, Theophilus was probably intimately involved in the conspiracy and eventual assassination of James the Just, the blood brother of Jesus and was subsequently arrested with the rest of his family and sent to Rome for trial.
  It was his nephew, Josephus also known as St. Luke and Flavius Josephus who brilliantly saved the House of Annas from extinction. Theophilus however was exiled to Antioch.
  In Antioch, Theophilus became the founding Patriarch, or "Pope" of Antioch of Eastern Christianity, known then as the Boethusians. In spite of the family being acknowledged as the founders of a new religion in heresy to Judaism, his son Matthias returned to Jerusalem and in 65-66 became the last High Priest before the revolt.
  Unlike the Paulinists, later known as the Western Christians or Catholics, the Boethusians were not considered to be part of the mass murder of over 200,000 innocent Romans during the arsons of Paul and the 1st Roman Pope, Prince Linus of Britain.
  While Paulinists were hunted down and executed by Imperial edict across the Empire, the Boethusians for a time enjoyed the continued growth in popularity across the Eastern Empire.
  On the death of Theophilus around 70/71 CE, he was succeeded as Pope by his grandson also named Theophilus. This is not reflected in the official christian list of succession, to principally hide the dynastic and herediary nature of the foundation of christianity.
  His great grandson Matias, also known as "Pappas" and "Polycarp" is recognized as one of the great philosophers of Christianity and the great great grandson of Theophilus whos name is known as St. Irenaeus is attributed with establishing many of the key theological doctrines of orthodoxy of christianity, including the elimination of heretical strands.
   

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