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Key Facts |
| Other names |
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| Born |
325 |
| Location |
Rome |
| Bloodline |
Unknown |
| Married |
Unknown |
| Children |
Unknown |
| Pope |
352-366 |
| Died |
366 |
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Background |
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A Pope that has since been "written out" of the ancient line of saints by the Roman Catholic Church. Much is written about an alleged feud between Pope Liberius and Emperor Constantius II and how therefore anything that was done by the Enperor was at his own request. |
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This is conveniently at odds with the acts of history at the time. Constantius II towards the end of his life was fanatically devoted to the cause of the Roman Catholic Church view of the world. Some of the earliest recorded acts of pure satanic mass murder occurred under the reign of Constantius and advice of Liberius. |
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The Papacy of Constantinople, nominally the most powerful of the churches at the time remained in turmoil from the bloody war between Pope Paul and Pope Macedonius. |
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Liberius was arrested and exiled by no earlier than 359 to Beroea in the ancient region of Thrace and an "anti-Pope" being appointed to Rome on account of some antagonism to signing the condemnation of Athanasius. |
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A likely chain of events is a review of permission and powers of Liberius upon his use of Imperior pro-Christian decrees to usher in a historic period of evil and cruelty. There is no doubt that the barbaric acts of Christians at the time would have caused extreme backlash and the Emperor probably considered it prudent to banish Liberius. |
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After the death of the emperor Constantius in 361, Liberius returned to full power. |
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Most Evil Crimes |
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List of most evil crimes |
| Type |
Year |
Crime |
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Of establishing an unlawful enterprise for the purpose of crime: (354 CE) That upon the execution of the request by Christian leaders Emperor Flavius Julius Constantius for the closure of all remaining Greek pagan Temples of the Roman Empire, that the Christian church did enslave former female clergy as prostitutes and convert key Temples into the first international network of brothels in history. Furthermore, that money paid to the sex slaves was then paid to the Christian Church as revenue. |
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Of deprivation of fundamental human rights: (356 CE) That Emperor Flavius Julius Constantius upon the request of christian leaders did order the death penalty for all forms of worship involving idolatry or pagan sacrifices. |
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Of deprivation of fundamental human rights: (357 CE) That Emperor Flavius Julius Constantius upon the request of christian leaders did ban all forms of science and divination, excluding astrology. |
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Of establishing an unlawful enterprise for the purpose of crime: (359 CE) That Syrian Christian leaders, being blood descendents of the satanic noble Jewish families of the Sadducees did organize for the first time in history, death camps for the sole purpose of processing people for human sacrifice with full approval and knowledge of the most senior church leaders and families that control Christianity. That these death camps were organised for the regular intake of new victims and their processing for satanic human sacrifice, especially women and children. That at least one of these death camps was established at Skythopolis, Syria with another most probably near Heliopolis as a historic home for ancient Judaic human sacrifice. That Patrophilus, alleged Bishop of Scythopolis is claimed to have overseen death camp however has been deliberately and wrongly been described by christian scholars as Arian to blame Arians, not Nicaean christians and jewish sadducee families from coordinating ongoing human sacrifices. That this prototype model of death camps for human sacrifice was then improved throughout the centuries by the christian church before being perfected as continuous mass human burning under the Catholic Nazi Regime in World War II. |
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Of extortion associated with moral indecency and depravity for the purpose of promoting the slave trade:
That the church under the authority of Pope Liberius at the Council at Gangra in Asia Minor, in 362 AD, did make it known that any person found telling a slave to despise his master or withdraw from his service shall be excommunicated. That this action was done with the deliberate intent of ending the Roman tradition enabling slaves to ultimately buy their freedom and be emancipated. Instead, by implication, Pope Liberius and the church ended the notion of emancipation and introduced the forced spiritual threat of permanent social slavery, or serfdom. |
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