Chapter 13 – The Legacy of Constantine
Chapter 13: The Legacy of Constantine Chapter 13 exposes how the Roman Empire—under Emperor Constantine—absorbed and preserved the ancient pagan system of Babel, carrying the legacy of the Nephilim into the foundations of Western religion. This chapter reveals how Constantine’s reforms reshaped Scripture, altered sacred names, and replaced biblical truth with the traditions of sun-worship and Babylonian rituals. Here you will learn how Rome created a new deity, manipulated translations, erased the Names Yahuah and Yahusha, inserted foreign concepts like the Trinity, cross, Christian, Christ, and enforced a counterfeit canon. The chapter also uncovers the real origins of Christmas (Saturnalia), Sol Invictus (December 25), and the shift from Shabbath to Sunday, exposing the imperial strategy that merged Babylonian sun-worship with Roman state religion. You will clearly understand how Constantine changed the biblical calendar, renamed the days and months after pagan gods, abolished Yahuah’s feasts, and replaced them with festivals dedicated to Saturn, Tammuz, and other deities rooted in the Nephilim lineage.
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(The Babylonian heritage of the Roman Empire)
13.1 From Babel to Rome: The continuity of pagan worship under a new face
In the time of Emperor Constantine, we clearly see the remnant of the Nephilim and their influence, for he inherited all the teachings and beliefs of Babel.
This remnant also appears in the New Testament—implicitly—through the actions of the Pharisees, when Yahusha Himself called them directly the sons of demons (Nephilim) by saying: “Children of Echidna.”
So much so that Yahusha explicitly reveals who their father is—and it is not Yahuah—though many fail to understand this statement.
From the days of Yahusha until today, the world has remained full of the Nephilim remnant, infiltrated into every place, group, and family.
Their favorite activity throughout history has been murdering those who proclaim the words of Yahuah—beginning with the prophets, then Yahusha Himself, and later His disciples and apostles.
13.2 The Creation of the God of the Roman Empire
(The falsification of the divine names and manipulation of the Scriptures)
To consolidate their deception, the Nephilim remnant in Rome carried out a systematic plan:
- They inserted two letters into the alphabet (J and V) to justify the pagan names “Jehovah” and “Jesus.”
- They erased all the names of Yahuah / Yahusha from the Scriptures in every translation—though in the original Hebrew, these names can never be altered.
- They leavened the Scriptures with pagan teachings such as the cross, Christian, Christ, and birthdays.
- They added false sections to justify Nephilim doctrines (such as the Trinity).
- They conquered nations and rebuilt them from scratch under their new religion and their new god.
- They created the so-called “canon”—a list of books they permitted humanity to read—while hiding the true canon guarded by the priestly descendants of Aharon in Qumran.
- They concealed inspired writings, manipulating the term “apocrypha” to make it sound evil or forbidden, when in truth these were the very texts they chose to hide.
- They invented terms and inserted foreign words into Scripture—such as cross (symbol of the demon Tammuz), Trinity, Christ, Christian, God, Lord, Jesus, Jehovah, and others.
- They merged pagan feasts, particularly Saturnalia and Christmas, which were celebrated for two main reasons:
- In honor of Saturn, god of agriculture.
- As a tribute to the victory of a conquering general (festival of triumph).
13.3 Saturnalia and “Christmas”
(From sacrifice to Saturn to the decorated tree: the pagan transformation that survived through time)
(Saturnalia, in honor of Saturn, was introduced around 217 B.C. to lift the spirits of Roman citizens after a military defeat by the Carthaginians at Lake Trasimene.
Officially, it was held on December 17, the day of the dedication of Saturn’s temple in the Roman Forum, marked by sacrifices, feasts (lectisternium), and the loud public cry “Io Saturnalia!”
The people loved it so much that it was unofficially celebrated for seven days, from December 17 to 23, filled with noisy amusements, orgies, feasting, and the exchange of gifts.
The festivities began with a sacrifice at the temple of Saturn—once the most important deity to Romans before Jupiter—at the foot of the Capitol Hill, followed by a public banquet open to all.
Romans associated Saturn, the agricultural protector of crops and guarantor of harvests, with the pre-Hellenic god Cronos, who ruled during the mythical “Golden Age,” when mankind lived happily without social divisions.
During Saturnalia, slaves were often released from their duties and even exchanged roles with their masters.
Over time, “Christmas” was instituted to replace this celebration of Saturn, the king of the sun—where the English word sun became confused with son, making it appear to represent the birth of the “Son of God.”)
13.4 December 24 – Eve of Sol Invictus (Christmas)
(The pagan celebration that marked the birth of religious deception)
(On the eve of December 25 in ancient Rome, families gathered and visited one another in preparation for the coming feast—the winter solstice, marking the rebirth of the sun.
Although Saturnalia, in honor of Saturn, was mainly celebrated from December 17 to 23, the eve of Sol Invictus on December 24 was also a day of social and family rejoicing.)
13.5 Birth of Sol Invictus – December 25
(The day Rome exalted the sun-god as the false Messiah of the world)
(Sol Invictus (“Unconquered Sun”) was a religious cult of the solar deity that arose in the late Roman Empire.
By the 4th century A.D., the festival of the birth of the Unconquered Sun (Dies Natalis Solis Invicti) celebrated the victory of light over darkness.
After the winter solstice (December 25 in the Julian calendar), the days grew longer—symbolizing the rebirth of the sun.
This same date was already celebrated in Rome as the birthday of the Sun, associated with the god Apollo, another solar deity.
Thus, the Roman world declared December 25 as the “holy day” of the new, imperialized sun-god—later rebranded as the birth of the so-called “Christ.”)
13.6 Changing the Shabbath to Sunday
(How imperial power replaced the Creator’s rest with the worship of the sun)
(On March 7, 321 A.D., Emperor Constantine I the Great decreed that Sunday, the “venerable day of the Sun”—later renamed by the Catholic Church as “the Lord’s Day”—should be observed as a day of rest for judges, the people, and tradesmen,
while farmers were permitted to continue working.
This imperial decree formally replaced the divine Shabbath with a solar day of rest, honoring the sun-god rather than Yahuah’s sanctified seventh day.)
13.7 Changing the Names of Days and Months
(The manipulation of the divine calendar to impose pagan worship)
The Romans changed the names of the days of the week and months of the year, replacing them with those of pagan gods and demons—just as humanity knows them today.
Originally, the days were numbered simply as first day, second day, and so forth, much like modern Portuguese still preserves (primeiro dia, segundo dia).
The only named day was Shabbath, meaning rest.
In like manner, the months were renamed to honor demons, pagan deities (Nephilim), or men who followed them—completely erasing the divine order of Yahuah’s calendar.
13.8 Substitution of the Biblical Feasts
(The replacement of the sacred calendar with pagan celebrations disguised as faith)
All the biblical feasts were forgotten and abolished, replaced by pagan or demonic festivals.
Through this manipulation, the Roman system created holidays for every type of demon or false deity, separating humanity entirely from anything connected with Yahuah.
(Tertullian wrote: “For us, to whom Sabbaths are foreign, and the New Moons and festivals once beloved by God, the Saturnalia, the New Year’s festivities, the Winter Solstice, and the Matronalia are now frequented.
Gifts go to and fro; New Year presents are made; games join their noise; banquets join their uproar.
Oh, better fidelity of the nations to their own sect, which does not claim for itself the solemnity of the Christians!
Neither the Day of the Lord nor Pentecost, even if they had known them, would they have shared with us; for they would fear to appear as Christians.”
(Tertullian – On Idolatry))
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