What contributed to Constantine’s success


Many have probably never heard of the Roman Emperor, Claudius Constantine, who ruled the largest empire in the ancient world for more than 30 years. He was charismatic, handsome and some would say a great general. That’s because he wiped out his enemies and his entire families. In other words, he was a brutal dictator who came to ‘abode’ on the death of his father when he rose to the office of Caesar.

However, much of his background is hidden, either by historians or others who may have had ulterior motives. It was given to me to investigate your early history and background when commissioned by the Spirit of the Universe to trace the origin of your religion. This was also triggered by my memory of reincarnation and the knowledge that heaven and hell are myths.

This is important because without understanding where it came from, the history of its time loses important attributes. He was first and foremost a Roman and the knowledge of his origin has been buried and for good reason, which will be explained below.

The Romans didn’t suddenly appear out of nowhere, but we first hear about them through the likes of Julius Caesar and the invasion of Italy. This is where the story often gets muddy or confusing. Before that time, we mostly heard about the Greeks and emperors like Alexander the Great, who defeated Darius III and overthrew the Persian Empire.

That’s what the history books claim, but how accurate is it. The Persians were the original inhabitants of Babylon, their capital city. But they were known by another name: the Amorites or of Amor.

In ancient texts they are described in horrendous terms for their brutality and the overthrow of kings and nations, including Egypt. They spread their religion in those regions and understood the Islamic system, which still dominates the areas today.

The big question is what happened to them after Darius was defeated. They did not fade away or disappear, but reemerged in the Mediterranean, where they continued to conquer nations, kill kings, and enslave people. They built a city as their capital and named it Rome (Reverse Love) and continued to live like the Romans.

Constantine was therefore an Amorite by descent and his religion was Islam. That became the Roman Imperial Religion and when he established the Catholic Church in AD 325, he did so on the model of his faith.

Religion helped him rule his empire while building the Vatican as a parliament of bishops to oversee the provinces and rule them with an iron fist. He gave the church power over life and death and reintroduced Mary, the Babylonian sun god, as the Mother of God. The Trinity was taken from the Vedic Trinity of India and Jerome, who followed it later, wrote the New Testament based on the order of Bishop Damasus. These contributed to Constantine’s success.