Loyola the Luciferian

Gaming

Ignatius of Loyola – Luciferian or Heliopolitan:

It is not a joke! Lucifer is the ‘light bearer’ and just as Hitler was a ‘torch bearer of Jesus’, we have the Luciferians within the Catholic Church to this day, as I have covered from people like Malachi Martin who was an advisor papal of three popes. and he taught Jewish studies (Kabbalah?) at the Vatican College until recently. In fact, all the Alumbrados (means Illuminati) people are ‘light bearers’ or people who need ‘light’. That includes Rodrigo Borgia (Pope Alexander VI), who I have dealt with in many books. I already mentioned that this Idiot’s Guide makes no mention of the Alumbrados founding the Jesuits or any related intrigue, including even the mere mention of Hibernians like Thomas Carlyle, Goethe, Saint Bernard as one, and other related things. This doesn’t surprise me one bit. Read Ignatius Loyola’s description of Jesus and think long and hard about whether I’m right about his being inspired by sun worship or the heliopolitanism of the Druids; that he is the foundation of the Freemasons according to Thomas Paine, who was further up the ‘octopus’.

“The Society of Jesus was founded by Ignatius of Loyola, who could be seen as the Catholic Reformation equivalent of Martin Luther. {Whose name also suggests Lucifer.} Loyola has been mentioned as one of the most important, if not the most important–figures of the Catholic Reformation.

Loyola was born Iñigo de Oñez y Loyola around 1491. He was born in his family’s ancestral castle in Guipúzcoa. When he was old enough, he entered the military service, where he served until 1521 when he was seriously wounded in battle. During her recovery from his injuries, he read about the lives of the saints in the church and was motivated to dedicate his life to spiritual service. He hung up his sword and spent a year in prayer and meditation in a cave near the Manresa monastery. While there, Loyola fasted, knelt in prayer for seven hours a day, and flogged himself to the point of endangering his health. {I grew up near a Manresa Lodge that had weird stuff and I often wonder when I see it in places like Sedona or other religious land based areas. I’m sure he talked to them or received instructions from them at this time.}

Loyola later described this time as an incredible ‘mystical’ experience during which he had blinding visions of heaven and hell and of Christ and Satan. He saw Jesus as ‘a great round shape that shines like gold’…

…Loyola and the Jesuits welcomed only those whose spirituality reflected their {NB} and those who were willing to engage in unquestioning obedience to the Pope. {Giving up their possessions like the Templars as well.} Any applicant who had even a hint of bad temper or unorthodoxy was rejected. {In fact? What orthodoxy could that be?}…

…The mission of the Jesuits was to educate the young, to bring people from Protestantism to Catholicism, and to carry the Catholic message to new areas of the world.

They were successful in all three efforts.” (3)

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