Brotherhood of the Sun: A Modern Story about an Ancient Order
Patrick Cain
175 pages, Paperback
ISBN: 0965922316
ISBN13:
Language: English
Publish: 1170057600000
21st CenturyAdultAfrican AmericanAmericanContemporaryFictionLiterary FictionNovelsRaceThriller
Brotherhood of the Sun is not another templar tale or masonic fabrication. It is an intelligent conspiracy-thriller with profound religious and historical implications. Brotherhood of the Sun penetrates the dense fog of speculative conspiracy literature and exposes the gospel truth. It cuts through literary artifice (Priory of Sion, Magadelene myth, et. al.) with razor sharp logic (solid historical facts) and weaves together an intriguing story chock-full of myth-shattering realizations — like Masonry’s and Christianity’s solar foundation. Novel insights – The gospel story is an astronomical tale (celestial myth). – The Holy Bible is a Sun Book (Helios Biblios). – Is-Ra-El and Sol-Om-On are astrotheological designations. – The 12 tribes of Israel and 12 disciples of Jesus represent the 12 signs of the zodiac. – The Celtic cross was derived from a mariner’s astrolabe. – The Christian cross came from an astronomer’s cross-staff. – Archaeoastronomical sites, like Stonehenge and the Pyramids, were part of a global celestial navigation and universal time-keeping network. – The Roman Empire stemmed from Rama’s Empire. – Rome was founded on Rama’s birthday — April, 753 B.C. – The Brahman priesthood created the Chrishna legend. – The Roman aristocracy concocted the Christ myth. – The Druidic Hesus and Hindu Chrishna were fused into a supreme solar diety, Jesus Christ — Sun of God. – The Atlantean civilization was a prehistoric global maritime monopoly and colonial empire. – Plato’s Republic inspired Bacon’s Atlantis, which, along with Virgil’s Aeneid, became America’s blueprint. An important distinction and startling revelation that sets this novel apart from others of this genre is that it posits Jesus Christ was neither human or divine, but rather pure myth. While others regard the gospel’s god-man as a historical personage, Brotherhood of the Sun leads readers to the inescapable conclusion that Christianity’s supernatural savior never even existed — except in the imaginations of the clever cosmomythologists who concocted him and the superstitious masses who believed them. In short, Brotherhood of the Sun leapfrogs current historical-conspiracy works as well as upcoming Templar/Masonic/Illuminati fables.