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Thread: Introducing Hésus, the Ancient Celtic Version of Jesus That You Probably Never Heard Of

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    Introducing Hésus, the Ancient Celtic Version of Jesus That You Probably Never Heard Of

    I was reading a book about the symbolism of Druidism and related ancient religions/spiritual practices, published in 1849, called Étude sur le symbolisme druidique. It's written by Th. Prosper Le Blanc and can be found for free on Google books here.

    This book explains that in the Gaulish religion (of ancient Gaul, modern-day France), there was a "supreme god" whose name has been lost to time. This supreme deity was represented by a trinity of three deities, each representing a different aspect of this god: "Teut," "Bal the black," and "Kor."

    The ancient Celts were all about some triads:






    The gods of the Celtic tribes of ancient Ireland, Britain and France often represented celestial events and marked the progression of the seasons. For example, during the first half of the year, between the winter solstice and the summer solstice, the Sun grows in power, higher and higher in the sky, and this time is divided into 6 months represented by male gods, and this is the time of planting. The next 6 months, from the summer solstice to the winter solstice, the Sun moves farther down the sky, and loses power as the weather becomes colder, and these 6 months are represented by goddesses. This is the time of harvesting.

    In the pages centering on page 86 of this book (94 of the PDF), it's explained that the supreme god (out of which all the other gods arise) has a home in the North and comes out of that part of the sky and moves toward the West. (Note that when the Sun is the most towards the North, this is the time of the summer solstice and the warmest part of the month in the Northern Hemisphere.)

    When the Sun goes into the West, it's said to enter the realm of a goddess of chaos. Also, the metaphysical supreme god incarnates into a human form known as Hu, Héus or Hésus.


    So just to recap, we have an ancient Celtic god, which is both a unity and trinity at the same time (like the doctrine of the Trinity in Christianity), and when this god incarnates into a human form, he is sometimes known as Hésus (which would be pronounced exactly as the name Jesus is in Spanish today).
    Last edited by bsbray, 28th August 2015 at 05:51. Reason: Updated characters to new unicode standard

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    The religion and spiritual practices of ancient Celtic tribes, especially pre-Roman, in the regions of Ireland, Britain, France, northern Spain, etc., are not well understood today. There seems to be very little to go off of. But maybe their knowledge is still with us, and we're just looking in the wrong places.

    We know that in the time of the man we now call Saint Patrick, the Irish were already using the symbol of the trinity, which made converting them to Christianity slightly easier since Christianity also employed the trinity. Why the Irish were using a triad symbol or what exactly that represented is usually neglected, and there doesn't seem to be much information about it in general. The information I posted above would shed a lot of light on this.

    Halloween, Christmas and Easter also originated as pagan holidays. In Europe many more holidays are observed which are pagan in origin, such as Michaelmas.

    The best place to hide something is often "in plain sight," and this seems to be the case for some of the ancient Celtic beliefs. They seem to have been incorporated directly into Christianity. The doctrine of the trinity, the idea of a metaphysical god incarnating into a human form (this was actually a common belief/practice for most/all Celtic deities, who were represented by human priests that took on the name and attributes of their god), and possibly even the rite of communion were taken from Celtic practices. The Celts and Germanic peoples also both honored virgins as sacred.


    Jesus is said to have been dead for 3 days, resurrecting on the 3rd day. During the winter solstice, the Sun also moves to its lowest point on the horizon, and appears not to move at all for 3 days, after which time it reverses its course and begins to "resurrect" its warmth in moving back towards the summer solstice to repeat the cycle all over again.


    Here is a video I was looking for that goes into a lot of this:

    Last edited by bsbray, 5th May 2015 at 02:12.

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    I thought that you may enjoy this.

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    As I understand it, it goes like this. There were two Jesus figures historically, both related. One was in Portugal, Jesus as of the Algarde or maybe it was Algarve I'd have to look but its a second cousin to the one supposedly who rose again.

    This one, the one that went to England and laid out the ground work for it is where the royals claim their right to rule, by tracing to this one. Its also why they have their children circumcised but that is another story. The entire history as we know it is false, based on the "Pauline" doctrine of the new approved Roman State Religion.

    So Jesus, the figure we know in Galilee or north of there actually existed and he was a problem for Rome, this both politically and diplomatically because he was unmovable. They did try to kill him. It failed. It was a violation because he was a royal line and Rome didn't know what to do with him and this was known. He also had a following and many of the followers practiced the peace be with you rituals and more associated with Christianity yes.

    What they did was set him up and offered him his own kingdom to the north if he would just go away! Literally they created the story of the rising again to lay the foundation for his grand entrance into the new Celt territory where his reputation for miracles, rising the dead, making water into wine, and more all preceded his arrival. By the time he escorted there with his people he came in and designed and laid out the ground work used in London today and not referring to the queen or king so much as the mayor of London, the real power behind the throne.

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