Pagan Romans rulers killed Jesus, not Jews
- From: Reporting <rep@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 06 Jan 2006 01:19:57 GMT
The pagan Romans killed anyone who spoke about "a new kingdom which
isn't run by the pagan Romans". The victims were Christians, Jews and
anyone else who wouldn't worship the pagan gods and the emperor himself
as god.
Jews and Christians had a lot more in common with each other than they
did with
the pagans. The pharisees who resented Jesus had been installed by their
pagan Roman rulers, and they were told not to allow any dissent, or they
themselves would be killed. They acted specifically at pagan Rome's
bidding, or they would face the death penalty.
The pagan Roman empire was a very different society from ours today.
While pagan
Rome was quick to find new building techniques someone invented to use
throughout the empire, we must remember the pagan Roman empire was also
a very repressive slave state. It was a society where it was perfectly
legal for a person to;
lie to anyone (except to a pagan ruler above him),
kill crippled people (unless a pagan ruler said not to),
have violent games where players were killed,
spread fake rumors about people (especially if his pagan rulers paid him
to),
have sex with anyone (lots and lots of sexual diseases abounded)
have sex with children,
rape children (higher pagan officials only),
rape any woman (higher pagan officials only),
kill anyone without a trial (higher pagan officials only),
kill anyone who tried to deny the authority of the pagan Roman rulers,
and more.
The above is basically animal-like behavior. It was the "only the
strongest
survive" mentality being promoted by pagan Rome, and this is why the
Jews back then called these pagans "animals", because they acted like
animals. Their pagan society was structured for it. Judaism had banned
all this within the Ten Commandments long before, as did Egypt with its
42 Commandments, but what Jesus was apparently doing was trying to rally
the underclass (Jews and non-Jews alike) to get back into the Ten
Commandments and bring down the pagan tryannical rule along with the
disgusting violence and depravity that was legal back then.
In 300 years the pagan rule ended when Constantine embraced Christianity
and
banned the animal-like, violent pagan practices listed above. Thank God.
.
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