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War of Ideas: The Battle of the Neurosphere for the Noosphere
“Destruction, sin, evil, in short, is all My sphere, the element I most prefer.” Mephistopheles There is an ancient war on this earth that has been happening since the beginning of time. This battle has been fought by every man, woman, and child regardless of their...
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How the venerable Suidbert in Britain, and Wilbrord at Rome, were ordained bishops for Frisland [692 A.D.] | Book 5 | Chapter 10
AT their first coming into Frisland, as soon as Wilbrord found that he had leave given him by the prince to preach there, he made haste to go to Rome, where Pope Sergius then presided over the Apostolic see, that he might undertake the desired work of preaching the...
How one in the province of the Northumbrians, rose from the dead, and related many things which he had seen, some to be greatly dreaded and some to be desired [Circ. 696 A.D.] | Book 5 | Chapter 11
AT this time a memorable miracle, and like to those of former days, was wrought in Britain; for, to the end that the living might be roused from the death of the soul, a certain man, who had been some time dead, rose again to the life of the body, and related many...
How another contrarywise before his death saw a book containing his sins, which was shown him by devils [704-709 A.D.] | Book 5 | Chapter 12
BUT contrarywise there was a man in the province of the Mercians, whose visions and words, but not his manner of life, were of profit to others, though not to himself. In the reign of Coenred, who succeeded Ethelred, there was a layman who was a king’s thegn, no less...
How another in like manner, being at the point of death, saw the place of punishment appointed for him in Hell | Book 5 | Chapter 13
I MYSELF knew a brother, would to God I had not known him, whose name I could mention if it were of any avail, dwelling in a famous monastery, but himself living infamously. He was oftentimes rebuked by the brethren and elders of the place, and admonished to be...
How divers churches of the Scots, at the instance of Adamnan, adopted the Catholic Easter; and how the same wrote a book about the holy places [703 A.D.] | Book 5 | Chapter 14
AT this time a great part of the Scots in Ireland, and some also of the Britons in Britain, by the grace of God, adopted the reasonable and ecclesiastical time of keeping Easter. For when Adamnan, priest and abbot of the monks that were in the island of Hii, was sent...
The account given in the aforesaid book of the place of our Lord’s Nativity, Passion, and Resurrection | Book 5 | Chapter 15
HE wrote concerning the place of the Nativity of our Lord, after this manner: "Bethlehem, the city of David, is situated on a narrow ridge, encompassed on all sides with valleys, being a mile in length from west to east, and having a low wall without towers, built...
What he likewise wrote of the place of our Lord’s Ascension, and the tombs of the patriarchs | Book 5 | Chapter 16
CONCERNING the place of our Lord’s Ascension, the aforesaid author writes thus. "The Mount of Olives is equal in height to Mount Sion, but exceeds it in breadth and length; it bears few trees besides vines and olives, and is fruitful in wheat and barley, for the...
How the South Saxons received Eadbert and Eolla, and the West Saxons, Daniel and Aldhelm, for their bishops; and of the writings of the same Aldhelm [705 A.D.] | Book 5 | Chapter 17
IN the year of our Lord 705, Aldfrid, king of the Northumbrians, died before the end of the twentieth year of his reign. His son Osred, a boy about eight years of age, succeeding him in the throne, reigned eleven years. In the beginning of his reign, Haedde, bishop of...
How Coinred, king of the Mercians, and Offa, king of the East Saxons, ended their days at Rome, in the monastic habit; and of the life and death of Bishop Wilfrid [709 A. D.] | Book 5 | Chapter 18
IN the fourth year of the reign of Osred, Coenred, who had for some time nobly governed the kingdom of the Mercians, much more nobly quitted the sceptre of his kingdom. For he went to Rome, and there receiving the tonsure and becoming a monk, when Constantine was...
How Albinus succeeded to the godly Abbot Hadrian, and Acca to Bishop Wilfrid [709 A.D.] | Book 5 | Chapter 19
THE next year after the death of the aforesaid father, which was the fifth year of King 0sred, the most reverend father, Abbot Hadrian, fellow labourer in the Word of God with Bishop Theodore of blessed memory, died, and was buried in the church of the Blessed Mother...
How the Abbot Ceolfrid sent master-builders to the King of the Picts to build a church, and with them an epistle concerning the catholic Easter and the Tonsure [710 A.D.] | Book 5 | Chapter 20
AT that time, Naiton, King of the Picts, who inhabit the northern parts of Britain, taught by frequent meditation on the ecclesiastical writings, renounced the error whereby he and his nation had been holden till then, touching the observance of Easter, and brought...
How the monks of Hii, and the monasteries subject to them, began to celebrate the canonical Easter at the preaching of Egbert [716 A. D.] | Book 5 | Chapter 21
NOT long after, those monks also of the Scottish nation, who lived in the isle of Hii, with the other monasteries that were subject to them, were by the Lord’s doing brought to the canonical observance with regard to Easter, and the tonsure. For in the year of our...
Of the present state of the English nation, or of all Britain [725-731 A.D.] | Book 5 | Chapter 22
IN the year of our Lord 725, being the seventh year of Osric, king of the Northumbrians, who had succeeded Coenred, Wictred, the son of Egbert, king of Kent, died on the 23rd of April, and left his three sons, Ethelbert, Eadbert, and Alric, heirs of that kingdom,...
Chronological recapitulation of the whole work: also concerning the author himself | Book 5 | Chapter 23
I HAVE thought fit briefly to sum up those things which have been related at length under their particular dates, that they may be the better kept in memory. In the sixtieth year before the Incarnation of our Lord, Caius Julius Caesar, first of the Romans invaded...
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Illustrations of Masonry by William Morgan [1827] Start Reading This book has a controversial backstory which is part of the mythology of anti-Freemasonry. 'Captain' William Morgan, the author, was a disappointed Freemason in Batavia, New York....
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