Wednesday, May 21, 2008

The JESUIT Coat of Arms of Geneva

From


http://z13.invisionfree.com/THE_UNHIVED_MIND/index.php?showtopic=55250


OH I SEE A SOMETHING POPPING IT'S HEAD
OUT INTO THE WORLD. DOES IT NOT LOOK
LIKE A JESUIT ORDER SUN SYMBOL AND
THEIR LOGO? OH I SEE IN HOC SIGNO OF
THE ORDER. OH WHAT A SHOCK.

user posted image

TAKE NOTE OF THE ISIS WORSHIP WITH THE
WAVEY RAYS WHILST OSIRIAN WORSHIP
WITH THE STRAIGHT RAYS. WE NOTICE ONE
HALF OF THE JANUS LINKED TO THE GAELIC
NAME OF GENEVA. THIS WESTERN EAGLE IS
WEARING THE SUN CROWN OF LIFE AS USUAL.


 


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QUOTE
See:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chi_Ro

also see the images at the lower right of this email.

That IHS/Sun symbol in the Geneva coat of arms may well have dated from the 15th Century & pre-Jesuits, for did not the Illuminati that Ignatius L. belong to pre-exist the Jesuits? Surely this symbol cold have easily been theirs to? I would suggest it unlikely that what was called the Alumbrados in Spain ("Illuminated Ones") was merely restricted to that region.

In Christ -

Troy











QUOTE
Its use in the West originated with St. Bernardine of Siena, a 13th Century priest who popularized the use of the three letters on the background of a blazing sun to displace both popular pagan symbols and seals of political factions like the Guelphs and Ghibellines in public spaces. One of the oldest Christograms is the Chi-Rho or Labarum. It consists of the superimposed Greek letters Chi ×; and Rho Ñ, which are the first two letters of christ in Greek. Technically, the word labarum is Latin for a standard with a little flag hanging on it, used in the army. A Christogram was added to the flag as an image of the Greek letters Chi Rho, in the late Roman period. So Christogram and labarum are not originally synonyms.
The most commonly encountered Christogram in English-speaking countries in modern times is the X (or more accurately, Greek letter Chi) in the abbreviation Xmas (for "Christmas"), which represents the first letter of the word Christ.

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