Category: Religious Revisionism

  • Demiurge

    In esoteric and conspiracy-oriented traditions, the Demiurge is described as the false creator of the material world: a lesser cosmic ruler who fashions physical reality, traps divine consciousness in matter, and obscures the existence of the true transcendent Source above him. In classical philosophy the Demiurge appears as a cosmic craftsman, but in Gnostic systems he becomes an ignorant, arrogant, or even oppressive architect of the visible world, often identified with Yaldabaoth, Samael, or Saklas and surrounded by archonic powers that maintain the prison of material existence.

  • Bloodline of the Lineage of Jesus

    This theory holds that Jesus did not leave history without descendants, but established a hidden royal bloodline through Mary Magdalene that survived the crucifixion era, passed into southern France, and later merged with the Merovingian dynastic stream. In this framework, the Holy Grail is not a cup but the vessel of that bloodline, preserved in secret through esoteric traditions, noble houses, and hidden guardians across the centuries.

  • Jahova was a Space Alien

    This theory argues that Jahova was not a supreme spiritual being, but an advanced non-human entity or group of entities who used aerial craft, overwhelming force, and religious deception to control the Hebrews and shape early monotheism. In this interpretation, biblical descriptions of smoke, thunder, fire, trumpet-like noise, and moving pillars in the sky are treated as observations of technology rather than miracles, while Jahova’s violent commands, territorial warfare, and manipulation of rival peoples are seen as the behavior of a powerful extraterrestrial ruler rather than a universal God.

  • Yahweh Is an Anunnaki

    This theory holds that Yahweh was not the singular infinite God later theology made him out to be, but one member of a larger ruling class of powerful beings known across civilizations by different names, including the Anunnaki in Mesopotamia and the Elohim in the Hebrew Bible. In this framework, the Old Testament preserves the history of a territorial covenant between one such being and a specific people, while later religious tradition universalized that local figure into the sole creator of the cosmos.