Patrick Scrivener #fundie reformation.org
THE BABYLONIAN CAPTIVITY OF BRITANNIA IN 1066!!
THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY DEPICTS WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR AS KING NEBUCHADNEZZAR,
AND KING HAROLD OF ENGLAND AS THE BLINDED JEWISH KING ZEDEKIAH.
IT WAS WILLIAM WHO WAS BLIND . . . AND NOT HAROLD!!
In 1520, Saint Martin Luther published his magnum opus entitled On the Babylonian Captivity of the Church. His main theme was that the Papacy was Mystery Babylon which had taken the Church captive. St. Martin saw himself as a last days Nehemiah raised up to rebuild the spiritual Temple after the previous 1,000 years desolation.
That book caused consternation at the Vatican, and Saint Martin was ordered to disavow it . . . or face a fiery death . . . like the 3 Hebrew teenagers in King Nebuchadnezzar's fiery furnace (Daniel 3:11).
Even though he wrote a brilliant rebuttal to Sir Thomas More's The Defence of the Seven Sacraments, the Saint did not know that 450 years previously, Satan had established another Babylon . . . not on the Tiber . . . but on the THAMES!
The Bayeux Tapestry is on display at the Musée de la Tapisserie de Bayeux in Normandy.
It contains the only account of the most momentous event in European history since the conquest of Roma by Emperor Jesus Constantine in 313.
It is a miracle that the tapestry has survived at all. Millions of Britons have viewed and admired the tapestry, but failed to comprehend its hidden meaning. The person who designed the tapestry had a very thorough knowledge of the Latin Vulgate Version. The most likely culprit was Bishop Odo of Bayeux—half-brother of William the Conqueror.
The tapestry depicts the epic 1066 Battle of Hastings between King Harold of England and the invader William of Normandy. At stake was the very fate of the nation for centuries to come.