Last Days of Peter the Rock
Oklahoma Summer, 2014
Peter in Cimejes Camp |
Peter, as most interested followers know, was called the Rock by Jesus, There are a lot of stories as to just what this means, but very few have any proof, so the story of Peter goes onward with no biblical facts of it reality. Sad but true.
The bible does clearly say that Jesus had the disciple drinking wine with each meal, as well as in between. In a ligature study, it's necessary to find out way 'wine' was a major issue with the Lord. One such theory here at KAPB is that the Disciple Peter is a prelude to a Xerxes. Through the use of wine, the human body coloring is altered to a golden yellow, much like a Goetia Marchosias would look...both Marchosias, Cimejes, and Asmoseus have important roles in the Western Christian orders.
Peter entering the stage of Xerxes through the use of red wine |
In the Disney movie production entitled, Prince of Persia, the adventure centers around the fable of a ghetto boy who become a prince of Iraq. The father king is an aging Xerxes and the brother in line for the crown is a younger King Xerxes. Whether a fable or the visual delusion, the tale is about returning to times before a great disaster happened called, by them, an 'Armageddon'. In history, King Xerxes is the grandson of King Darius. Darius, though over-throw the Greek world, returned home in defeat because of a horrific tempest at sea that destroyed the Persian world as it was known.
P of Persia, Dasdan aka Peter |
The similarities are numerous between the Holy Bible's disciple Peter and Iraqi fable of a ghetto prince. All in all, the two persons are inter-connected because of the use of wine to create a king from a simple peasant fisherman...fisherman being the connection between the stories.
P of Persia, Dasdan aka Peter |
Wherefore, it's no surprise that portraits of both men seem to resemble each other. And, with the Nazarene Christian Church is really a Muslim Christian church, it's little wonder that the two men, Peter and Dasdan would look much like each other. Does it make a realistic assumption between the two? Yes, it does. A good Eastern Studies bible lesson will show a reader why the two are one and the same.