The one book you need that explains how Judaism, Christianity and Islam all came from Egypt. It shows how the monotheism of Akhenaten gave us the God we know today. It explains the Exodus, where the missing tribe of Israel went and who Moses is. We even see why the Druids and Celts became the enemies of Rome and friends of the Templars, Rosicrucians and Freemasons.The book gives you the truth about religion, shows how history gets distorted and confirms that the only path to spiritual enlightenment is the one you're already on. The way out of the minefield of religion is in The Greatest Lie Ever Told.
This book is interesting as an idea, but not interesting enough as a topic for me. The author utilizes archeology and ancient (mostly Egyptian) historical records to expose some inaccuracies of the Bible, to link both the Old and New Testaments to their Egyptian origin, and to introduce the "primitive" form of nationalism in Jewish history. Because I have not read either the Old or the New Testament, I have no idea, but the author summarizes succintly the two before going into the falsity, so I could learn about the stories within the two Testaments. However, the inaccuracies went on and on, without a prominent order other than the chronology, so I lost interests after a while and resorted to skimming the whole thing. Maybe an experienced Bible interpreter might find this book of great interest.
An amazing and comprehensive book, well researched and fully referenced. It takes the reader back to Egypt to discover the origins of Judaism within the religion of Akhenaten. The latest archaeology supports the explanation. The author then looks at how Christianity too, evolved from much later Egyptian religion brought to the Ancient Greeks by Pythagoras.
The history of the corruption of Christianity is clearly explained, and how various covert groups tried to keep the original teachings alive, even to the founding of the new world in America.
The appendices, on Islam and the Roman Catholic Church's research into the Afterlife, alone were worth reading the book for.