The greatest fraud ever invented; the greatest fraud the world has ever known. God, the creator of the world, and his son Jesus, the savior of the world. of this Jesus, Pope Leo X (1475-1521) said: "How well we know what a profitable superstition this fable of Christ has been for us". (Doane's Bible Myths, p. 438). And the son is greater than the Father. Jesus personifies the Sun of our universe, while his Father is only the personification of an Ancient Symbol. The ancient Hindus called the Sun Kris. Their Krishna was a personification of the Sun, and they worshipped him as such. The English added "T" to Kris, making it Krist, then changed the spelling to Christ to deceive the masses. Similar fraudulent tricks were used by the church fathers in the invention of their God. The Ancient Masters had an ingenuous Symbol that embodied the Four Principles of Creation..
In the 4th Century A.C., the Church Fathers stole the secret word of the Ancient Masters, which symbolized the four cosmic principles of creation, changed the meaning of the "Secret Word" to indicate their God, then destroyed the ancient mysteries and the ancient literature to hide their crime, and slaughtered more than seventy million people to make the work believe in the fraud that evolved into . -Professor Hilton Hotema
Hotema’s The Mysterious Sphinx reads like a wake-up call to those seeking a deeper understanding of ancient wisdom buried beneath religious dogma. He argues that early church leaders deliberately distorted spiritual teachings, replacing symbolic truths with literal interpretations to control the masses.
At its core, this book explores the deeper meaning behind ancient symbols, particularly the Sphinx and the concept of “animal sacrifice.” Hotema explains that these sacrifices weren’t about killing animals but about overcoming our lower nature—our base instincts. He reframes biblical fire not as hellfire, but as a creative and transformative energy within the human being, especially centered in the spine.
Hotema’s message is simple yet powerful: man is not an animal, nor is he born in sin. He is a divine being capable of great things if he learns to master himself. The book makes a strong case that true spiritual power comes not from worship or belief, but from inner discipline, knowledge, and the courage to rise above programmed behavior.
Hotema is a five-star esoteric writer in every sense—clear, fearless, and packed with truth. That said, I don’t give five stars to books under 100 pages. At 72 pages, this one comes close, but the brevity holds it just shy of that mark.