Difference between revisions of "131:0 The World's Religions"

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131:0.2 There is presented herewith an [[abstract]] of Ganid's [[manuscript]], which he [[prepared]] at [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandria Alexandria] and [[Rome]], and which was preserved in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India India] for hundreds of years after his [[death]]. He collected this [[material]] under ten heads, as follows:
 
131:0.2 There is presented herewith an [[abstract]] of Ganid's [[manuscript]], which he [[prepared]] at [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandria Alexandria] and [[Rome]], and which was preserved in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India India] for hundreds of years after his [[death]]. He collected this [[material]] under ten heads, as follows:
  
<center>[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_131 Go to Paper 131]</center>
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<center>[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_131 Go to Paper 131]</center>
<center>[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_Urantia_Text_-_Contents Go to Table of Contents]</center>
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<center>[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_Urantia_Text_-_Contents Go to Table of Contents]</center>
  
 
[[Category: Paper 131 - The World's Religions]]
 
[[Category: Paper 131 - The World's Religions]]
 
[[Category: Tradition]]
 
[[Category: Tradition]]

Revision as of 21:38, 12 December 2020

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131:0.1 During the Alexandrian sojourn of Jesus, Gonod, and Ganid, the young man spent much of his time and no small sum of his father's money making a collection of the teachings of the world's religions about God and his relations with mortal man. Ganid employed more than threescore learned translators in the making of this abstract of the religious doctrines of the world concerning the Deities. And it should be made plain in this record that all these teachings portraying monotheism were largely derived, directly or indirectly, from the preachments of the missionaries of Machiventa Melchizedek, who went forth from their Salem headquarters to spread the doctrine of one God—the Most High—to the ends of the earth.

131:0.2 There is presented herewith an abstract of Ganid's manuscript, which he prepared at Alexandria and Rome, and which was preserved in India for hundreds of years after his death. He collected this material under ten heads, as follows:

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