− | 131:0.1 During the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandria 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]]. | + | 131:0.1 During the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandria 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 [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 [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandria Alexandria] and [[Rome]], and which was preserved in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India India] for hundreds of years after his [[death]]. He collected this [[material]] under ten heads, as follows: |