Interesting that before 1,000 AD it was considered "heresy" to call the holy fathers of the Old Testament sinners for having several wives, because they did it according to the Perfect Word of the Creator.
Satan indeed is the great deceiver, and the god of this world. Today you're an heretic if you even believe that a man has a God-given right to add wives, and at the same time be righteous and holy. The Perfect Word of the Creator means nothing to the majority.
Also, in St. Augustine's book - "City of God" - he makes the claim that they were living during the age of the 1,000 year reign on Earth with satan "BOUND" in prison.
Now the devil was thus bound not only when the Church began to be more and more widely extended among the nations beyond Judea, but is now and shall be bound till the end of the world, when he is to be loosed.
During this interval, which goes by the name of a thousand years, he shall not seduce the Church
Speaking about Satan's future un-bounding - he says this:
Those who have not been written in the book of life shall in large numbers yield to the severe and unprecedented persecutions and strategies of the devil now loosed.... by God's grace aiding them to understand the Scriptures..... And yet the verse of the Gospel will not be untrue, "Who entereth into the house of the strong one to spoil his goods, unless he shall first have bound the strong one?"
Ok - what about Constantine changing the Sabbath in the 300's?
There is a Russian mathematician. His name is
Anatoly Fomenko. The synthesis of his 40 years of work? There was once a unified empire before 1,000 AD. All of recent written history is merely copying, altering, and repeating a limited set of historical events that have occurred entirely since
1000-1100 AD. In the Geneva Bible notes - they note for Revelation 20 that Satan was released around 1070 AD.
So my question: Did
Constantine change the Sabbath in 300 AD or 1300 AD during the rule of
Constantinople (which fell around 1450 AD)? All over Europe - for example - you have all these countries that have named the 7th day of the week to a word that is similar to "Shabbat." Which leads me to believe that all of these nations were keeping the 7th day Sabbath, therefore, very likely not under Roman Rulership.
It's also interesting - the cathedrals we see built all over the world - may not of originally been cathedrals. But something to do with free electricity:
