Jesus’s Real Teaching They Burned in 325 AD – How To Enter The Monad
The Great Erasure: The Day the Kingdom Was Lost
On the 20th of May, 325 AD, the air inside the marble halls of Nicaea was thick with the scent of burning beeswax and the stifling weight of imperial ambition. Emperor Constantine, a man whose soul was as cold as the stone beneath his feet, sat upon his gilded throne. Before him stood 318 bishops, their robes heavy with the dust of a dying world.
They weren’t there to discuss theology; they were there to commit a crime against humanity.
Spread across the massive cedar tables were the real treasures: manuscripts of thin vellum and papyrus, stained by the sweat and tears of the earliest followers of Jesus. These were not the sanitized gospels you find in a modern pew. These were the “Method” texts. They contained specific, dangerous instructions on how to access the Kingdom of God—not in some hazy afterlife promised by a tax-collecting priest, but immediately, while the lungs still drew breath.
Constantine looked at Bishop Eusebius, a man more interested in power than providence, and uttered a single, devastating command: “Burn them.”
The manuscripts were gathered and cast into the flames. As the smoke rose toward the vaulted ceiling, the direct connection to the Divine was severed for the masses. The Empire had realized a terrifying truth: a person who can access God directly is ungovernable. They don’t need bishops, they don’t need rituals, and they certainly don’t need emperors. To maintain control, the Church had to be positioned as the mandatory gateway. They built a religion around Jesus to ensure no one ever followed what Jesus actually taught.
The Hollow Echo of Ritual
For 1,700 years, the suppression worked. You likely grew up in the shadow of this erasure. You sang the hymns and mouthed the prayers, but always, there was that hollow echo—the feeling that you were performing a script written by someone who wanted you small. When you asked why worship felt like theater or why you needed a middleman to speak to the Creator, they told you to have “more faith” or “more obedience.”
They lied. That emptiness you feel isn’t a lack of faith; it’s your soul recognizing that the vital core of the message was surgically removed. Jesus never established a hierarchy. He taught a method of “Source Consciousness”—what the Greeks called the Monad. He taught that you are a cell in the body of the Divine, a signal connected to the infinite internet of the universe. He was killed not for his miracles, but for his freedom.
But they made one fatal miscalculation. They thought knowledge died with the paper. A few, the Gnostics, memorized the Method. They passed it through bloodlines and coded texts, waiting for a time when information could move faster than the censors. That time is 2026.
The Four Doorways to Freedom
The Method consists of four doorways. Once you pass through them, you cannot “un-know” the truth. Your life as a controllable cog in the machine ends, and your existence as a sovereign expression of Source begins.
The First Doorway: Sacred Silence
The Church filled its cathedrals with noise—organs, chanting, and bells—for a specific reason: to prevent you from finding the silence where God actually resides. The original Greek word for where Jesus went to “pray” was Eramos, meaning a desolate place of total sensory emptiness.
To enter the first doorway, you must stop. Sit for ten minutes with a straight spine. When the mind panics and tells you this is “unproductive,” recognize that voice as 2,000 years of conditioning trying to keep you from the one place it cannot follow. After a week of this, you will feel a pressure between your eyebrows—the first seal breaking.
The Second Doorway: Unification
The Church thrives on division: body vs. spirit, sinner vs. saint. A divided consciousness is a controllable one. They used the lie of “original sin” to convince you that you are broken and need their salvation.
The truth is you aren’t broken; you are scattered. In your silence, observe the fragments—the anxious you, the skeptical you, the hopeful you. Then ask: Who is watching these fragments? That observer is the real you—unfragmented and whole. Between days 12 and 18, these fragments will collapse inward, and a warmth will settle in your chest that no priest can provide.
The Third Doorway: The Single Eye
“If thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light.” This wasn’t a metaphor. It refers to the pineal gland, the seat of the soul. The system has sought to calcify this organ through physical and spiritual toxins, calling it “occult danger.”
By day 14, focus your awareness deep inside your skull. Breathe into that point. The pressure will intensify; it may even hurt. That is the calcification of centuries shattering. Between days 18 and 25, the “Golden Shift” occurs. Colors brighten. Synchronicities abound. You begin to see reality as it is, not as it has been constructed for you.
The Fourth Doorway: The Crossing
This is the moment the Empire feared most. It is the spontaneous expansion of awareness beyond the physical body. It happened to Sarah, a doctor in Manchester who, after 23 days of practice, felt the floor of reality drop out. She didn’t “connect” to God; she remembered she was a part of the Divine.
When the pulling sensation begins at the crown of your head, do not retreat. The Church called this “demonic possession” to make you flee from your own breakthrough. Pass through. On the other side is the Monad—the singular consciousness before it fragmented into the universe.
The Dangerous Reality of Being Free
Once you make the crossing, you become a threat to the system. You will see the lies in real-time—the news, the sermons, and the social programming will appear transparent and pathetic. Your intuition will become a precision instrument, and your fear of death will vanish, replaced by the knowing that you are eternal.
But be warned: the gatekeepers remain. In the astral spaces of the Monad, there are parasitic frequencies that feed on the unready. The Church hid the maps to these places, leaving you vulnerable.
The Monad is calling. You are no longer a servant of a stone cathedral; you are the living bridge between Source and Form. The portal is open. The question is: are you brave enough to be ungovernable?