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The Last Bloodline

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Aho, Barbara (1997), "The Merovingian Dynasty: Satanic Bloodline of the AntiChrist & False Prophet", Watch Unto Prayer [watch.pair.com], archived from the original on 2009-12-12 , retrieved 2009-11-11 Margaret Starbird, The Woman with the Alabaster Jar: Mary Magdalen and the Holy Grail (Bear & Company; 1993).

At Clash at the Castle on September 3, Reigns defeated Drew McIntyre to retain the Undisputed WWE Universal Championship following an interference from Solo Sikoa, Reigns' younger cousin and Usos' younger brother, who became the newest member of The Bloodline. [48] On the September 13 episode of NXT, Sikoa defeated Carmelo Hayes to win the NXT North American Championship, giving The Bloodline a total of five championships and making them the first stable to hold titles across all three brands. [49] However, in the following week, Sikoa had to vacate the NXT North American Championship due to not being an eligible option in the fan vote that was to have originally determined Hayes' opponent. [50] At Crown Jewel on November 5, The Usos successfully retained their titles against The Brawling Brutes while Reigns successfully retained his titles against Logan Paul. [51] Three weeks later at Survivor Series: WarGames on November 26, The Bloodline defeated The Brawling Brutes, Drew McIntyre and Kevin Owens in a WarGames match, with Sami solidifying his place in the group in the eyes of Jey. [52] Baigent, Michael; Leigh, Richard; Lincoln, Henry (1987). The Messianic Legacy. Henry Holt & Co. ISBN 0-8050-0568-4. Closing Arguments Heard in 'Da Vinci Code' Case". NPR All Things Considered. March 20, 2006 . Retrieved November 28, 2019. Defelice, Robert (January 6, 2023). "Kevin Owens vs. Roman Reigns For Undisputed WWE Universal Title Set For WWE Royal Rumble 2023". Fightful. Statement of Ben Hammott". Ben Hammott: Rennes-le-Chateaux Research & Discoveries. Archived from the original on 30 October 2019.a b McClymond, Michael J. (2001). "Jesus". In Freedman, David Noel; McClymond, Michael J. (eds.). The Rivers of Paradise: Moses, Buddha, Confucius, Jesus and Muhammad as Religious Founders. Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. pp.309–456 at 329. a b c Bertrand Ouellet, " "But you, who do you say that I am?" Proclaiming Jesus Christ after the Da Vinci tsunami", officecom.qc.ca, 2006. Retrieved on 2008-04-23.

Garretson, Jordan (October 25, 2020). "Universal Champion Roman Reigns def. Jey Uso (Hell in a Cell "I Quit" Match)". WWE. Archived from the original on October 29, 2020 . Retrieved October 25, 2020. Very much the ultimate endpoint of the series is kind of where we left off, which is, there is no resolution. It’s a deeply personal and conflicted story. In terms of what the audience thinks they want, obviously there are ways of telling the story where they get arrested, where John gets killed, where there’s a comeuppance for these characters. But from the beginning of how we conceived this series, that was not how this was intended to play out. Some people tend to like things that are more life-affirming, relationship-affirming, family, it will work out, there will be resolution. But the reality of this with the Rayburns is hopefully going to a place that’s deeper that resonates with a sense of, “What does that actually mean? What would I do if I was in their position?” As opposed to, “I can close this story, end the series of Bloodline and feel like it’s more affirming or reaffirming or there’s a sense of hope or rightness in the world.” Obviously with how the world is unfolding, every hour it seems, it doesn’t have to go that way and it doesn’t always go that way. So the feeling for us from the very beginning was this was going to be a family tragedy, and going all the way to the most powerful stories that are tragedies, things don’t tend to resolve themselves in a tidy way. For a discussion between Barbara Thiering and Geza Vermes surrounding this, see http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2065 Claire Nahmad and Margaret Bailey, The Secret Teachings of Mary Magdalene: Including the Lost Verses of The Gospel of Mary, Revealed and Published for the First Time (Watkins; 2006).

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Dyer, Jennifer (December 2015). "2.3.2 The Jesus Scroll". The Role of Archaeology in the Jesus Industry (M.A.). University of South Africa. pp.58–62. Claims to a Jesus bloodline are not restricted to Europe. An analogous legend claims that the place of Jesus at the crucifixion was taken by a brother, while Jesus fled through what would become Russia and Siberia to Japan, where he became a rice farmer at Aomori, at the north of the island of Honshu. It is claimed he married there and had a large family before his death aged 114, with descendants to the present. A Grave of Jesus ( Kristo no Hakka) there attracts tourists. This legend dates from the 1930s, when it was claimed that a document was discovered written in the Hebrew language and describing the marriage and later life of Jesus. The document has since disappeared. [61] Much of the literature of this type has a more specific emphasis, on a claimed marriage between Jesus and Mary Magdalene. There are indications in Gnosticism of the belief that Jesus and Mary Magdalene shared an amorous, and not just a religious relationship. The Gnostic Gospel of Philip tells that Jesus "kissed her often" and refers to Mary as his "companion". [3] Several sources from the 13th-century claim that an aspect of Catharist theology was the belief that the earthly Jesus had a familial relationship with Mary Magdalene. An Exposure of the Albigensian and Waldensian Heresies, dated to before 1213 and usually attributed to Ermengaud of Béziers, a former Waldensian seeking reconciliation with the Catholic Church, would describe Cathar heretical beliefs including the claim that they taught "in the secret meetings that Mary Magdalen was the wife of Christ". [4] A second work, untitled and anonymous, repeats Ermengaud's claim. [4] The anti-heretic polemic Historia Albigensis, written between 1212 and 1218 by Cistercian monk and chronicler Peter of Vaux de Cernay, gives the most lurid description, attributing to Cathars the belief that Mary Magdalene was the concubine of Jesus. [4] [5] These sources must be considered with caution: the two known authors were not themselves Cathars and were writing of a heresy being actively and violently suppressed. There is no evidence that these beliefs derived from the much earlier Gnostic traditions of Jesus and Mary Magdalene, but the Cathar traditions did find their way into many of the 20th-century popular writings claiming the existence of a progeny of Jesus. [4] [6] Christ and Mary Magdalene (Peter Paul Rubens, 1618) Modern works [ edit ] Simcha Jacobovici and Charles R. Pellegrino, The Jesus Family Tomb: The Discovery, the Investigation, and the Evidence That Could Change History (HarperCollins, 2007) ISBN 0061192023

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