Rome seems to have a problem with dragons. Just last year at around this time, I covered a story embedded in myth and history of how Rome struggle.... The tale, when taken in a grand context, is simply amazing. The story holds many lessons for Rome today, which is once more fostering dragon worship among its people.
The saga goes like this. In the ancient times, the old Romans proactively imported a foreign deity from the Grecian isle of Epidaurus. According to legend, this was a literal creature with eyewitness reporters attesting to the facts on the ground. The Romans brought home a dragon they considered a god, named Asklepius. And unlike other old gods that the Romans worshiped, this one was benevolent towards the people. He was actually a healer of infirmities. Centuries later, however, Rome found herself rife with idol worship and sorcery, and by that time the dragon of Rome had turned into a lethal force, responsible for killing up to 300 men in a single day. Out of desperation, St. Sylvester was called upon, and with God’s aid, he conquered the beast. Later in 589, the rotting carcass of a dragon surrounded by a school of dead water snakes was washed through the streets of Rome by a devastating flood. Was it the same dragon? The corpse sent out putrid fumes that choked the city and filled the air with a fatal plague. In the end, it was St. Gregory the Great who appealed to the Holy Mother in a vast procession which defeated any remnants of the dragon’s influence. The plague went away, and Rome was saved.
A Dragon Returns
Now, once more, Rome has welcomed a dragon into her bosom. But unlike the ancient Romans, this dragon was not prominently displayed in the same way as before. In the ancient times, the dragon Asklepius was sailed into the harbor proudly for everyone to see. The crowds could observe this serpent wrapped around the mast of the ship that sailed its way into the harbor. However, the dragon I am mentioning—Pachamama—was smuggled into the Vatican in the guise of a woman.
Pachamama, the ancient Incan earth goddess and star of the Amazon Synod, was brought into Rome in a boat—much like the ancient dragon from Epidaurus. She was ushered into the Vatican in a canoe, and pictures of this ceremony have spread throughout the worldwide media channels. In fact, her entry into the Vatican much resembled that of a papal coronation, in which a pope is carried in on the gestatorial chair. It is almost as if that ritual was intentionally orchestrated to mimic the coming of Asklepius and simultaneously ridicule the coronation of Roman Catholic popes. So like the dragon of old, she was prominently brought in on a vessel. However, she wasn’t seen as a dragon.
Yet, Pachamama is a dragon.
Pachamama is currently being touted as a new age Earth mother. She is even depicted as being pregnant with child. By all appearances, and much like the benevolent-themed Asklepius , Pachamama strikes worldly people as a helper. To her fans and followers, Pachamama nourishes life, and she looks over the affairs of farmers and ranchers. She is friend to plants, animals, and people of the land. She blesses new buildings that are constructed in her name. She is a compassionate deity, just as was the old dragon Asklepius .
Yet, again, more than just her kind altruism towards mortals, Pachamama is also a dragon. Her original form is that of a serpent—just like Asklepius . Her true form mirrors that of the Andes Mountains, and should this serpent fail to be appeased, she will cause earthquakes. She does this, because she is of the Earth, and her energies are that of this world. Though the ancient Incans would offer human sacrifices on the mountaintops for promises of glory, today Pachamama is primarily known to receive sacrifices of llama fetuses or chicha beer spilled on the ground. During the ancient llama sacrifices, they would open the animal’s chest, pull out the llama’s throbbing heart, lungs, and viscera, and they would attempt to read the future from these organs. To date, one of the best ways to appease Pachamama is to spill blood in a brutal fistfight at the Tinku festival—as human blood will assure a bountiful harvest later. In fact, as recently as November of last year, Bolivian police believe that a missing boy was ritualistically sacr.... Although, who knows? Maybe the boy was being sacrificed to El Tio, another god of the Andes.
This ancient Incan dragon is the very deity being honored in Rome this October. Just like in ancient times, when the old Romans were looking for the healing, natural aid and intercession of that old dragon, Asklepius , so also now does the New Age-minded clergy flirt with the worldly aid of another deity claimed to have salubrious, beneficial earth-energy.
Gaslit By The Hierarchy
Adding insult to injury in all of this, as I discussed last week, it is the brainwashed, leftist hierarchy who are actually accusing traditional Catholics of serving the Dragon. Archbishop Orlando Brandes of Aparecida, Brazil berates all faithful Catholics who criticize the Amazon Synod and oppose this pagan idol worship. He states that they are serving the Dragon that is Satan. And yet, he of all people—a bishop in a country that shares the eastern border of Bolivia—I say, this man should be well aware of what Pachamama is: a dragon. And he should be quite clear about what the worship of this pagan goddess entails: new-age healing claims, seemingly-benign sacrifices, and a history of substantial blood sacrifices. They are LITERALLY WELCOMING A DRAGON DEITY INTO THE VATICAN, and yet this Archbishop has the nerve to accuse faithful laity of serving dragons.
As I said in that latter article: leftist, liberation-theologist clergy such as Archbishop Brandes reveal their delusional, paranoid, childish emotions when they lie like this. His slander is typical leftist projection, and he is wrong.
Pope Francis and his hand-picked friends in the Vatican have welcomed a dragon into Rome, once again. If I didn’t know any better, I’d say they’re intentionally trying to recreate the ancient past and reinforce the black magick forces already at work in that city.