Is it possible that the story of Judas Iscariot's betrayal was intentionally designed to symbolically link the entire Tribe of Judah and the Jewish people to betrayal and deicide?
Could this narrative have served a deeper agenda: severing the ancient connection between the Tribe of Judah and Jerusalem — considered the Anunnaki's Mission Control Center — while justifying future control over the sacred site and its powerful energy
At a deeper, esoteric level, this narrative served to disconnect the Jews from their sacred legacy — particularly Jerusalem, which many alternative researchers, including Sitchin and Hancock, have linked to ancient extraterrestrial activity or Anunnaki presence. Jerusalem, in this theory, was not just a city but a Mission Control Center — a key energy point and sacred hub of advanced knowledge left by the "gods" or sky-beings.
By recasting the Jews as the betrayers of "God," the early Church — backed by the Roman Empire — could both morally and spiritually usurp the holy city. It allowed them to control the narrative, the land, and the sacred energy believed to reside there, while rewriting history in their favor.
This framework explains why the story of Judas is so emotionally charged and why it endured — it served political, religious, and energetic agendas, ensuring that the original custodians of that ancient knowledge were marginalized and vilified.
Zecharia Sitchin, a pioneering figure in the study of ancient civilizations and their potential extraterrestrial connections, presented a compelling narrative about Jerusalem’s role as a Mission Control Center within the Anunnaki hypothesis. In his extensive works, particularly The Earth Chronicles series, Sitchin posits that the Anunnaki, an advanced extraterrestrial race from the planet Nibiru, established key operational hubs on Earth to manage their gold-mining operations and interstellar travel. According to Sitchin, after the Great Deluge around 11,000 BCE, the Anunnaki restructured their facilities, shifting their spaceport from Sumer (modern-day Iraq) to the Sinai Peninsula. Jerusalem, specifically Mount Moriah, emerged as a critical site in this new configuration. Sitchin describes it as the Mission Control Center, a central hub for communication and coordination of the Anunnaki’s celestial chariots—vehicles used to transport gold back to Nibiru. He emphasizes the strategic placement of Jerusalem along a landing grid that connected Mount Ararat, Baalbek, Giza,9 and the Sinai spaceport, all aligned with remarkable precision along the 30th parallel. This alignment, Sitchin argues, reflects the Anunnaki’s advanced understanding of geometry and astronomy, positioning Jerusalem as an integral component of their global network.Sitchin further elaborates that Mount Moriah, later the site of the Temple Mount, was chosen for its elevated position and its role in overseeing the spaceport operations in the Sinai. In The Stairway to Heaven, he connects this location to biblical accounts, suggesting that the Anunnaki’s presence influenced the region’s sacred status. For instance, he interprets the story of Abraham and the binding of Isaac on Mount Moriah as potentially linked to its significance as a pre-existing Anunnaki control point, a place where divine (or extraterrestrial) encounters were orchestrated. Sitchin’s analysis of Sumerian texts also points to Ningishzidda, an Anunnaki figure associated with engineering and knowledge, as the architect of this post-Deluge infrastructure, including the Giza pyramids and the Jerusalem hub. This narrative paints Jerusalem as a vital nexus in the Anunnaki’s Earth-based operations, a testament to their technological prowess and long-term planning.Graham Hancock, another influential researcher, complements Sitchin’s ideas by exploring the broader implications of ancient sites like Giza and their connections to a lost advanced civilization. While Hancock does not explicitly focus on the Anunnaki or label Jerusalem as a Mission Control Center in the same terms as Sitchin, his work in Fingerprints of the Gods and The Message of the Sphinx supports the notion of a sophisticated ancient network that could align with Sitchin’s framework. Hancock argues that the Giza plateau, with its pyramids and Sphinx, reflects an astronomical alignment—particularly with the constellation Orion—that hints at a purposeful design by a highly knowledgeable culture. He suggests that Giza’s placement might have served as a marker or beacon, a concept that resonates with Sitchin’s idea of it being part of a landing grid tied to Jerusalem. Hancock’s discovery, alongside Andrew Collins, of a cave complex beneath Giza in 2008 further bolsters the idea that these sites hold layers of hidden significance. This find, detailed in Collins’ Beneath the Pyramids, aligns with Sitchin’s assertion that Giza housed master computer programs and Anunnaki annals, potentially linking it to a control center like Jerusalem through a shared purpose.
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