Oath of Supremacy of Plunder and Pillage

The City Banking Establishment’s power derives from Henry VIII with the oath of supremacy and the spoils taken from English churches.

The Party is presenting a 2017 print on the origins of the oath of supremacy in England, with reference to how this oath cemented the City establishment’s new appeal to the world: one based on presumption, arrogance, violence against the church, plunder, confiscations, theft and pillage.

Oath of Supremacy

Anglia Of England (2017)

Today, The Party will take a brief look into the events that unfolded in England following the Reformation that took place 500 years ago.

Going to Paradise

On October 31, 1517, a German monk hammered a list of 95 theses onto the church door at the castle of Wittenberg. His name was Martin Luther. This was an open challenge to popish authority and to the claims that people could purchase their way into paradise. The list of theses also included a challenge to other standing regulations within the Catholic scene according to which people could pay a sum of money for defunct relatives in order to get them out of purgatory and on their way to Heaven. This money would never be handed over to God but instead ended up in the pope’s treasury.

Dashing Young Man

Along came Henry VIII, king of England, who styled a book in Latin by way of which he defended the pope and the Catholic practices from all Lutheran heresy. His invective against the German monk earned him the praise of the pope, Leo X, and the popish title of Fidei Defensor, Latin for defender of the faith. This title was granted him on 11 October 1521, four years after the German’s intellectual revolt. However, the monk’s theses were gaining traction in Germany and started spreading to other countries as people contemplated their meaning.

I Changed My Mind

Within time, Henry VIII discovered that his wife, Catherine of Aragon, did not bear him a son that could survive infancy death, but rather only one daughter, Mary, and so he concluded that he must divorce her. He sought the pope, no doubt seeking a return for the past favour he had rendered in defence of papal authority. But unfortunately for Henry, the pope had received visitors in Rome in the person of Charles V, Emperor of Germany, and his army of Teutonic soldiers. While Rome was being sacked, the pope had fled to Castel Sant’Angelo, a fortified castle within the city, and from the high walls observed German soldiers plundering his possessions on the other side of the river Tibur. Charles V was also the king of Spain and the nephew of Catherine of Aragon, and so the pope was unwilling to offend the man who in 1527 had sacked his beloved city of Rome, lest he do more harm and plunder even more of the pope’s wealth. He had to turn down Henry’s request for an annulment of the marriage with his Spanish wife Catherine, which he did in a letter to Henry in January 1531. In response, Henry VIII resolved to changing his ideas on being the defender of the pope’s faith, and slowly but surely he resorted to undermining the Catholic unity in England so as to marry his new love, Anne Boleyn.

I Am the Boss

As time passed, Henry VIII had not only divorced his wife Catherine, but meanwhile had also had his second wife, Anne Boleyn, executed, which he found to be a swifter process and made possible by his own supremacy laws over Truth, Lie and Religion. He had, in fact, proclaimed himself the head of the church in England and introduced the Oath of Supremacy, whereby people had to swear an oath to him confirming his new title and their allegiance to his self-proclaimed divine authority.

As self-professed founder of the church of England, Henry set about destroying English priories and cathedrals, taking the gold and the silver from the churches and the lead from the windows, and all the land belonging to the various ecclesiastic estates, which he sold to his political allies. Many among the common folk had been working these estates, and as a result of Henry’s acts, they lost their work and their livelihood, while the monks were evicted and forced to live on a state pension.

It was at this point in history that the establishment in England took on a new form whereby the church would be considered a hostage of the City’s elite and subdued to its patronage. This came about through brute force, coercion, torture, threats, pillage and plunder. The City establishment had just made its diabolic appearance!

Act of Supremacy of 1534 and Mrs Mountbatten Today

The Act of Supremacy required that people in office, including those of ecclesiastic rank, had to take an oath of supremacy to the king. Refusing to do so led to incrimination for Treason, and a number of Englishmen were arrested and executed for not taking the oath. Among these was Thomas More, the author of Utopia, who was put to death on the 6 July 1535. Today, people who are not prepared to swear an oath of supremacy and allegiance to Mrs Mountbatten cannot enter parliament if they have been elected. This oath is based on the same supremacy law of 1534.

As the law stands now in England, the head of the Church is the rightful Monarch, and Angela of the English Chancellery identified Jesus Son of God as this Person. This means that Jesus is the rightful King of the English. Doing her research, Angela found that the English Church was founded in two separate events, the first having taken place in Kent during the sixth century, the second in Northumbria in the seventh century. In each of these events, a king of the Folk had made the decision to introduce the Christian Faith, and neither the king of Kent nor the king of Northumbria had claimed supremacy over the Church.

At The Party, we say it as it is.


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