What you know as ‘Christianity’ is actually a Medieval forgery
The story of Dionysius the Areopagite
Published in
6 min readNov 24, 2024
In the late 5th or early 6th century, a bunch of books by a writer out of the New Testament surfaced. They’d been hidden for centuries, and they became a sensation.
They had an incredible author. Dionysius the Areopagite was mentioned in Acts 17:34 as an important man in Athens and an early convert of the apostle Paul. Somehow his writings had gone unnoticed by Christianity.
They told an unbelievable story.
He had been a witness to the major events and personalities of the Age of the Apostles.
Dionysius writes of seeing the eclipse when Jesus was crucified. He’d met Paul and been part of his circle.
He’d met James, Peter, Timothy and Titus. He’d visited John, the prophet of Revelation, on the isle of Patmos. He’d been present for the death of Mary, the mother of Jesus.
And all along, he was writing books that were like glimpses into Heaven.