The Persecution of the Prophetess of God
and of the Followers of Jesus of Nazareth
The History of the Cruelty of Church and State
What you read here is merely the tip of the iceberg

Compiled by Matthias Holzbauer
The Persecution of the Prophetess of God
and of the Followers of Jesus of Nazareth
Würzburg in Germany, at the end of the 70s of the 20th century: a city with a population of 130,000, tranquilly situated on the Main River – shaped mentally and structurally since millennium one, by Catholic prince bishops with cathedral, fortress and a residence. A historical stronghold of the murder of Jews, the Counter Reformation and the burning of witches. It was here, of all places, that the Free Spirit, the Christ of God, raised His voice mightily. From then on, a handful of people, later a few dozen, met regularly in a room open to the public, to hear the word of God through the mouth of a prophet – in the Homebringing Mission of Jesus Christ, the work of teaching and enlightenment of the Spirit of the Christ of God and the basis for the later Universal Life.
Through the prophetic word, visitors in Würzburg and several other cities received deep spiritual teachings about correlations previously unknown to humankind, for instance, about the nature of God and the make-up of the Kingdom of God, about the make-up of the soul, about life after death, about the power of prayer, but above all, about the path to within, which can be taken by every soul and every person who opens his heart to God.
At first, the Vatican Church, dominating in Würzburg, merely observed the development.
Like all Catholic and Lutheran bishops in Germany, the Catholic Bishop of Würzburg, PaulWerner Scheele, had received a letter from the Cherub of divine Wisdom in January 1981, including the message:
“The word of God is in the temple of flesh and bone and not in external churches, and becomes a power of grace for those who humbly seek God in themselves ... For it is essentially written: You are the temple of the Holy Spirit, and the Spirit of God dwells in you.“
“God in us” – this was and is one of the core statements of the message of all true prophets of God. Already Jesus of Nazareth, the greatest prophet of all time, taught: “The Kingdom of God is within you.” But this message, which is, without exception, always directed to all souls and ensouled people, stands in sharp contrast to the behavior of the priests and theologians of the various denominations, who bind the people to external stone houses, to dogmas and rituals, who persuade the believers that they are mediators between them and God, and who therefore obstruct the direct access to God in the inner being of every ensouled human being. …
Behind the walls of the Episcopal office buildings, measures of a different kind were being devised. The ecclesiastical hunt quickly took off at full speed. The first major public attack took place on June 20, 1982. The Würzburger Katholisches Sonntagsblatt (newspaper) pub-
lished a full-page article under the heading “No Liability for Damages!” A Catholic journalist named Jutta Falke is mentioned as the author of the article.
The article demonstrates the church procedure and is the opening of the long-standing strategy of persecution with the means of the present time. The Church does not even consider dealing with the content of the divine revelations of the Spirit of the Christ of God. Instead, the reader is presented with slick falsehoods right from the start. …
The balance of power in comparison with the churches was extremely unequal: Here, two powerful religious conglomerates with thousands of well-paid officials, with immense financial and media power – church newspapers, publishing interests, seats on the broadcasting councils – and with great influence on church-educated and enlisted journalists and
politicians. There, a small movement, kept going by a few dozen people, who could commit themselves to the word of the Christ of God only in their free time; with limited financial means and without any influence on mass media or politics. What possibility of countering such a defamatory article remains for a minority that has neither a high-circulation press organ of its own nor a press agency with appropriate contacts to the daily press? In the end, merely a paid advertisement.
On July 7, 1982, a large-format advertisement appeared in the local newspaper with the headline: “Have We Been Forsaken by God?”
In this advertisement, the followers of Jesus of Nazareth indicated with scholarly accuracy contradictions in the Bible, and pointed out the horrors of a bloody church history. The inflammatory article in the Sonntagsblatt was therefore not answered with a speech of justification or defense, but with verifiable facts about the churches – and with counter questions.
Here are just a few examples. So the question was asked:
Does the Church live according to the Bible? – such as Jesus’ commandment, “Love your enemies”?
The Catholic theologian Bruno Bauer was quoted among others: “No other religion has demanded so many human sacrifices and slaughtered them in such a shameful way as the one that boasts of having abolished them forever.”
Or does the Church obey the commandment: Do not heap up for yourselves treasures on earth where moths and worms destroy them?
Here follows a quote by Karlheinz Deschner, among others: “The total stocks and capital holdings of the Vatican were estimated at about 50 billion German Marks in 1958.“ …
When it comes to the fight against “heretics,” apparently the Bishop’s Ordinariate of Würzburg also makes use of the “help” of the other denomination – even though it has also publicly demonized it as “heretical” for a long time and still does so in its books of dogma. A few days later, the Lutheran pastor Friedrich-Wilhelm Haack from Munich spoke out for the first time. In 1969, Haack had already been appointed by the Bavarian state Church as a full-time “commissioner for questions of sects and ideologies.” He described himself as an “expert on sects” – and he was indeed an expert on demagogy, reminiscent of the dark times of the Inquisition. On July 12, 1982, the Lohr Zeitung (newspaper) stated that the afore-mentioned advertisement of the Homebringing Mission had prompted him, Pastor Haack, “to warn Christians against this sect.” That it is “a new spiritistic sect,” which “mixes Hindu and Christian ideology.” Here it is, the mendacious opinion that the Cherub of divine Wisdom had predicted already at the end of 1981. But it is again a pro-
jection – because hardly any other world religion has absorbed so much foreign thought, so many thought patterns, rituals and ceremonies from ancient pagan cults as the Roman Catholic State Church, from which the Lutheran Church later split off. And it was a Lutheran pastor, of all people, who was the first to use the term “sect” in connection with the Homecoming Mission of Jesus Christ. For centuries, it was precisely the Lutheran Church that the Vatican Church has disparaged with this insult, just as it branded the so-called heretics with it during the Middle Ages. In early modern times, both denominations then persecuted the “witch sect” together. But the term is much older: Already the followers of Jesus of Nazareth were discriminated against by the scribes of the time as the “sect of the Nazarene,” as can even be read in the Bibles of the churches. * * *
Despite the church attacks on the Homebringing Mission of Jesus Christ, the number of people who gathered around the prophetic word through Gabriele increased.
After it became obvious that the spiritual good that is given through Gabriele contains an immeasurable wealth of true spirituality, of divine wisdom – which the churches lack – and that the word of the Christ of God through His prophetess could not be silenced, Count Magnis declared quite openly on the telephone to a supporter of the Homebringing Mission that he would wish to see this movement within the Church.
This was not the only attempt to integrate Gabriele, the prophetess of God, into the Catholic Church. Another caller pretended to be the contact person for the Bishop of Augsburg and also offered to integrate the Homebringing Mission of Jesus Christ into the Catholic Church. The book “The Rehabilitation of the Christ of God” describes how it continued:
“Humbly and modestly, God’s prophetess then asked the Spirit of the Christ of God what His will is. The answer was clear and unequivocal: ‘His prophetic word, the word of the Spirit of the Christ of God, remains outside of the institutional churches.’
Thus, the all-wise Free Spirit, whom we in the western world call God, the Creator of all life, does not give revelations within the institutional churches, nor does the Christ of God. The Spirit of God blows where It will. The written answer to the Church’s caller was then limited to the statement: “I think it would be better if we march separately” … (p. 85f)
When this answer was also conveyed to Count Magnis in its sense, as a modern day inquisitor, he unabatedly continued his smear campaign.
The modern Inquisitor Magnis created totally new accusations: He wrote: It is known from the practice of far-eastern schools of philosophy that the abstention from animal protein can make people docile, controllable and manageable by weakening their own will. Undoubtedly, this protein deprivation also leads the followers of the HBM [Homebringing Mission] to a total readiness to be led, to open themselves to the teachings by way of meditative indoctrination. The resistance of the followers is gently reduced by means of nutritional instruction, skillful didactics, emotions and meditation. Later he adds that this instruction is life-endangering.
Today, a few decades later, it is clear to anyone how absurd such claims are – just as absurd as the belief that the sun revolves around the Earth. That the abstention from meat foods is not only physiologically harmless, but even extremely advantageous healthwise – not to mention animal protection and climate protection – is known to every child today. But at the beginning of the 1980s, a vege-tarian diet was still an “alternative” topic, with which one
could easily arouse negative emotions among older Catholics, especially, in connection with Far Eastern esoteric “mystery mongering.” The count‘s “exposures” are fatally reminiscent of witchcraft stories of earlier times: In those days, as well, one did not have to prove anything, but could be sure of an eagerly listening audience.
Perhaps Count Magnis secretly thought back even further, to a time when a vegetarian diet was indeed “life-threatening”: In antiquity and in the Middle Ages, when “heretical movements” such as the 4th century Priscillianists or the 12th/13th century Cathars were killed by the Catholic Inqui-sition precisely because of this way of life! Already in ancient times, the Catholic Church condemned the meatless diet as “godless heresy” in a dogma that is still valid (!) today.
Church and state “sect experts” then tried to track down and prevent in advance planned business projects of the Original Christians. And what if they are already under wraps? Then one nevertheless pulls out all stops, even if millions of tax monies are wasted in the process. This is shown by the example of the Christ Clinic planned in Dettelbach, Lower Franconia.
In Dettelbach, a Catholic pilgrimage site, a former regional hospital had been empty for a long time. Both the district of Kitzingen (the owner of the building) and the town of Dettelbach were desperately looking for a buyer and therefore welcomed the fact that a GermanSwiss group of doctors agreed to establish a clinic there for the follow-up care of cancer patients. They agreed to a purchase in midJune of 1984, which was then settled immediately.
But a few weeks later, suddenly everything was different. It had turned out that the doctors and alternative practitioners had the “wrong” prayer book – they were close to Universal Life. ...
The tranquil wine village in the district of Kitzingen is close to the Episcopal city of Würzburg, so that the mayor obviously very quickly adopted the view of the Episcopal Ordinariate there. ...
The politicians now had to reverse course – because the Church wanted it that way. ...
At the beginning of February 1985, he published a new paper with the suggestive title: “Is the So-called Homebringing Mission of Jesus Christ a Homebringing Mission of Satana Lucifer?” Already in the headline, however, he not only suggested that the entire Homebringing Mission is “satanic,” but also literally described the teachings spread there as “demonic.” “A Dangerous Sect” – “A Demonic Teaching” – “Life-Endangering Dietetics” –such and similar were the headlines with their diabolic suggestions. ...
Through His prophetess, the Christ of God teaches the love for God and neighbor and the path to the Father’s house; the churches teach, as before, eternal damnation – but, they call the teaching of the Christ of God demonic!
As stated, the human being, the prophet, who speaks the truth from the Kingdom of God, has to cope with such inflammatory slogans and distortions! How would you, dear reader, fare, if you were constantly pelted in public with filth in this way, just because you speak the truth.
Friedrich-Wilhelm Haack repeatedly demonstrated his special talent in the unscrupulous invention of ever new untruths and distortions, the core discipline of the inquisitorial business. ... The exaggerated self-confidence and zealous sense of mission of the “pastor” lead repeatedly to situations that are not without a cer-
tain discomfiture. When on October 8, 1986, the Original Christians organize a silent march through Würzburg to protest against their discrimination by church and state, Haack suddenly appears. He jumps back and forth in his leather coat in front of, and beside, the march, brandishing his camera, photographing the peacefully demonstrating Original Christians from all possible angles. He insults individual Original Christians, assigned (officially stipulated) to keep order, as “ruffian dwarfs,” “secret police,” “thought police,” the entire demonstration procession as a “Nazi herd,” “nothing but crazy people, right down to their toenails.”
He is visibly enraged that people of the 20th century are allowed to exercise their right to freedom of expression. I’ll finish you off, berates the pastor, and, as stated before: In the Middle Ages we would have treated you in a totally different way!
In fact, in 1446, 127 Hussite followers were sentenced to march through Würzburg in a “penitential procession” before having to renounce their faith in a solemn ceremony.
* * *
A large part of Haack‘s speech consists of outright invectives toward those people who have bought land in a Lower Franconian village and now want to settle there. He thus acts like a military agitator who wants to prepare soldiers for war: As a rule, the opponents are first presented as inferior, as “subhumans” or the like, in order to suppress and prevent normal human interaction, if possible. ...
An experienced inquisitor knows what people think. That is why Haack continues: You do not have to have any respect for them ... There is no commandment for love and friendship or for the care and nurturing of those who want to kick me in the shins. ... You don‘t have to have anything to do with them. ..
Just how much Friedrich-Wilhelm Haack has actually stirred up the villagers, how much he has succeeded in bringing deep-seated primitive reflexes to light, becomes apparent immediately after the event ends. In front of the hall, several people stand in silence, and name tags identify them as “Christ-friends.” They deliberately did not take part in the “discussion”
in the hall, but want to offer themselves unobtrusively as conversation partners for those who have still kept a clear head. But it seems that, at the moment, no such person is present. Instead, the Christ-friends standing there peacefully become the target of the inflamed rage of the crowd of visitors streaming past them: “Shoot them down!” “They should be put up against the wall – just as they are all standing, one after the other!“ “You should be hanged right now!” “You should be burned!”
An elderly woman spits contemptuously, and a man shouts, “Heil Hitler!”
The fourth of January 1988 in Hettstadt – a spooky spotlight is cast on the thin sheet of ice on which our democracy moves. In this case, however, no agitator of the people from the far right or far left has stirred up the masses, but an agitator of the people in a pastor’s cassock.
Behnk also used every opportunity to portray the followers of Jesus of Nazareth analogously as dangerous, unpredictable, “crazy” outsiders. When on April 19, 1993, 81 people died in Waco, Texas (USA) when the ranch of the “Davidians” was stormed by the police, he had no scruples exploiting the tragic events that had played out in the USA for his campaign against Universal Life. He had the following report distributed via the Protestant-Lutheran Press Agency:
A mass suicide such as that of followers of the Davidian sect in Waco, Texas, is also possible in Germany, according to the Munich sect commissioner, Pastor Wolfgang Behnk. ... In this context Behnk warned against the group “Universal Life,” which wants to establish a “ChristState New Jerusalem” near Würzburg.”
And yet, Wolfgang Behnk knew the Original Christian writings – he had studied them extensively and therefore knew very well that suicide is out of the question for a person who has accepted the teachings of the Christ of God through Gabriele.
The Original Christians and everyone who knows them and the Original Christian teachings were stunned: What drives a person who calls himself a “Christian,” indeed, even a “pastor” and “pastoral worker,” to take such action against his fellow human beings? –The answer comes from history: Since the beginning of time, the caste of priests has been the enemy of the prophets of God.
The mass media were not interested in the truth – they reacted immediately, eagerly took up the “sensational news” that wasn’t one, and sent droves of sensation-hungry journalists to the area around Würzburg to take a look at the “Waco in Lower Franconia.”
A film team even rented a helicopter to film a farm inhabited by followers of the Nazarene. According to their own statement, they had received the determining tip-off from Pastor Behnk.
During the years before the turn of the millennium, the disparagement of the followers of Jesus of Nazareth as “end-time apostles”
or “end-time disciples” was especially popular among the heretic hunters. ...
IWhen the cassock wearers decades ago mocked those giving warnings as “end-time disciples,” they distracted from the fact that it is they themselves, who bear a large part of the blame for what is approaching humankind, because they did not teach the people the love for creation. God, the Eternal, gave timely warnings through His prophetess Gabriele – but through their defamations, the cassock wearers prevented these warnings from reaching countless people.
Neither Gabriele, the prophetess of God, nor the followers of Jesus of Nazareth ever received an apology for the barrage of malice and contempt to which they were exposed for years, because of their unfortunately alltoo justified indications of the threatening overload of the planet Earth and the impending climatic disasters. Instead, today, when climate change and its devastating consequences can no longer be denied, the main-
stream churches suddenly act as if they have always been nature protectors. ...
And how did Gabriele, the prophetess and emissary of God, fare under this barrage of lies and slander? Through her, God, the All-Wise One, had warned humankind in time. But now, these warnings were obscured by a cascade of mockery and imprecations. And the calamity on the planet takes its course almost unchecked. To a large extent, the devastating consequences of this go on the debt account of the mainstream churches. If the churches had not used their media power to ridicule the word of the Christ of God in public and thus prevent the warnings of the Spirit of God from being taken seriously, many things could still have been prevented or mitigated.


