Recent Featured Videos and Articles | Eastern “Orthodoxy” Refuted | How To Avoid Sin | The Antichrist Identified! | What Fake Christians Get Wrong About Ephesians | Why So Many Can't Believe | “Magicians” Prove A Spiritual World Exists | Amazing Evidence For God | News Links |
Vatican II “Catholic” Church Exposed | Steps To Convert | Outside The Church There Is No Salvation | E-Exchanges | The Holy Rosary | Padre Pio | Traditional Catholic Issues And Groups | Help Save Souls: Donate |
Satanist purchased mysterious old mansion to perform dangerous black magic ritual attempting to open the portals of hell
Another fire has destroyed Aleister Crowley’s old residence in Scotland that was damaged in a previous mysterious fire in 2015. The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service said the alarm was raised shortly before 4 pm on Wednesday and two firetrucks were sent to Boleskine House located on the south-eastern shore of Loch Ness, close to the village of Foyers, Inverness Shire.
However, this time the Scottish police said it believes the fire was started deliberately and has appealed for witnesses to come forward. Interestingly enough, this happened on July 31st, during the so-called “dog days of the summer” when Sirius the Dog Star often cited in Crowley’s writings, was shining its brightest.
As most already know, Aleister Crowley is known today for his involvement in the Illuminati network, and for his occult writings that have influenced the dark side of the New Age scene like no other. Crowley purchased this mysterious old mansion on the shores of Loch Ness to perform one of the most dangerous black magic rituals ever attempted so he could open the portals of hell.
The mansion was constructed in the late 18th century by Archibald Fraser. According to a local legend, there was once a church on the site which caught fire burning it’s whole congregation to death, and it was because of this terrible event that Crowley decided to purchase Boleskine House in 1899 as the self-styled, “Laird of Boleskine and Abertarff.” He evoked evil entities that would materialize and later were channeled through his wife in 1904 for his Liber AL bel Legis commonly known as The Book of the Law, the unholy book of his new Satanic religion. Crowley continued to visit until 1913, when he eventually sold the property...
Aleister Crowley’s magick at Boleskine House is known as the “Abramelin Operation” taken from The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage, a famous grimoire (book of magical knowledge), dating back to at least the middle of the 15th century. Crowley seems to have become aware of this ritual from the 1897 translation of the book by occultist and Illuminati kingpin Samuel Liddel Mathers, one of the founders of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, which Crowley had joined in 1898...
Crowley later sold Boleskine and it subsequently had a series of private owners including, in the 1970s, Led Zeppelin guitarist and Crowley fanatic, Jimmy Page...
Since in his youth, once he departed from the ways of his fundamentalist Plymouth Brethren parents, Crowley was referred to by the title of “Beast.” Later on, in Cambridge, he not only accepted this nickname but expanded on it, calling himself, “The Great Beast” and signing his notes with the number “666.” Through different Hebrew transliterations, Crowley was even able to derive the value 666 from his name, “Aleister Crowley” and “Aleister E. Crowley” and the Greek phrase often used by him To Mega Therion (“The Great Beast”), that also has the value of 666, as does the Greek word Therion (“Beast”) when transliterated into Hebrew as ThRIVN.
Sign up for our free e-mail list to see future vaticancatholic.com videos and articles.
Recent Content
^