Canonum De Lex Ecclesium
Canons of Ecclesiastical Law

one heaven iconI.   Introductory provisions

1.2 Concepts

Article 18 - Bigot

Canon 3550 (link)

A Bigot is any person intolerantly devoted to their own religious beliefs who exhibits irrational animosity and illogical hostility to other religions. Hence, a bigot is considered a “religious hyprocrite”.

Canon 3551 (link)

Given the goal of a Cult is by definition to conceal knowledge, to manipulate its followers and promote ignorance, no Person who forms a rational and reasoned opinion concerning the dangers of a Cult may reasonably be called a Bigot.

Canon 3552 (link)

The modification of the meaning of Bigot to define any person who is hostile to others of difference race, ethnicity, nationality or sexual orientation is deliberately confusing and misleading. The primary and only determination of a Bigot is a person who has an irrational and illogically founded animosity and hatred towards another religion.

Canon 3553 (link)

As the proper definition of Bigotry requires a person to exclude rationality, reason and logic from their conclusions against a belief system, it is an absurdity and deliberate deception to call a person a Bigot who has formed a rational and reasoned opinion of a Cult.

Canon 3554 (link)

The most vocal and deceptive of Bigots in the world are organs of the elite anti-semitic parasites formed in 1913 by the ultra secretive Khazarian Cult known as Independent Order of B’nai B’rith to promote religious hatred and hatred between Abrahamic religions.

Canon 3555 (link)

The most common form of Bigots are members of Cults otherwise called Cretins.

Canon 3556 (link)

Any claim of Bigotry by a Cult to attack any reasonable and factual summary of its behaviour is by definition an unlawful act and itself a defamation of character.