II. Sovereign
2.11 Venetian - Roman Law Form
Article 130 - Decretales Gregorii Noni
The Decretales Gregorii Noni, also known as the Decretals of Gregory IX are the alleged “original” decrees of “law” issued by the Roman Cult in 1234, to usurp the original and true Iuris Canonum (Canon Law) of the Roman Catholic Church (Romanum Ecclesia Catholicus).
Prior to the alleged Decrees of Gregory IX (Decretales Gregorii Noni) of 1234, the Roman Cult sought to destroy every copy of the true Iuris Canonum (Canon Law) of the Catholic Church (Catholicus Ecclesia) known as Decretum Gratiarum or “the Decree of Graces (of God)”. Until the alleged fraud of Gregory IX, the Roman Cult called the true laws the Decretum Gratis meaning the “Meaningless or Nothing Decrees”.
The fraudulent Decrees of Gregory IX (Decretales Gregorii Noni) allegedly promulgated in 1234, comprised of approximately one thousand nine hundred seventy one(1971) chapters of which one thousand seven hundred seventy one (1771) were completely false renderings of non-existent history and one hundred ninty one (191) chapters contain “laws” issued by Gregory himself.
One (1) reason the alleged Decrees of Gregory IX (Decretales Gregorii Noni) are suspect, including alleged “original” versions from the 13th Century incredibly found in the 18th Century is that this body of fraudulent canons formed a core component to the wholly fraudulent work known as Corpus Iuris Canonici compiled and published in 1580 to coincide with the production of Corpus Iuris Civilis in 1583 by Jesuit trained and educated Denis Godefroy.
Further evidence supporting the alleged Decrees of Gregory IX (Decretales Gregorii Noni) are a complete fraud produced no earlier than 1580 is the inclusion within the Corpus Iuris Canonici of the terrible and wicked fraud known as Decretum Gratiani or “Decretals of Gratian” an alleged “lawyer” and monk living in Bologna Spain in the 12th Century. Despite the Decretum Gratiani having been exposed as a clumsy fraud containing numerous errors and concepts not present in the 12th Century, the text remains a cornerstone of the claims of the Roman Cult.
Given the alleged Decrees of Gregory IX (Decretales Gregorii Noni) contradict the original Decretum Gratiarum or “the Decree of Graces (of God)” of the Roman Catholic Church (Romanum Ecclesia Catholicus), they are therefore without legal force or effect and null and void from the beginning.
As the alleged Decrees of Gregory IX (Decretales Gregorii Noni) are most certainly a deliberate fraud created no earlier than the end of the 16th Century as part of the larger fraud known as Corpus Iuris Canonici, they therefore are illegal, unlawful, immoral and are null and void ab initio (from the beginning).