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IV. Faith
 
  4.3 Dogma  
  Article 114-Deposit  
  Canon 4215  
  Deposit, or Deposit of Faith is a dogma first introduced by the Roman Cult in the 14th Century that God conveyed certain property rights in trust to St. Peter and the Apsotles and that the Cult is the duly appointed trustees of this trust. Hence the word deposit from the Latin depositum meaning “to entrust to the care of”.  
  Canon 4216  
  The dogma of the Deposit of Faith is intimately connected to the concept of Sacred Tradition and two separate dogmata being the claimed role and authority of leader of the Nazarenes known as Esus, also known as Yeshua and Jesus the Christ and the dogma of Apostolic Succession. The dogma of Deposit of Faith is essential to the central claim of the source of property “deposited” in lawful conveyance of Unam Sanctum in 1302 as the first Express Trust for the planet.  
  Canon 4217  
  The dogma and concept of Deposit of Faith is essentially to justify the claims of Unam Sanctum being both possible and lawful as the 1st Express Trust for the whole planet. If either the claimed rights of Jesus the Christ are disputed, or the concept of Apostolic Succession are disputed then the Trust is unlawful and no valid conveyance could have taken place.  
  Canon 4218  
  As the Roman Cult have never been the legitimate successors of the founders of the Catholic Church, much less Imperial Christianity, nor the Nazarenes, any claim of Deposit of Faith and therefore any subsequent trusts and legal instruments are null and void from the beginning.  
     
     
 
 
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