The Ancient Chinese Prophecies the Vatican Never Wanted Translated | History For Sleep

Vatican Mysteries For Sleep October 16, 2025
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Welcome to Vatican Mysteries For Sleep — a sanctuary of forgotten knowledge, forbidden texts, and hidden truths buried deep beneath centuries of silence. Each night, we guide you through the shadowed corridors of history — exploring secret archives, suppressed scriptures, lost timelines, and the dark twin of the Vatican itself. These are not bedtime stories. These are the whispers behind the throne, the echoes of angels no one dared to name, and the chapters the Church erased. Perfect for sleep, deep focus, or late-night curiosity — dim the lights, close your eyes, and let the silence speak. Subscribe to uncover what was never meant to be remembered.

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Long before Christianity reached the East, ancient China recorded visions of divine rulers, celestial wars, and the fall and rebirth of worlds. These weren’t just myths — they were prophecies, eerily similar to those later found in the Bible. But when missionaries brought these texts back to Rome, something strange happened. They vanished. In this video, we uncover the ancient Chinese prophecies the Vatican never wanted translated. From scrolls describing floods, heavenly judgments, and saviors born under stars, to records of cosmic battles that mirror Revelation itself, the evidence suggests the Church encountered truths that didn’t fit its version of history — and chose silence over revelation. Did the Vatican hide these prophecies because they challenged its story of divine origin… or because they confirmed something far older and far more universal? ✨ Don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe to History For Sleep for more forbidden prophecies, ancient civilizations, and the secrets they never wanted revealed. #Vatican #AncientChina #HiddenHistory #ForbiddenKnowledge #HistoryForSleep Sources: Handbook of Christianity in China, Vol. 1 (635–1800) — Nicolas Standaert (Brill) The Chinese Rites Controversy: Its History and Meaning — D. E. Mungello (ed.) The Chinese Rites Controversy: From Its Beginning to Modern Times — George Minamiki A Jesuit in the Forbidden City: Matteo Ricci (1552–1610) — Po-chia Hsia Oxford Bibliographies: The Jesuit Missions in China Cum Deus Optimus (1704) — Pope Clement XI Ex illa die (1715) — Pope Clement XI Ex quo singulari (1742) — Pope Benedict XIV Kangxi Emperor’s Proclamation on the Chinese Rites (1721) Kuan-yin: The Chinese Transformation of Avalokiteśvara — Chün-fang Yü Fengshui in China — Ole Bruun Superscribing Symbols: The Myth of Guandi — Prasenjit Duara Jesuits, Astronomy, and Calendrical Reform in China — Benjamin A. Elman Ferdinand Verbiest and Qing Court Astronomy — Macau Cultural Institute / Vatican Observatory Nathan Sivin’s studies on Chinese science, qi, and Daoist cultivation

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