I must admit I had not heard of this 'book', which is not a bible, it's a supposed collection of ancient texts, decripted from Egyptian and Celtic texts.
It speaks of a 'destroyer' aka Nibiru, planet x, or whatever you want to call that crap.
The point this 'book' is making, is that more than one civilisation, seperated by miles of land and sea, were supposed to have experienced the same 'planet of the crossing' 'the frightener' or the 'destroyer' at the same time. This caused a period of light for one civilisation, while the other experienced darkness, making it seem the Earth had stopped rotating as this 'planet' passed by.
It claims the 'planet' or 'object' is on a 3,600 year orbit of our sun, and returns to wreak havoc every 3,600 years.
I have not read the full book, but the snippets I did read online, at the time, really did upset and frighten me. It is written in an almost metophorical, and very graphic way.
That the object glows red, causes the Earth's rotation to stop (impossible as far as I know), and created earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, ocean displacement, tsunamis, fires, freezing conditions, firestorms etc, and that it was accompanied by another smaller object, which they called a moon, which broke up and fell. Also 'the placid skies hold a terrifying secret' etc.
Now common sense tells me planet x aka 'Nibiru' is a load of crock because it would be visable to us all now, no cover ups, bigger in the sky than our moon if it was going to hit us next year. Very stupid.
A lot the other bits sound very much like the eruption of mt versuvias (spelling?) which the Romans experienced and were unable to escape from, such as 'awful mouths opened in the land and poured evil breath which drove men mad and killed them', possibly volcanic ash deposits or some kind of gas released from a volcanic event. Most volcanic events were devistating, but small scale, local events, not global ones. These said events would SEEM global to people who did not travel, were not seafaring, and had little knowledge of how things like volcanos & earthquakes worked, so they would attribute them to a supernatural cause, not a natural one.
Noah's Flood is mentioned in this book as being caused by the passing of this object. I don't know how though, because Egyptian civilisation flourished before, during and after the time of the flood! so Egypt wasn't effected, making this again, a local event, similar to the floods we experience today, devistating and harmful, but not global. Also, it could be a spiritual metaphor, or simply the result of someone using Ethogens like peyote…lol. The Burning Bush story is suspected to have come about because Moses was 'high' on one of these plants that cause halucinations.
Other things can cause darkness, eclipse of the sun by the moon (misunderstood by many ancient civilisations as acts of a certain god etc), volcanic ash, and even swarms of locusts if they get big enough can block out the sun! The 10 plagues of Egypt probaby started when Thera erupted, the ash caused the darkness, mineral deposits caused the nile to turn red, and killed the fish & drove the frogs out, and the knock on effects so on so forth, the locusts may have been a result of this, they could have blocked the sun, or the ash could too. The death of the firstborn could have been caused by the fact the firstborn child in Egypt was given preference, and did everything like eat and drink first, so if water had become contaminated by a bacteria or mold, then this would have harmed the firstborns first.
Whatever that was, it was a localised event, as it is not mentioned anywhere else.
Now, back to the Kolbrin, is it just a scam, a historical hoax? or is it a record of past events?
I would go with the hoax, as nobody can be sure where the stuff came from, and it was supposedly saved from a fire in an abbey sometime in the 1500s I think. It's probably a misinterpretation of the Bible christians follow, because that, like all books, is open to interpretation by the reader. It was also transcribed by someone, again unknown. It all sounds very dodgy, like some 18th-19th century hysteria stuff to me.
I would appreciate more on this though if anyone can chime in.






