Chronovisor: The Vatican's Secret Device to See Through Time - Summary

Summary

The Vatican is believed to possess a device called the Chronovisor, which allegedly allows its users to view events from any point in history. The device was supposedly invented by Father Pellegrino Ernetti, a Catholic priest, with the help of other scientists, including Enrico Fermi and Werner von Braun. The Chronovisor was said to be able to detect residual electromagnetic radiation from past events and translate it into images and sound.

According to Father Ernetti, the Chronovisor was used to view various historical events, including the crucifixion of Jesus Christ and the performance of a lost play by the Roman poet Ennius. However, the Vatican allegedly dismantled the device and forbade anyone from speaking about it, fearing its potential misuse.

Despite the Vatican's denial of the Chronovisor's existence, some people believe that it was not dismantled and is still being used by the Church to influence world events. The story of the Chronovisor raises questions about the potential consequences of such a device falling into the wrong hands and the ethics of keeping it a secret.

The story is based on the testimony of Father Ernetti and Father Francois Brune, a priest who claimed to have heard about the Chronovisor from Ernetti. However, many details of the story have been disputed, including the authenticity of photos and documents associated with the Chronovisor. Ultimately, the existence and functionality of the Chronovisor remain a mystery, leaving many to wonder if it is fact or fiction.

Facts

Here are the key facts from the text:

1. Vatican City is home to the Secret Apostolic Archives, a hidden underground fortress.
2. The archives contain over 50 miles of shelves with countless texts, relics, and artifacts collected by the Church for over a thousand years.
3. Father Pellegrino Ernetti was a scientist, musician, and scholar who worked on a project at the Catholic University of Milan in 1952.
4. Ernetti claimed to have invented a device called the Chronovisor, which could view events anywhere and anytime in history.
5. Ernetti said the Chronovisor used a series of antennas to detect residual electromagnetic radiation and translate it into image and sound.
6. Ernetti claimed to have used the Chronovisor to witness events in the past, including the final days of Jesus and the creation of the Ten Commandments.
7. Ernetti said the Chronovisor was dismantled and hidden away by the Pope due to concerns it could be used for nefarious purposes.
8. Ernetti published an open letter claiming the Chronovisor was real, and his friend Father Francois Brune also wrote about the device.
9. Brune published a book called "The New Mystery of the Vatican" which included more details about the Chronovisor.
10. Ernetti used the Chronovisor to transcribe a lost play called "The Estes" by the Roman poet Ennius.
11. Ernetti's transcription of the play was later disputed by scholars, who claimed the Latin was clumsy and used words that wouldn't appear in the language for at least 200 years.
12. The Catholic Church denies the existence of the Chronovisor, but in 1988, the Church issued a decree stating that anyone caught using a machine like the Chronovisor would be excommunicated.
13. Father Francois Brune passed away in 2019, and Father Pellegrino Ernetti passed away in 1994.
14. Enrico Fermi, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist, and Wernher von Braun, a Nazi rocket scientist turned NASA director, were allegedly involved in the development of the Chronovisor, but there is no concrete evidence to support this claim.