Fading Suns
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One of the most well-known sections of the Digamma Apocrypha is the corpus attributed to Horace the Learned, the Prophet’s beloved disciple. Although a prominent figure in the Omega Gospels, and typically considered the exemplar of saintly wisdom and the quest for divine knowledge, the four texts concerned with Horace (the Apocrypha of Horace, or the Horace Literatures) were by the Pentateuch Concordat are considered deuterocanonical: lesser revelations, and thus edifying scripture worthy of instruction and study — but still secondary to the Omega Gospels.

The Logos Gospel:[]

The private teachings of the Prophet to Horace, and of Horace to his successors, on the nature of Sacred Wisdom. This text reveals and details the Holy Flame that burns within each of us — and it is because of this teaching (“the Universalist Heresy”) that the Church deemed the Gospel to be in error.

The Acts of Horace:[]

Written by Saint Nicodemus, Horace’s greatest student, this text details the life and miracles of Horace after the death of the Prophet, as the Learned follow the Prophet’s injunction to “quest after the things of God.”

The Epistles of Horace:[]

The letters of Horace to his own disciples — written as he traveled across space — in which he teaches how to cultivate Wisdom and fan the flame of the divine within. It is a superb manual on discipline and meditation.

The Eskaton:[]

Horace’s deathbed vision, narrated to Nicodemus, this text is filled with frightening images of the End Times and the destruction of all Creation.

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