Canonum De Ius Fidei
Canons of Fiduciary Law

one heaven iconII.   Instruments & Transactions

2.2 Scientiam Mysteria (Occult Knowledge)

Article 82 - Dispensation

Canon 7406 (link)

A Dispensation is a formal Instrument issued under the Scientiam Mysteria (Occult Knowledge) standards of instruments and writing first formed under King Henry VIII of England from the 16th Century as a proprietary form of Indulgence and Ecclesiastical License providing an exemption from some law; or permission to do something otherwise forbidden; or allowance to omit something commanded.

Canon 7407 (link)

Under Scientiam Mysteria (Occult Knowledge) since the 17th Century, the nature of certain types of Dispensation may be deliberately hidden and obscured through the use of the abbreviation “Dis” as a prefix in the creation of new legal words and concepts having proprietary forms of Dispensation as their base.

Canon 7408 (link)

The first surviving Statute issued by Westminster in the creation of Dispensations is (25 Hen 8 c 21) in 1533 entitled “Act Concerning Peter's Pence and Dispensations” and also the name:“The Ecclesiastical Licences Act 1533”. The Statute remains partially in force today.

Canon 7409 (link)

The core element of Dispensation is the absolute claimed right of the Crown of England to issue under ecclesiastical authority a form of indulgences that permit a wide variety of wicked, murderous, immoral, profane, sacrilegious and insane acts and behaviour with impunity. Such madness remains the cornerstone of Western-Roman Governments at war with their own people.

Canon 7410 (link)

Examples of types of Dispensations created since 1533 that remain central to the Scientiam Mysteria (Occult Knowledge) system of legal instruments are:

(i) Discharge as the “Dispensation of Charges” whereby one is exempt from the payment or performance of punishment associated with certain allegations, even if the merits of the suit stood true; and

(ii) Dismissal as the “Dispensation of Trial and Confession” whereby one is exempt from the facing and responding to a suit and accusations.

Canon 7411 (link)

Dispensation is by definition a concept of supreme profanity, sacrilege and is morally repugnant, absurd in its presumptions and therefore null and void ab initio (from the very beginning). Therefore, all forms of instruments representing variations of Dispensation are also null and void, having no force or effect ecclesiastically, lawfully or legally.