Answer:
I'm aware that there's some connection between Jesus words in Matthew 13:43 and the myterious Illuminati. However, I'm not familiar with many details of this legendary connection or what you call "The Divine See Code". But without knowing what has been speculated about the Illuminati and Jesus words in Matthew (13?), I would feel no need pay much attention to such theories. The reason is simply because the passage in question can be understood in context quite clearly - and therefore there's no need to import a mysterious or conspiratorial interpretation on it.
The verse I believe you're referring to says, (Matt 13:43) "Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun in the kingdom of their Father. Who hath ears to hear, let him hear." KJV You can see the actual words Jesus uses are not "suns of God" but "shining like the sun". This nicely reflects the Greek structure of the original sentence. So what's he saying? In this passage Jesus is interpreting his own parable about the weeds and the wheat told earlier in 13:24-30. Among other things, Jesus says the parable describes final judgement when the righteous and unrighteous will be separated and meet their final destinies, in torment or in bliss. Verse 43 is Jesus' description of what awaits when God's Kingdom is fully realized. The righteous will live in perfect harmony with each other and their God because not only are their sins forgiven, the temptation to further sin will be removed (41). It's heaven, it's restored life as God meant for us to live it. Those that will reign with Christ will shine Jesus says, like the sun.
There's no need to see in this a cryptic message. It's a simple middle eastern metaphor being used that we still use today. We assocaite light with goodness. Jesus is saying with judgment completed, the darkness of evil will be gone - not only around us but also IN us. Therefore our lives, our words, our actions, our thoughts, our community will exude the righteousness of God. Righteousness is contrasted with evil as light is contrasted with darkness. Therefore the righteous ones raised at the end of time will shine LIKE the sun - the brightest thing we can think of.
Paul uses a similar metaphor for how Christians currently also shine in a world of darkness - for the same reason. Our lives of following Christ in increasing holiness stand in contrast to the broken and sinful world in which we live. He says, (Phil 2:15-16) "...so that you may become blameless and pure, children of God without fault in a crooked and depraved generation, in which you shine like stars in the universe."
It's that simple. We shine NOW, Paul says, and Jesus says we will shine THEN. The righteousness that is experienced by Christians in part now, will be fully lived out then when all sin and temptation is done away with and when we are raised incorruptable, the old house of flesh transformed. This is a prediction of what happens to ALL of us who choose Christ, not a reference to some secret society of legend and lore.