A while back I posted a
scenario that seemed very probable, that of a secret rapture fraud. I never
receive comments, but I can see how many people around the world read my blog.
(I never look at readers’ URLs or other private internet addresses, because Blogger
warned that if I did, then the readers would be able to know that I did, and then ban
me from their blog reading. I don’t want that, and besides, I don’t need to
know who is reading my posts. I do occasionally look at the numbers, and that
is all.)
So, this blog, Prophecy and
Politics, while not as popular as my main blog, TruthInvestigate, did have a
steady readership. That is, until I wrote of a secret rapture fraud. Then most readers never came back. And that probably was because I added a table with the scenario that I conjectured might
play out. And that scenario, which was a prediction, had future dates.
I knew that using dates for
predicting the future was a big no-no, because Jesus said that no man knows the day or hour of His coming, or really anything related to His coming. But I used dates anyway. I also felt
that leaving out dates made the whole scenario look fictitious and
fairytale-like. So I chose to put in dates in the hopes that, even if the secret rapture hoax concept were rejected
because I broke the rule of “no dates for prophetic interpretations”, at least the scenario would
leave a strong impression of a reality in the minds of the readers.
After that post my readership
plummeted. I was sad for that. But I realize that most importantly, the readers
who ingested my concept of a secret rapture, even though it is not biblical,
could very easily be faked in accordance with the “Left Behind” doctrine, which is very widely believed among our Evangelical brothers and sisters. I still believe in a future Secret Rapture hoax. If anyone copied that previous post with its table explaining my
expectation of a faked Secret Rapture, then I leave a simple warning: The
dates cannot be relied upon in any way. But, the way I laid it out could very
possibly happen.
I only wanted to plant a seed
of what to watch out for. Even if a faked Secret Rapture doesn’t happen, the post wasn’t a waste of my
time or the Adventist readers’. But, if it does happen, then Adventist readers won’t be
completely thrown for a loop and get swept up in the spiritually lethal,
popular current of the Bible reality of Christ’s return (although it is a complete mistake about the true, biblical description of His return), because the Adventists always tossed out the Secret Rapture as an impossibility
simply because it isn’t biblical. Many, many things that are not true and
biblical will comprise the final deceptions and delusions. I quote several
verses that tell it all:
“And Jesus answered and said
unto them, Take heed that no man deceive you.” (Matt. 24:4).
“For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect.” (Matt. 24:24).
“But evil men and seducers
shall wax worse and worse, deceiving, and being deceived.” (2Tim. 3:13).
“Then shall that Wicked be
revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of His mouth, and shall
destroy with the brightness of His coming: even him, whose coming is after the
working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders, and with all
deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish; because they received
not the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this cause God
shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie…” (2Thess.
2:8-11).
“And I beheld another beast
coming up out of the earth; and he had two horns like a lamb, and he spake as a
dragon.
And he exerciseth all the
power of the first beast before him, and causeth the earth and them which dwell
therein to worship the first beast, whose deadly wound was healed.
And he doeth great wonders,
so that he maketh fire come down from heaven on the earth in the sight of men,
And deceiveth them that dwell
on the earth by the means of those miracles which he had power to do in the
sight of the beast; saying to them that dwell on the earth, that they should
make an image to the beast, which had the wound by a sword, and did live.”
(Rev. 13:11-14).
This last text from
Revelation shows that the final deception to reinstate the Papacy of the Dark
Ages will involve great deceptions, even including fire the sky (or from
above the outer regions of our atmosphere). This event—if literal—would be what causes the United States to accept the work of the
second beast for the purpose of leading the Protestant Americans to make the replica of the old
papacy, and then breath life into it, per verse 15.
I can’t think of a faster way
to drive the Christian world to strong-arm the United States legislature to
pass a Sunday law than for everyone to have “witnessed” the lightning quick
(i.e. invisible) Secret Rapture. Such a lightning quick hoax could also easily
use lightning. Recently, weather modification has had placed within its reach
the possibility of creating lightning—and gargantuan lightning 100 times
greater than natural lightning. (See my July 12, 2019 post, “Fire from the sky”.) And such man-made
lightning, by harnessing the ionosphere through the Tesla principle, could
imitate the sudden event that has been popularized since the 1970s, the “blink of an eye” rapid appearing of Christ and the taking away of millions of people.
But the Pre-Trib Secret
Rapture is connected with another unbiblical falsehood—the Seven Year
Tribulation period that follows the invisible rapture hoax. And at the center
of that unbiblical period is the turntable event when a beloved Mr. Perfect
world leader rips the mask off his face, and there, to the chagrin and horror
of Christendom, they see the devil incarnate. That is where I believe the
following article below may well give some input.
I don’t accept any of the following article’s use of polarizing speech that is taking place in the religio-political world of Evangelical
America today. In my mind, everyone and anyone who involves himself in politics
and, especially, religio-politics, is falling into the deepest chasm of Jesuit deception. I
warn everyone I see of this, whether they are on the religious side of the
questions or the irreligious side. And religion-irreligion is the line that
both sides are lining up behind. It is simple the Hegelian principle being used
on Protestant America to divide and ultimately to conquer our holy
Protestantism inheritance. This conquest of our holy religion sticks a knife in
my heart as I watch the destruction of our religion’s strongest protection against our
enemy from the Dark Ages. We are literally watching that ancient power direct this
Protestant nation set up its own people, from both sides of the religious
divide, to lose their soul when they join or fight against the Religious Right.
In the end, Protestantism completely disappears, and the Vatican and its Jesuit
deceivers from the bottomless pit win the long war against the Bible, and faith
in the only true God and His only begotten Son. And the Papacy also wins over
our Protestant U.S. Constitution.
So, without further adieu the
article below that might be the introductory thrust to prepare the religious
American mind with the idea that, one day soon, an “Antichrist” will rip the Mr. Perfect mask off his face:
A Christian theology
professor has warned conservative evangelicals who believe President Donald
Trump is like the biblical Cyrus that he’ll “turn on them in a moment.”
Roger E. Olson, professor of
Christian Theology of Ethics at George W. Truett Theological Seminary at Baylor
University in Waco, Texas, wrote Monday on his blog that
some Trump-backing evangelicals see him as “something of a messianic figure.”
He clarified that he’s not
talking about everyone who voted for Trump, but specifically evangelicals who “lionize
Trump as a kind of new national messiah” and see him as “our Cyrus,” referring
to the biblical king.
“Cyrus was, of course, the
emperor of Persia who died in 530 BC. During his approximately thirty year
reign he released the Hebrew people in exile to return to Jerusalem and rebuild
the temple that was destroyed earlier by the Babylonians,” the theologian
described.
“He is mentioned in the
Hebrew Bible several times and always favorably. There is one obscure passage
in Isaiah that even attributes messianic qualities to him.”
Olson pointed out that the
Hebrew people did not consider Cyrus one of them, but saw him as a powerful ally
that was raised up by God to deliver them from bondage. He noted that some
evangelicals, in much the same way, believe that God is using Trump to deliver
them from persecution.
“These people see themselves
as a remnant of the conservative Christianity that once made America truly
great,” he argued.
“Their view of American
history is a downward slide toward not true pluralism but suppression of
traditional Christian values,” he continued.
“They truly believe that
Trump, even if he is immoral and criminal (the latter has not been proven, of
course), was raised up by God to reverse the trend in American culture toward
total decadence and hedonism. But even more, they believe God raised up Trump
not because he is one of them but because he hears them and will put a stop to
efforts by government bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. (e.g., in the Department
of Education) to persecute Christians.”
Olson argued that it must be
examined whether U.S. internal public policy truly is anti-Christian, however,
and whether Trump really had good intentions toward evangelicals.
He said that when it comes to
the second question, he “very much doubts” it has a positive answer.
“Personally, speaking only
for myself, I believe President Trump only cares about power. I have not seen
any real principles — other than ‘Make American great again’ (with an implied ‘and
me, too’). I strongly suspect that he is manipulating his conservative
Christian ‘base’ and would turn on them in a moment if it suited his agenda to
be powerful,” he said.
There have been a variety of
Christian and non-Christian personalities that have alluded to Trump being a
Cyrus-like figure.
Those include author,
speaker, and political strategist Lance Wallnau; Fox
News host and former judge Jeanine Pirro; and
even Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
who has hailed Trump for his support for Israel.
Evangelical leaders, such as
Anne Graham Lotz, the daughter of famous evangelist Billy Graham, have likened Trump to
another biblical king, Nebuchadnezzar, who at first oppressed believers, but
then turned to faith in God.
Others, such as Michael
Brown, president of FIRE School of Ministry, have argued that only God can say
whether Trump can be compared to Cyrus or Nebuchadnezzar, if either.
“As the saying goes, let God
be God, meaning, it’s up to Him to do what He wants to do. Only He can answer
this question for sure,” Brown wrote in an March 2016 op-ed in The Christian Post.
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