24 February 2024
From time to time, conversations I have with readers indicate a need to answer questions that are inherent in the discussion, but not raised verbally. They are questions you might ask if you thought of them.
My ministry began simply as a dire need to answer my own questions. When as a young man I asked them, the answers I got were few; most people I asked brushed me off as impertinent. The few answers I got seemed to miss the point. There was a fire burning in my soul, and nobody knew what to do with it, least of all, me.
I didn't set out to answer anybody else's questions until I finally felt like my own were answered. By that time, I was far down the road, and I knew the appeal of my work would not be wide. But unlike Madame Blavatsky, I'm not targeting the self-appointed elite movers and shakers. I'm not trying to change the world. Part of the answer to my questions was that this world doesn't really matter that much. It belongs to Satan; we have no authority to take it back from him. The only thing we can rescue is our own individual selves, by claiming the redemption of Christ.
So, the biggest issue was helping other people realize that very thing. There was a time I was fired by the idea of making the world a better place, but that eventually died. This is a time in human history when the narrow upward path of faith is neglected, and few are they who find it.
I have no use for trying to correct common assumptions about Christian religion. It may look like I'm doing that, but I take no offense when others cling to false notions. Unlike most religious leaders in this world, it's not my job to make sure everyone agrees with my particular discoveries. There's no place for polemics in my calling.
So, unlike Brandon Smith, the author of the linked article above, I see no need whatsoever in fighting those guided by false spirits. I have no real stake in this world. I fully expect to die a most obscure figure in Christian teaching. It's not my department to worry about publicity and broader adoption of what I've discovered. All I can do is put it in reach of anyone the Lord brings to my work.
By the way, Smith correctly identifies the doctrine of Theosophy as precisely everything the Bible warns us against. The Devil is working very hard to get humans to join his opposition to our Creator's agenda. The whole prophetic warning about the Devil is that he sought to usurp God's throne, and so the natural drive of this false religion is to turn humans into gods. Transhumanism is a perfect application of this insane doctrine:
Globalists assert that there is no such thing as the soul, no such thing as individual identity and no such thing as moral compass. From their perspective there is no danger of adopting technology as a path to godhood because nothing would be lost; and here we see the true nature of luciferianism at work. A perfect representation of this cancer is World Economic Forum spokesperson Yuval Harari -- a man who says the quiet part out loud and promotes the darker tenets of luciferianism regularly.
Thus, we can safely regard Harari as the current High Priest of Devil worship. He fits nicely the symbolism of the Beast's Prophet. If this kind of doctrine continues to metastasize and becomes a common feature of human government, we know how this will turn out.
But the rise of psychopathy is what gets my attention. Psychopaths have always been around, but one could get the impression their numbers are increasing. Do you remember the Amalekites? In rather literal human terms, Amalek was the bastard grandson of Esau, a man devoid of spiritual nature. You can chase down the history of his tribal descendants, but it's important to understand that the real issue wasn't Amalek's DNA, but his utter lack of moral orientation. The term "Amalekite" refers to a kind of people more than a particular nation; that's a common aspect of Bible History. A great many names of peoples were not nations so much as a label for how they lived.
My point is that the Amalekites were raiders, not builders or agricultural folks. Their one profession was raiding and stealing. Every man was first some kind of soldier, in that sense. But more to the point, they were generally psychopathic in their actions. They rejected any kind of customs of civility that was otherwise ubiquitous across the Ancient Near East. They stood out as part of a dreadful presence of incorrigible hateful people who fully deserved to be wiped out, which eventually happened (1 Chronicles 4:42-43).
Further, it is worth speculation as to whether they were any part of the Nephilim. Keep in mind that the term "Nephilim" refers to a kind of people, not a specific genetic heritage. Rather, it's a class of genetically twisted people, like a particular disease. They were typically larger and more intelligent than normal humans, but the main point was their demonic souls; they weren't entirely human. We should wonder if psychopathy isn't in some way an attempt to restore their presence, to provide bodies for the demonic souls trapped in the Abyss.
The only flaw in this argument is that, (1) psychopathy in our world is defined as a range of traits, not an all-or-nothing kind of thing, and (2) there are some who score high on the psychopathic scale who are committed to social stability and are shocked when they discover they meet the definition of "psychopath". Still, the proliferation of people who have these traits should indicate something in human DNA is being manipulated to some small degree, which is most certainly one of the powers granted to the elohim. They are the ones who created the Nephilim in the first place.
Regardless of the details, I am not alone when I say I'm convinced we will see the Nephilim again as we approach the next apocalypse. But there aren't very many saying that.
Comments
Jay DiNitto
If what you say about the Nephilim being about a certain type of person, or at least the Bible/ANE thinking claiming that the important thing is that it's a "type" and not a genetic lineage, then it's definitely possible that we'll see them again. If there is a genetic component that's "needed" for the Nephilim to reemerge, that's certainly possible too, because of phenotypical forces. What genes and environment are required is anyone's guess.
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