HERE AND GONE: THE RAPTURE ABDUCTION
HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, March 8, 2025 – The powers-that-be have a plan. When their time comes (that is, when Satan’s time comes), they’re going to get rid of us, with God’s permission. To back their plan, they’ve twisted scripture until it states that the golden age of Jesus’ Kingdom will come only after true believers have been raptured and everyone else has gone through a tribulation. First comes the rapture, then comes the tribulation, and then comes Jesus’ 1000-year Kingdom, along with the return to Earth of all the previously raptured saints.
Sounds great, right? Really something to look forward to!
The only problem is that it’s junk theology. Scripture doesn’t back it up (except the part about God permitting us to be killed). In the “millennial reign” mentioned in the book of Revelation, the martyred believers reign with Jesus for “a thousand years” (i.e., a very long but indeterminate time stipulated by God). These saints died and went to Heaven, where their bodies have been glorified. Glorified bodies aren’t suited for long-term visitations on Earth, which is why angels don’t appear in their glorified form very often or for more than a few minutes at a time. Instead, most angels appear in an earthly-heavenly hybrid body, like Jesus during his 40 days of post-resurrection appearances. But hybrid bodies aren’t built for long-term earthly use either, so how are Jesus and his saints going to reign on Earth in physical form for a thousand years?
I’ve written about this before, but it bears repeating because the PTB have been going into overdrive lately beating their rapture drum (see the video here or below for an example). They’re hammering the rapture into people – even unbelievers – by simplifying and codifying its occurrence, so that when the mass abductions take place, most people will default to “rapture” and accept the disappearances without question or be threatened into silence.
I have zero doubt that there’ll be mass abductions. How else are they going to get rid of us when their time comes? Still, the truth of the matter is that Jesus has been reigning on Earth for almost 2000 years already. Jesus is King here and now, and his glorified saints rule with him in his spiritual Kingdom, while we, his Earth-bound saints, are its cherished and protected citizens. This is the prophesied Zion written about in the OT, taught by Jesus in the NT, and presented as the millennial reign in the book of Revelation. There will be no other Kingdom on Earth and no other Zion, golden or otherwise. This is it.
There will also be no rapture as framed by the PTB, though there will be individual ascensions, like Jesus mentions (“one shall be taken, and the other left”) and as exemplified by Jesus, Elijah, and Enoch. So no, there won’t be a mass rapture before the tribulation, but there will be mass abductions of born-again believers. That is the PTB’s diabolical plan.
But I guess you’ll just have to take my word for it, because if I’m still here when it all goes down (or allegedly up), I probably won’t be around to tell you “I told you so”, because I’ll be gone.
And so will you.
“SMASH THEM DOWN!”
HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, March 5, 2025 – At the very center of St. Peter’s Square, in the corner of Vatican City that interfaces with the world, stands a 4,500-year-old obelisk. The pillar was stolen from Heliopolis, an ancient Egyptian city whose principal deity was the sun god Ra, the “king of the gods”. But as we well know, all “gods” are demons. So why has a demon idol been erected in the front yard of the home of the alleged vicar of Christ?
Good question.
And this isn’t the only demon pillar in Rome under the auspice of the Vatican. There are 13 in total scattered throughout the city, all designated as Catholic “pilgrimage sites”.
God, in scripture, commanded his people to smash down and destroy every demon pillar they came across in the promised land. Roman Catholics are either exempt from this command or not God’s people. It was the Roman caesars who first relocated these idols from Egypt to Rome at great cost and effort, but it’s been the papacy that’s maintained them over the centuries. Interestingly, all worldly centers of power, such as Washington, London, and Paris, have their own prominently displayed obelisks, which they either pillaged from Egypt or built as replicas. When Jesus said that the world is under Satan, he wasn’t kidding. The demon pillars are proof.
But the obelisk in St. Peter’s Square is particularly perturbing. Surely at least one person at the Vatican has access to a Bible and has read the Old Testament? Because the very first time I read the OT as a born-again believer I came across the verses about the pillars and immediately thought of the obelisk at the Vatican. I thought: How can this be?
I’ve since come to understand that the Vatican, and in fact Roman Catholicism in its entirety, is an homage to Satan, full of ostentatious wealth and pomp and idols and rituals that have nothing to do with Jesus, let alone God. This abomination of a religion is only permitted to exist because God has put the world under the authority of Satan, including this branch of the worldly church, and so the papacy is not actually under God’s protection but under Satan’s. It will remain under his protection until it no longer serves the devil’s purpose.
I say without reservation that there are profoundly unholy people occupying the highest offices of the Vatican. How can these be God’s people? They serve Satan and do so openly, as anyone with eyes to see can see. It’s worth noting that Vatican City was built on the site of Nero’s Circus, where countless Christians in the early Church were murdered for sport and entertainment. The same demon pillar that held a position of prominence at Nero’s Circus holds a position of prominence on the Square. The blood of the martyrs is mixed into the very soil of the place. Peter and Paul were also murdered there. I would not be surprised if martyring of genuine Christians continues at the Vatican to this day.
I despise the papacy and everything it stands for, even as I acknowledge why it exists. Still, having been born Roman Catholic, I pray to God to be excommunicated from that abomination before he takes me Home.
ON MISINTERPRETED SCRIPTURE
HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, March 4, 2025 – Deuteronomy 28 provides a run-down of the blessings and curses that come from obeying God. This chapter was directed at the children of Israel, to guide them as they settled the promised land; by extension, the blessings and curses are also meant to guide us born-again believers as we settle the spiritual promised land of God’s Kingdom on Earth.
In two seminal Gospel passages, Jesus took those blessings and curses and applied them directly to us. Unfortunately, these passages are also among the most misinterpreted in all of scripture.
The first passage describes Jesus using a little child as a metaphor to explain how to live in the Kingdom. He calls the child to him and then sets him up and apart “in the midst” of the crowd while giving his teaching. The child is the focus of the lesson. Jesus explains that after being converted, his followers are to “humble” themselves like a child, to be thoroughly obedient and compliant to their heavenly Father as a child is to his earthly father. Jesus then warns what will happen to anyone who harms these little children, saying that it would be better for the offenders if they hadn’t been born at all.
The common interpretation of this passage is that Jesus was referring to all children (i.e., humans under a certain age), and that we’re to treat all children with a certain deference, as they hold a special place in God’s Kingdom, but this was not Jesus’ intention. Jesus used the child as a metaphor for God’s children (i.e., born-again believers), and the lesson is meant as a guidance for God’s children as well as a warning to anyone who purposely harms them. That Jesus was using the little child as a metaphor rather than as a direct reference is clear when he states “except ye be converted and become as little children”. He is describing here adults being converted and then humbling themselves like a child in relation to God. He was not teaching how to deal with young humans in general.
The second passage has been similarly misinterpreted and misapplied. In it, Jesus refers to God’s children as his “brethren” and describes the blessings that come from helping them and the curses that result from refusing to help them. This is the parable of the sheep and goats: the sheep are rewarded with Paradise, while the goats end up in “everlasting fire”. And who are Jesus’ brethren? Those who do God’s will, as Jesus explained in another passage.
Unfortunately, the “brethren” part has been overlooked in most interpretations of these verses, making “those in need” apply to everyone in need, especially the poor. This was not Jesus’ intention. Jesus mentions elsewhere that we can help the poor whenever we want, as there’ll never be a shortage of them, but we won’t always have him to help. In saying this, he prioritizes helping him (and by extension helping his brethren) over helping everyone else.
Enormous blessings flow to those who are obedient to God and help his children, while horrendous curses result from disobeying God and refusing to help his children (or purposely offending them). Deuteronomy 28 and the “little child” and “sheep and goats” passages make this crystal clear.
ON OLD ACQUAINTANCES, SOFT HEARTS, AND GRUDGES
HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, March 1, 2025 – The older we grow, the softer our hearts should grow. That doesn’t mean we turn into a pushover or a soft touch. No, because even as our hearts grow softer, our resolve to do God’s will grows stronger. The two – soft heart and firm resolve – are intertwined and interdependent. This doesn’t make for a pushover, having a soft heart and a firm resolve; this makes for a person firmly rooted in God but holding no grudges.
It’s critically important that you live your life firmly rooted in God and grudge-free because grudges will keep you out of Heaven and distance you from God. If you’re distanced from God, he’s not hearing your prayers, you’re not hearing from him, and the only way you can proceed along that dreary path is downward. You don’t want to go downward; you want to go upward. Upward is the only way to stay in God’s heart and the only way Home.
I ran into someone yesterday I hadn’t seen in years. We have some history between us, though not personally. It’s more an arms-length, third-party history, affecting people we know mutually. But that history is decades old. Still, and not having seen me for years, this person studiously stonewalled me, purposely looking the other way as I passed by.
My heart must be softer than I realize, because even as it was happening, I didn’t feel anything but sadness for that person. How can you not pity someone who’s still holding a grudge decades after the fact? Paul says we should be on good terms with everyone as much as possible and Jesus warns us that God won’t hear our prayers if we have a hardened heart.
As we know, everything happens for a reason. More specifically, nothing happens that doesn’t affect our spiritual well-being, whether for good or bad. So I asked God why he brought this person into my life yesterday. Was it to test the hardness of my heart? Was it to test my resolve? What he told me surprised me: He said that he hadn’t brought that person into my life yesterday, he’d brought me into that person’s life. It was for that person’s sake that we had our unexpected meeting after all those years, as that person’s days are numbered.
A grudge is horrendous chronic spiritual pain that burdens the person holding it, not the person it’s held against. My encounter with the grudge-holder yesterday made me grateful to God for teaching me not to hold grudges. You learn at some point in your life to hold grudges, and then you have to unlearn holding them. You have to unlearn holding grudges, and the best way to do that is simply to make the choice to forgive, and stick with it.
A few hours after that encounter, I passed by another old acquaintance I’d had some words with years ago and hadn’t seen for a while. He, too, used to stonewall me, but yesterday he nodded and smiled in response to my nod and smile. That’s all Paul meant when he said we should be on good terms as much as possible with everyone. Just a nod and a smile, keeping the heart soft and grudge-free.



