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JOSEPH AND HIS AMAZING WEALTH-TRANSFER DREAM SCHEME
CHARLO, New Brunswick, February 19, 2024 – Christian preppers often point to the story of Joseph and the 7-year famine in Egypt to justify their stockpiling of food and supplies. They also tend to simplify the story by saying, “Look, Joseph knew a famine was coming and prepared for it, saving his family and the Egyptians from starvation.” But that’s the rosy picture of Joseph and his allegedly heroic feat of prepping. If you look a bit deeper into the details, a darker picture emerges.
In the years leading up to the famine as well as during and after it, Joseph was second only to Pharaoh in power and authority. But how did he get there? How did a young foreigner imprisoned in a dungeon on rape charges rise in rank overnight to become Pharaoh’s right-hand man?
Scripture tells us that Pharaoh had put Joseph in charge of preparing the kingdom for the famine based on Joseph’s interpretation of Pharaoh’s dreams. But what we have to read between the lines to learn is that Joseph’s suggested plan on how to deal with (or better said, how to profit from) the prophesied dearth stood to make Pharaoh the richest and most powerful man in the world. As soon as Pharaoh heard about Joseph’s dream scheme, he eagerly agreed to it and immediately rewarded Joseph with his exalted position. So Joseph not only became the second-most powerful man in Egypt virtually overnight, he also became incredibly wealthy, catapulting instantaneously into the upper ranks of the 1% or ruling “elite” class. This detail is important.
Once appointed, Joseph quickly set his plan in place. But the plan wasn’t a noble scheme prompted by his compassion to feed the starving masses during the coming famine. No, not at all. Joseph’s plan was much more shall we say “comprehensive” and involved the greatest wealth transfer in Egyptian history.
Fortunately or unfortunately (depending on your perspective), the wealth transfer was from the poor to the rich – from the people to the state – and started already when food was still being grown. Joseph instituted a nation-wide policy that required all farmers and other food producers to give the state 20% of whatever they grew or made each year. They could not opt out of this initiative (it was essentially a tax on their labour or an income tax). What Joseph was doing was taking the surplus food out of the market and storing it as property of the state, food that otherwise could have been stocked away as preps by the individual producers or consumers or even sold for a profit. So when the famine hit, the people had nothing in their own storerooms for themselves and very little by way of savings, as they’d had to give 20% of their product to the state and whatever was left over they had to live on.
The famine was long and widespread, which meant that the Egyptian people could not simply go to neighouring countries to grow or buy their food. They had to rely on the Egyptian state to feed them. After having centralized the entire food supply and in so doing creating a monopoly, Joseph then proceeded to sell the food taken from the Egyptians back to them. At first, he charged them money for the food. But when they had no more money (because they couldn’t produce or sell anything due to the ongoing famine), Joseph accepted their livestock as payment. Then when they ran out of livestock, Joseph accepted their land and their labour as payment. Under this “dream scheme”, the former independent subsistence producers and small landowners in Egypt became destitute serfs within only a few short years, thanks to Joseph’s prepping.
By the time the famine ended, Pharoah owned all the land in Egypt and the Egyptians were not only forced to labour for him, they were also forced to give him 20% of the fruits of their forced labour.
This is the view of Joseph and the famine that doesn’t get much airplay in Christian prepping circles, but the 1% have certainly taken note of it over the years. Joseph’s wealth-transfer and labour-taxation dream scheme has been repackaged and rebranded at various times in history and we’re fortunately/unfortunately (again, depending on your perspective) living in one of those times. We know the scheme today as “The Great Reset”, popularized by the heartwarming phrase: “You’ll own nothing and be happy”.
Yet it is worth remembering that Joseph did what he did with God’s approval and blessings. In fact, God instigated both the dreams and the dream scheme, just as he’s instigating the wealth transfer now. We can only assume that, like the ancient Egyptians, we have it coming.
RECYCLED SOULS? ON DEATH, DEMONS, AND SOUL MIGRATION
CHARLO, New Brunswick, February 18, 2024 – I came across the comment below a few days ago on a “conspiracy” website. I’m reposting it here because the topic is important and also touches on erroneous beliefs that some Christians hold – beliefs that are demonic in origin and need to be cleared up. The person who posted the comment was discussing the death of a famous member of a so-called elite family, speculating that the soul of the deceased had likely migrated to another human body and from there would continue his reign of economic and social engineering terror:
Pretty sure he hopped into a ‘donor’ body. These creatures never die; they hop from one donor body to the next. Most likely it would be his son, grandson, or something like that. This is how these entities continue to wreak havoc, this is why they never actually ‘die’; its because they are terrified of dying. Once they actually die (without hopping into a donor body), they will be punished for all of eternity, with most never being able to incarnate again. Before the actual ‘death’, a soul transfer is performed, switching the soul from the dying shell to the new host. [This is] similar to memory transfer into the clones they keep making. These old guys in power are older than history; they keep bouncing from one body to the next, with never actually dying, their soul just keeps transferring. ALL memories all memories, ideas, plans, etc., stay with them and they get up and continue on doing what they were doing before the transfer.
As informed as the author considers himself to be, his speculations are baseless. Souls don’t transfer from body to body; demons do. All human souls get one chance on Earth in a human body, whether they choose to serve God or choose to serve the devil. When they die, they don’t reincarnate into another human body (or animal body or insect body, etc.); their mortal body remains here (unless it undergoes the pre-ascension glorification process while still on Earth, like with Jesus) and their soul proceeds either to the realm of death or to Heaven. Satan lies to people about being able to transfer their soul to another human body when theirs dies; this lie is one of the chief tricks Satan uses to get them to sign on with him. It’s wishful thinking on the part of his prey, to believe they can body-hop, but it’s still a lie. We all, every one of us – without exception – get only one time around this racetrack, and that’s it.
Demons, however, with God’s permission, are able to migrate from body to body until the end of time, and demons are well able to pretend they’re this or that person’s soul transferred to another being. (Fallen entities are not called “intelligences” for nothing.) The lie of soul migration is how people have come to believe in and promote inter-body soul transfer and reincarnation. Demons also masquerade as dead people who are trapped on Earth in spirit form, causing “hauntings” and “visitations”. Demons tell a lot of lies and are quite good at deceiving humans. Whole religions and doctrines of superstitions have developed over the millennia based on nothing but demon-inspired lies.
Our discussion here today needs to include a reminder on where souls go when their human body dies. Scripture teaches us that there are four possible soul destinations: Heaven, hell, death, and the lake of fire. Heaven is the final destination of souls whose names are written in the book of life; hell is an interim holding pen for fallen entities who are not roaming the earth; death is an interim holding pen for human souls; and the lake of fire is the final destination (post-hell and post-death) for souls that don’t make it to Heaven. After the Judgement, all souls will either be in Heaven or in the lake of fire.
I had a very talkative cab driver a few weeks ago who regaled me with stories of his near-death experiences, claiming to have died at least three times over the past 20 years. But far from being frightened by his NDEs or finding that they gave him a new lease on life, he was enthusiastically anticipating his actual death. According to him, the only time he’s ever felt at peace was when he was dead. He described each of his NDEs as being in a dark place where he was free of pain.
As I’ve written here before, I also had an NDE (just before my rebirth) and experienced exactly what this man did – darkness and no pain. At the time, I interpreted the absence of pain as peace. It was in this pitch-blackness that God came to me with his offer. I accepted it and came back to life reborn. The so-called peace I’d felt in the darkness was nothing compared to the real peace I then experienced as a born-again believer. The peace of death is an absence of sensation, whereas the peace in a believer’s soul comes from the abiding presence of God’s Holy Spirit.
I mentioned to the cab driver that the peace he’d felt was an interim phase only (death) and that something much worse would follow for unbelievers, but he didn’t want to hear about it. He insisted (or better said, he ranted) that he hated life and longed for death. Needless to say, I was glad when that cab ride was over.
There are only four destinations for human souls when their body dies, and being recycled back to Earth is not one of them. Despite what the devil says to convince you otherwise, there’s no such thing as soul migration; there are only demons masquerading as human souls, pretending they’ve been reincarnated or transferred. Don’t fall for their lies. We’ve been granted by God to live once and once only on Earth, and then comes the Judgement. Before your time is up, set your sights on Heaven and hold them there steady ’til the end.
CHRISTIAN IN A BUNKER
CHARLO, New Brunswick, February 17, 2024 – You’re in your bunker. You’ve got enough food to last at least 10 years. Ditto, water (your bunker is on a gravity-fed well). Your power is run by by a bank of batteries that you recharge on a bike. Your air filtration and security cameras are camouflaged in tree trunks. You’ve stockpiled iodine pills, First Aid supplies, vitamins, supplements, and everything you think you’ll need to keep yourself occupied, grounded, and centered in an SHTF scenario. Your guns and ammo are high and dry, your back-up bows have plenty of arrows, and all your comms are masked and hardened. You’ve prepped to remain underground for as long as it takes, and as far as you know, no-one knows where you are.
But there’s just one thing you may have forgotten – God knows where you are, and so does the devil. And if God and the devil know where you are, you’re going to have company sooner or later. It could come in the form of surveillance or attack drones, or it may be some desperately hungry or injured people, sent by God or the devil to test how you’ll respond. As a Christian, what do you do? Do you give your position away and emerge to assist them, or do you hunker down, stay silent, and wait for them to move on? What if more refugees start showing up, even more desperate than the first ones? How long can you remain underground and silent, hoping everyone will just go away? Or should you pick and choose who to help and who to ignore?
Being a Christian makes you obligated to help whoever God prompts you to help, whether friend or foe. This obligation is non-negotiable for Christians, even in an SHTF scenario. If you choose not to help someone God has specifically prompted you to help, you’ll get the due rewards for that, which means you’ll pay the price in suffering.
Even so, helping strangers will compromise your hide-out location and put a dent in your supplies. This is the dilemma that all preppers face, Christian or not, and also the reason why they stockpile weapons and ammo. Defending your fortress at all costs may be priority #1 for most preppers, but it can’t be for Christians. Priority #1 for you as a Christian must be to help whoever God prompts you to help. You should be prepared to walk away from your bunker, if staying means you have to spill another’s blood to defend it.
Jesus’ warned us that the time would come when we’d be treated like outlaws by mainstream society, and when that time does come, we should get a weapon at all costs, even if we have to sell the shirt off our back to get one. But Jesus never said that we should use the weapon to hurt people. We should get a weapon, yes, but we should use it for deterrence purposes only. The person staring down the other end of our barrel, bow, or blade won’t know our true intentions and will likely be scared off by our menacing posture. That’s the idea, anyway, and should suffice.
Better not to have a bunker at all, if it only ends up bringing you tests and temptations.
We need to have this conversation around weapons and their use. Far too many people who call themselves Christians believe it is their God-given right to kill in self-defence or in defence of a loved one or property. Some even consider it their duty to kill in defence of God’s honor and for Christianity itself (Crusaders and “God’s Army”, I’m talking to you). This belief is false. Jesus was clear in his warning that those who live by the sword die by the sword. When Peter rushed to defend Jesus at his arrest, Jesus rebuked him for hurting the soldier and then healed the soldier’s wound. This crystalizes Jesus’ teaching on weapon usage for his followers. Yes, he told us to get a weapon, but he meant that we should carry it for deterrence purposes only. I cannot repeat that enough. We’re not to use our weapons to hurt or kill people. God will protect us from our enemies and deal with them as only he knows how.
So if you do get to that point (I pray you never do) where you’re hunkered down somewhere to ride out an SHTF storm and God sends you someone to help, to test you, you help that person, even if it compromises your hide-out and supplies. Unlike the children of the world, we’re not here for survival; we’re here to help: We’re here in service to others.
And by all means, have a weapon on hand and brandish it in fine style if the situation calls for it. Jesus told us to get a weapon. Just don’t hurt anyone with it. Only shoot (if shoot you must) to put the fear of God in your attacker. Learn how to handle and care for a weapon, but think of it as a prop only, not a killing or maiming tool. This scripture-based teaching for Christians comes straight from Jesus, who himself got it straight from God. So if you have any problem with it, take it up with them.
FEAR AND TREMBLING
CHARLO, February 16, 2024 – I was born-again from atheism nearly 25 years ago. I learned about God and Jesus from God and Jesus, first by my rebirth experience itself, and then by reading scripture and deepening my relationship with God and Jesus day by day. I attended Catholic mass for the first few years of my rebirth, but it was more an exercise in attendance and calisthenics (stand up, sit down, kneel down, sit down, bow your head, cross yourself, stand up, etc.) than an education in God. I guess what I’m saying in my usual roundabout way is that my knowledge of God and Jesus comes from the source itself – God and Jesus, and their words recorded in scripture.
Having been taught about God and Jesus by God and Jesus, I find it odd when theologians and pastors argue over what God and Jesus meant when they said this or that. God is Truth and we receive God’s Spirit of Truth at rebirth, which means those who are born-again are speaking God’s language of Truth by default. I don’t argue in support of this or that point of theology or school of thought, like a sports fan raucously backing a team for no other reason than that it is his team. As a born-again believer, I support Truth and Truth only, which is neither a school of thought nor a point of theology, because Truth, as scripture assures us, is God.
I mention this as a preamble of sorts to the topic of salvation. There are several different theological points of view and schools of thought on whether or not salvation (that is, eternity in Heaven) is guaranteed for all those who believe in Jesus. But how can there be opposing points of view on Truth? The fact that there are even differing arguments on this pivotal topic is itself a giveaway to the spiritual credentials of those doing the arguing.
Truth, being God, doesn’t need to be argued. Truth only needs to be presented, and those who love Truth will recognize it and receive it as such. This process of recognizing and receiving Truth when it’s presented is one of the abiding gifts of God’s Holy Spirit in a reborn soul. Those who are not reborn don’t have that gift and so can easily be deceived.
When I heard about “once saved, always saved”, I immediately dismissed it as a lie. It’s not only non-scriptural, it’s a repackaged version of the same old nose-stretcher told to the children of Abraham back in the day. Jesus had it out quite a few times with the scribes and Pharisees, etc., about their presumption that they were indisputably Heaven-bound solely because of their genetics. He tried to correct them by presenting the Truth, but being children of the devil, they would not receive correction.
I know that when you, as a born-again believer, read these words, you’ll recognize God’s Truth in them and receive them as such. I know that you’re well aware that we’re on spiritual probation and will remain on spiritual probation right up until the end of our time here. Our salvation is not guaranteed by our rebirth. Our rebirth, being conditional, guarantees nothing; it did, however, enable us to receive God’s Holy Spirit and through the Spirit to develop a close relationship with God and Jesus and to enter into God’s Kingdom on Earth.
But our rebirth does not guarantee our salvation, any more than the state of grace we entered into at our rebirth guarantees our salvation or being in God’s Kingdom guarantees our salvation. Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross paid the sin price that enabled our reconciliation with God, but our reconciliation doesn’t in and of itself guarantee our salvation. Jesus’ sacrifice doesn’t guarantee salvation to someone simply for stating: “I believe”. If that were the case, even demons would be Heaven-bound, as James rightly pointed out, because demons know only too well that Jesus is the Christ.
Spiritual rebirth enables us to have a one-on-one relationship with God and Jesus. Through this relationship, we have their protection and guidance, which is worth more than all the world’s wealth combined. But even having this priceless constant protection and guidance still does not guarantee our salvation. We still have free will while we’re in the state of grace, which means we can still choose against God and Jesus.
We can still sin.
And we can still fall.
We don’t stop being tempted and tested just because we’re born-again and the apple of God’s eye. Yes, God loves us, but rules are rules and standards are standards, and we’re held to the highest of standards as God’s children. He expects the most from us, and rightly so, because he’s blessed us with so much. Jesus warned us that everything we do, every word we speak, and every thought we entertain will be judged. The devil’s taking copious notes on each of us and is planning to throw them in our face at the Judgement, pulling all stops to have us condemned. Jesus will present our defense, of course, but it will be much more than just “they believed in me”. He will have to prove by our actions, words, and thoughts that we lived our belief to the best of our ability, and that we did so to our last mortal breath. The proof, as they say, is in the pudding, not in the recipe.
You, as a born-again believer, know this already. You know that you have to work out your salvation with fear and trembling, not with presumption, boasting, and false assurances. You know that you’re on probation and will remain on probation until the end of your time here. You know that grace is a state of being that you entered into at rebirth, courtesy of Jesus’ sacrifice. You didn’t earn grace; it was given to you. God has no interest in taking his gift back, but you still have the capacity to trash it and dump it of your own free will.
God promises he’ll never leave us or forsake us, but we can certainly leave and forsake him. God will not stop us, if we choose to go. We still have the capacity to stop following Jesus and start following Satan, like Judas did. May we never do that.
I learned about God, Jesus, and scripture from God, Jesus, and scripture, not from theologians and pastors. Being reborn and in a state of grace, I have God’s Holy Spirit of Truth in me, so I know a lie when I hear it. “Once saved, always saved” is a lie and a very dangerous one at that. It makes people spiritually lazy and proud, which is why the devil told this lie to the children of Abraham all those years ago and why he’s telling it to Christians today.
But as born-again believers, we know that as long as we have free will, we have no assurance of salvation, which means we can still sin the unforgivable sin and fall from grace. Being conscious of our vulnerability makes us careful in how we choose our words, thoughts, and actions. The more careful we are, the less ammo we give the devil for Judgement Day.
GOD’S BABIES
For since the beginning of the world men have not heard nor perceived by the ear, neither hath the eye seen… what he hath prepared for him that waiteth for him.
Isaiah 64:4
CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, February 4, 2024 – Forget the Museum of Natural History. Don’t waste your time watching Jurassic Park. Why pore over old bones locked up in dusty display cases or sit in the dark staring at CGI dinosaurs when you can live the real thing, up close and personal, in Heaven?
Every creature that once roamed the Earth has a forever home in the celestial realm, and they’re all tame and friendly and surprisingly quite talkative. That’s right – if you make it to Heaven, you’ll not only see the dinosaurs, along with every furry, scaly, feathery, and leathery creature that’s ever existed, you’ll be able to talk with them as easily and as naturally as Adam once talked with the animals in Eden. You’ll be able to hang out with them and go on adventures with them. And the best thing (for me, anyway) is that glorified creatures don’t bite, sting, scratch, or poop, not in Heaven. Nothing bites, stings, scratches, or poops in Heaven.
I mention this about God’s glorified creatures because as lovely as Earth is and as blessed as we are to be here and to have Earth as our temporary address, it doesn’t hold a candle to Home. It just doesn’t. On a scale of 1 to a million in wonderfulness, with “1” being occasionally wonderful and “a million” being mind-blowing, Heaven soars beyond countability while Earth barely hangs on to “1”.
Not to denigrate Earth. I would never do that. I’m grateful to be here and I love what God’s done with the place. But God doesn’t want us to get too attached to our earthly lives or to his time-and-space-bound imperfect creation. He wants us to enjoy everything, certainly (he specifically made it for our use and pleasure), but he doesn’t want us to get too attached. Earth is like a glossy brochure, a 30-second ad, a sneak-peek preview of what’s waiting for us at Home. And not surprisingly, the dinosaurs are as much of a draw in Heaven as they are on Earth.
Of all the sights that await us in Paradise, the plants and animals will probably overwhelm us the most (that is, after we recuperate from our first glimpse of God!). And we’ll see all of God’s creatures in Heaven, not just the ones we’re familiar with. We’ll see plants and animals that are long extinct and for which no bones or fossilized remains have been found, and we’ll see plants and animals that were never on Earth. Quoting Isaiah, Paul reminds us that what God has prepared for us in Heaven is beyond our comprehension. In other words, we, as humans, not only have no point of reference on Earth, we simply don’t have the capacity to comprehend what’s waiting for us. A big part of that unimaginability is the glorified plants and animals in every conceivable (and inconceivable) size, shape, color, texture, and personality.
All of our beloved pets make it Home, too. The ones that are no longer here are there. (There’s no third option for them: they’re either here or there). So you can imagine how big Heaven must be, if every creature that ever lived on Earth is now in Heaven! I find this to be a great comfort as well as an ongoing source of amazement. When I think about my pets being perfected and permanently safe and happy in their real forever home, I can’t thank God enough and I want to be there with them as soon as I can. Knowing they’re in Heaven massively motivates me to get my butt Home.
Theologians and preachers don’t talk much about plants and animals, but they should, since God’s creatures are all over his Word, from Genesis to Revelation. Plants and animals play a huge part in God’s plan of redemption and also feature prominently in scriptural visions of Paradise. My little piece of Heaven that God shows me is full of my favourite plants and animals, all perfected and waiting for me. God has done this, showing the depth of his love for me, just as he’s done the same for you, showing the depth of his love for you. God loves his creatures so much, he’s even surrounded his throne with them. They’re always in his presence. (They’re his pets!) We’ll get to meet God’s pets, too, some day, if and when we make it Home.
And in the midst of the throne, and round about the throne, were four beasts full of eyes before and behind. And the first beast was like a lion, and the second beast like a calf, and the third beast had a face as a man, and the fourth beast was like a flying eagle. And the four beasts had six wings… and they were full of eyes… and they rest not day and night, saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God almighty….
Revelation 4:6-8
Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him. But God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit….
Corinthians 2:9
I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes.
Matthew 11:25
THAT ONE THING
CHARLO, New Brunswick, February 1, 2024 – There are so many things that we can do, but only one thing that we should do. We need to be careful, we believers, to focus on that one thing and ignore the rest.
The world is full of noise and distractions that lead us astray, or the world will allow us just a little tiny bit of time to spend on that one thing, just a teensy tiny bit of time, just enough so that we can comfort ourselves thinking we did it, all the while making silent vows to spend more time on it later. The world is very good at grabbing and holding our attention – grabbing and holding us – and in so doing keeping us from doing the only thing that matters. Did you know that the sole purpose of the world is to redirect our attention away from God? By “the world”, I don’t mean God’s creation (God made his creation for our comfort and joy); by “the world”, I mean Satan’s creation; I mean all things fake and lies.
One of the for me unexpected joys of aging is being able to break through the noise and ignore what has no value. I now have no trouble saying “No” when it’s warranted. When I was younger, I wanted to please everyone and put a smile on their face, and so many a time I would say “Yes” when I should have said “No”. Many an hour I spent doing things I shouldn’t have done with nothing to show for it but regret and bad memories. I don’t do that anymore. I focus on doing that one thing and that one thing only. I get more frowns now than smiles, more grumbles than grins, but I don’t care. And that’s another unexpected joy of aging – not caring what people think of what you do or what you don’t.
Tomorrow is not a given. Even the rest of today is not a given. The older you get, the more you realize this truth is meant for you. At some point, your number is up, and I sure as heck don’t want mine being up when I’m doing something other than that one thing that I know I should be doing. I’d definitely have some splainin’ to do if that happened. And God would likely remind me that I should have known better – I of all people should have known better – but at that point it would be too late.
The notion of “too late” is not something that strikes you when you’re younger. Time stretches before you, and with it the presumed assurance of having plenty of time yet for redo’s. If it doesn’t work this time, we’ll try it again next time; if it doesn’t work next time, we’ll try something else. There’s always a nearly infinite amount of time for do’s and redo’s when you’re younger. But when you’re older, time is short. Years are short. Days fly by. There might not be time for a redo, so you’ve got to get it right the first time around.
But how can you always get it right the first time around?
Here’s how: You do that one thing. You focus on that one thing. Your whole world becomes that one thing, that pearl of greatest price that Jesus told us about, the one that you sell everything you have in order to buy. If you focus on that one thing, you’ll get everything right the first time around and you won’t have to worry about regrets or redo’s. You won’t even have to worry about time because you’ll know that time is just something that passes, like everything else in the world, just something that passes and then is gone.
When you focus on that one thing, there is no time… until one day there really is no more time.
And you’re Home.
ON ATHEISM
CHARLO, New Brunswick, January 28, 2024 – If you open the door to Hell, don’t be surprised if the devil walks in and makes himself at home. Jesus’ focus was on the lost sheep of the house of Israel, not random people he happened upon in his travels. He never forced his views and opinions on anyone; those who came to hear him came of their own free will. We need to be reminded of this every so often. Standing on the street corner and shouting the “The End Is Nigh!” or handing out “God loves you!” flyers is not what Jesus taught us to do.
I was an atheist before I was born-again, so I know how utterly closed-minded (that is, spiritually deaf and blind) atheists are to Truth. They claim to be seeking the truth in their rejection of all things God, but what they’re actually seeking (although they don’t know it) is the truth according to Satan, which is of course the gospel of lies. Atheists and Satan are all about pride; both stake their claims with arrogance, and both disdain anyone who disagrees with their arguments, dismissing them as fools. But real Truth – God’s Truth – doesn’t need to be argued; it only needs to be presented, and those who genuinely love Truth will recognize it and immediately embrace it as such. Those who don’t love Truth will not accept it, no matter how clever or persuasive the argument.
We do God and Jesus a grave disservice when we argue God’s Truth. Arguing God’s Truth implies that God didn’t explain his Truth well enough in scripture so we have to make up for God’s shortcomings and oversights. I remember, as an atheist, editing the Ten Commandments for style and content (aiming for humor) and then faxing the marked-up copy to an ad agency, hoping for a job interview. What I got back was a stern rebuke commanding me never to contact them again. This is what happens when you try to one-up God.
I have never met a happy atheist, but I have met many a happy believer. “Happy believer” is so much a given, it’s basically a tautology, whereas “happy atheist” veers into the realm of the twilight zone. Snarky atheists abound, as do drug- and alcohol-addicted atheists, boastful atheists, cruel atheists, degenerative, debauched, and deranged atheists, depressed atheists, and suicidal atheists. But happy atheists? No. When I was an atheist, I sneered at the concept of happiness. I thought it a delusion for the weak-minded. I was certain that the strong needed to feel pain in order to be truly alive, which is why, I reasoned, all great writers and artists were of necessity suffering souls. Anything that fell short of this “necessary” state of (what I know now to be mostly self-induced) suffering was mere wretched contentment, as Nietzsche once phrased, derided, and dismissed it.
Happiness eludes the unbeliever because happiness, like all good things, comes from God. That’s not to say that atheists can’t every now and then perceive sensations that are akin to happiness, as I used to on rare occasion as an atheist, such as when walking through a fragrant forest or sitting on the edge of a cliff overlooking an ocean. But whatever the sensation was that I felt in those moments, it was fleeting and superficial and nothing compared to the deep steady joy that is my everyday reality as a believer. I don’t even drink alcohol anymore, not because I’m a teetotaling kill-joy but because alcohol just brings me down.
If I had one wish for atheists, I would wish for them to be made whole. To be made whole means to be healed, but a bone that has grown crooked first needs to be broken for it to be set straight. Now imagine if everything – mind, body, and soul – is crooked and in need of healing, in need of being set straight. Only God can affect such a monumental breaking and resetting, and that’s what I wish for atheists. I wish – no, I pray – that they be fully and properly broken, not caught and cushioned before they crash but permitted to crash hard. We Christians do people a grave disservice when we don’t allow them to crash; under the guise of helping them, we prolong their agony. Atheists in particular need to crash (as I well know and as I certainly did) because crashing is the only way to break their pride and make them whole again.
DOING GOD’S WORK? WHEN CHURCHES BURN
CAMPBELLTON, New Brunswick, January 27, 2024 – Over the past few years, thousands of churches around the world have been vandalized or burned to the ground. In many cases, local governments have effectively fanned the flames by sympathizing with the vandals, labeling the destruction an understandable response to alleged historical crimes allegedly perpetrated by Christians. As horrendous as the burnings and desecrations may seem to us as believers, are the vandals actually doing God’s work?
Many if not all of the affected churches served as unofficial repositories for local historical artifacts, including those connected to ancient worship ceremonies that are not Christian. As we well know, worship of anything or anyone other than God is paganism, which is a polite term for demon worship. Some communities, prior to adopting Christianity, were steeped in demonism under the guise of “spirit worship” or other religions. Although they’ve since been coerced or persuaded into exchanging their talismans for crucifixes, their hearts have never fully been invested in “White Man’s religion”, especially in recent years. Tokens small and large of their former demon worshiping ways have been creeping back into their Christian rituals through a process known as religious syncretism.
We know what God thinks about religious syncretism. The Bible makes it abundantly clear. God didn’t like it back in the day when the children of Israel were doing it, and he doesn’t like it today when people who claim to be Christians do it. Nothing personal; it’s just that worship of demons and worship of God are not the same thing: one of these things just doesn’t belong. And using church buildings to store and/or display artifacts made for demon worship or to host celebrations or gatherings that invoke and glorify spirits other than God’s – well, God has a solution for that.
It’s called a flame.
And it burns things.
Sometimes to the ground.
If God allowed his desecrated temples in Jerusalem to be burned to the ground, why wouldn’t he also allow his desecrated churches to be burned?
I am not inviting, promoting, or celebrating the vandalizing of churches. I’m simply reporting their destruction as God gives me leave to do so. On the other hand, governments and their unofficial mouthpieces in media have all but condoned the attacks for political or cultural reasons, but we know, from evidence in scripture, that religious syncretism was likely the real catalyst for the burnings and also the reason why God permitted them to happen.
Jesus tells us that God is looking for people to worship him in spirit and in truth, not in a building. Buildings aren’t required to worship God. Paul said that the bodies of true believers form the worship temple, as God’s Holy Spirit resides in them. If this is the case (and it most certainly is), perhaps nothing of real value was lost in the church fires. What the destruction does indicate, however, is that Christianity is now approaching the same point of no return as Judaism once did, and if that thought doesn’t light a fire under you, I don’t know what will.
HOW THE DEVIL EMASCULATES GOD’S WORD
They have filled the land with violence and have returned to provoke me with anger…. Therefore will I also deal in fury: mine eyes shall not spare, neither will I have pity: and though they cry in mine ears with a loud voice, I will not hear them….
I will recompense their way upon their head.
CHARLO, New Brunswick, January 22, 2024 – The quote above is from Ezekiel (8:17-18/9:10), where God explains what he is about to do to his own people, and why. As with everywhere else in the Bible, God does not mince his words. He is not afraid to offend Ezekiel’s sensibilities: He simply says what he means.
Most Christians no longer say what God means. They’ve been trained by the devil to sugar-coat and even compromise God’s Word so as not to offend or hurt people’s feelings. For example, Christians are now watering down what love means to include sinful acts, again for the sake of not hurting people’s feelings or risking “alienating” anyone.
But we as born-again believers are not in the business of being nice or popular; we are not trained by the devil. Prophets of God should never sugar-coat God’s Word so as not to hurt people’s sensibilities. Our job is to represent God and to speak his Truth as he reveals it to us, no compromise.
And God’s Truth is at time intensely hurtful. It’s meant to be. God uses emotional and physical pain as a way to get people’s attention – to snap them out of their sinful delusions. He also uses pain as a reward for ungodly behavior (as evidenced in the opening quote) and as a test. Allowing people to experience pain is part and parcel of who God is. We can’t expect to go through this life, whether as a sinner or a saint, and not experience some level of emotional or physical pain.
In other words, God doesn’t shy from doing what needs to be done. His justice, like everything else about him, is perfect, and sometimes his justice requires the swift, mass, and fatal infliction of pain even in his own people as their due reward. You cannot sugar-coat this reality or you risk offending God. Yet as we see in the watering down of the meaning of “love”, many Christians have no problem offending God as long as people still like them.
I have zero problems offending Christians if the choice is between speaking God’s Truth and not hurting someone’s feelings. In fact, my consistent choice to offend Christians by speaking God’s Truth has become my calling card. Most pastors caution that we should be speaking God’s Word in “love” and “grace”, again with an eye not to offend or alienate, but I don’t see any attempt by God, in Ezekiel or elsewhere, to water down the description of what he intends to do to his people. The unadulterated Truth of God is that pain is part of love and that pain is part of grace. To deny that reality is to speak the lies of the devil rather than God’s Truth.
The devil scores points when we bend and twist God’s Word so as not to offend. He’s taught even God’s people to do this and continuously whispers in our ear to act “in love”, after having redefined love as meaning “good feels” rather than evidence of God’s presence. But when you reduce God to good feels and restrict his prophets to not hurting anyone’s feelings, you emasculate them. Misrepresenting God and his Word is not acting in love; it’s supporting and promoting sin.
We cannot, as born-again believers, tolerate the misrepresentation of God and his Word, any more than we tolerate any other sin. We call it sin and refuse to participate in it. Our job is not to mollify people’s sensibilities but to speak God’s Truth boldly and as he gives us permission and instruction to speak it. It is the greatest of all privileges to be a prophet and child of God, to be called his people, but it’s not a free ride: there are equally great responsibilities in being such. I’m not saying you should set up a soapbox in the middle of a pride parade and start railing against sin – no. That is not the time or place to speak God’s Truth. But if someone in a space designated as God’s House demands that sin be tolerated, you have an obligation to speak God’s Truth, and that obligation is to God.
God has no problem obliterating even his own people if his justice calls for it. That is who God is. As his prophets speaking his Word in Truth, we need to remind “those who have ears to hear” that God is revealed as much in Ezekiel 8 and 9 as he is in John 3:16, and that the same God of John 3:16 will not hesitate to Ezekiel 8 and 9 you, if you have it coming.
I tell you all this because the devil certainly won’t, and the devil has infiltrated all denominational churches, emasculating the pastors and their congregations by watering down God’s Word. This is not what Jesus had in mind when he said we should become eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven’s sake. Jesus modeled what it is to be a child of God, and if you’ll recall, he was his boldest and hardest hitting when speaking God’s Truth to those who should have known better. There was zero compromise and zero sugar-coating in his confrontations. Jesus had no trouble revealing that side of himself or that side of God when circumstances called for it.
Neither should we.









