Tuesday, June 22, 2010

THE SOCIETY OF JESUS UNDER THE CURSE OF GOD ACCORDING TO THE KING JAMES BIBLE

KJV Proverbs 24:24 “He that saith unto the wicked, Thou art righteous; him shall the people curse, nations shall abhor him:”

HAVE THE JESUITS ESCAPED THE JUDGMENT OF GOD IN THE PAST? IF NOT IN THE PAST, HOW CAN THEY ESCAPE IN THE PRESENT?

KJV Proverbs 24:24 “He that saith unto the wicked, Thou art righteous; him shall the people curse, nations shall abhor him:” KJV Proverbs 24:25 “But to them that rebuke him shall be delight, and a good blessing shall come upon them.”

The Society of Jesus shows that the above verses are dogmatic and prophetic. They in their office as “priests” have said to wicked men that they were righteous. Based upon these two verses, the hatred of the Jesuit Order and expulsion by “nations” was prophesied of and destined according to the providential working of God. They were cursed of the people of the nations and their Catholic “brethren,” deemed them unfit for citizenship in all the nations listed. Those that preach any other gospel than that which Paul preached are “accursed,” so the Order has been “accursed” since it inception, and at this time “accursed.” The Society of Jesus preaches a “another gospel,” which is not the “gospel of the grace of God.” Therefore they, and their kindred infidel Arminian, Protestant “brethren” are all accursed.

The Jesuits have been expelled-

From Saragossa, in . . . . . 1555

From La Palintine, in . . . . 1558

From Vienna, in . . . . . 1566

From Avignon, in . – . . . 1570

From Antwerp, from Portugal and Segovia, in 1578

From England, in . . . . 1579

From England again, in . . , 1581

From England again, in . . . 1586

From Japan, in . . . . . 1587

From Hungary and Transylvania, ia . 1588

From Bordeaux, in . . , . 1589

From the whole of France in . . 1594

From Holland, in . . . . 1596

From the city Tonron and Berne, in 1597

From England, in . . . . 1602

From England again in 1604

From Denmark, Thorne and Venice in 1606

From Venice again in 1612

From the kingdom of Amura in Japan, 1613

From Boemia in 1618

From Moravia in 1619

From Naples and the Netherlands, 1622

From China and India in 1623

From Yalta, in . . . . . . 1634

From Russia, in . . . . . . 1723

From Savoy, in . . . , . . 1729

From Paraguay, in . . . . . 1733

From Portugal in . . . . . 1759

From France again, in . . , . I764

From Spain and the Two Sicilies, in . . 1767

From the Duchy of Parma and Malta, in . 1768

From all Christendom by the Bull of Suppression by Clement XIV, 1773.

(Lists from A GLIMPSE OF THE GREAT SECRET SOCIETY)

KJV Proverbs 24:24 “He that saith unto the wicked, Thou art righteous; him shall the people curse, nations shall abhor him:”

During the period of their suppression (from 1773 till 1814) the

Jesuits assumed various names and characters-such as “ Adorers

of Jesus,” (‘ Redemptorists, ” “Brothers of the Christian Doctrine,”

“ Brothers of the Congregation of the Holy Virgin,” “ Fathers of

Faith,” etc. etc.)

They were expelled:

From Russia, in – . . . . 1776

From France, in . . . . . 1804

From one of the Swiss Cantons (Grisson) about the year . . . . . . 1804

From France again…1806

From Naples in…1810


What changed since the restoration of the Soceity of Jesus on August 7th, 1814? The nations, in the person of their rulers, embraced the Order. The people of the nations embraced the Order in the form of its educational institutions. This ultimately fullfills another part of God’s word, that the WHORE OF BABYLON might fullfill her prophetic role to deceive all nations. It is through influence over the kings and potentates of the earth that the nations are made drunk with the wine of formication spewed forth from the belly of the Whore.


KJV Revelation 18:1 “And after these things I saw another angel come down from heaven, having great power; and the earth was lightened with his glory.” Revelation 18:2 “And he cried mightily with a strong voice, saying, Babylon the great is fallen, is fallen, and is become the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every unclean and hateful bird.” Revelation 18:3 “For all nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of her fornication, and the kings of the earth have committed fornication with her, and the merchants of the earth are waxed rich through the abundance of her delicacies.”


KJV Revelation 18:23 “And the light of a candle shall shine no more at all in thee; and the voice of the bridegroom and of the bride shall be heard no more at all in thee: for thy merchants were the great men of the earth; for by thy sorceries were all nations deceived.”


KJV Proverbs 26:18 “As a mad man who casteth firebrands, arrows, and death, Proverbs 26:19 So is the man that deceiveth his neighbour, and saith, Am not I in sport?”


KJV Psalm 75:8 “For in the hand of the LORD there is a cup, and the wine is red; it is full of mixture; and he poureth out of the same: but the dregs thereof, all the wicked of the earth shall wring them out, and drink them.”


If we do not shun “all the counsel of God,” (Acts 20:27) we may easily see that the Jesuit Order are accursed of God.

LEARNED BY THE WORD OF GOD AND EXPERIENCE

THINGS I HAVE LEARNED BY THE WORD OF GOD AND EXPERIENCE

1) All men are by nature exceeding vain and sinful, so much that pride and flesh to some degree taint the good works of the Christian with the odor of self.

2) The propensity to self-deception lies so deep in the heart and soul of man that only God’s grace and moving within can reveal error and generate true repentance.

3) Christians will at times frame their rebellion against the word of God as obedience to it.

4) That many preachers and ministers become so enamored of themselves that they come to act and speak as if God needs them more than they need God.

5) Many professing Christians would rather follow a religious man (or expert, scholar, or authority) than Jesus Christ, and have a religious man as their final authority in the place of the Lord Jesus Christ.

6) The providence of God so orders the events of a man’s life as to instruct him; some are instructed thereby to greater or lesser degree; others turn aside rather than receive knowledge.

7) Obedience is better than sacrifice; the righteousness of Jesus Christ is most demonstrated uprightness in the small affairs of daily life by those in fellowship with Him.

8) A man is justified by faith without works, and Christ the justifier works in them that have his faith.

9) That the means established by God and commanded in His word are the primary channels whereby we are able to know our own moral state. Reading the word of God, prayer, preaching, and assembling ourselves together in accountable fellowship are these means. These things arose an active contemplation of divine truth in the inner man.

10) All power in heaven and earth is given unto the Lord Jesus Christ of God the Father, and no man can stay His hand from His purpose.

Monday, April 19, 2010

WILLIAM WALLACE, MEL GIBSON, AND BRAVEHEART


The story of William Wallace in true history is obscure considering the stature of the man and his importance to the Scottish nation, with a fair portion of what is known of Wallace coming from the minstrel “Harry the Blind” who lived two centuries later. Mel Gibson’s popularization of Wallace in the film “Braveheart” catapulted Gibson to theatrical prominence but also made the name William Wallace a household word for millions of movie goers and home viewers, Gibson’s movie introducing them to this national hero. Gibson’s portrayal of Wallace as a devout Catholic was in harmony with his own rigid, pre-Vatican II Romanism, and from available extant sources appears to be correct historically concerning Wallace’s own religious practice. Romanism was essentially the only religion publicly practiced in the British Isles at the time, with Druidic and Wiccan practices condemned as witchcraft by the Papacy. Hence the whole population were professing Catholics, possessing no Bible in the common tongue nor instructed in the truths of God by a priesthood notorious for drunkenness, lewdness and fornication, crimes against nature, slothfulness and greed. These same conditions amongst the “clergy,” monks and nuns over two centuries later were part of the impetus for Henry VIII to dissolve the monasteries nationwide and take their assets and lands for himself and his nobility.

King Edward, known as “Longshanks” was an inveterate idolater who had repeatedly invaded Scotland. “King Edward was a serious prince, according to the notions of the age, and much given to relic worship.” In 1296 he removed from the Abbey of Scone the famous “Stone of Destiny” on which the coronation of the Scottish kings was performed. “It was enshrined in a chair or throne, on which the kings of the Scots were wont to be crowned. Its legendary history was, that it was the pillow on which Jacob reposed when he saw the vision of the angels ascending and descending the ladder, and that it was brought over by Scota, the daughter of Pharaoh from whom the Scots line of monarchs was descended.” “He intended at once to enclose the relic in a shrine, which should be the coronation chair of the kings. At first he gave orders for a chair of bronze, then altered his intention, and had it made of wood. Its cover or shrine thus being a seat or throne, altered and adorned from age to age, became the coronation chair of the kings of England.” (It is noteworthy that Herbert W. Armstrong and many other Anglo-Israelism believers have accepted this story of the stone and its origin at face value.) “Besides the Stone of Destiny, King Edward got possession of another movable, valuable to him as a weakening of the enemy and a strengthening of his own hand by the possession of a potent relic: this was the celebrated Black Rood or Holy Rood. It was a certified fragment of the true cross preserved in a shrine of gold or silver gilt. It was brought over by St. Margaret...” Edward had in the course of his warring against Scotland not only plundered its most revered object, but trodden under foot and killed many of the general population, besides the armed men who sought to resist him. There was a great ire and anger amongst the Scots, the popular uprising led by Wallace being the result.

The revolt against the English by Wallace and his followers occurred somewhat in the very manner depicted by Gibson in his production. Wallace was however not the mere peasant Scot that is presented in the film. “His father was a knight and a landowner, having the Estate of Ellerslie, in Renfrewshire. He had been knighted, and was thus, by the etiquette of Norman chivalry, as well entitled to lead armies as any noble, or even monarch, of his day.” Whether of Norman or mingled Norman/Saxon blood, William Wallace was of Teutonic descent, and the interests of his own family were tied with those of the surrounding population. “He had just taken to wife a virtuous damsel named Bradfute. She resides in the town of Lanark, where there is an English garrison; and as he is a marked man, from having already resented the insults of the invaders, it is not safe for him to reside there, and he must be content with stealthy visits to his bride. One day, having just heard mass, he encounters some straggling soldiers, who treat him with ribaldry and practical jokes.” “Wallace bears all with good temper, until a foul jest is flung at his wife. Then he draws his great sword, and cuts off the offender’s hand. He is joined by a few of his countrymen, and there is a scuffle; but the English are many times their number, and they must seek safety. His own door is opened for Wallace by his wife, and he escapes it into the open country. For this service his wife is slain, and he vows eternal vengeance. Gathering a few daring hearts around him, he falls upon the garrison in the night, burns their quarters, and kills several of them, among the rest William de Hazelrig, whom Edward had made Earl of Clydesdale and Sheriff of Ayr.” (This is essentially the plot Gibson presented, with a few small changes, one of which was the notion that the practice of Prima Nocte was in use by the lords of Scotland, when in fact this was not the case.) The cited descriptive passage (from John Hill Burton’s 8 volume HISTORY OF SCOTLAND, 1905, Edinburgh, Blackwood and Sons, publishers) is the general outline used by Gibson, and finds corroboration in the writings of an imprisoned North Umbrian knight sixty years after the incident, who gave a detailed description of his own father surviving the attack on the garrison, having been left for dead between two burning buildings. It seems that the Braveheart scriptwriter and Gibson had the authoritative Burton account before them as they worked on the film. Burton was the Historiographer Royal for Scotland, and cites many Latin, French, and English documents of the period to which he had access. His accounts appear dispassionate and balanced; though the language and phraseology in other sections of the work make it plain that he was himself a professing Protestant who likely believed in the Lord Jesus Christ.

The certainty of Wallace being a devoted Papist seems to be indisputable: he at one point offered protection to some clerics in Hexham, England in the midst of a bloody incursion into enemy territory. “As his unruly soldiers pillaged the church of Hexham, he took the canons under his immediate protection. “Abide with me,” he said, “holy men; for my people are evil doers, and I may not correct them.”” (History of Scotland, by Sir Walter Scott, Collier, 1909, page 88, volume one.) At his capture Wallace was in possession of a letter of safe conduct from King Philip of France, and in the Tower of London another paper turned up which was found to be a letter from Philip of France recommending to them his friend William Wallace. The solid Catholicity of Wallace was no doubt something that would have commended Wallace to Gibson and his Opus Dei father Hutton, and Jesuit co-adjutor Alex Jones as well. (For a number of years Jones used a sound clip of Gibson from Braveheart in his broadcast breaks, has interviewed Hutton Gibson numerous times, and actively promoted Gibson’s THE PASSION.) Gibson also made another film, WE WERE SOLDIERS, a Vietnam war flick, where he portrays a devote roman Catholic Colonel who takes fellow soldiers to pray before a Catholic altar, and even does his own version of extreme unction to the dead and dying on the field of battle.

The actual fighting scenes in BRAVEHEART are loosely fashioned after the facts, but again with some noticeable differences. At the battle of Stirling, the English heavy horse crossed a narrow bridge two abreast for a good part of the morning, and then were attacked by Wallace’s army. The Scots slaughtered the force projected across the bridge, and many others were driven into the river. At the later depicted battle of Falkirk the method of receiving the charge of cavalry or heavy horse shown by Gibson was utilized, but the Scots were positioned in circular clumps of spearmen, and not in a unified front. The horses impaled themselves on the spears and lances, which resulted in confusion amongst the English, but the sheer preponderance of numbers took its toll and each clump of spearmen were destroyed one at a time. Wallace and a few followers escaped the field. It is of special interest that in the Hollywood depiction by Gibson, King Edward gives orders for his archers to fire into the infantry as they were engaged in fighting at close quarters. An aide says, “But we will hit out own men.” To which Edward replies, “Yes, but we’ll hit theirs too. Bring me word of our victory.” Here the Jesuit Order tips the hand of their involvement in the film: a willingness to kill their own to achieve their purpose, with no regard for the value of any individual life.

The sum in the historical aspect of the life of William Wallace and his successor Robert Bruce is simple: the efforts of these two men resulted in the unification of Scotland as a nation, that it not remain simply as a conglomeration of feuding related clans continually meddled with by the English. The Scots were given a glimpse of victory and liberty by the triumphs of Stirling under Wallace, later Bannockburn under Bruce. This taste of freedom never left them, and made the nation fertile ground for what was to come. God in his gracious providence prepared the nation for the re-entry of the true gospel of Jesus Christ centuries later, and used the yearnings and desires of two Papists to do it. Wallace and Bruce were Catholics, but nationalists. Rome was too far away for them to have any concern about the Pope’s supposed temporal power being brought to bear upon them. They resisted with their whole beings the temporal power of a tyrannical prince who had no regard for man or God, and exhibited personal courage of the highest nature. Wallace is reputed to have hacked the body of the first English lord that was killed to pieces (Hazelrig) as a message to his own men and the English. Bruce slew three men who jumped him while he was in full armor on horseback. On another occasion went forward between his own lines and that of the enemy, a Scottish sort of David, and meant an enemy challenger, killing him with one blow to his helmeted skull. These men were not the sort to be trifled with, and the fleshly power they exhibited then were later surpassed by the various fearless Scottish ministers who loved not their lives unto death. God has his way in the whirlwind of history.

There are many peculiarities about the career of Mel Gibson and his rise to prominence as first an actor and now director. In the filmography below notice his lead role in GALLIPOLI, where the slaughter of the British troops by Turks in a senseless and impossible attack is depicted, one determined by co-adjutor Winston Churchill. He also played the lead in CONSPIRACY THEORY, as well as THE PATRIOT (another Alex Jones promoted film). Having viewed quite a few of these productions, it seems that Gibson is an Opus Dei/Jesuit anointed papal knight engaged in Jesuit theatrical mockery and subversion of the viewing public of America. In some of the films he engages in sympathetic, heart rending acting, but in his most popular roles plays a good kind of guy forced to engage in rapid, angry killing of those that have wronged him and his lived ones. His portrayal of Hamlet, while competent has an unnerving, psychotic aspect to it that goes far beyond Shakespeare (de Vere). In one of the LETHAL WEAPON movies he also engages in race mixing behavior with the woman playing his partner’s daughter. Mel’s recent outbursts, public drunkenness, and one noted testimony of adultery (by the fornicatrix who claims to have consorted with him) are certainly the works of the flesh and the fruits of Romanism, and possibly the result of practicing the Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius Loyola. His loyalty to Romanism is unquestionable, as the building of his own personal church to engage in pre-Vatican II, Council of Trent style worship testifies. His affability and ability to engage and hold the attention of his viewer are obvious, but there is much more to him than meets the naked eye.

A PARTIAL MEL GIBSON FILMOGRAPHY

Complete Savages (TV series, 3 episodes) (2004)
Paparazzi (2004)
The Singing Detective (2003)
Signs (2002)
We Were Soldiers (2002)
Breaking The News (TV, narrator) (2001)
Drama School (TV series, as himself) (2000)
What Women Want (2000)
Chicken Run (2000)
The Patriot (2000)
The Million Dollar Hotel (2000)
Payback (1999)
The Simpsons (TV series, one episode, voice) (1999)
Lethal Weapon 4 (1998)
Conspiracy Theory (1997)
Fairy Tale: A True Story (1997)
Father's Day (1997)
Ransom (1996)
Pocahontas (voice) (1995)
Casper (1995)
Braveheart (1995)
Maverick (1994)
The Chili Con Carne Club (short) (1993)
Man Without A Face (1993)
Forever Young (1992)
Lethal Weapon 3 (1992)
Dame Edna's Hollywood (TV, as himself) (1991)
Hamlet (1990)
Air America (1990)
Bird On A Wire (1990)
Lethal Weapon 2 (1989)
Tequila Sunrise (1988)
Lethal Weapon (1987)
Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome (1985)
The Bounty (1984)
Mrs Soffel (1984)
The River (1983)
The Year Of Living Dangerously (1982)
Attack Force Z (1982)
Punishment (TV series) (1981)
Mad Max 2: Road Warrior (1981)
Gallipoli (1981)
The Chain Reaction (1980)
Tim (1979)
Mad Max (1979)
Summer City (1977)
The Sullivans (TV series, one episode) (1977)

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Concerning Divine Providence by John Newton from his collected works

"The Book of Providence is the third volume, by which those who fear the Lord are instructed. This likewise is inextricable and unintelligible to the wisest omen who are not governed by the word of God. But when the principles of Scripture are admitted and understood, they throw a pleasing light upon the study of Divine Providence, and at the same time are confirmed and illustrated by it. What we read in the Bible, of sovereignty, wisdom, power, omniscience, and omnipresence of God, of his over-ruling all events to the accomplishment of his glory, of the care he maintains of his church and people, and of his attention to their prayers, is exemplified by the history of nations and families, and the daily occurrences of private life. the believer receives hourly and indubitable proofs that the Lord reigns; that verily there is a God that judges the earth. Hence arises a solid confidence: he sees that his concerns are in safe hands; and he needs not be afraid of evil tidings; his heart is fixed trusting in the Lord: while others live at uncertainty, exposed to the impression of every new appearance, and, like a ship in a storm, without rudder or pilot, abandoned to the power of the winds and waves. In the history of Joseph and in the Book of Esther, and indeed throughout the Bible, we have specimens of the wise unerring providence of God; what important consequences are depend, under his management, upon the smallest events; and with what certainty seeming contingencies are directed to the issue which he has appointed. By those authentic specimens we learn to judge of the whole; and with still greater advantage by the light of the New Testament, which shows us, that the administration of all power in heaven and earth is in the hand of Jesus. The government is upon his shoulders; the King of Saints is King of nations, King of kings, and Lord of lords; not a sparrow falls to the ground, nor a hair from our heads, without his cognizance; and though his ways are higher than our ways, and his thoughts than our thought; though his agency is vailed from the eye of sense by the intervention of second causes; yet faith perceives, acknowledges, admires, and trusts his management. This study, like the former, does not require superior natural abilities, but is obvious to the weakest and meanest of his people, so far as their own duty and peace are concerned."

John Newton, from his letter, "On A Christian Library."

From THE WORKS OF JOHN NEWTON in Six Volumes, Volume 1, Williams and Whiting, 1810. New York.Page 216,217

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

BOOK OFFER: The Mind of the Jesuit


BOOK OFFERS




THE MIND OF THE JESUIT: SIGNS, SYMBOLS, DOGMA AND DOCTRINE BY NELSON C. TURNER (COPYRIGHT 2010)


This just completed work on the life and works of Ignatius Loyola and the Society of Jesus was designed to serve as a primer and overview of the topic for those unfamiliar with the Society, but includes much information that those familiar with the Order may not have encountered or considered. A review of the personal history of Ignatius, his annotations for the Spiritual Exercises, and a clear and concise overview of the main tenets of Jesuit theology are enhanced with numerous images which demonstrate the global hegemony of the Jesuits. The extent of their moral influence upon professed Protestants is exposed as the doctrines of the Jesuits are compared to the words of the King James Bible and the statements of the Lord Jesus Christ. Documentation includes citations from Catholic, Jesuit, and Protestant sources detailing the perverted morals, twisted theology, and criminal actions of this group of self professed followers of the doctrines of Ignatius Loyola. The research for this work included the perusal of hundreds of books and documents, resulting in the discovery of various facts demonstrating that the damnable deeds of the Jesuits are but the natural product of a warped, subversive, and Satanic mentality.





PAPERBACK COPIES WILL BE AVAILABLE SHORTLY.