The Key Bridge to Heaven is not through Mary Land but through ONE sacrifice.

I found the number of people, 8, who were reported as casualties like a dark sentence. Interestingly, the number eight refers to Father and Son sitting face to face. There are fifty-five holes in the chainsaw blade times the two thrones or full circles, giving us the all-important clue of 2×55 = Psalm 110:1. Angels insisted on seeing God the Son, meaning God would need to make man. The enemy does not like me as I tend to ruin his plans, and I refuse to become one of Santa’s little helpers; I do not think the Muslims or Jewish people will be chased to the cross using Santa and the Easter Bunny, and what’s with the eight Reinder? Why not six or five? Cupid sounds all too familiar. Where’s the LOVE among the Churches who claim to know HIM? The only way into heaven is through the cross, calling upon… Read moreThe Key Bridge to Heaven is not through Mary Land but through ONE sacrifice.

Living Parables Are All Around Us.

HONEY bees and their disappearance, the good bees go, and the killer bees coming up from the south remain behind.  They kill for their spirit queen, a demonic queen who has gone by many names from the beginning of time. Rome boasted 163 goddesses, not including the Greeks, who surpassed that number, and Athena and Venus don’t even overlap. Rome was big on Venus. While Eostre, who is a Germanic goddess, was brought about by the myths of Odin. Thank’s to Tolkien, his mythology remains alive and well. What brand of Christianity has to steal, kill and destroy? Rome pre Christian had no problem bringing on the gods of other cultures, and so when caving into Christianity, they created their brand of it that included their gods; changing names was not a big deal if it accomplished the end result of holding people back for the tribulation so he can… Read moreLiving Parables Are All Around Us.

The Spirit of Odin alive and well and in the Church.

The following is from the wiki: Odin is a widely revered god in Germanic paganism. Norse mythology, the source of most surviving information about him, associates him with wisdom, healing, death, royalty, the gallows, knowledge, war, battle, victory, sorcery, poetry, frenzy, and the runic alphabet, and depicts him as the husband of the goddess Frigg. In wider Germanic mythology and paganism, the god was also known in Old English as Wōden, in Old Saxon as Uuôden, in Old Dutch as Wuodan, in Old Frisian as Wêda, and in Old High German as Wuotan, all ultimately stemming from the Proto-Germanic theonym *Wōđanaz, meaning ‘lord of frenzy’, or ‘leader of the possessed’. This spirit overtook Hitler and his Nazis, and this is because the Church did not understand what Jesus meant by placing a new patch on an old wineskin. The patch would tear, the wineskin where it was placed, and that… Read moreThe Spirit of Odin alive and well and in the Church.