Thursday, July 28, 2022

Canadian Dictator Plots To Destroy Nation’s Agriculture

 Click On The Headline

Are Luciferian Elites Laying The Philosophical Framework For The Acceptance Of Cannibalism?

 Click On The Headline

New Orleans Replaces Confederate Memorial With Idol To Demonic Entity

 Click On The Headline

Andy Stanley Undermines First Amendment While Assuming Ecclesiastical Infallibility

 Click On The Headline

Plague Cult Priestess Confesses Alchemical Elixir Little More Than Tyrannical Snakeoil

 Click On The Headline

Aspiring Eco-Tyrants Propagandize Against Air Conditioning As Racist

 Click On The Headline

Raise Kids To Think Like Philosophers

On The Passing Of John Shelby Spong

 Click On The Headline

What Is A Futurist?

Living In Charlotte, North Carolina vs. Living In South Carolina

How To Think Like A Futurist

 Click On The Headline

Feeling Our Way Into The Future

Lovecraft: Fear Of The Unknown

What Is The Call To Ministry?

Church History and Historical Theology

 Click On The Headline

The Cycles In Human History

When The Transformers Generation 1 Series Died

A Teaching On Fundamentalism

The Unsolved Death Of Edgar Allan Poe

How To Write A Spy Thriller

Writing and Christian Culture

Imagination Shapes The Future

Anglican Schools Of Thought

Friday, July 22, 2022

Wishing Biden Nothing One Way Or The Other

 Avowed Plague Cult zealot Joe Biden has contracted the venerated pestilence. 

At the zenith of the respiratory boutade, the Autarch conspired to restrict the availability of particular curatives in order to coralle the population towards the injectable genetic therapies preferred by elite technocrats and to punish individuals refusing to acquiesce with the likelihood of grave illness and possibly even death. 

Bet during the grips of his illness no physician wheeled Biden to the hospital entrance and had him ejected from the premises as pleurisy filled his lungs, essentially telling him desiccated bowel movement because of his inoculation status. 

As such, I am gripped with profound indifference regarding his potential recovery.

by Frederick Meekins


Thursday, July 21, 2022

Is Death Of God Theology Resurging After Half A Century?

 Click On The Headline

Triumph The Insult Dog Apparently Allowed To Cock His Leg Wherever He Wants In “OUR BELOVED” Capitol

 Click On The Headline

A Christian Analysis Of Mortimer Adler

 Click On The Headline

Artificial Intelligence Church Prepares To Worship Image Of The Beast

 Click On The Headline

Woketopians Seize Control Of Madison's Stronghold

 Click On The Headline

Transhumanism & The Great Reset

 Click On The Headline

Transhumanism & The Rise Of Artificial Intelligence

Norman Geisler’s Legacy: Apologetics & Evangelism

H.L. Mencken: The Bitter Byline

Stepping Into Retirement

Revising Retirement

How To Write New Classics In Fantasy

Defeating Big Government Socialism

How To Teach Review Writing

What If Satan In Planning Extraterrestrial Conspiracies For The End Times?

Evangelical Anglicanism: Pietism & Empiricism

Ignatius Lyne and the Restoration Of Anglican Monasticism

What The Media Mob Won’t Cover

The Impact Of Dr. Norman Geisler

Transhumanism: The Left’s Next False Religion

How To Start A New Career After Retirement Or A Layoff

George Will on “American Happiness and Discontents”

Should Christians Avoid Fantasy Like Lord Of The Rings & Harry Potter?

Tuesday, July 19, 2022

Bikers Hardly Proponents Of Traditional Domesticity

 An online theologian observed, “I don't know much about Adam Carolla but he has a new book out. He brought up the fact that every time you see a man and a woman on a motorcycle, you see the man on the front and the woman on the back. Why is that if genders are totally equal?”

My response: What is being left off is that Carolla in his next statement provided the explanation.

It was simply that the sort of men that usually own motorcycles are dominant.

They are not going to sit in what these sorts refer to as “the bitch seat”.

Motorcycles are morally neutral. 

However, it should also be pointed out that many bikers aren’t exactly fonts of the sort of behavior conservative Christians would want to emulate.

They do not treat women the way that they do out of a devotion to the medieval codes of chivalry.

Neither should Corolla, though often insightful as a libertarian pundit, be celebrated as a proponent of demure feminine modesty.

He does, after all, owe much of his notoriety as the host of a program titled “The Man Show”, a prominent feature of which consisted of a scantily clad woman bouncing on a trampoline with her bosom jiggling in the breeze as they did spread eagle leg splits midair facing the camera.

By Frederick Meekins

Saturday, July 16, 2022

Aging Thespian Advocates Secession

 Actor Ron Perlman, a self-avowed liberal, is calling for Red and Blue states to go their separate ways.

The aging thespian readily admitted, “You don’t wanna live in my world and I certainly don’t want to live in yours.”

The declaration acknowledged the irreconcilable differences in values that have come to characterize America for a half century at the least.

But where are the condemnations that Perlman is “undermining our BELOVED democracy”?

For was that slogan not invoked to justify the mob-sanctioned vandalism of assorted public monuments while blowing the Capitol Kerfuffle all out of proportion to the extent of undermining the due process of those that at most committed trespass that particular day in comparison to the massive riots instigated that previous summer?

Most importantly, it is said that a liberal is a conservative that has not been mugged yet.

As such, should fortunes need to be confiscated in the jurisdictions that will form this progressive alliance where a significant percentage of the population likely won’t even work, will Perlman be willing to surrender his and refuse to seek refuge in the areas he so despises but which will no doubt be characterized by greater economic freedom?

by Frederick Meekins

Friday, July 15, 2022

Pastor Asserts As Much Claim To Tuesday Evening As Sunday Morning

A pastor remarked that Tuesday night visitation ought to be as popular as Sunday morning church.

When you become a Christian in general and a church member in particular, most of the time you acquiesce to the claim that organized religion has assessed on your time on Sunday mornings.

An argument can be made that such a precedent was set to an extent by certain understandings of Scripture and solidified by the practice of tradition.

However, no such obligation exists to show up Tuesday evenings because a particular pastor has decided to fill a gap of time between Sunday and midweek Bible study or prayer meeting.

Most are able to attend Sunday morning services because the culture grants a considerable amount of free time both before and after the primary worship service. No similar blocks of time bracket Tuesday evening visitation, a religious endeavor specifically called for nowhere in the pages of Scripture in terms of being a ritualized compulsory observation.

This activity is held right on the tail end of what would be considered a regular work day.

As such, what tasks are pastors and other religious laborers required to participate in that are more in your area of expertise not at a time of their particular choosing but rather one you bark out as an arbitrary order after completing a task particularly tiresome from their own vocation?

by Frederick Meekins

Transgender Bishop Resigns In Spat Over Who Can Out Politically Correct The Next

 Click On The Headline

Plague Cult Ecstatic At Prospect Of Reinfection Revival

 Click On The Headline

Solar Ejaculate About To Smear Earth’s Visage added to facebook

 Click On The Headline

Humans, Gods, & Technology

Eternal Life In The Cloud: Technology As Religion

The King Of The Macabre: The Life Of Edgar Allan Poe

Lewis Carroll Documentary

Merging Man & Machine: Transhumanism & Religion

Science Communication & Space Journalism

A World Without America

Journalism Is For Citizens – Not Journalists

Transhumanism, Human Exceptionalism & Christianity

Who Do You Want To Be When You Grow Old?

Redefining Journalism Entrepreneurship

Tuesday, July 12, 2022

No Set Sermon Methodology

 An online associate made the remark that there is a case against topical preaching.  

Yet neither is there a diehard command that sermons must be absolutely expositional in terms of having to plod through the less useful parts of the Bible in what result in multiyear series on the life of David.

Ironic how this homicidal polygamist will be upheld as some kind of aspirational ideal by the very same congregations that would subject you to church discipline if you had interests different than thoe of the typical octagenarian,  married a divorced person,  or even went on a date for that matter.


Why Not Wish Departed Loved Ones A Happy Birthday?

An online theologian posted, "It seems kind of odd for somebody to wish a person a Happy Birthday if he has gone on to heaven. We don't celebrate Earthly birthdays in heaven. 

We are not to communicate in any way with the deceased." 

My reply, "Where does it say do not communicate in anyway with the deceased. 

There is a profound difference in making a verbalized declaration with a departed loved one's name attached and in consulting a necromancer for the purposes of ritualized contact.


Saturday, July 09, 2022

The Study Of The History Of The End Of The World, Part 5

 Today, most theologians specializing in eschatology will readily agree that America is likely not directly referenced in the portions of Scripture dealing with the End Times. Interestingly, that belief was not necessarily the case in regards to the eschatologically inclined during the era of early European settlement and formation of America as a nation. Nor has fascination with the consummation of all things gripped as pervasively the imagination of a people as those of the United States of America.

Without a doubt, the Puritans in particular left an indelible mark upon the American psyche and character. And that particular brand of Christianity certainly possessed a number of millenarian proclivities. However, it is interesting to observe that this spiritual way of life was not as unified in its approach to the End Times as one might expect for a system that emphasized conformity to accepted norms in much of its thought. Most Puritans tended towards some form of postmillennialism. For example, Jonathan Edwards taught that the Millennium would transpire before the Second Coming as the Holy Spirit worked through the redeemed to defeat the Antichrist in the form of the papacy as this remnant subdued all of the Earth in the name of Christ. The Mathers --- Cotton and Increase --- on the other hand were more dispensationalist in their thinking, teaching that believers would be snatched up with that event followed by the disasters foretold in prophetic passages such as the Book of Revelation to be completed when Christ returned to establish the millennial kingdom.

Regardless of where individual Puritans stood along the pre or post millennial divide, those endeavoring to view all of life through a particular interpretative lens without a doubt perceived the events of the day in terms of prophetic fulfillment. For example, at the time of the French and Indian Wars, Catholic France was often cast in the role of the Antichrist. When that scenario did not quite unfold as expected, postmillennialists came to believe that the Revolutionary War would be the conflict through which the faithful would usher in the Millennium, with this time around King George III depicted as the Antichrist (Kyle, 81).

Even if the American Revolution and the founding of the Republic did not result in an anticipated utopia, these events in one sense did result in a degree of religious liberty hitherto until then unheard of in history. As such, a number of sects flourishing in such an environment professed eschatologies that could only be described as unconventional. One such group was called the Society for the Public Universal Friend.

In 1770, Quaker Jemina Wilkinson was believed to have died from the plague, with her body even having grown cold. However, she seemed to have miraculously revived. Eerily, the voice that emanated from her claimed that the body was no longer inhabited by Jemina but rather by the Spirit of Life also referred to as the Public Universal Friend (Kyle, 82). This individual professed to be the Second Coming of Christ who would rule for a thousand years. For the record, the body known as Jemina Wilkinson expired in 1819, far short of the end of that being's prophesied reign.

The Shakers were yet another unusual millennial sect to dot the religious landscape of the early American republic. Formally known as the United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Coming, the Shakers traced their origins to the Shaking Quakers. Ann Lee Stanley led the group to America in 1774 where they established a communalist settlement. The group came to regard Mother Ann as the incarnation of the feminine attributes of God in the form of the Holy Spirit. In terms of the sect's eschatology, the Second Coming took place in the form of God manifesting the feminine through Ann Stanley. As such, since salvation could only be obtained by abstaining from sex, Shakers were to await the commencement of the Millenniuum in a state of celibacy. Given that Shakers did not reproduce and that it is difficult to hoodwink considerable numbers into embracing perpetual celibacy, the movement eventually petered out.

The millenarian figure that probably had the most profound influence upon American apocalyptic thought was William Miller. Miller was a farmer and Baptist layman from New York with a penchant for what might be categorized as Biblical numerology. Working from Daniel 8:14 that the sanctuary would be cleansed in two-thousand, three hundred days and assuming that this cleansing was a reference to Christ's return to Earth and that one prophetic day equaled a year, Miller calculated using Bishop Usher's chronology that Christ would return in 1843.

Interestingly, initially Miller did little to promote public interest in his speculations. It was not until urging by his friends that Miller took to the preaching circuit. Miller's message made the leap from being a rural movement to a national phenomena when his teachings were publicized through newspapers, pamphlets, and extensive evangelistic outreach which at the time included tents capable of seating up to 4000 souls (Kyle, 89). As the time grew closer, under pressure Miller relaxed his natural hesitancy and advocated a more specific date between March 21, 1843 and March 21, 1844. When that time frame passed and the world continued on as it always had, the movement attempted to save face by setting the date of the Lord's return as October 22, 1844.

Religious frenzy (one might even categorize it as a panic) gripped the nation. As a result of the ensuing media blitz, many of the fervent sold their homes and quit their jobs for a predicted apocalypse that never materialized. This profound letdown known as the Great Disappointment reverberated across the American religious landscape. Foremost, the Great Disappointment would serve as a lasting reminder as to the dangers of setting firm dates regarding the Second Coming in the minds of the most discerning Christians. It would also serve as the origin of two distinct theological traditions that would grapple with the ramifications of the Great Disappointment each in its own way.

The first group that came to grips with the Great Disappointment over time became what would be known as the Seventh Day Adventists. The Adventists, for the most part, spiritualized their eschatology in order to avoid additional theological upheaval and existential hardship. On October 22, 1844, Christ did not physically return to Earth to clean it as the sanctuary. Instead, Adventists believed, the Lord entered the holiest parts of Heaven to begin investigating the sins of His people in preparation for His imminent return (Abanes, 227). Seventh Day Sabbitarianism became attached to the Adventist movement when Ellen G. White speculated that Christ did not return in 1844 because believers had neglected a literalist application of that particular Old Testament law and He would not do so until God's people once again observed Saturday as the day of rest.

The second prominent sect to come out of the Millerite Great Disappointment was the Jehovah Witnesses. Whereas the majority of Adventists learned from past mistakes and grew more tentative in regards to setting nailed down dates, the Jehovah's Witnesses continued on in this practice with gusto along with the other assorted doctrinal errors for which this sect would become infamous. Charles Taze Russell hoped to preserve Millerite eschatology by postulating that the error was actually to be found in the chronology formulated by Archbishop Usher. As such, it was predicted that Christ would instead return in 1874. When this prophecy did not transpire, it was insisted that Christ had indeed returned to Earth, but that He would remain invisible until the Battle of Armageddon.

Russell continued to tinker with the dates. He then came to the conclusion that all would be revealed by 1881; and, when that did not pan out, it was claimed that 1914 would be the year to end all years. That did turn a few heads as at that time the world was indeed gripped in the overwhelming conflagration then known as the Great War. Yet Russell proved wrong once again and tried to save face by insisting that 1918 would be the year of cosmic significance. However, Russell died in 1916 before getting to realize he would once again be profoundly mistaken.

His successor Joseph Franklin Rutherford, though admitting the mistakes made, did not learn from these by changing course. Instead Rutherford continued on with the pattern, insisting that 1925 would assuredly be the year in which all things would be consummated. The results were once again no different after many Witnesses quit their jobs and sold their homes. It would take for additional embarrassments in 1975 and 1984 for acolytes of the Watchtower to to realize that it might be best simply to hold that Jesus was coming soon without exactly advertising a highly specific estimated time of arrival.

Given that America was in part founded by a people of profound religious motivations, it is expected that fascination with the End Times would play an important role in the psyche of those believing that they were a part of a special destiny or divinely-appointed plan. By studying those motivated in such a manner, discerning Americans can be on guard to protect against such an impulse from getting out of hand.

By Frederick Meekins

Bibibliography

Abanes, Richard. End-Times Visions: The Doomsday Obsession. Nashville, Tennessee: Broadman and Holman Publishers, 1988.

Kirsch, Jonathan. A History Of The End Of The World: How The Most Controversial Book In The Bible Changed The Course Of Western Civilization. San Francisco, California: Harper Collins Publishers, 2006.

Kagan, Donald, Ozment, Steven and Turner, Frank. The Western Heritage Since 1789 (Fourth Edition). New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1991.

Kyle, Richard. The Last Days Are Here Again: A History Of The End Times. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books, 1988. Hanover, New Hampshire: University Press of New England, 1996.

Ladd, George. The Blessed Hope: A Biblical Study of The Second Advent and The Rapture. Grand Rapids, Michigan: WM. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 1956.

Thompson, Damian. The End Of Time: Faith and Fear in the Shadow of the Millennium. 

Friday, July 08, 2022

Thursday, July 07, 2022

Warrior Lady

Autarch Surrenders Much Of Strategic Petroleum Reserve To Maoist Enemy

Click On The Headline


Legislatrix's Jiggly Ass Imbues Political Pork With Whole New Meaning

 Click On The Headline

How Futurists Think

 Click On The Headline

Does Transhumanism Intend To Infiltrate The Vatican?

 Click On The Headline

Plague Cultists Continue To Herald Alchemical Passports As Effective Way To Control Subjugated Populations

 Click On The Headldine

Was Hitler A Drug Addict?

John Warwick Montgomery On Why People Reject The Faith

How to Start an Online Ministry Website

The History Of The American Conservative Movement

Useful Idiots Who Are Past Their Usefulness

The July Fourth Slaughter

Crisis: The Future Of Christianity In America

What Makes 60 Minutes Tick?

How To Begin In Ministry

What Is An Evangelical?

Careers In Journalism

The Role Of Opinion Journalism In Foreign Affairs

Fundamentalism & Evangelicalism

Encouraging Details About The Rapture Revealed

Cal Thomas Addresses The Western Conservative Summit 2022

Tuesday, July 05, 2022

Church Insinuates Those Unwilling To Become Members Might Be Asked To Leave

 A church is considering implementing a program modeled by another church where those attending for six months would be required to sit down for a discussion with a pastor for the purposes of strongarming long term visitors into membership.  

Such a meeting might prove fruitful for those wanting one. 

But what if one does not want one or where after words you still see little need for membership since the congregation is mostly an obey the pastor or else sort of place and that those not in the ranks of the clergy are of limited value in the first place? 

Is one going to get slapped with a restraining order where you can’t set foot on the premises for the purposes of quiet observation? 

For those that like to participate in confrontational drama, that might make for an interesting media story.

Personally, if things are getting to this point, I eventually just won’t be going back.

by Frederick Meekins


Michael Moore Proves His Mind Is As Disheveled As His Apprearance

 Michael Moore says that, in light of the overturn of Roe v. Wade and what can be termed as the mass incarceration of certain demographic cohorts, the slovenly gadfly can no longer accept the full privileges of United States citizenship.   

The muckraker warns that he refuses to be silent on these issues. 

But if he has forfeited what he terms his “privileges” meaning one has no guarantees to these sociopolitical conventions in the first place, on what grounds does he have to launch a formalized complaint or protest should it be determined his free speech should be eliminated in regards to these contested matters?

Warning Of Red China’s Plot To Conquer Moon Condemned As Thought Crime

 Click On The Headline

Thoroughgoing Plague Cultist Stricken With Liturgical Pestilence

 Click On The Headline

Apparently White Supremacy Consists Also Of Trump For Prison Apparel

 Click On The Headline

Highland Park Gunman A Rapping Acolyte Of Lee Harvey Oswald

 Click On The Headline

Friday, July 01, 2022

Should Activist Demographics Be Allowed To Veto Presidential Runs?

 An online theologian insists that Trump should be denied the possibility of a second presidential term because certain activist elements of the Black community found the candidate to be “divisive”.

We are led to believe that Black people constitute about 10% of the population.

Like it or not, there were Black people that voted for Trump.

Thus, the percentage of Black people opposed to him constitute an even smaller percentage of the overall population in terms of ethnicity and electoral preferences.

So unless such a response is over fear of the tendency of this demographic to destroy property when activists of this extraction fail to get their way, why should the concerns of such individuals be given a disproportionate sway over American politics?

So does this piece of ratiocination proffered for public consideration by this online theologian apply to other contexts?

Should Kamala Harris or Michelle Obama be barred from even running for the Oval Office because a statistically significant number of White people find these political figures “divisive” to the point of harboring animus against the Caucasian majority.

by Frederick Meekins