Saturday, March 18, 2017

The Antichrist is Coming Very Soon! Why I Say That



Many are unaware that the Antichrist is coming very soon!
It should be, maybe, 2017, or in the next few years.  I have reasons for saying this that would best be discovered by reading Revelation, on your own, and observing the finer points of astrology, where the sign of Aquarius, representative of our current age, is broken down into the Vedic half-degree segments, the most powerful actuators  in the zodiac.
In short, the first half-a-degree of the end of the sign of Aquarius, since the astrological ages go backward through the zodiac, is a water-segment of the zodiac, representing Pisces.  The particular part of Revelation is the first verse of chapter 13:  the beast coming up out of the “sea.”  This is important because the sea is “water,” and we’re in a part of the zodiac, the last part for over a hundred years, that is a water sign.  Actually, it represents Pisces, so in a way, we’re still in Pisces, even though we just left the “astrological month” of Pisces, of the 2000-year major ages, in 2000.
Also, we`ve begun the Age of Aquarius:  This is the first major astrological age since Jesus walked the earth, so it’s important to occultists, who meticulously follow these things, and Christians alike, in representing and forwarding a new way of living and a new time, as recorded in Daniel and Revelation.
Daniel speaks of knowledge exploding, or, specifically, “piling up,” in Hebrew, in chapter 12, verse 4.  Is this not our time, then?  It’s been a gradual buildup, but just look on YouTube for “future technology,” and you`ll see what’s coming.  Aquarius stands for “knowledge” and the future.
However, before much of this happens…the Antichrist must come.  This is because we will enter a half-degree segment representing Aquarius, under the Age of Aquarius in 2033: a 2000-year age, of 30 segments, 30 degrees, and 60 half-degrees, yielding 33 1/3-year segments, since the zodiac is a circle of 360 degrees.  No more “sea,” Pisces, after that point for hundreds of years.  That doesn’t give us much time.  As of this writing in 2017, I am reasonably sure we will have the Antichrist in less than 17 years, since 2017 plus 16 equals 2033.  Someone born this year will see the Antichrist reigning before he’s an adult.
According to Revelation 13 the second beast arises from the “land.”  This is another symbol of the periods and circumstances we will experience.  Whatever the “land” is, it will certainly be later than 2033.  It is he who causes all to take the “Mark of the Beast,” so, with this knowledge, we understand that these things will be gradual.  It won’t happen all at once.
You won’t find this in mainstream media or books on the Age of Aquarius.  I looked.
May this article inform you and may you be blessed.  Mark Harris

Thursday, March 4, 2010

What Comes Out of an Ass

I've noticed that in the world, people few and rarely do not take advantage of you. New York City has people, or is known, for being the opposite of gullible, the opposite of naive; they are known for distrusting mostly all, of anybody. All's intentions are questioned.

Now, having never been to New York City, ... I personally wouldn't know. They're known to be tough and hard.

While Christians are to be godly, and as New York is considered worldly, I'd wish that we wouldn't emulate that ...; however, ... if there's one thing we need to learn about credibility, it's not to trust, not to believe.

Which makes honest Christianity, or specifically dedication to Christ, and discipleship of Christ, so very hard for such people, let alone the average. ... It's hard to trust God, isn't it? Some would even say He doesn't exist. Even, ... Why bother? When you talk about this, we're having just the right attitude! For general, and generally, we should not trust people.

The point. Here's the point!: We should distinct and distinguish, ... between the people that we see and the god that we do not! Verily, if they are the same, then treat them likewise. ... Eye both with suspicion.

However, if God and people, should be looked at differently, then do that!

We're anthropomorphizing God! Biblically he anthropomorphized us! And that is the way to think about it. I think.

What comes out of an ass, is shit! Priests. Pastors! Ministers! (If you come from such a denomination where 'priest,' and 'pastor,' just won't do!) New Yorkers know, I believe, that people's mouths resemble what's on the reverse, and lower down, about midway. As an Italian, or part-Italian, with an Italian family, there almost seems to be an intrinsic sense. And affinity. For that! Not to mention that pastors per se, priests per se, and ministers per se, as they are today are completely unbiblical; ... but so and thus are the people kept in their ignorance, blithely. I guess God is irrelevant after all.

They say we form our first impressions of God through our parents, and that that sticks! So it becomes, for people, from nurturer, since we are considered more lovable and innocent as babies, to torturer, rule-establisher, and often nuisance, ... imperfect, if we were honest, unscrupulous, if we were honest, and not God. Many of us become very angry at our parents, and since they are our parentage, ... caretakers, originators, nurturers, creators, we see our creator, and for some there's question as to existence, likewise. Then it's the other assholes, spewing what assholes do. For some, such as me, people seem to have diarrhea. Fathers, husbands, come home to complain about work. That's what people do, that's always the problem at work. And people become very angry at God; equating him with others, they become mad at people.

My own experiences recently, in inter-connectivity, have proven to be the same as church, and the same way I used to view God, though I, and we, dare not admit it, do we? All sorts of contact with religious people to find, all sorts of contact with people, that generally you can't trust anybody. Specifically we might be able to make a few exceptions.

Some blatherer rambling on at church. Latin or English, I don't care. You go to him. Although now it's popular that you may go to her as well. Looking for help. Well it's the same as your dormitory mate, roommate, in college, you didn't like him either. Same as the guy on the subway. Same as the person at work. No answers. ... And they'll only make you mad. Eventually.

It's time that a piece of cloth not get in the way of a person. Who is the same person, as your roommate, or former roommate, the person that cuts you off on the road. Same idiot. Different day. Maybe a suit. Maybe a tie. It's time that a piece of cloth not get in the way of a person! And recognition. It's time that that person, naked now, not get in the way of God, or whether one exists at all.

We believe too much! When it comes to religion.

We doubt too much.

If we're ever to survive in this religious stuff, and not go crazy, we need to cast aside these people! And the hypocrites that so easily entangle. As the New Yorker, I agree, ... no more smiling faces. ... I know what you are! No more shit-eating grins! For indeed I know what you are! Now, the accessibility to God ... that's another issue ... in full view now. Certainly. It's religion that keeps us from God!

Dress it up!

Dress it down!

Add columns!

Add credentials!

Certifications!

Rituals

formats

and congregations.

Shit comes out of an asshole.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

What is Love?: The Definition

Paul was noted as saying: "Love does no harm to its neighbor". In Romans 13. We also ought to do no harm to our neighbor, and when Jesus was asked "Who is my neighbor?" he gave the story of 'The Good Samaritan' as we know it. Noting that in this story we have someone who was traveling and a Samaritan passing nearby. And that the Samaritan went further, ... further than the religious Jews who passed him by. While we don't expect kindness from certain non-religious and foreign people, Jesus used the Samaritan man as the main character in his story.

So, for starters we should do no harm, ... even to our enemies, even and especially when it is tempting, and even and especially when we have the upper hand in the matter. Jesus commands us Christians to live like this. He even asserts that our righteousness, which he says is written about in the law of the Jews, and which is outlined in his note of the two greatest commandments, which are both about love, that we love our enemies, and our friends of course, is based in love, and surpassing that of the Pharisees of his day, the religious; and so it is today. That our righteousness must surpass that of the religious leaders, both of his day and today.

And beyond, ... we see Paul's example of Christ's love: "While we were still sinners, Christ died for us."
Two verses later Paul claims even that we were his "enemies". Romans 5. If we have enemies, we the Christian, ... we are to show the same love of Christ, for Christ said to love your enemies and love one another. And how can we ourselves be Christians if the cardinal trait of our master we're not even willing to give an inch more than our world? Or ... How then can we be defined as Christians? The non-Christian world calls foul -- And why don't we? Is it because we are happy with the fellowship with our 'brothers' in not trying to do anything about this hypocrisy? But rather supporting it when we see it, and engaging in the hateful things of these so-called fellows. Paul did not say Say nice things, did he? Jesus strongly criticized the Pharisees, so then if he did, is niceness in question, or even love itself, but navigating an issue for our own benefit or because it makes us feel we are doing the right thing. We are nice for a reason, we are mean and hateful for a reason, no matter how much we slather the person or situation in butter.

Beyond, to caring for injured strangers who have been beaten up on the road where no one comes to aid. Be different in this, or, what the heck, choose another religion. Care for people. This is love, and beyond just doing them no harm, either to their back or to their face! If your words and action, whether physical abuse or adultery, do harm and do not heal, then you are not the Samaritan in the story, you are the Pharisee. It comes down to the intention of the heart, and the intention of God's heart towards you in giving you good things every day, and the intention of your heart, for if Christ died for you as a sinner and enemy, with him as holy, then would you not honor him by no harm and an active love? And it is regardless of like or not knowing the person: We see the example of the good Samaritan. And of Jesus. And of Paul, who sought to help those who beat him, as Christ sought and asked his father for forgiveness of those who crucified him, and was willing to serve the Roman centurion and go to his house to heal his servant, whom he did not even know. Love.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Sunday Without Church

Although I am neither traditional or nontraditional in certain ways, I do want authenticity. And that includes church.

That authenticity includes not going to church -- not because I'm an uninvolved Christian, but truly and frankly, because I'm so involved I can't spare the cost.

I wonder as a Christian how I am benefited from church. Although we often hear The Bible read, study The Bible before the auditorium-part and sing praises to God, I do not see how I can't do most of this on my own, with other Christians, and skip what I now see as ineffectual on any serious level.

I've got The Bible on computer, The Bible being read in audio, any time I want to hear it. I can study on my own, and I've learned a lot more effectively. Older people often cease going to church and listen to perhaps a better preacher on their syndicated channel on TV or the radio. I can sing without anyone else being necessary.

Now this may sound all-too cynical to the dedicated church-goer, and I used to be one of them! I thought it was just what you did. It was an expectation of every dedicated Christian.
But how far does my dedication and gravity go in it? I've found church-Christianity to be very lighthearted, unconfronting, and never too deep.

I know that Jesus was so offensive to his
synagogue, or 'church,' gathering, that they tried to throw him off a brow of a hill. Jeremiah, even his own family was calling for his blood. Paul's jail-time. John's, the baptist, beheading. In a Christian society, Martin Luther's sentence. Tyndale's perfidious translation! And what of me? Am I satisfied with arm-chair Christianity? Then let my name be never: John, Jeremiah, William Tyndale, Martin Luther, Paul, the Anabaptists; let me never be burned at the stake for translating into English, sought for opposing the practices of a corrupt Catholic church, beheaded for speaking the truth, persecuted from city to city, as Jesus promised; let me be satisfied to sit back and accept right or wrong, whatever the pastor, priest or minister, board, etc., tells me, that in any practical way has nothing to do with mission work, persecution, objection, offense, church holiness, repentance or anything else than attendance at a edificial slightly-varied repetition at an institution ...

... Yes, that doesn't satisfy me and isn't me. And few, of course, are prone to question. No message will ever rattle our boat. Sedentary. Static. Just the way we perceive our Christianity to be, just as Jesus' ministry exhibited, just as Paul's laid-back voyages, just as
"upstanding" citizens of a Christian country that never go to jail! Or is there more? ...

Frank Viola and George Barna in their book Pagan Christianity, have alluded to more, a community of Christian followers, and participants ... but honestly that's not far enough for me. That Christianity in someone's living room by nature exceeds to God's calling in Christ so much over the building-style churches, that the topic is thereby ended, with some talk of "spiritual gifts," and "sharing," of the type where the word "community," ... "fellowship" and "brotherhood," ... "brother" and "sister" are mentioned. Is that the Christianity that was rocking the world in Paul's time, and with the Anatolian Christians to whom John writing concerning their persecution? Or is it just so
Christian all of the sudden, our living in a Christian society that no stands and no work remains? ... It's all internal now. No need to get up. ... It certainly is honesty that gives us the answers we don't want to hear ...

That those of The East, many of them, can't see how we can be so immoral; that those of the Muslim regions can't see how we allow such a worldly life, with sexuality and disrespect in shows and in movies. And are we the light of the world, are we not worldly? The "unbelieving," ask us questions we can't answer ... even though we go to church Sunday after Sunday, or even more than once a week. Is there something wrong?
You know there is!

It's as though people don't know what Christianity is, and as people of Jesus' time and afterward, in any practical way, don't intend to learn it. And that is the fact. Paul uses the term
"holy and dearly loved," and does he mean us? We, holy? Of course not. That is not the kind of persons we find at church, nor expect at church, but we do find immoral and unholy people, whether we're honest about it or not. So what did Paul mean? ...

I think truly the house-church movement is a great movement, as one of the premiere proponents, Frank Viola, has extolled, and rightly so. And great. But it doesn't end there. Paul spared no measure himself in correcting the churches he wrote to, which discipline by Paul or by God himself we certainly do not expect today and in our churches. Again I ask you:
What changed? Paul went so far as chastising the Corinthians, for what?, why, for even allowing the kind of behavior that was occurring among just one of their members. Can you imagine today? They wouldn't put up with it.

Accountability is a big portion. Another has to do with fellowship. Paul never intended, nor Peter if you read his two letters, nor John the apostle, that his and God's church and people have fellowship with one another including with an adulterer -- Paul even mentions that the body of Christ should not be joined with "a prostitute" -- even to the point of excluding an "immoral person".

Now shapes up Paul's intent for his church, and churches. That indeed the fellowship with God is not fellowship with evil, but fellowship with him, who is righteous, holy and good, and loving, and not the opposite. That their fellowship with "light" as John says, excludes fellowship with darkness. Thereby if the church you attend, as I've found through my travels, pleads
"neutrality" on these life-altering issues, then it seems they plead "neutrality," on God and what the church is supposed to be.

Be like the first gatherings of Christians. You don't need a big building. You don't need people that feed over from the big building to find out what you are doing, or to corrupt your fellowship, or what I would call, your holy values. Of brotherhood in gratitude to Christ. If it is a fellowship with God, do we need claimants of the Christian faith mulling around a building, listening and proceeding through recitations and what's rote?

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Common Among All Major Religious Belief-Systems

What is common among all benevolent mainstream religious belief-systems?: Morality

What is expected among all people? It is that they do right by other people. Any moral system requires that proper behavior is exhibited both by its followers, and by transference also it is expected by outsiders.

Is that so hard?

So then often what is the issue is not what religious system people follow, excepting the dearness of the religion to people's heart, or belief that it is the right religion, but that people fulfill their religious morals, often simply that they live out the morality of the religion that they claim.

A lot of times, it doesn't matter what religion or group the other person is, but that they are treated well by you, and that itself will usually speak more for your religion, as far as it relates to you, to your practice of your religion, than the details of it which people will not always understand, especially or appreciate. Likewise, if you want to feel good about another person or their practice of their religion, denomination, religious affiliation, it matters to you, if you can see how you would feel being on the receiving end, that their interpersonal interaction in morality, their interpersonal morality, includes treating you honorably and morally well. This often speaks loudest for your religion, and many people are persuaded by good behavior towards themselves, and a forgotten trait called 'kindness'.

Apart from and knowing the distinction between 'buttering-up,' this is a religious moral and righteous belief that people share, that the other person or group should be treated well and regarded as valuable. What respected religious or belief system does not have the expectation that treating people well, often even with kindness, is an objective or obligation? In Christianity besides 'loving God' that is the totality of the religion, or at least the law Jesus recommended. And so, with Christianity, and also with others, we are speaking for our religion by having these high moral standards that we also exhibit. Practically. If your religion is to be spread, if you want to convince others of it, and they do not accept specific tenets, such as Jesus rising from the dead, then what is your specific approach, considering that in Christianity the love for God, which may or is supposed to be or turns out being largely a private affair, that then the only Christianity they see other than your tenets, specific, perhaps to a denomination, or general, is your love or good behavior with regard to them, which they certainly see!

What is your tack as a Christian, Muslim, Jew, esoteric ... that they go to your building, reciting your tenets, practicing your rituals ... regardless of your or their behavior on this universal moral quotient that everyone apparently knows is right and that these religions as well as others ostensibly or in actuality put such a high rank on that its practitioners put such importance on supposedly, while they may lack displaying this behavior in some ways, or to its full extent?

You must ask What am I converting this person to or what do I hold to so strongly that I am emphatic about it?

In saying this I have not betrayed my own religion, but that my practice must line up with my confession. If as a Christian I believe that God loves me and that love is the highest and greatest commandment, both to God and to people, Why then would I focus so much on everything else, to the exclusion or sublimation of the crown of what I say I most stand for? For us who believe either religiously or otherwise that this is important to our code, why would everything else take precedent, or this practice even a back seat? In this way our stated religion or ethics inform us of what we already believe and should be practicing.

Regardless of the point we are trying to get across, religious or otherwise, if we acknowledge and have the expectation that the right way people deal with us is of utmost importance, if we believe people should be treated well, and we expect they should be treated as we would want to be, because we want the same in return, then violating this point makes you wrong already! Regardless of the issue, you have violated them, their value, especially if you are connected to part of such a religion!

Would you Christians say that Jesus loved you and them so much that he died for all, tell opponents of any sort to your religion, that they must love as you are to, and then rail them with abuse and insults for not accepting your religion, or do you display a lack of interpersonal morality? If you desire to bring people to your way, then as regards to them, both to their face and generally, treat them with personal integrity that you also accept as a basic requirement.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

A World Religious View as a Christian

With various world beliefs out there, from atheist to Christian, to Eastern philosophy, to another religion of the East, Islam, et cetera; we must ask ourselves, What are we criticizing?

What do cause the stomach to churn and cause our interjections and objections?

It is usually the same things that upset us so much in interpersonal relationships. That the other person doesn't care about us. It is often the reason atheists are so ardent, in objection; and the cause of hurt to the atheist heart, that not only do they feel that God doesn't care, or even exist, if you don't mind, but that Christians display an intolerant, and often hateful, especially virulent to 'sinners' or 'deniers,' expression to those who will not accept their principles, which objections, to be honest, are ofttimes valid! Logic is, or seems to be, undeniable. And why would the Christian be so offended by an appeal to the truth, or logic? Or, for some, science for that matter? The important point for the atheist ... is that the Christian is unreasonable, believing in something, or a laundry list of things, because of tradition, or upbringing. The atheist is individualistic, future-oriented, reasonable, ... or else he often perceives himself to be, or desires to be. To the atheist, the Christian is unreasonable, ... and to top it off, not only can't explain his tenets, for many Christians, he may be unwilling to do so, and appear or be recalcitrant to our poor atheist, who is just in search for the truth. The Christian, strangely, or perhaps strangely, registers the same sentiments.

To the Christian and the Muslim, and even to often those of the Eastern philosophical persuasion, God is undeniable. But the atheist cannot fathom, through thought, reason, religious experience or bitterness, perhaps, the religious one's unbending adherence to his own religion or a conviction of one sort or another. Again, just as the atheist closes his mind to his personal conviction, against naysayers and incompatible ideas, so does the Christian and all else, even applying to outside religion, in other areas, as politics, gender ... The unaccepting mind is just closed, each party will say, or the heart is closed. The ideology one chooses comes from the heart. It is not that it does not comport with the asserter's mind at all, but that it is something the person believes to be right.

At this point, religion or belief, tenet ... it all fails to matter. Those who hold particular said belief, position, are the enemy, for many. The idea of being intellectually right or morally right falls by the wayside, for the adherent has chosen what makes sense to him, and the opponent to him or his is the adversary.

This is all too unfortunate. For, as an old saying goes, attaining to truth leads to unity, but attainment, or arrival, at truth leads to division. The idea is that as long as we have a common goal we're unified in that, and not on the basis of denomination, religious or otherwise.

Those who make themselves our enemies or adversaries, or we who do the same, on this basis, lack one thing: Education. We're so interested, many of us, in entrenching and solidifying our own position, that we cease to learn, for our unyielding ossification lets us not change our minds, in small way, or great, in tenet or totality, for we are right. For we are no longer Christians, atheists, Jews or Muslims, wise men, but propagandists, at least only and alone to ourselves.

I have seen the objections on the part of many of the East, who deject at and upon our immorality in the West, atheists who note an uncaring God, Christians who question how the atheist yet doubts even in an undefined God at all. The Christians on the Western side of the world seem to have little interest in the pure life of the East. The morality. The Eastern world has no interest, the philosophical Buddhists and esoterics, et cetera, in substitutionary atonement, of a christ who died as a substitute.

The sad fact of all this, ... is that whatever the truth is, and whatever is the appropriate philosophy, outlook, or religion, we apparently will never discover it, will we; unless on the off-chance we already have? For if the name and life of the Christian, is correct, then it will end there. The mind is closed to any thought not already rattling around in the brain, or open to the heart of the Christian, or expounded by their famous religious demagogues, or local assembly leaders. In the end we have abdicated our minds, our hearts, to the narrowness of the haranguing of our opinion-makers, and socially delineated constraints, rather than the fearful tenuous ship's plank -- or it is perceived, apparently, treated as such -- of open heart, open mind, ... genuinity.

As a Christian and for a Christian, and to convince those who are not, will I not have to open my heart and my ear? Keep throwing up walls, and renunciations, and whether Christian, or not, the world will not listen to you. And why should they? For you have painted them as the black sheep, often Christians, that in your mind they are. Shall they renounce their objections and thoughts, and beliefs, so that they fit your idea, when many Christians themselves are more interested in denominations than truth, love, or being called 'Christian'? Now what denomination? Is your mind big enough to grapple with their thoughts and understandings, or your heart wide enough to see their perspective and how it seems appropriate to them? Or do you array yourself with presorted answers? What if your favorite preacher, doctrine or pope is at stake? If your religion or belief is the issue then these things are or may be secondary. What if ... by laying down your defenses, you come to the truth? What if you come to be known as open-minded ... convincing ... reasonable? And if all else fails, at least you get an education yourself.