Pastors, Theologians and other Jacobin Revolutionaries

The Protestant Institutional Churches, all of them, are in the hands of red revolutionaries. There is simply no other explanation for their behaviour. The Southern Baptist Convention continues to cement its position in the revolutionary hierarchy. They don’t even try to hide it anymore.  Having elected themselves a new Negro vice-President, perhaps finally all the racist sins of the past can be expunged. No, of course not. That cannot happen until the last unmiscegenated European lies dead at the feet of the dark horde. Until then,  I wonder why these churches will not grow a spine and simply posthumously excommunicate all their members from prior to oh, 1980, just to be safe. The sheer arrogance of these troublers of Israel is astounding. It is the tyranny of the living applied to the eternal things.

It all moves very fast now. With negro leadership and negro-worshipers firmly in command of the machinery, the alleged pastors and doctors of the Baptist world can turn their red gaze onto the scattered remnants of the old America and offer their strength against it. Immigration, the popular euphemism for invasion, is the next front. It seems Southern Baptist Russell Moore is “amazed when {he} hears evangelical Christians speak of undocumented immigrants in this country with disdain as “those people” who are “draining our health care and welfare resources.”” It amazes me also. When I hear that I think of the great and magnanimous General Lee who could speak of his own racial kinsmen who were devastating his country as “those people” instead of “those invading pillaging bastards.” To apply it to foreign criminal aliens is very gentle. “Those people” seems to be quite a restrained response.

However, according to Moore, and presumably he speaks with full approbation of the Baptist Convention, that is evil and unchristian. So, he must spread falsehoods about the Lord, calling Jesus an “illegal immigrant” because Joseph took him to Egypt. I would know this: is Mr. Moore this well versed in the immigration policies of the Roman Empire? Was it a crime to move from one Roman province to a neighbouring Roman province? Or does he claim divine inspiration for the millions of invaders? Would he have us believe that the angel of the Lord has spoken to each and every mestizo and instructed them to cross the Rio Grande? Or is this a cynical effort to provoke a tear from the blue haired ladies in Southern Baptist Churches who write the checks?

Mr. Moore admonishes us from Deuteronomy 10 to “love the sojourner.” We certainly ought to do that. We also ought to have a corresponding protection for our houses and our lands as did ancient Israel. Strangely enough, there is no call for the protection of the natives. In fact there is just the opposite. There is thinly veiled hatred and disgust for the European, Anglo-Saxon stock of this land. Carefully digest this sentence: ” If our churches ignore the nations around us who are living in our own communities, we will reflect 1970s Bible Belt America rather than the kingdom of God. . .” (emphasis added.) The clear meaning of the English of this sentence is to contrast “1970′s Bible Belt America” with “the Kingdom of God.” Could there be any more blatant loathing of our people and their faith? Apparently the mouthpieces of the religious institutions believe that the sooner the remnants of Bible Belt America die off, the sooner we can finally reach the Kingdom of God. Reader, Satan is readying his push against Israel, against the Camp of the Saints. Your “leaders” will throw you to the wolves in hope they will be consumed last.

The obligatory Romans 13 section at least offers some comic relief. Moore writes: “It is easy to lash out at undocumented immigrants as “law-breakers,” and to cite Romans 13 as reason to simply call for deportation and retribution. But this issue is far more complicated than that.” It is? As an exercise, rewrite that sentence, substituting “tax protesters,” “sovereign citizens” or “raw milk salesmen” for “undocumented immigrants.” Can anyone picture a Southern Baptist hierarch uttering or writing such heresy against their corporate sponsor? But when it comes to life or death in the land of our ancestors, all of a sudden the issue gets complicated. It isn’t complicated at all when one grasps the revolutionary subversion of the religious institutions. It is the simplest thing in the world. You see, Mr. Moore supports “a realistic means of providing a way to legal status for the millions of immigrants already here.” In other words, he supports Reconquista. He supports the displacement of Europe’s children on this continent. The realistic way for “legal” status is for this to reach critical mass, which the census tells us is dangerously close. And, apparently, that day cannot come soon enough for Russell Moore and God only knows how many other “Southern Baptists.”

Advertisement

Comments are closed.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.