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TakenusernameA on scored.co
1 year ago18 points(+0/-0/+18Score on mirror)2 children
Once pre-millenial dispensationalism and globalism are exposed for being frauds (like the jews themselves), then their iron grip over the world will be shattered like glass. Traditionalism is the antidote to dispensationalism, and Nationalism is the antidote to globalism
I think the boomers are the last generation that believes in our greatest ally. Once they are gone I wouldn't be surprised if Israel loses its standing in the US. Of course it is hard to predict with how many politicians they can continually blackmail.
1 year ago12 points(+0/-0/+12Score on mirror)1 child
From what I gather, It’s jew worship, thanks to John Darby’s many out of context misinterpretations of the Bible (very likely intentional misinterpretations). His ideas were popularized by Cyrus Scofield in the Scofield Bible and ultimately conned millions of Christians into worshipping jews. Dispensationalists basically believe that God will judge any individuals or nations who go against jews, thus, we have to support jews at all costs. It also basically sells the idea that our support for jews will help usher in the second coming of Christ and judgement day, where all living and dead Christians who were faithful to the jews will be raptured away to heaven as God ushers in tribulation. Dispensationalists don’t realize that when the Bible is talking about those who go against Israel, it’s not talking about the jews, it’s talking about spiritual Israel, which is the Church/Christianity, thus, it’s saying those who go against Christians will face God’s wrath. Throughout most of Christianity’s history, Christians believed that jews broke their covenant with God, that jews are damned if they don’t accept Christ, and that Christians are now the chosen ones who hold God’s blessing, that idea is called “supersessionism”, kinda the opposite of dispensationalism.
This is a good overview, one most of us are familiar with here. But I've never been able to find a "smoking gun" --in print.
Is it something passed on through the generations in the seminaries, in the (pilpul) pulpits, or from the guest speaker rabbis at their respective denominational congresses?
I'd like to have something to point to when I make the argument that 99% of "churches" exist to worship jews.
Is it something passed on through the generations in the seminaries, in the (pilpul) pulpits, or from the guest speaker rabbis at their respective denominational congresses?
I'd like to have something to point to when I make the argument that 99% of "churches" exist to worship jews.