April 6, 2014

As James Perloff shows, the Illuminati set out

to systematically destroy Christianity and belief in God.

Do we need any more proof that we are ruled by a satanic cult?



by James Perloff

(henrymakow.com)





The Bible and the Protocols agree: one world government and religion are coming.



Revelation 13:7 says the Antichrist will have "authority over every tribe, people, language and nation." Protocol 5:11 says the Illuminati plan to "absorb all the state forces of the world and to form a super-government."



Revelation 13:8 says that "inhabitants of the earth will worship the beast." Protocol 15:20 brags "they will acknowledge the autocracy of our ruler with a devotion bordering on 'apotheosis'" [glorification as a god]. He "will be the real pope of the universe, the patriarch of the international church." (17:4)



For Satan to rule Earth autocratically, he must not only consolidate governments and currencies, but belief systems. But how could he unite something so diverse as religions?



THE PLAN



The long-term strategy: (1) splinter a religion into sects on the "divide and conquer" principle; (2) assault the religion's foundations, creating doubts among believers; (3) finally, herd the remnants together with other religions - i.e., ecumenism.



Let's see how this played out in Christianity. Protocol 17:5 says of churches: "we shall fight against them by criticism calculated to produce schism." Over centuries, Christianity has been splintered into increasingly smaller sects. For example, the Jehovah's Witnesses were founded by a Freemason, Charles Taze Russell.



To plant doubts in believers, Darwin's theory of evolution was introduced as a "scientific" alternative to creation by God. Protocols 2:3 flaunts "the successes we arranged for Darwinism."



Attacks on the Bible achieved what Protocol 17:2 terms "the complete wrecking of that Christian religion." The Rockefellers funded seminaries that questioned the Gospel, most notoriously the Union Theological Seminary. In the late 19th century, Union Theological professor Charles Briggs introduced "Higher Criticism," in America claiming the Bible was error-ridden.



In 1922, Harry Emerson Fosdick, left, gave a landmark sermon which cast doubt on the Bible being God's Word, the Virgin Birth, the Second Coming, and Christ's death as atonement for sins. He declared those holding these beliefs "intolerant."



His sermon sparked outrage, and Fosdick was forced to resign. However, he was immediately hired as pastor of Riverside Church - attended and built by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. for $4 million. Rockefeller paid for 130,000 copies of Fosdick's sermon to be printed and distributed to ministers. Fosdick's brother Raymond was president of the Rockefeller Foundation.



The views expressed by theologians like Briggs and Fosdick were called "Modernism," which included denying Christ's divinity, miracles and resurrection. Modernism was not a quibbling over some gray area of theology; it was total repudiation of Christianity's major tenets. With Rockefeller funding, it permeated seminaries and churches.



Recently Modernism has gone further; the Jesus Seminar (financial backers unpublicized) declared over 80 percent of sayings attributed to Jesus weren't authentic. The Da Vinci Code - this century's best-selling novel, thought by John Coleman to be a Tavistock creation - claimed Jesus wasn't resurrected and married Mary Magdalene. Shortly after the film version's release, a Discovery Channel documentary claimed a tomb had been found containing the bones of Jesus and Mary Magdalene.



ECUMENISM AND SOCIAL GOSPEL UNDERMINING FAITH



Consolidation of churches required organizations. The Rockefellers funded the National Council of Churches. John Foster Dulles was chosen to spearhead the ecumenism drive. Dulles was a Rockefeller in-law, chairman of the Rockefeller Foundation trustees, a founding CFR member who helped draft the UN Charter (which never mentions God.)



In 1942, Dulles chaired a 30-denomination meeting which called for "a world government of delegated powers." Not content with unifying America's churches, Dulles traveled to Amsterdam in 1948 to attend the founding conference of the World Council of Churches. Director of research for this foundation-funded conference was John Bennett - president of Union Theological and a CFR member.



Among today's ecumenical traps: the Tony Blair Faith Foundation. The former British prime minister - a consummate insider - said he wanted to "promote respect, friendship and understanding between the major religious faiths" since "globalization pushes us ever closer."



But even with structures for consolidation, the question remained: how to motivate churches to unite. Since denominations often disagree on theology, the strategy was to encourage collaboration where they did agree: values (e.g., helping the poor and sick.) This materialized in an action-based program, "the Social Gospel" (socialism masked as religion.)



Walter Rauschenbusch, trained at Rockefeller-funded Rochester Theological Seminary, became "Father of the Social Gospel," declaring that "the only power that can make socialism succeed, if it is established, is religion."



Perhaps the most notorious "Social Gospel" pusher: Rockefeller-backed Reverend Harry F. Ward, who long taught at Union Theological. Ward, the ACLU's first chairman, was called by labor leader Samuel Gompers "the most ardent pro-Bolshevik cleric in this country." Ward helped found the Methodist Federation for Social Action, which advised Christians to downplay the Gospel and fight for things like social justice, better labor conditions, and "world peace" - i.e., the goals Marxists proclaimed.



Missionary work was targeted. In 1930, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. funded the "Laymen's Foreign Missions Inquiry," which recommended missionaries downplay Christian doctrines and ally with other religions in doing good works. Although most denominations were critical of the report, former missionary Pearl Buck praised it in the media. Subsequently her novel The Good Earth received the Nobel Prize.



This "unity through action" strategy continues today. The Tony Blair Faith Foundation's original website had a "Social Action Projects" page which asked viewers to sign a declaration stating: "I commit to working together with people of all faiths to fight against disease and poverty."



Rick Warren, author of The Purpose Driven Life (over 30 million sold) is America's current Social Gospel point man. In 2008, backed by a $2 million Rupert Murdoch donation, Warren launched the PEACE Coalition. Time magazine headlined it: "RICK WARREN GOES GLOBAL." Warren said the coalition's goal was "to mobilize 1 billion Christians worldwide."



Warren, who is a CFR member, gave the invocation at Obama's inauguration, and was dubbed "America's pastor" by CNN. He's anointed, but by who?



CATHOLICS



The Illuminati haven't forgotten Catholicism. Protocol 17:3: "When the time comes finally to destroy the papal court...we shall penetrate to its very bowels."



Like other churches, Catholics have recently seen major ecumenical developments, such as: the signing of the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification by Lutheran and Catholic representatives (1999); dialogue with Eastern Orthodox churches, resulting in the Common Declaration of Pope Benedict XVI and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I (2006); an unprecedented Catholic-Muslim summit at the Vatican (2008); and visits of Pope Benedict XVI to Israel and to the Great Synagogue of Rome (2009).



And Catholicism has experienced its own "social action" movement - comparable to the tactics of Harry F. Ward and Rick Warren - as in the doctrine of liberation theology, which was prominent in Latin America beginning in the 1950s and 60s, where the Gospel took a back seat to fighting poverty and social injustice via Marxist precepts.



Protocols 17:2: "as to other religions we shall have still less difficulty in dealing with them, but it would be premature to speak of this now."



ONE WORLD RELIGION



The final mechanism for one-world religion might be Project Blue Beam. According to Serge Monast, satellite-projected holograms in the sky (the "image of the beast" predicted by the Bible), will be tailored to religious populations in Earth's different regions.



To induce worship, the Antichrist will not initially appear as a tyrant, but as a "savior." To save us from what? Probably from all the chaos the satanic Illuminati will have created: wars ignited by false flags, famines from artificial food shortages, plagues from viruses synthesized in laboratories, HAARP-generated storms and earthquakes, and perhaps even a fake "Blue Beam" alien attack, simulated by holograms of spaceships. Having contrived these disasters, it will easy for him to stop them. By turning off HAARP, for example, he will appear to duplicate the feat of Jesus in quelling the storm on the Sea of Galilee. These high-tech counterfeit "miracles" will allow him to be accepted as God, as Christ returned.



But any "saving" will be short-lived. Once enthroned in Jerusalem (the end goal of Zionism), Satan will use his absolute dictatorship to unleash his greatest cruelties on the world. Worshiping the Antichrist will undoubtedly include human sacrifices - a practice consistently associated with Satan worship, from child sacrifices offered to the demonic Baal in the Old Testament, to today's mock human sacrifices carried out by America's elite at Bohemian Grove.



People of faith should stand united; not in their one-world religion but against the Illuminati.



Jesus warned: "Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves."



Protocol 11:4: "The goyim are a flock of sheep, and we are their wolves. And you know what happens when the wolves get hold of the flock."

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James Perloff is author of several books; his latest is Truth Is a Lonely Warrior .

