Days of Noah Redux
"It's a bird! It's a plane!
It's...more aliens!" My apologies for revisiting this topic so
soon, but a couple of issues came up that I felt warranted a closer look and I
decided to go ahead and strike while the iron was hot.
In my last article, I discussed the UFO/alien narrative and how it will impact certain
aspects of the end-time scenario. For one thing, I discussed how I wasn't 100
percent convinced that Satan would break out the full monty of his elaborate ruse
before the attack of Gog-Magog.
I also discussed was how I
wasn't convinced that Satan would immediately wave his UFO/alien narrative
around by the tail as an alternative explanation for the Rapture, and that a
full-blown, UFO/alien-based explanation for this "evacuation" would come
during the Tribulation, when fallen angels posing as aliens show up to supposedly
save mankind and our planet.
But I gotta admit being beamed
up by aliens in advanced spacecraft would totally rock as a way to be raptured.
The reason I said I don't think
Satan will do that is the simple fact that the world in its current state of
indoctrination in regard to UFOs and aliens isn't going to need any extra help
from Satan to ascribe the sudden disappearance of several hundred million
people from the face of the planet to the work of an advanced race of
extraterrestrials from a galaxy far, far away. That's the conclusion most
people will leap to, alien landing or no alien landing.
I received a number of
thought-provoking comments on what I wrote—some of which added to and extended
what I had written, and some that took slightly different views on some of the
details. And hey, that's a good thing, because this is a topic
where...well, let's just say things are notoriously difficult to pin down with
a high degree of scriptural certainty.
In other words, I can only name one
person on earth who knows exactly how the UFO/alien narrative will come
into play in the end times:
First name "No," last name "Body."
The point is that all any
of us can do is read and study Scripture and do our best to put the pieces of
the puzzle together in a way that at least doesn't contradict God's Word
and that makes a reasonable amount of horse sense to most scripturally
knowledgeable believers.
However, as I worked on last
month's article, a couple of ideas reared their extraterrestrial heads that I
was hesitant to pursue to any great degree because I felt it would have taken me
too far afield. That article was already developing into an eminent example of
my hopelessly scatterbrained style of writing, and I feared that doing so would
have made it even more so.
So what I want to do here is
take a closer look at a couple of ideas that floated to the surface in my last
article that are related to Satan's use of his UFO/alien narrative to deceive
and gain control over the world and establish his kingdom in the end times. But
just keep a tight grip on one thing:
ALIENS are a LIE of Satan.
You can take it to the bank.
Although a few side issues will
arise along the way (as they always do for people as hopelessly scatterbrained
as this writer), the primary issues I want to flesh out in this article boil
down to the following two items:
1. In my last article, I discussed how I believe Satan
will arrange for fallen angels to take on physical form and come to earth posing
as advanced aliens. I mentioned that Satan did something similar with his
fallen angels back in Genesis 6 before the Flood—but how does what happened in Genesis
6 relate to what I believe Satan will do during the Tribulation? Are there any
connections or parallels waiting to be ferreted out?
2. Although I didn't actually speak to this issue
directly in my previous article, I did give it some thought as I worked on it. As
far as Satan having fallen angels pose as aliens during the Tribulation is
concerned, are there any passages of Scripture that give us any hints or
shadows of this, or that could be reasonably interpreted in ways that support
this idea?
Although I was thinking about
these and other ideas last month, I decided to deal with them in a future
article...which turned out to be this article.
Before the Flood
It may come as a bit of a surprise
to many people that the idea of Satan arranging for some of his fallen angel
cohorts to take on physical form and dwell among men here on terra firma is certainly
not new. Many Bible teachers and commentators are fully convinced that we see
this occurring in Genesis 6, in the days prior to the Flood:
1 And it came to pass,
when men began to multiply on the face of the earth, and daughters were born to
them, 2 That the sons of God [early
references are virtually unanimous on these being angels—in this case fallen
angels] saw
the daughters of men that they were fair; [two distinct groups are
mentioned here—see remarks below] and they took them wives of all which they chose. [That
is, although they possessed "demonic DNA," so to speak, they were
clearly close enough to real humans that they could freely mate with fully human
women.] 3 And
the LORD said, My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is
flesh: yet his days shall be an hundred and twenty years. 4 There
were giants [i.e. nephilim] in the earth in those days; and also after
that, when the sons of God came in to the daughters of men, and they bore
children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of
renown. [More nephilim.]
5 And God saw that the
wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the
thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. 6 And it
repented the LORD [in other words, it grieved Him—it broke His
heart] that
he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart. 7 And
the LORD said, I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the
earth; both man, and beast, and the creeping thing, and the fowls of the air;
for it repents me that I have made them.
8 But Noah found grace in
the eyes of the LORD. [And as a result, you might say God gave
mankind a second chance.]
(Genesis 6:1–8 AKJV / emphasis & [comments] added)
The phrase "sons of
God" (v. 2) is used several times in other places in the Old Testament to
refer to angels (Job 1:6; 2:1; 38:7), and here in Genesis 6:2 many people are satisfied
that it refers specifically to fallen angels.
Arguably the oldest and most
widespread interpretation of this passage in Genesis 6 is that fallen angels
took on physical form, dwelled here on earth, mated extensively with human
women, and produced what were in effect people who were genetically
contaminated with some non-human DNA.
The great majority of early
sources starting from around the third century BC reflect this Fallen Angel
view, and it was easily the predominant view in the early Church.
There is, however, another popular
view that balks at the Fallen Angel idea and sees Genesis 6:2 as referring to
the "sons of Seth."
Am I my brother's keeper? Just to get our bearings: After
Adam and Eve were expelled from the Garden of Eden, their first son was Cain and
later they had Abel. God accepted Abel's offering of a blood sacrifice, but
rejected the sacrifice offered by Cain because it consisted of produce he had grown
in his fields—the work of his own hands. In a fit of jealous rage, Cain rose up
and killed Abel, and essentially became a fugitive (Gen. 4:1–16). Afterwards,
Adam and Eve had their third son, Seth.
According to the Sons of Seth argument,
the lineage of Seth ultimately became regarded as being godlier than that of Cain.
In spite of that, however, the sons of Seth ultimately became enamored with
many of the daughters of the sons of Cain and intermarried with many of them. But
since this argument claims the "sons of God" mentioned in Genesis 6:2
are the (eminently human) sons of Seth, that means this is no longer a matter
of pure human DNA vs contaminated DNA. According to the Sons of Seth argument, it's
a matter of godly people vs ungodly people—nothing more.
People who hold to this view
argue that since Scripture indicates that angels neither marry nor are given in
marriage (Matt. 22:30), that means they cannot reproduce, and thus the Fallen
Angel view must be discarded.
But there are weaknesses with this
view, and I'll touch on two of them:
1. Yes, Matthew 22:30 indicates that angels in heaven do not marry. OK, fine.
But it requires a modest leap of logic to go from that statement to the idea that
all angels—both good and bad—are 100 percent incapable of taking
on human form and impregnating female humans under any circumstances. It
doesn't say that—it must be read into Scripture.
For starters, it's clear from
several passages of Scripture that angels are perfectly capable of taking on human
form and interacting among men here on earth, and have undeniably done so. For
example, consider the angels who came to warn Abraham's nephew Lot of God's impending
destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen. 19). Of course, these "good" angels
certainly didn't have sex with anyone...but still. The men of Sodom sure wanted
to have sex with them. In fact, they were ready to beat the door down and
drag them out and rape them. So why is it such a stretch to believe that
"bad" angels could take on human form and have illicit sex with human
women? Who said anything about marriage? Hey, these are some bad
angels!
2. There is also a bit of a grammar issue in Genesis 6:2, so you may need
your grammar magnifying glass. As I pointed out in the passage above, the
grammatical structure of this verse clearly refers to two distinct groups:
(a) The sons of God, and (b) men.
Not these men or those
men. Not any certain group of men. Not just men who were the sons of one
certain individual, be it Seth or whoever. Just men, period. Not
a subgroup in sight. Logically that refers to all human men in general.
And the grammar of the sentence clearly distinguishes "men" from the
first group mentioned, or "the sons of God." So, if the rules grammar
and logic mean anything at all, "the sons of God" cannot be conflated
with or interpreted as a group of human men. TILT.
Having said that, however, let
me emphasize that it's unlikely that anyone will ever be able to prove either
side of this argument with absolute airtight certainty. But having said that,
I am still convinced the Fallen Angel view enjoys stronger scriptural support
if people simply follow the Golden Rule of Biblical Interpretation and let
Scripture interpret Scripture.
So I am content to cast my lot
with what was long the majority view and go with the idea that Satan had some
of his fallen angels take on human form and dwell in the earthly domain. Then,
over a period of time that could have been up to a millennium and a half, they
got busy mating with human women until nearly the entire human population was
contaminated with at least some non-human DNA (all but the eight members of
Noah's family).
But one obvious question is
staring us in the face:
Why on earth would Satan do such a
thing?
What could have possibly motivated him?
Simple: He wanted to stop the Head Crusher.
I've written about this before in more
depth, but understand that when God confronted Satan over his deception of Adam
and Eve, He said something to him that would alter the course of his existence
for eternity:
14 And the LORD God said to
the serpent, Because you have done this, you are cursed above all cattle, and
above every beast of the field; on your belly shall you go, and dust shall you
eat all the days of your life:
15 And I will put enmity
between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed [i.e.
the Redeemer];
it shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel [a lot
of translations read "crush your head," although the same
Hebrew word is used in both spots—it conveys both meanings].
(Genesis 3:14–15 AKJV / emphasis & [comments] added)
The woman's "seed"
refers to the Redeemer God is promising to send to take back from Satan what he
duped Adam and Eve out of. And in so doing, the Redeemer will "crush his
head." Yep...Christ the Head Crusher.
Satan may be evil, but he's
not stupid—he got the message.
So he got to work...and he knew
what he had to do:
Plan A: Prevent the Head Crusher from
being born!
From that time forward, Satan
tried to outguess God and go after, negatively influence, or somehow disqualify
individuals he suspected might be or give rise to the Head Crusher.
And I believe Satan wasted no
time in going after Adam and Eve's firstborn son Cain (C'mon, firstborn
son...gotta be the one, right?), and influenced him to disregard God's
commands concerning sacrifices and ultimately to slay his brother Abel in a fit
of rage and end up an outcast. But Satan guessed wrong—turns out the Head
Crusher would come from the line of Seth, not Cain.
And that brings us to Genesis 6.
Satan knew that the Head Crusher would have to be born of a genetically pure
human woman. So the next angle from which he approached the problem was to have
some of his fallen angels take on human form and mate copiously with human
women, and after well over a millennium it reached the point where nearly the
entire human race was contaminated with non-human DNA. And if he could
genetically contaminate them all, he would win because there
would be no fully human women left to give birth to the Messiah who would come
to redeem fallen Homo sapiens—not fallen Homo daemonium. But thanks to
Noah and his family, Satan failed and God started over with Noah's three sons and
their wives.
Satan continued to guess wrong at
every turn for roughly the next 15 centuries, until the Head Crusher was
finally born in a manger in Bethlehem to a young virgin named Mary.
Satan had been knocking himself
silly for many centuries trying every trick in the book to prevent the Redeemer
from ever being born—but at that point he knew he had failed. So what did Satan
do? He switched to...
Plan B: Kill the Head Crusher!
After the Three Wisemen and their entourage came to Jerusalem seeking what they knew was the King of the Jews, Satan's first major attempt at killing the Head Crusher came in the form of influencing King Herod to kill all the male children under the age of two in order to eliminate what he perceived as a potential threat to his rule.
Mary's husband Joseph was warned in a dream by an angel of the Lord to pack up the family and head to Egypt to escape Herod's baby-killing rampage. After Herod's death they returned to Israel and settled in Nazareth, so Satan's first attempt came up empty.
But even though Satan may have failed in his initial attempt at killing the Head Crusher, he saved his grandest attempt for last—and he succeeded! When the Romans took Jesus into custody and proceeded to crucify Him, Satan was convinced he had finally won after all. He figured that he may not have been able to prevent the Redeemer from being born, but he sure prevented Him from "redeeming" anybody. And most importantly, he had prevented the Head Crusher from fulfilling Genesis 3:15.
Or so he thought.
But the Resurrection changed everything.
Just like all of mankind, Satan failed to see that one coming—an omniscient God
planned it that way. So when Satan realized Christ had defeated the curse of
sin and death and had officially won back the rights to what he had cleverly usurped
from Adam and Eve back in the Garden of Eden, what did he do? He switched to...
Plan C: Prevent the Head Crusher from returning!
Satan knows that it is the believing
one-third of Israel calling on the Lord to save them at the climax of Daniel's
70th Week that prompts Christ to return in the Second Coming (Zech. 13:8–9) to
physically establish His kingdom (and in the process the unbelieving two-thirds
of Israel will perish).
So for the last two thousand
years, Satan's primary goal has been to prevent that possibility from coming to
fruition by wiping out the Jews completely in order to prevent
Zechariah's prophecy from ever being fulfilled. By doing so, Satan actually believes
he can put the Second Coming on ice indefinitely and hang on to his little
kingdom down here on earth where he can strut around pretending to be like the
Most High (Isa. 14:14).
To that end, Satan's plan
involves establishing, possessing, and controlling a man that he will transorm
into an all-powerful world leader that he will sell to the world as their true
Messiah. This man—the Antichrist—will appear to have great supernatural power, which
will presumably be rationalized by his intimate connection with and support
from an advanced alien race who has come to earth to help mankind evolve
spiritually in order to help their Earth Mother get through a time of turbulent
changes. These turbulent changes (the judgments of the Tribulation) are a
result of Mother Earth trying to cleanse herself from the dark, negative energy
of ancient myths (i.e. the Bible) that some low-vibrational cretins persist in foolishly
clinging to (i.e. the believing Jewish remnant and the Gentile Tribulation
saints).
I believe one part of this plan
will involve the staged "arrival" of a large number of Satan's fallen
angels who will once again take on physical form, just as they did in Genesis
6. Only this time they will present themselves as an advanced
race of aliens who have come to earth in a fleet of advanced spacecraft. As I mentioned,
one of their main jobs will supposedly be to help mankind evolve spiritually in
order to assist Mother Earth in surviving the turbulent changes she is going
through. If our Earth Mother Gaia can successfully do that, then mankind and our
planet will be able to enter into an indescribably wonderful New Age of heaven
on earth.
Of course, in reality this idea
of helping people "evolve spiritually" may amount to little more than
a bunch of fancy-schmancy Yoga-type breathing and meditation and other associated
pseudo-spiritual, New Age schlock—just dressed up with sexy extraterrestrial
terminology. I mean, hey, it's coming from an advanced race of aliens
who have traveled many light years to help us, and so I'm sure people will
eagerly buy into it and gobble it up.
Those who have come to faith in
the gospel of the real Messiah, however, won't be deceived
and won't buy it (the Jewish remnant and the Gentile Tribulation saints),
and according to the demonic "aliens" their refusal to get with the
program will endanger the earth and all of mankind. And that means they must
be eliminated for the greater good—and legions will be.
But don't miss the striking
parallels between what Satan and his fallen angels did in the days before the
Flood what they will do during the Tribulation:
• Before the Flood, Satan had his fallen angels take on human form and
dwell on earth so they could mate with human women in order to contaminate the world's
people genetically in an effort to prevent the Head Crusher from being
born.
His efforts failed, however, and the Head Crusher was
born. And He died, rose from the grave, and Scripture promises us that He will return
to establish His kingdom after making His enemies His footstool. But Satan
believes that if he can just wipe out all the Jews, he can prevent that from
happening. So...
• During the
Tribulation, Satan will have his fallen angels pose as an advanced race of
aliens that will strive to contaminate the world's people spiritually
and kill all who resist in an effort to prevent the Head Crusher from returning.
(Spoiler alert: His efforts will
fail again—Glory to the Head Crusher!)
So during the Tribulation, the
world is going to see a bona fide days of Noah redux, where Satan and his
fallen angels will pull an even grander stunt than the one they pulled before
the Flood in regard to the Head Crusher, and for an updated reason that smacks
of a greater sense of desperation:
In the days of Noah, the goal was to
stop Him from coming the first time.
In the days of Noah redux, the goal
will be to stop Him from coming back.
But a sovereign
Creator God has a very different ending to that story already scripted and
ready to play out.
And
we will be watching from the wings as it all goes down until we join Christ on
stage for the climactic scene.
What saith Scripture?
As always, especially when
dealing with something I think most would agree is a bit on the wild side, biblically
speaking, we need to go to the Word. We need to take a careful look at anything
in Scripture that could possibly be interpreted in a manner that either
potentially supports or contradicts the ideas we have been discussing
concerning fallen angels appearing on earth and posing as aliens during the
Tribulation.
As I wrote about this last month,
the primary passage of Scripture that grabbed my attention comes from the
Olivet Discourse.
In Matthew 23, Jesus has His
final standoff with the Pharisees at the temple, and when He's finished with
them He and His disciples get ready to leave the temple area. As they leave,
Jesus drops a bombshell on them:
1 Jesus went out from the temple, and was going on his way. His
disciples came to him to show him the buildings of the temple. 2 But
he answered them, "You see all of these things, don't you? Most certainly
I tell you, there will not be left here one stone on another, that will not
be thrown down." [And this was fulfilled about 40 years
later.]
(Matthew
24:1–2 / emphasis & [comments] added)
In
other words, He tells them the temple will be utterly destroyed. The stunned
disciples don't what to make of Jesus' statement, since they are convinced
Jesus is on the verge of establishing the kingdom—and they knew that would
obviously require a functional temple.
Later
that evening back at camp on the Mount of Olives, four of Jesus' disciples (according
to Mark 13:3, Peter, Andrew, James, and John) were in such distress that they come
to Him in private seeking answers to the questions that were burning in their troubled
hearts:
3 As he sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples [the
four that Mark mentions] came to him privately, saying, "Tell us, when will
these things be? What is the sign of your coming, and of the end of the
age?" [They are focused on His return to establish the kingdom,
which was of primary interest to Jewish believers at the time. They knew nothing
about the Church and even less about the Rapture, if that's possible.]
4 Jesus answered them, "Be careful that no one leads you
astray." [The first words out of Jesus' mouth: "Do
not be deceived."]
(Matthew
24:3–4 / emphasis & [comments] added)
After
admonishing them to not be led astray, Jesus said something that stirred in my
mind as I wrote my last article:
5 "For many will come in my name, saying, 'I am the Christ,'
and will lead many astray. [See remarks below.] 6 You
will hear of wars and rumors of wars. See that you aren't troubled, for all
this must happen, but the end is not yet. 7 For nation will
rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom; and there will be famines,
plagues, and earthquakes in various places. 8 But all these
things are the beginning of birth pains." [In other words, Jesus
goes on to mention several of the seal judgments that will get the Tribulation
off and running (see Rev. 6).]
(Matthew
24:5–8 / emphasis & [comments] added)
My
focus here, however, is on verse 5. Note that the word "Christ" comes
from the Greek word Χριστός (khris-TOS), which
means "the Anointed One" and it became one of the most common epithets
of Jesus.
In
other words, Jesus is saying that during the Tribulation "many" will
go around saying they "come in the name of the Messiah," and that each
one of them will say he is "the anointed one." Now, please take out
your grammar magnifying glass.
Note
that in Greek Jesus says "ὁ Χριστός"
or "the Christ." That is, He uses the definite article ὁ (ho), which works the same way as the
English word "the." So Jesus makes it clear that these
"many" are not just saying they are anointed, or one of the anointed
ones. Each of them is saying "I am the anointed one."
The
question is whether or not these "many" could possibly be Satan's
fallen angels posing as aliens and running around saying they have come in the
name of the Messiah (a "messiah" who later turns out to be the
Antichrist), with each of them saying he is "the anointed
one."
On the
other hand, perhaps they are simply deceived people who have been deluded into
believing they are some type of spiritual grand poobah like Jesus (who dwells
on Saturn according to some UFO cults) and who seek to save the world by spouting
pseudo-spiritual mumbo jumbo.
And
we've got a few of those out there now.
Notice,
however, something else Jesus says about these "many":
23 Then if any man tells you, "Behold, here is the
Christ!" [same definite article as in v. 5] or, "There!"
don't believe it. 24 For false christs [note
that although each of them uses a definite article and says "I am the
Christ," Jesus just lumps them all together into one group here] and false prophets will
arise, and they will show great signs and wonders, [i.e.
they have supernatural powers] so as to lead astray, if possible, even the chosen ones.
[Many translations read "the elect," which in this case are believers
in the Tribulation.]
(Matthew
24:23–24 / emphasis & [comments] added)
Note
that we have shifted forward in time a bit here, and are now in the period
following the abomination of desolation (vv. 15–22). And we still have those
who are claiming to be "the Christ" or "the
anointed one" as we did in the first half of the Tribulation in verse 5.
So
what can we make of all this? The way I see it, these "many" Jesus is
speaking of can legitimately be one of two things:
(a) Deceived human men empowered by Satan.
(b) Fallen angels posing as advanced aliens.
I
cannot definitively rule out (a), and I say that for two basic reasons:
1. I am
satisfied that Satan will have the capacity to grant supernatural power to men
during the Tribulation. After all, I have to believe that Satan will be
enjoying the benefits of being unrestrained.
2. It's
also easy to imagine deceived men running around saying "I am the
anointed one," as foolish as that sounds. We've got people doing that today.
And it's just as easy to imagine people falling for it, because some are.
One
problem, however, is that it just seems more likely to me that aliens would be
informed enough to say "I am an anointed one" (indefinite
article—one of many) or "I am one of the anointed
ones," (same deal—one of many) not "I am the anointed
one" (the one and only). That would seem to point to their boss's man the
Antichrist, who will pose as the Anointed One (the Messiah). So,
why would his phony alien gofers all foolishly claim to be what would refer exclusively
to the Antichrist himself? It just strikes me that Satan's program would be a bit
better organized than that.
Now,
I have seen articles written by people who claim the "many" are aliens
who are in fact saying things like "I am an
anointed one," as in one of many. It strikes me, however, that they're not
paying very careful attention to the grammar Jesus uses in Matthew 24:5, 23.
That's
not what Jesus is saying.
So I
can't definitively rule out (a), but neither can I definitively rule out
(b)...and I say that for two basic reasons:
1. Although
yes, I believe Satan will be able to impart supernatural power to human men
during the Tribulation, it's actually easier and more natural to see fallen
angels as being the ones with the supernatural power. So I have to consider
both possibilities as being entirely workable.
2. Grammar
issues aside, I believe that if these "aliens" went around saying that
each of them is "the anointed one" and performing
miracles, most people would excitedly leap to the conclusion that they are highly
spiritually advanced beings who are preparing us for the advent of the true
Anointed One (that is, the poser extrordinaire pretending to be Him). And since
all these aliens are saying the same thing, many people would interpret what
they are saying to mean they are one with or part of the Anointed
One, and so are part of God (as are we all, didn't ya know)—which meshes
nicely with New Age teachings.
So
that leaves the issue on the proverbial fence: I think Jesus could be referring
to either deceived men claiming to be the Christ (which is how most
commentators have traditionally interpreted these verses in Matthew), or to
fallen angels posing as aliens making that claim. I think a good case can be
made for both possibilities without contradicting Scripture, so I think we have
to consider the idea that Jesus is referring to Satan's fallen angels posing as
aliens during the Tribulation as being a valid interpretation of the passage.
In
other words, nothing in Scripture precludes that UFO/alien view. So...
The possibility that Satan's fallen angels
will
pose as aliens during the Tribulation to
deceive
people into worshiping the Antichrist
as the
Messiah is still very much on the table.
So the
UFO/alien view may be on the fence, but it's still on the table—and that's fine
and dandy with me. That's all I set out to establish in this section, and that
is that the idea of Satan having some of his fallen angels posing as advanced
aliens during the Tribulation is scripturally plausible.
Plausible?!
It's practically staring us in the face.
Another redux
So I
believe Satan will use his fallen angels again—as in the days of Noah—to
try to prevent Christ from returning to crush both his head and his kingdom.
Only
this time, instead of mating with human women to contaminate the human
gene pool to prevent the Messiah from being born like he did back before the
Flood, this days of Noah redux will see those fallen angels posing as an
advanced race of aliens who have come to help the world prepare for the advent
of the Antichrist and hopefully put Christ's return on ice by wiping out the
Jews in the process.
It
occurred to me, however, that there are also parallels between the First and
Second Advents of Christ...call it Christ the King redux if you please:
Christ came the first time as a
King
riding on a humble donkey
to establish
His Church, conquer
sin,
and teach about His kingdom.
He will come the second time as the
King
of kings riding on a white horse,
accompanied
by His Church, to conquer
sinful nations and establish
His kingdom.
Of course, we won't be here to
witness the days of Noah redux. But when it's time for the Christ the King
redux, we will do more than witness it:
We will take part in it when we return to
earth with Christ at His Second Coming, having already been raptured and
rewarded, and ready to rock and rule with Him in His glorious kingdom!
And you know, now that I think
about it, there's really no way being beamed up by aliens in advanced
spacecraft can top being changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye and
being caught up into the clouds along with many of our loved ones to meet the
Lord in the air.
Now that's gonna
totally rock!
From Greg Lauer @ A Little Strength—MAY '26: "Days of Noah Redux"


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