Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden in Washington on March 24, 2021, the day he tasked her with addressing the root causes that drive migration from Central America to the U.S. I wonder if she considered the activities of Catholic Charities as a potential root cause? Probably not. Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images file
We spent some time looking at the birthright citizenship issue, first, because it is such a key component of Antichrist’s irredentist immigration assault on America, and second, because at least as far as I am aware, it has been largely ignored by Christian writers.
However, other statements in SNL need to be refuted from the Scriptures. We will now turn to these.
Pope Francis stands on an altar facing the U.S. before celebrating Mass during a February 2016 trip to Juarez. A mere five years later, America’s second Roman Catholic president unleashed a border invasion the likes of which America had never seen. Photo: Robin Zielinski/Las Cruces Sun-News.
I’ve titled this talk “Antichrist’s Irredentist Immigration Assault on America: A Review of Strangers No Longer.” Before going on, it would be helpful to define a few terms.
Antichrist
My definition of Antichrist is the same as that of the Westminster Confession of Faith that historically has identified “the Pope of Rome” as “that Antichrist, man of sin and son of perdition, that exalteth himself in the Church against Christ, and all that it called God.”[1]
While this definition of Antichrist was the standard position of Reformed writers from the 16th century through the early 20th century, calling the Pope “Antichrist” today is considered, at best, bad manners and shocking in many circles.
The identification of the Pope of Rome as Antichrist is one of the more prominent conclusions of what is known as the “Protestant system” prophetic interpretation. This school of thought is also known as Historicism.[2] Historicists hold that Revelation records the history of the church from the time John wrote the book in the first century through the second coming of Jesus Christ.
Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel, addresses the U.S. Congress on July 24, 2024 in Washington. Josh Morgan, USA Today.
All three religions – Romanism, Islam, and Judaism – are false, militant, and violent.
John W. Robbins, “The Religious Wars of the 21st Century”
In a piece I have cited several times before in this space, John Robbins commenting on the coming religious wars of the 21st century noted that “the religious right in America has embraced both Romanism and Judaism as saviors of the West, foolishly ignorant of the fact that they, as forms of unbelief, are destroyers of the West and causes of the collapse [of the West].”[1]
As I have noted previously, Robbins does something in his article that I have never seen done by any other writer. Rather than taking sides with Romanism, Judaism, or Islam, he describes all three as “medieval…false, militant, and violent.” But unlike Robbins, many Evangelicals do take sides with either Romanism or Judaism against the secularists and Islam.
In America, one likely would not find those who claim to be Christians, at least those of the “religious right” variety, embracing Islam. Unlike Romanism and Judaism, Islam is viewed with suspicion by the religious right due to events such as 9/11, the influence of dispensationalism, and the work of the Israel lobby.
One may be tempted to question Robbins’ characterization of Romanism, Islam, and Judaism as destroyers of the West. After all, didn’t Christianity Today run a piece in 2015 titled “From Antichrist to Brother in Christ: How Protestant Pastors View the Pope”? Further, American Christians are constantly told that they have a Biblical obligation to support the state of Israel and the Jews as “God’s chosen people.”[2]
Once again, the month formerly known as June has rolled around on the calendar.
I took last week off work, and it can be easy to lose track of days when you’re not in your usual routine. But not this time of year. Everything is festooned in rainbow colors, so if nothing else, you know for certain that the month formerly known as June has arrived.
Even my computer screen declares the onset of the annual festivities. In the lower right corner of my screen where the system tray is located, I noticed yesterday that a rainbow-colored icon for Copilot, Microsoft’s AI tool, is now showing up. Oh, the joy.
Beit Lahia in northern Gaza on Dec. 26, following Israeli bombardments. PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
I’ve written a great deal over the years in the space criticizing Roman Catholicism, but I’ve not had much to say about Dispensationalism. But both of them seem to have this in common: they are deeply superstitious.
Now Romanism and Dispensationalism are not superstitious in the same way. Romanism with its worship of Mary and the saints,[1] its doctrine of transubstantiation, and its cult of relics is thoroughly imbued with superstition. Dispensationalism, on the other hand, is a superstition that has taken over large parts of the professing Evangelical church in the United States, its chief superstition being the worship, or something close to it, of the modern nation-state of Israel.
Pastor Greg Locke, a Baptist preacher, is one of many examples of Israel worshipping American Evangelicals on the scene today. In a post on X dated 5/11/2024, Locke spent 588 words expressing his thoughts on Israel, even threatening to dismiss congregants whose views did not conform to his. Locke wrote, “In the last days there will be ONE dividing factor in the Body of Christ.” Locke enumerated several things that were not dividing factors: who kept their church open or closed (apparently a reference to Covid), cessationists vs. those who operate “in the gifts,” traditional vs. contemporary worship, or Bible versions. Interestingly, Locke did not mention those who believe in sovereign grace or free will or those who hold to justification by belief alone vs. those who hold that one is saved by faith plus something else. No, these are all minor issues. The big dividing line for Pastor Locke is what one believes about the nation-state of Israel.
I have a confession to make. I’m a glass-half-empty guy. I don’t recall any particular event that made me that way. No crushing tragedy that I can point to or someone I can blame. It seems that it’s my nature to be so. But perhaps there’s something more to it than my own personality.
If you pressed me on why I tend to look on the dark side of things, maybe it has something to do with the zeitgeist, the spirit of the age. I was born in the 1960s into a collapsing civilization, the collapse of which has only accelerated over the course of my life. Civilizational collapse is not a pretty sight for anyone with a philosophical bent. Of course, philosophical reflection is not a prerequisite to experiencing the impact of a civilizational collapse. When the barbarians are scaling the walls and burning your city, even the least reflective man knows he’s in trouble.
But barbarians scaling the walls and burning the city mark not the beginning of a civilization’s collapse but its end. What marks the earlier stages of a collapse is the rejection of truth, the belief in the lie, and decisions based on the lie – things which at the time may have seemed righteous and good and progressive to many – but which eventually and necessarily lead to destruction. “There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death” to quote Proverbs.
Martin Luther as the “German Hercules” vanquishing the doctors of Rome. Hans Holbein the Younger, 1520. Brother Martin was not confused about the identity of Antichrist.
Have you prayed against Antichrist today?
To answer that question truthfully, you first need to know who Antichrist is. Protestants once knew the identity of Antichrist. But the Protestant school of prophetic interpretation has been out of fashion for a long time, and other systems such as Postmillennialism, Amillennialism, and Dispensationalism have captured the bulk of Reformed and Evangelical pulpits in our day.
For the Postmillennialists, Antichrist is yesterday’s news. He came and went in the first century, so there’s no need to pray against him. For in the literal sense of the word he is history.
With the Dispensationalists it’s not much different. For them, there’s no need to pray against Antichrist, because Antichrist will not appear until sometime in the future. When Isaiah prophesied to King Hezekiah that the Babylonians would come and carry off all Judah’s treasure to Babylon, he exclaimed, “The word of the LORD which you have spoken is good…Will there not be peace and truth at least in my days?” Hezekiah saw the destruction of Jerusalem as a small thing since it was an event in the distant future and would not affect him. Not Hezekiah’s finest moment, that. For Dispensationalists, it is much the same way. The coming of Antichrist is a future event and not a clear and present danger. Perhaps some Dispensationalists pray against the supposedly future Antichrist, but human nature being what it is, probably most do not.
Bishop Mark J. Seitz of El Paso, TX holds a mass on the US/Mexico border on 11/5/2022 to commemorate those who died trying to illegally enter the United States. He wants you to forget that it is the Roman Catholic Church’s policy of encouraging the dangerous practice of illegal immigration that is the cause of the deaths of the people whom he pretends to commemorate.
It should come as no surprise that the Roman Church-State, the system of Antichrist, is the master of deception. We have it on the authority of the Lord Jesus that when Satan lies, he speaks from his own resources. In like fashion, so too does his representative organization here on earth, the Roman Catholic Church-State.
This is a general principle one can apply to all of Rome’s decrees. But for my purposes today, I’ll apply it to Rome’s statements about immigration. Even more specifically, I’ll apply it to Rome’s oft-repeated claim that it “recognizes a country’s right and responsibility to manage its borders in accordance with the common good.”[1]
I call Rome’s claim that it “recognizes a country’s right and responsibility to manage its border in accordance with the common good” an extraordinary lie for the simple reason that I have never once seen any official of the Roman Church-State even agree with any government policy that restricts massive welfare migration in any way. Even the smallest measure taken by a government to keep its people from being overrun by the migrant hordes Rome unleashes on its people is met with strident objections from prelates of the Church-State such as Mark J. Seitz, Bishop of El Paso, TX, and U.S. Bishops’ Migration Chairman.
Fake asylum-seeking illegal aliens enter the Catholic Charities respite center in McAllen, TX, on August 10, 2021.
“Catholic charities is a prime [of an NGO facilitating Biden’s Border Rush] example. They’re really the 800-pound gorilla when it comes to this.”
Mike Howell of the Heritage Foundation
My Comments: My goal as a Christin concerned about the destructive and treasonous immigration policies of our government is to systematically expose the Antichrist Roman Catholic Church’s role in the process. Why’s that my goal? Because hardly anyone else is doing it.
A lot of commentators will talk about “globalists” and their plots to destroy America. But hardly any of them get down to specifics. But to speak of globalists and not to speak specifically about the Roman Church-State is really a form of dodging the issue while appearing to speak about it.
Evidence that Rome is behind the immivation of the United States and other Western nations abounds, but hardly anyone will speak about it. This is unfortunate. Americans deserve to know who’s attacking them and why. But beyond that, there’s a spiritual issue at stake. The Apostle Paul enjoined believers “And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather expose them.“ Christians are called, not only to avoid fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness but are called to expose them, that is, to point them out to others. My aim as a writer on immigration is to expose Rome’s unfruitful works of darkness in flooding my country with illegal aliens and all the harm this brings.
I consider it my Christian duty to speak against Rome’s destruction of my homeland and I cannot be quiet about it. It is in this spirit, the spirit of seeking to expose Rome’s unfruitful works of darkness, that I write and speak against the manifold evils of Rome, especially concerning its brazen role in facilitating the destruction of the United States by aiding and abetting illegal aliens, helping them not only to enter the country but to disperse them throughout the length and breadth of the land.
The link below is a piece from the Heritage Foundation, a leading conservative think tank, about the role NGOs (Non-Governmental Organizations) play in facilitating the immivasion of the United States. Imagine my shock (sarcasm alert) when I found that Catholic Charities was called the “800 pound gorilla” of such organizations by a representative of a mainstream conservative organization. Who knew? A Roman Catholic organization helping a Roman Catholic president carry out the Vatican’s long-term, irredentist policy of displacing the historic Protestant American nation. It’s like some kind of crazy conspiracy theory. Only it’s true.