Before
World War!', Joseph Stalin and Franklin Delano Roosevelt
conspired to dominate the world. It was their job to
create a tension that would lead us into a world order"
With most of Russia already dominated by the Communists,
it fell to Roosevelt to create the same conditions here.
In his sweeping measures of 1933, he stole our gold,
gave it to the bankers and replaced it with a monetary
system that they could control, inflating or deflating
it as needed. There was still the need for an entity
to replace the failed League of Nations. Alert Americans
doomed that organization but Communist spy, Alger Hiss,
and his buddies were waiting in the wings with the United
Nations.
In an article found in Time magazine in 1942, we get
a clue as to how this new order would use the churches
to leadus into one world government.. .at the cost of
our freedom and Constitution. In 1942, the seeds of
~y were well sown within our own churches.
(Begin Transcript)
'TIME" MARCH 16, 1942 - PAGE 44
AMERICAN MALVERN
These are the high spots of organized U.S. Protestantism's
super-Protestant new program for a just and durable
peace after World War II:
* Ultimately, "a world government of delegated
powers."
* Complete abandonment of US. isolationism.
* Strong immediate limitations on national sovereignty.
* International control of all armies & navies.
* A universal system of money. . so planned as
to prevent inflation and deflation."
* Worldwide freedom of immigration.
* Progressive elimination of all tariff quota
restrictions on world trade.
* "Autonomy for all subject and colonial peoples"
(with much better treatment for Negroes in the U.S).
* "No punitive reparations, no humiliating decrees
of war guilt, no arbitrary dismembennent of nations."
* A "democratically controlled" international
bank "to make development capital available in
all parts of the world without the predatory amd imperialistic
after-math so characteristic of large-scale private
and governmental loans."
This program was adopted last week by 375 appointed
representatives of 3O-odd denominations called together
at Ohio Wesleyan University by the Federal Council of
Churches. Every local Protestant church in the country
will now be urged to get behind the program "As
Christian citizens," its sponsors affirmed, "we
must seek to translate our beliefs into practical realities
and to create a public opinion which will insure that
the United States shall play its full and essential
part in the creation of a moral way of international
living."
Among the 375 delegates who drafted the program were
15 bishops of five de-nominations, seven seminary heads
(including Yale, Chicago, Princeton, Colgate-Rochester),
eight college and university presidents (including Princeton's
Harold W. Dodds), practically all the ranking officials
of the Federal Council and a group of well-known laymen,
including John R. Mott, Irving Fisher and Harvey S.
Firestone Jr.
"Intellectually," said Methodist Bishop Ivan
Lee Holt of Texas, "this is the most distinguished
American church gathering I have seen in 30 years of
conference-going."
The meeting showed its temper early by passing a set
of 13 "requisite principles for peace" submitted
by Chairman [John J. Foster Dulles [CFR] and his inter-church
Commission to Study the Bases of a Just and Durable
Peace. These principles, far from putting all the onus
on Germany or Japan bade the U.S. give thought to the
shortsighted selfishness of its own policies after World
War I, declared that the U.S. would have to turn over
a new leaf if the world is to enjoy lasting peace.
Excerpts.
* "For at least a generation we have held preponderant
economic power in the world, and with it the capacity
to influence decisively the shaping of world events.
It should be a matter of shame and humiliation to us
that actually the influences shaping the world have
largely been irresponsible forces. Our own positive
influence has been irnpaired because of concentration
on self and on our short-range material gains....if
the future is to be other than a repetition of the past,
the U.S. must accept the responsibility for Constructive
action commensurate with its power and opportunity."
* "The natural wealth of the world is not evenly
distributed. Accordingly the possession of such natural
resources.... is a trust to be discharged in the general
interest. This calls for more than an offer to sell
to all on equal terms. Such an offer may be a futile
gesture unless those in need can, through the selling
of their own goals and services, acquire the means of
buying."
With these principles accepted, the conference split
up into four groups to study, respectively, the social,
economic and political problems of the post-war world
and the problem of the church's own position in that
world. Discussion waxed hot & heavy, with one notable
silence: in a week when the Japs were taking Java, discussion
of the war itself was practically taboo.
Reason:
The Federal Council felt that, since five of its other
commissions are directly connected with the war effort,
the conference's concern should be with plans for peace.
One war statement - "the Christian Church as such
is not at war" - was proposed by Editor Charles
Clayton Morrison, of the influential and isolationist-before-Pearl-Harbor
Christian Century. This statement was actually inserted
in a subcommittee report by a 64-58 vote after a sharp
debate. In the plenary session, however, it was ruled
out of order.
Some of the conference's economic opinions were almost
as sensational as the extreme Internationalism of its
political pro gram. It held that "a new order of
economic life is both imminent and imperative"
- a new order that is sure toc ome either "through
voluntary cooperation within the framework of democracy
or through explosive political revolution." Without
condemning the profit motive as such, it denounced various
defects in the profit system for breeding war, demagogues
and dictators, "mass unemployment, wide-spread
dispossession from homes and farms, destitution, lack
of opportunity for youth and of security for old age."
Instead, "the church must demand economic arrangements
measured by human welfare... must appeal to the Christian
motive of human service as paramount to personal gain
or governmental coercion."
"Collectivism is coming, whether we like it or
not," the delegates were told by no less a churchman
than England's Dr. William Paton, co-secretary of the
World Council of Churches, but the conference did not
vote as far to the left as its definitely pinko British
counterpart, the now famous Malvern Conference (Time,
Jan.20, 1941). It did, however, back up Labor's demand
for an increasing share in industrial management. It
echoed Labor's shibboleth that the denial of collective
bargaining "reduces labor to a commodity."
It urged taxation designed "to the end that our
wealth may be more equitably distributed." It urged
experimentation with government and cooperative ownership.
"Every individual," the conference declared,
"has the right to full time educational opportunities...
to economic security in retirement... to adequate health
service (and an) obligation to some socially necessary
service.
The conference statement on the political bases of a
just and durable peace proclaimed that the first post-war
duty of the church "will be the achievement of
a just peace settlement with due regard to the welfare
of all the nations, the vanquished, the overrun and
the victors alike." In contrast to the blockade
of Germany after World War I, it called for immediate
provision of food and other essentials after the war
for every country needing them. 'We must get back,"
explained Methodist Bishop Francis J. McConnell, 'to
a stable material prosperity not only to strengthen
men's bodies but to strengthen their souls."
Politically, the conference's most important assertion
was that many duties now performed by local and national
governments "can now be effectively carried out
only by international authority." Individual nations,
it declared, must give up their armed forces "except
for preservation of domestic order" and allow the
world to be policed by an international army & navy.
This League-of-Nations-with-teeth would also have "the
power of final judgment in controversies between nations...
the regulation of international trade and population
movements among nations."
The ultimate goal: "a duly constituted world government
of delegated powers; an international legislative body,
an international court with adequate jurisdiction, international
administrative bodies with necessary powers, and adequate
international police forces and provision for
enforcing its worldwide economic authority."
(END TRANSCRIPT - "TIME", MARCH 16,1942)
So, even before the war was over, the scene was being
set for the installation of the UN as a ruling
body, with the memory of Patrick Henry still fresh in
their evil little minds, the "One Worlders"
had to neutralize the danger of Christians becoming
involved in politics. They latched upon the fraudulently
used but oft-quoted doctrine of the "separation
of church and state." The agency used to
cut the balls off the church was none other than the
IRS.
According to this list, excerpted from a list of 30
requirements for 501(c) (3) Churches. Put out by the
Department of Treasury Internal Revenue Service Pub
1826 (9-94) Cat. no. 21096G, churches must:
1. Be incorporated (BECOME A BUSINESS)
2. Have a recognized creed and "IRS approved form
of worship."
3. Have "IRS approved code of doctrine".
4. Have ordained ministers educated in "state accredited
colleges."
5. Be "neutral on political issues."
6. "Have tax exempt status issued by IRS."
7. Pastor must answer to the IRS as to "daily activities
of the church."
8. The IRS must be privy to "all financial transactions"
of the church.
9. Pastor must supply "names of all donors"-
make books records available.
10. May only use "IRS approved" fundraising
methods.
11. Pastor will be "called to account over any
stand taken against the tax system."
12. Church "must advocate and support racial integration."
(Multiculturalism)
13. May "not" engage in activities "opposing
p@rnography."
14. May "not" support legislation saying "children
belong to parents" rather than state."
15. May not form a Political Action Committee nor support
legislation "opposing lotteries and gambling activity."
16. May not "oppose the public school system."
17. May "not publicly declare" we are
to "obey God rather than the government."
(Those
requirements only pertain to churches that want to escape
paying taxes.
Most businesses cannot operate at a profit today because
of taxes. In fact, most small businessmen are either
forced to cheat on their taxes and lie to the government
simply to make ends meet and to feed their families.)
So
the government which stole our gold in 1933, led us
into a world war, imposed illegal taxation and adopted
the 10 Communist planks verbatim, as stated in the Communist
Manifesto, and has now invaded our churches and now
controls our religion, as of 1942. Our pastors, preachers,
priests and rabbi answer to the government, not God.
The obedience of the Christian Coalition to the Republican
party, the refusal of the ministries to endorse a true
leader or to expose political corruption is now explained.
It simply means that churches that are incorporated
are the property of the government.
I was watching simpsons proberly a year ago. This particular
episode was interesting to me, and divinely in line
because I hardly watch t.v. It featured Lisa Simpson's
struggle with religion. The church that Ned flanders
attends was burnt down. They had no money to fix it
back again, so Mr burnsspring field's scrooge opted
to help them. He was portrayed as the devil who had
millions of dollars to help the church out at the cost
of the whole essence of the faith. His condition was
that the church be run like a business to generate income,
by one of his specialist. Left in the cold, the pastor
agreed. The church was quickly built; but with neon
light signs like that of vegas, hot dog stands, money
changing machines, secular ad banners, guys selling
all types of things. The pastor was required to give
two minute business ads. Through all this Lisa the secular
kid was in uproar, because she thought that the church
shouldn't be a business. She was ignored and even passified
by the pastor. Eventually she left the church, in search
for a true relgion. She ended becoming a budhist.
Without
getting technical about the cartooon setting, the denomination
and even the fact that tv is dangerous and should be
avoided at all times. But this episode has made me realize
that the world is watching us and based on our outlandish
behaviour and compromise they are ready to use it as
a means to justify their deeds and excuse to seek another
religion that satisfy them. We are actually standing
in the way of sinners.
The
mere fact that a church have been incorporated means
that you have compromise the gospel if you follow the
17 legislature outlined above.
I
bet you didn't know that you were deceived. Don't
worry, get with a professional in your church to see
how your church can reverse this process and become
independent of the government.
"MY PEOPLE COME
OUT FROM AMONG THEM!" DON'T SELL OUT THIS GOSPEL
FOR NOTHING!"
Here
are some links:
The links above are
mostly for American resident.