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Kᄃ
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Kᄃ
@truthforce_
“God is Light, and in Him there is no darkness at all” ✨The Way, The Truth, The Life✨
United States शामिल हुए Ekim 2022
593 फ़ॉलोइंग1.5K फ़ॉलोवर्स
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☦️ Why aren’t Protestants taught about Christ’s conquest of Hades?
Because the Reformation cut them off from Holy Tradition.
In the Orthodox Church we don’t just say “He rose.” We proclaim:
**Christ is Risen, trampling down death by death, and upon those in the tombs bestowing life!**
He didn’t merely die and pop back up. The Lord of Glory descended into Hades — the place of the dead — shattered its bronze gates, crushed the serpent’s head, and led Adam, Eve, and every captive soul out in glorious triumph.
This is the Resurrection we celebrate. This is why icons show Christ standing on the broken gates, grabbing Adam and Eve by the wrists, pulling them from the darkness.
The Apostles’ Creed still says “He descended into hell,” but without the Church Fathers, the liturgy, and the living apostolic faith, that line gets ignored or explained away. Sola scriptura left them the verses but robbed them of the fullness.
So many Protestants get a beautiful but incomplete gospel: “Jesus died for your sins and rose again.”
We get the whole story: **Death is dead. Hades is conquered. The prisoners are free.**
Christ is Risen! Truly He is Risen!
Come and see what the ancient Church has always known.
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It was the LAST Passover Supper. And the main point - I don’t know how you missed it - is that it was the FIRST Holy Communion.
Jesus said, “This is the New Covenant in my blood…Do THIS in remembrance of me.”
The Passover was an Old Covenant ritual. It looked *forward* to Christ’s atonement. Holy Communion, the New Covenant ritual replacement looks *backward* to Christ’s atonement.
Passover is impossible under the New Covenant. Not only is there no longer a lamb that needs sacrificed, you can’t look forward to that which has already come.
For even Christ our passover is sacrificed for us.” (1 Cor 5:7). He’s already come.
What Jews observe today is not Passover. Not only is it totally different from what God designed, with no lamb and with its simple elements replaced with four cups and a 15-part tradition of Christ-hating nonsense invented by the rabbis, God forbade its local observance in Deuteronomy 16:5. Attempting it locally is a capital sin. God has swallowed up people by the ground for less.
The fact is, without the temple, the Passover cannot be observed, at least, without violating God’s very explicit instructions. But with the REAL Passover lamb being already sacrificed, it’s not necessary.
Because Jesus was so clear at the Last Passover Supper that He was putting the Old Covenant to rest and replacing Passover with Communion, for roughly 1950 years, Christians stopped doing “Passover.”
This “Happy Passover!” nonsense among Christians is a recent heretical novelty, a rebirth of the Neo-Judaizing heresy, and God hates it. The Church Fathers banned Passover observance for a reason; it’s a tacit denial of Christ Jesus being our Passover Lamb and His atonement being made complete.
Jesus WAS Jewish. And George Washington was British. Both are true. And both, brought something better.
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You’re shown carefully selected images, same clouds, same angle, supposedly 12 hours apart, and no one stops to think. A skydiver can film everything in high quality, but somehow a multi-billion dollar mission gives you blurry, choppy footage, and people just accept it. They show you fragments, they distract you when it matters, and as long as no one questions it, the illusion holds realityrevolt.com
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No, quite to the contrary.
According to Apostolic Canon 7 (still observed by the #OrthodoxChurch but abandoned by Rome & her Protestant offshoots), the Christian Pascha/Passover ("Easter") cannot be celebrated before or during the Jewish Passover.
This is because the OT Passover was the type foreshadowing the antitype: the true Passover, Christ (1 Cor. 5:7).
Orthodoxy preserves this typology without confusion.
The West has lost it. This is why you see many modern Protestants, and even some Roman Catholics, holding Passover seders as part of their Easter observances. Their ancestors must be spinning in their graves.
Apostolic Canon 7: "If any bishop, presbyter, or deacon, shall celebrate the holy day of Pascha before the vernal equinox, with the Jews, let him be deposed."
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@POTUS Why are you allowing Israeli companies to spray our skies?? I haven’t seen a blue sky in a few months. All I see is streak ….this is insane. Should we go over to Israel and spray their skies with heavy metals? Would that be fair? No we wouldn’t do that because we’re Christians. And we don’t believe in poisoning other people.
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🚨The Israeli company, Stardust Solutions, backed by billionaires is set to spray chemicals 11 miles above our heads across the entire United States starting in April.
No public vote.
No consent.
No real transparency.
They’re calling it “climate intervention.”
I’m calling it unauthorized atmospheric experimentation on 330 million Americans — using an EPA loophole to avoid all accountability.
Who approved this?
We need names, answers, and accountability. Those responsible must face consequences for experimenting on the American people without permission.
This is OUR sky. OUR air. OUR families.
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A few facts about Stardust Solutions:
Stardust Solutions is incorporated in the United States (specifically in Delaware), while being based/headquartered in Israel (Ness Ziona, near Tel Aviv).
Founders and leadership are Israeli:
- CEO and co-founder Yanai Yedvab — former deputy chief scientist at the Israel Atomic Energy Commission and physicist with experience at Israel's Negev nuclear research site
- Co-founder/Chief Product Officer Amyad Spector — also a nuclear physicist with prior Israeli government experience
- Third co-founder Eli Waxman — particle physics professor at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.
The company was founded in 2023, has a team of about 25 scientists/engineers (many with Israeli academic/government backgrounds), and operates primarily from facilities in Israel.
Their site (stardustsolutions.com) focuses on the technology without deep ownership disclosure.
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Trump is seeking to pay for his new $1.5 trillion military budget by cutting the following:
$510 million - Grants for farmers and agricultural research
$82 million - Loans for rural small businesses (Fully eliminated)
$61 million - Support for farmers and food markets (Fully eliminated)
$240 million - School meals and food education for children abroad (Fully eliminated)
$659 million - Community building grants
$47 million - Support for minority-owned businesses (Fully eliminated)
$449 million - Economic development grants for communities
$1.6 billion - Weather forecasting, fisheries, and coastal protection (NOAA)
$993 million - Scientific research and technology standards
$150 million - Support for American exports and trade
$2.2 billion - Broadband and internet access programs
$8.5 billion - Funding for public schools
$1.5 billion - Vocational training and adult education (Fully eliminated)
$2.7 billion - College access and higher education support
$15.2 billion - Roads, bridges, and infrastructure projects
$1.1 billion - Home energy efficiency and clean energy programs (Fully eliminated)
$1.1 billion - Scientific research funding
$386 million - Environmental cleanup programs
$150 million - Cutting-edge clean energy research
$4 billion - Help paying home heating and cooling bills for low-income families (Fully eliminated)
$768 million - Refugee resettlement assistance
$819 million - Care and shelter for migrant children
$775 million - Local anti-poverty programs (Fully eliminated)
$5 billion - Public health programs, mental health services, and disease prevention
$5 billion - Medical research (NIH)
$129 million - Healthcare quality and safety research
$356 million - Emergency preparedness and disaster response
$1.3 billion - FEMA community disaster preparedness grants
$707 million - Cybersecurity protection for critical infrastructure
$52 million - Airport and transportation security
$40 million - Protection against chemical and biological weapons threats
$53 million - Funding for homeland security operations
$3.3 billion - Community development block grants for local neighborhoods (Fully eliminated)
$1.3 billion - Affordable housing construction grants (Fully eliminated)
$393 million - Programs to reduce homelessness
$529 million - Housing assistance for people living with HIV/AIDS (Fully eliminated)
$489 million - Housing and services for Native American communities
$50 million - Grants to help communities build more housing (Fully eliminated)
$60 million - Enforcement of fair housing and anti-discrimination laws
$58 million - Homebuyer and renter counseling services (Fully eliminated)
$45 million - Renewable energy development programs (Fully eliminated)
$1.7 billion - Grants for local law enforcement and public safety
$20 million - Civil rights mediation and legal access programs (Fully eliminated)
$1.6 billion - Job training for at-risk youth (Fully eliminated)
$395 million - Jobs program for low-income seniors (Fully eliminated)
$234 million - Worker safety and labor protection programs
$101 million - Enforcement of equal pay and workplace anti-discrimination laws
$46 million - Programs to combat child labor and forced labor abroad
$2 billion - International humanitarian aid
$1.2 billion - Food aid for hungry families abroad (Fully eliminated)
$4.3 billion - Global health and disease prevention programs
$2.7 billion - Funding for the United Nations and international partnerships
$642 million - International economic and treasury programs
$315 million - Democracy and anti-corruption programs abroad
$486 million - Grants for public transit projects
$4.2 billion - Electric vehicle charging infrastructure
$372 million - Airline service for rural and small communities
$145 million - Grants for sustainable and equitable infrastructure
$204 million - Loans and investment for underserved communities
$1.4 billion - IRS taxpayer services and enforcement
$100 million - Air pollution monitoring and reduction programs (Fully eliminated)
$1 billion - EPA grants to states for environmental protection
$2.5 billion - Clean drinking water and wastewater infrastructure funds
$90 million - Grants to reduce diesel pollution (Fully eliminated)
$3.4 billion - NASA space and earth science research
$297 million - NASA technology innovation programs
$1.1 billion - International Space Station operations
$143 million - STEM education programs
$309 million - Small business development and entrepreneurship programs
$170 million - Small Business Administration operations
$158 million - Loans for small businesses


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A good early warning system for heresy detection is that subversive, sub-Christian teaching will have to present itself as having “reclaimed” or “restored” something essential that was, until recently, lost for the bulk of church history.
For example, the “Restoration Movement” of the early to mid-19th Century brought an entire hive of heresies ranging from Mormonism to Seventh Day Adventism to the Jehovah’s Witnesses, to the Church of Science. Each one, claiming to have discovered long-lost teaching that restored purity to the faith.
The Neo-Judaizing Movement that claims to have rediscovered the Jewish roots of Christianity is a good example, when suddenly in the 1970s, new value was discovered in celebrating the rites and rituals of the Old Covenant, that the Christian Church had not observed for 2k years. But the error is that the “Christian version” of these rites is not the version you find in the Bible. It’s a version you find among the Talmudians, who crafted their traditions in the centuries *after* Christ, not the traditions handed down by Moses.
Rabbinic Judaism is spin-off of authentic Old Testament religion, with traditions only vaguely resembling those in the Christian Old Testament. “Messianic” traditions have then become “Christianized” spin-offs of the cheap imitation, rather than a spin-off from the authentic Old Covenant faith. They are a spin-off of a spin-off.
So ironically, the purest expressions of the Old Covenant faith are found exclusively in what the Apostles and Prophets founded under the New Covenant, inaugurated by Christ Himself, poured out in His own blood and *not* by the traditions invented by the rabbis who rejected their messiah in the centuries following Christ’s arrival.
The Scripture speaks of the Old Covenant as a shadow of the real, typifying that which would come. Christ is the real substance those shadows represented and typified, the real deal. Rabbinic inventions are a shadow the of the shadow, minus its substance, hollow and empty. “Messianic” traditions are therefore even more shadows, not of the real substance. They’re shadows…of shadows…of shadows, each one becoming a step further away from the substance instead of closer to it.
The appeal is as simple as it is carnal. Human beings love symbols, and are drawn to them. We love the things we can touch and feel and smell. We love imagery and mysticism. But that’s exactly why God gave an incredibly simple New Covenant in which those things are limited to bread, wine, and water. It’s to keep us grounded and connected to the real substance, who is Jesus. Authentic Christianity has fewer tactile components of any religion on Earth by design.
Those symbols are extremely limited in our faith because God knows how easy it is to take our eyes off Christ, and onto the symbols, images, and ritualistic observances. He wants our focus on Christ Himself lest we, like the ancient Israelites before us, miss Jesus when He’s close to us because we’re fixated on the things designed to represent Him.
Prior to the Holy Ghost’s permanent arrival, we needed those representations and symbols, because we had to hold onto something. With Christ having come, and with His Holy Spirit within us, we no longer need them - short of the simple bread and cup - because we have HIM. Now, we cling to Christ Himself and Christ alone because we have seen Him, and know Him, because He’s already come.
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St George’s church in Yaroun. I am no longer able to safely reach this church. This was shot on Christmas Day. I was able to reach this town and work right up until March 1st.
The second video is a destroyed church in Derdghaya.
On this Easter weekend, remember that American tax dollars are spent on destroying churches in the Middle East.
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Floridians have seen this show so many times, they know the drill.
All NASA launches are unmanned bottle rockets getting yeeted into the Bermuda Triangle.
Switch to full CGI a couple minutes in, play cartoons portraying "space travel" for the next several days on youtube, and voila, all the gullible goyim clap for their computer screens, and nobody riots over the $70 million in taxes being extorted out of us every single day.
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The anger at my "Happy Passover" criticism goes to demonstrate that very recent traditions are often held to with more white-nuckled stubbornness than ancient ones. And that's what wishing "Happy Passover" is in the one corner of Christianity where it's done. A very, very recent practice.
The greeting feels ancient, the kind of thing a decent person naturally says to a neighbor of a different faith during their holiday season. But it isn't. It is, instead, a recent innovation with a traceable origin, and tracing it tells you something important about how evangelical Christianity lost its theological mind over about sixty years.
For most of church history, Christians did not celebrate Passover or congratulate Jews for doing so. They celebrated Resurrection Day, which they understood to be the fulfillment of Passover, the moment the shadow dissolved into the substance and the type gave way to the antitype. The lamb had been slain. The feast had accomplished its purpose and been superseded. Christians also understood the things the Rabbinic Passover prays for, and stood in wild disagreement.
The early church fathers were clear about this. John Chrysostom wrote eight full homilies, the Adversus Judaeos, triggered specifically by Christians in Antioch who were attending Jewish festivals, listening to the shofar on Rosh Hashanah, and treating Jewish religious observance as spiritually legitimate. He called it a disease. He said Christians who went to the synagogue during Jewish holidays should be grabbed by the arm and dragged back to the church. He happens to be one of the most celebrated preachers in church history.
It's true that Darby's novel eschatology, Dispensationalism, laid the groundwork that would eventually make "Happy Passover" possible, but I don't want to blame him entirely, because not even he would utter such a thing. But his theology did make this idiocy possible, elevating Jewish national and religious identity to a category of ongoing prophetic significance. All in a sudden after 1821, Jews were no longer just people who needed the gospel. They were actors in an extremely complicated eschatological drama whose religious observances suddenly carried significance again.
The concept really started in the interfaith Seder practices from the post-Vatican II Jewish-Christian dialogue movement in the wake of Vatican II's Nostra Aetate (1965), calling for better Jewish-Catholic relations. A Rabbi would lead Catholics in the Seder as a "holding hands around the campfire" type thing.
At some point in the late 1960s, it hopped over to evangelicals through the "Chosen People Ministries" and "Jews for Jesus," when somebody thought, "Hey, we can change all the horrific stuff and make a Christian version of this," and started doing "Christian Seders." They meant it as an educational novelty, but unfortunately sent the message that the Seder was (A) an Old Testament tradition, which it wasn't, and (B) a legitimate and meaningful thing worth reenacting. Which, it isn't.
But "Happy Passover" didn't catch on as a Christian concept until the Messianic Jewish Alliance of America kicked it off in 1973. The movement's central proposition was that Jewish believers in Jesus should retain and celebrate their Jewish cultural and religious identity, including the feasts, rather than assimilating into "Gentile Christianity." That's flawed logic, obviously, because Christianity is post-Jew/Gentile thinking and had been for 2k years at that point. Further, all those rituals and feasts were invented by rabbis AFTER Jesus and existed to reject Him. We're not talking about the Mosaic rites God had given, which disappeared after the Temple's destruction.
That movement introduced into mainstream evangelical consciousness the idea that Passover, Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and the other Jewish feasts were not superseded types but "living celebrations" with ongoing validity. But they aren't, because - as stated - they share nothing with the Old Testament but their name.
The movement spread rapidly and by the 1980s and 1990s, church Seders were common. And by the 2000s, Christian bookstores sold Passover Haggadahs. By the 2010s, evangelical pastors were preaching Passover sermons every spring explaining the Jewish roots of Easter and encouraging their congregations to wish their Jewish friends well. The leap from there to a Baptist-seminary-trained U.S. Ambassador standing at the Western Wall in a kippah on Good Friday wishing the world a happy Passover is not a leap at all. It is a straight line.
Now, when a chicken farmer posts on X that wishing Jews a "Happy Passover" is a wildly insane idea for a Christian, considering why they still celebrate Passover and *how* they celebrate it outside the Old Testament precepts, the people who've been influenced by this very recent trend or are in a Dispensational Zionist bubble, have no idea this fad isn't older than grandpa.
First Corinthians 5 says that "Christ our Passover, is sacrificed for us." Any celebration that sends the message it's anything but Jesus - intentionally or unintentionally - is a doctrinal compromise and dishonors the Lamb of God. What that passage means is that Passover, designed to look **forward to Christ** has now come to an end, and now we look **back** to Jesus on the Day of His Resurrection. To continue to observe it is a tacit denial of that holy sacrifice.
And even IF you wanted to stubbornly stand apart from roughly 1950 years of Christian history and argue "I want to celebrate Passover in accordance to my own personal meaning and the significance I personally ascribe to it," that's one thing, but to wish a Jew a "Happy Passover" is an altogether different thing, because he's doing it in denial of Christ and its traditional Rabbinic rites pray down wrath upon Christians.
That's not happy. That's sad. That's a sin. And a Christian shouldn't encourage it.
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@ShaykhSulaiman Please don’t let this turn into a crypto space! Uhhhhh 🙄
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Let me be clear, and I say this with the full weight of discernment shaped by scripture:
Paula White, who serves as a spiritual advisor to Donald Trump, does not reflect by word, by doctrine, or by fruit, the character of one I would recognize as a true servant of God.
For we are not left without guidance in these matters. The standard is already given in The Bible: “by their fruits you shall know them.” And when that measure is applied, what is revealed is not alignment with the God of our Fathers, but something altogether different.
Because the prayers we offer, and the altars upon which we lay them, matter.
Not every invocation of God is unto God.
Not every offering ascends to Heaven.
And if what is presented as worship is instead rooted in self-exaltation, distortion of truth, or the sanctification of power, then one must ask, honestly, to whom is it truly being offered?
For the God we serve is not ambiguous. He is not contradictory. He is not a God of confusion.
His Majesty cannot be mocked, rebranded, or repurposed to suit earthly ambitions.
And history, as well as scripture, is unyielding on this point: when sacred things are misused, the consequence is not silence, it is judgment.
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The Keepers of the Gate: Why the Key to the Holy Sepulchre Has Not Belonged to Christians for 800 Years
The story of the key to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is probably the most fascinating example of an “impossible solution” in the history of religious diplomacy. It is living proof that in Jerusalem, trust is not built on friendship, but on a perfect balance of neutrality.
Here is how this system has worked for over 800 years:
1. Two Muslim families for a Christian church
Because the Christian denominations (especially the Greek Orthodox and the Catholics) could never agree on who should control the main gate, in 1187 Sultan Saladin decided to entrust the key and the guarding of the church to two Muslim families from Jerusalem.
The roles are still divided with sacred precision today, in 2026:
- The Joudeh family (The Keepers): They are the custodians of the key. The physical key is in their possession. The current heir of the family has held this privilege, passed down from father to son.
- The Nuseibeh family (The Doorkeepers): They have the physical task of opening and closing the gate. Every morning and evening, a member of the Nuseibeh family receives the key from the Joudeh family to perform the ritual.
2. The Opening Ritual (A spectacle of precision)
Opening the gate is not a simple administrative act, but a ceremony that respects the Status Quo down to the second:
- Knocking on the door: From inside, a monk (according to the rotation schedule between Orthodox, Catholics, and Armenians) knocks on the gate to signal that it is time to open.
- Handing over the ladder: Through a small window in the gate, the monk passes out a wooden ladder.
- Climbing and unlocking: The representative of the Muslim family climbs the ladder to reach the upper lock, unlocks the gate, and then opens it wide.
3. Why is this system “immortal”?
In Europe in 2026, we rely on digital codes and facial recognition, but in Jerusalem this iron key, about 30 cm long, is more secure than any server.
- Neutrality: No church feels “humiliated” by the other, because the gate is opened by someone outside their own religion.
- Continuity: When the police or the army tries to intervene (as happened with Cardinal Pizzaballa), the Muslim families become historical witnesses to the violation of the rules. They are the “living memory” of how this city is supposed to function.
4. The symbol of unity through separation
The paradox is enormous: the holiest place in Christendom depends, in order to exist, on two Muslim families and an Ottoman firman. This is the essence of Jerusalem - no one can survive alone without the other.
This key is so symbolically valuable that the Joudeh family holds original documents (firmans) from sultans of the 16th century that confirm their right to keep it.

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I’ve cried 2 times in the last 24 years… the day my brother Sebastian passed 🕊️ & the day these two boys came into the world. Very different tears, same raw emotion. It’s crazy how in an instant your life changes forever & the happiness I feel around them is like no other. I look forward to what the future holds 🙏🏽❤️
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@ChrisEubankJr Amazing job Chris! You and the misses did great. Congrats 🎊
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I am not merely a Catholic by affiliation, I nearly walked the path to the priesthood. Scripture, to me, has never been casual reading; it has been studied with the care of a sculptor refining form; patiently, attentively, reverently.
And so I say this with both conviction and humility:
Prayer is not performance. It is not spectacle. It is a sacred act, an intimate communion between the human spirit and the divine. A means not only to speak, but to interface with the heavens, the hosts of heaven themselves.
When we pray, we approach with humility. With thanksgiving. With love. Just as one brings offerings into the house of the Lord, not in arrogance, but in surrender.
Which is why moments of public prayer demand even greater care.
When figures such as Paula White stand before the world in prayer, the expectation is clear: to seek wisdom, not validation. To ask that leaders like Donald Trump be guided toward justice, compassion, peace, and discernment. To intercede for the poor, the vulnerable, and the preservation of life. That is what true supplication looks like.
But to elevate any political figure especially during the sacred solemnity of Holy Week to a comparison with the sinless Son of God is not devotion.
It is error.
And more than that, it borders on blasphemy.
Likewise, when Franklin Graham invokes the Book of Esther as justification for the destruction of a modern nation such as Iran, it reflects not divine insight, but a troubling misapplication of scripture. Context matters. Theology demands responsibility. Sacred texts are not instruments for political ends.
Faith was never meant to be weaponized.
It was meant to guide, to correct, to humble.
And if we are to invoke God in matters of leadership and war, then let it be done with trembling reverence, not confident distortion.
Because the danger is not in believing too deeply but in believing wrongly.
I am ashamed, this is our Holy Week for Gods sake.
God have mercy.
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