In High Places

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In High Places

In High Places

@In_High_Places

We wrestle not against flesh & blood, but against principalities, powers, the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.

Mt. Moriah Katılım Aralık 2023
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In High Places
In High Places@In_High_Places·
I signed up for @bluesky and I was literally blocked within 30 minutes. 🤡🌎
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Evangelical Dark Web
Evangelical Dark Web@EvangelicalDW·
Woke preacher Josh Howerton is not exactly a history buff and applies Isaiah 66:8 to 1948 Israel, claiming that this was accomplished by the Balfour Declaration. Howerton, celebrating his intellect with his buddies, was unaware that the Balfour Declaration was in 1917 and Israel declared its independence at the scheduled date in May of 1948. His friends would go on to confirm his ignorance. Inaccuracies aside, this is no more miraculous than all the other nations with independence days, as America also had an ongoing War of Independence prior to July 4, 1776. Israel was no more made in a day than any other nation. In fact, Isaiah 66-8 applies to Modern Israel, probably, less than most other nations, given that Zionism was a top down movement decades in the making.
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Eyal Yakoby
Eyal Yakoby@EYakoby·
BREAKING: Iranian missiles have reportedly struck residential areas in Israel. This is a war crime btw.
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Nick Hinton
Nick Hinton@NickHintonn·
Jim Keith, a controversial conspiracy theorist who many believe was assassinated, used to say the Illuminati’s ultimate goal is rebuilding the Third Temple and ushering in the reign of the Antichrist. He also used to say the government is actually run by a UFO cult that worships Isis. Apparently, this cult was connected to Crowley and his demon goddess Babalon. Interestingly, Herbert Hoover’s home was decorated with a creepy statue of Isis. And the Hoover Dam was named after Herbert Hoover. However, he was hated by Americans during his presidency. They blamed him for the Great Depression. So, in 1933, the name was changed to Boulder Dam. The original name wasn’t restored until 1947. Oddly enough, this was the same year Crowley died and the rituals to summon Babalon were completed. 1933 is obviously symbolic too. Nevertheless, even Herbert Hoover’s name seems symbolic. His initials are HH, which equates to 88 in numerology. Funny enough, white supremacists use 88 as a code for Heil Hitler. And this is just one of the many reasons numerologists associate 88 with Donald Trump. They also associate 88 with time travel though. In Back to the Future, which featured a fascist antagonist based on Donald Trump, the car that traveled through time had to go 88 mph. So, is the Hoover Dam hiding time travel technology? Is it a portal for ancient alien invaders? Will its destruction cause another Great Depression?
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Nick Hinton@NickHintonn

According to a document in the CERN server, the Hoover Dam holds the key to the fate of the universe.

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Steven Greenstreet
Steven Greenstreet@MiddleOfMayhem·
🚨BREAKING: The White House and the Executive Office of the President has registered the websites alien.gov and aliens.gov Disclosure day coming? 👽
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In High Places
In High Places@In_High_Places·
@JasonColavito It took me a long time to understand why "being ahead of your time" is actually a curse. By the time people come around to your ideas, you have been marginalized and rejected, and someone else gets the credit for your insight when it's already obvious-after you suffered for it.
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Jason Colavito
Jason Colavito@JasonColavito·
I made an original contribution to scholarship in "The Cult of Alien Gods" that was strongly resisted at the time but is now considered so self-evidently true that this guy copied my entire thesis, failed to cite me, and claims I'm arrogant for pointing out I did it first.
Pittipedia@pittipedia

@JasonColavito Ah yes, of course—history began the moment you hit "publish." Before that, humanity was just staring at cave walls, blissfully unaware of alien gods until you personally broke the news. LOL.

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In High Places
In High Places@In_High_Places·
As a Christian, I do not need to know what political territory these missiles are about to hit before I make up my mind on how I feel about them. #israel #IranWar
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In High Places
In High Places@In_High_Places·
@LostMyHats To paraphrase Moody ... "I like their way of doing evangelism better than your way of not doing it."
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JD™
JD™@LostMyHats·
In the mid-teens, we went through this stupid stage in Reformed evangelicalism where people sat there reviewing open air evangelism and street apologist videos, incessantly criticizing methodology of everyone else. It got really ugly. Wars were started. This was the background context of the Jeff Durbin secret-recording scandal (unsure if that was 1st, 2nd, 3rd, or 4th one) in which someone who engaged in that behavior apologized, and he anonymously posted it to YouTube later. All over methodological criticism. Point is, I almost never posted video of my open air evangelism (some have made a lot of money from it) bc I didn’t want some armchair quarterback nitpicking it to death. I said so at the time, and did a podcast saying it’s a darn shame because those videos are really helpful and encouraging to people, but most of us know it’s not worth the risk of being savaged by the critics supposedly on our team. I did so only once or twice, and sure enough, one 10 second clip out of many, many hours was pulled and eviscerated. It was the last time I shared video, (despite having a go-pro running at all times for safety reasons). Part of the criticized video was out of context. Part of it wasn’t, but it was a a real human being dealing with a crowd of angry sodomites who had been spit on and air-humped all afternoon, and was less than eloquent. Point is, sometimes there’s a real “man in the arena” situation where those who do not evangelize find the need to criticize those who do. And because they don’t do it, they have no idea the complexity and human fragility and vulnerability of what that’s like. Because the real truth is this; you’ll never do it perfectly, you’ll never wish you couldn’t get a do-over, and sometimes you’ll get mad at yourself for what you could have or should have done differently. That’s the way it goes. But for the love of God (literally) don’t let the fact that a great many people who wouldn’t get caught dead sharing Christ with undesirable people and their incessant criticism stop you from doing it. You don’t work for them. They’ll maintain their reputation of flawless doctrinal or methodological perfection precisely because they don’t, themselves, do it at all. And they’ve got their reward already. Learn. Improve. Go again. Ignore the criticism, unless it’s genuine (it almost never is), and then plow forward. Brethren, see poor sinners round you Slumbering on the brink of woe; Death is coming, hell is moving Can you bear to let them go?
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In High Places
In High Places@In_High_Places·
@HonestYPTweets Well, Evangelicals enthusiastically elected a president who is both pro-abortion and pro-war, so we actually want to run up the score on both counts!
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Honest Youth Pastor
Honest Youth Pastor@HonestYPTweets·
The estimated number of abortions worldwide since 1980, roughly 2.5 billion, far exceeds the estimated total deaths from all known wars and conflicts in human history, roughly 600 million. Let that sink in.
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Chris Menahan 🇺🇸
Chris Menahan 🇺🇸@infolibnews·
Asked if the US attacked a desalination plant in Iran, Pres. Trump says Iranians are "among the most evil people ever on earth." "They cut babies' heads off—they chop women in half..." "I know nothing about a desalinization plant, other than to say, if they're complaining about a desalinization plant, we complain about the fact they shouldn't be chopping babies' heads off." Trump envoy Steve Witkoff and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth can be seen nodding in agreement.
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Green Beret Nap Time
Green Beret Nap Time@GBNT1952·
To all of you morons saying “I’m not dying for (insert country),” or “I didn’t vote for us to go to war for (insert country),” let me explain to you why you are stupid. Isolationism sounds appealing if one has never stepped outside the comfort of their own homes (or if you have the IQ of a cockroach). I have spent a decade and a half operating in the shadows of the world’s fault lines, where the reality is brutally clear: power vacuums do not remain empty. They are always filled—and rarely by benevolent actors. If the United States withdraws from the global stage, China, Russia, and every opportunistic authoritarian regime in existence will rush to occupy the ground we abandon. They will shape trade routes, control supply chains, dictate technological standards, and dominate the security architecture of entire regions. That is not speculation. It is how geopolitics has always worked. The global order that allows Americans to live in relative prosperity and security is not an accident; it exists because the United States underwrites it. Remove that foundation and the structure collapses. The fantasy of isolation ignores the fact that our economy, our security, and our alliances are interwoven across the planet. If we retreat, we do not become safer or freer. We become strategically blind while hostile powers consolidate influence over the very systems that sustain our way of life. In other words, isolationism would not protect the United States. It would guarantee that the future world order is written by nations that do not share our interests or values, and once that order solidifies, reclaiming it would cost far more than maintaining it ever did. So, if you get your geopolitical knowledge from a former Vogue intern, a former pizza delivery guy, a closeted gay Nazi, or any other grifter with a live stream that is being paid to post their nonsense, please wake up and embrace reality with the rest of us.
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David French
David French@DavidAFrench·
We absolutely need to know if this was an American strike. It's looking increasingly like it was, and if so it will be one of the worst individual incidents of civilian deaths in a generation or more.
Malachy Browne@malachybrowne

Official statements placing U.S. forces in the area – along w/ analysis of social posts, videos, sat. images – suggest U.S. forces bombed a school in Minab, Iran during strikes targeting an IRGC base. Over 150 were killed, Iranian officials say. nytimes.com/2026/03/05/wor…

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Megan Basham
Megan Basham@megbasham·
The responses to this post are interesting. But one thing I might note, talented evangelicals who might be able to have a big impact in the political realm are often shamed from using their gifts because it’s framed as “grasping power.” Or, it’s argued that they will make evangelism harder. It’s a bit of a ploy, I think. Because this fear of power grasping is never directed toward evangelical figures who are moving the church to the left. Like we’ve never seen outlets like TGC or Christianity Today warning that democratic operatives like Michael Wear are grasping power. It’s only people who might go to work for the Trump administration. And there’s also the fact that to climb to the top in today’s corporate or academic arenas often takes a sort of moral compromise that many Christians will understandably refuse to stomach. Look at what corporate HR departments have required in the last few years. If you weren’t somebody who was prepared to recite the required lines on LGBTQ and DEI issues, there was no way you were getting that corner office. Even when it’s come to Christian founded businesses, you see this compromise for corporate success. Look at Dan Cathy.
Matthew Schmitz@matthewschmitz

Evangelicals make up about 25 percent of the US population. There isn’t a single one on the Supreme Court, or in many other leading institutions. washingtonpost.com/opinions/2026/…

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