Yes, Jesus Christ cares about 'politics'



"Jesus Christ brought about a spiritual revolution, not a political one!"

You’ll often hear this cope coming from the non-Apostolic apologetics types.

Everything Jesus was about was political because that's all politics is; it's a material demonstration of one’s spiritual essence.

There’s a weird compulsion among many self-professed Christians to separate the spiritual realm from the physical realm. They go to church on Sundays. They read their Bibles every now and then. They get on their knees and make their prayers every night. They feel good inside.

But as soon as those chores are completed, it’s back to the “real” world. God is compartmentalized. God has his “place.”

Outside church, God is nothing more than imaginary.

Because, don’t you see, Jesus saved our souls, but he didn’t challenge any political orthodoxies. He wanted you to go to the designated place of worship one day out of the week but didn’t care what you did with the rest of your allotted time here in the physical plane. After all, Jesus clearly made a distinction between the spiritual realm and the physical realm.

Except all of that couldn’t be farther from the truth. And I don’t need to allude to any specific red-letter verses from Scripture to wake you up. All I need is to direct your attention to his person.

What does it mean when the Bible says that the Word became flesh? More precisely, what was accomplished by the Word becoming flesh? The answer? Reconciliation.

Our world was officially reconciled with the kingdom of Heaven by the coming of Jesus Christ. Our material realm was reunited and synchronized with the spiritual realm.

What else are we possibly saying when we say that God became man?

We’re saying that there is no separation between the spiritual and the physical. If God was indeed here in our very midst, it means that the physical is spiritual. That the political is spiritual.

Which means that all politically imbued "shoulds" — "We should give women the right to abort"; "We should take our 10th booster shot"; “We should let children get gender-affirming medical procedures” — are a culmination of one's spiritual framework brought to the surface.

Everything Jesus was about was political because that's all politics is; it's a material demonstration of one’s spiritual essence.

And if you’re a Bible-believing Christian, then it only follows that you must believe that Jesus Christ’s existence in the physical realm is proof of that.

Once that realization is internalized within your being, there’s no going back to the default mindset of neatly separating politics from religion. Because politics is religious. And if you think otherwise, take a good hard look in the mirror next time someone shouts “Trust the science” in your face during the next government-mandated lockdown.

If you're someone who separates the political revolution from the spiritual revolution, I just have to assume you're evil. Because how exactly am I supposed to trust someone who compartmentalizes and shelves his morality that conveniently?

Evolution: A fairy tale for progressives



When I was a child and I was being indoctrinated in school with the evolution meme, my teacher (who was actually pretty based) asked the class a question: "So which is it? God or evolution?"

I raised my hand and gave an answer: "Why couldn't God have simply created evolution?"

I got some praise from some classmates (especially the supposedly smart ones), but my teacher treated that answer as a cop-out and wasn't satisfied.

Looking back on that moment as a full-grown adult, I realize just how childish my answer was and just how childish I was for believing in evolution.

God, the Logos, the unmoved mover, can't create a nonsensical, chaotic process that magically transforms inanimate, microscopic particles into living, breathing, fully fleshed-out organisms.

For intelligent design to come from random chaos is ridiculous and impossible and would have no trace of God's fingerprints. My answer truly wasn't thought through and was, in fact, a cop-out. (I was in seventh grade.) The truth is that you do have to choose one or the other.

To my seventh-grade brain, evolution made sense.

"Animals just changed over time!" I thought. "The monkeys look kind of like us. We must have just come from them millions of years ago."

In retrospect, I think I and many others in my generation were subliminally psyoped by the liberal notion of "progress" that pervaded every aspect of our culture in the 1990s and 2000s. Clearly, we were more socially enlightened and technologically advanced than any other civilization in history. We as the human race were living proof that "progress" was real.

So why wouldn't that apply to biology as well? We must have "progressed" from tiny specks of dust to fish, to monkeys, to humans.

But if we think about this with just a modicum of rigor, we began to detect traces of absurdity. Take so-called transitional fossils — fossils of species that would link modern species and ancient species. We've found very few, if any, so few that evolutionary biologists like Stephen Jay Gould had to come up with an entirely new model (punctuated equilibrium) to make evolution make sense.

That's just one example. The deeper you dig, the dumber and more childish it gets.

As adults, we must learn to put childish things away. That means using critical reasoning skills instead of slurping up the slop we slurped up as a child. The superstition that we all came from monkeys is a good place to start.

Can America survive its ‘Jezebelification’?



We, the human race, currently reside in a post-monarchy and increasingly post-nation-state world.

One could say that all those living in the West, and soon enough the rest of the world, in the year of our Lord 2024 are essentially transnational nomads — physically, digitally, and spiritually.

Everything that makes the world economy run — oil pipelines, shipping lanes, computer networks, trade agreements — exists to serve the Jezebel spirit with ruthless efficiency.

We are all splintered off into our own little worlds. No one keeps the same job, the same house, the same friends, the same spouse, or even the same kids for too long. Everything and everyone is temporal, transient, commodified.

Now why is that? Short answer: globalization

Defining the terms

OK, so what's globalization?

The Oxford Dictionary defines globalization as “the increasing integration of economies around the world, particularly through the movement of goods, services, and capital across borders. The term sometimes also refers to the movement of people (labor) and knowledge (technology) across international borders.”

But you know, technical terms and their definitions don't really give the average Joe any real understanding about the world around us.

What is globalization, really? What is its essence? What drives men to build systems that move money, resources, and (don't forget) migrants to different parts of the world?

Well, I have a mental model for you to internalize.

Babylon and Jezebel

In order to understand "globalization," you need to understand two prerequisite, biblically based terms. We need to start referring to globalization by two other sub-categories: Babylonification and Jezebelification. Let's break it down.

Babylonification specifically refers to the mass deracination and migration of large groups of people into big melting-pot societies, much like the major cities of the U.S. and the rest of the West today and much like the original Tower of Babel described in the Bible (Genesis 11:1-9).

The lens that the Babylonification model provides us allows us to see Western culture for what it truly is: a concrete jungle of a cesspit that merely maintains the façade and appearance of a civilized and functioning society.

Babylon (aka the establishment regime) functions to procure peoples and cultures from different locations all over the world and stick them into a centralized metropolitan district in order to perform low-wage labor, live in shoebox housing, eat soy slop, and turn a once ethnically homogenous neighborhood into a multicultural bazaar.

All the decision-making on policy comes from a centralized bureaucratic authority rather than the local community.

The Babylon system does not care for the cultures, histories, and subsequent cultural and historical differences of the peoples it procures and the natives it governs. It only cares for maximal economic output.

Therefore, Babylonification aims to strip all cultures, languages, and histories and distill them into one culture, one language, and one history in order to breed a compliant laborer population. The commodification of the labor class and the dissolution of the nations exist only to serve the desires of the ruling class.

Now, why does Babylonification exist? This leads us into a discussion about Jezebelification.

‘The great prostitute’

Jezebelification can be described as the engine of Babylonification, the underlying motive of the agents who run Babylon. Whereas Babylonification is the corporeal shell, Jezebelification is the heart that pumps its blood.

It is the reason why the world has become more and more globalized. As we see in Revelation 17:1-2:

“Come, I will show you the judgment of the great prostitute who is seated on many waters, with whom the kings of the earth have committed sexual immorality, and with the wine of whose sexual immorality the dwellers on earth have become drunk.”

And again in Revelation 18:11-13:

"And the merchants of the earth weep and mourn for her, since no one buys their cargo anymore, cargo of gold, silver, jewels, pearls, fine linen, purple cloth, silk, scarlet cloth, all kinds of scented wood, all kinds of articles of ivory, all kinds of articles of costly wood, bronze, iron and marble, cinnamon, spice, incense, myrrh, frankincense, wine, oil, fine flour, wheat, cattle and sheep, horses and chariots, and slaves, that is, human souls."

The kings and merchants are a reference to the leaders of business and government of the world, who are motivated solely by power, greed, and sexual satisfaction. They seek only to satisfy their carnal desire, which is an appetite that can never be quenched.

They want to serve the Jezebel spirit that inhabits them.

So what do they do?

Sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ roll

They get rich by making products and services that satisfy their unquenchable erotic Jezebel spirit. They create makeup, lingerie, fast food, social media, and (of course) sex trafficking networks — anything and everything that instantly gratifies the whims of the Jezebel.

And as globalization grows and becomes more integrated, so does the power of Babylonification, as the unquenching lust of the Jezebel spirit craves ever more immediate gratification.

Everything that makes the world economy run — oil pipelines, shipping lanes, computer networks, trade agreements — exists to serve the Jezebel spirit with ruthless efficiency.

Having the entire world’s infrastructure dependent upon the desires of the Jezebel spirit also means that any enterprise not dedicated to serving that spirit will fail.

In a highly globalized world, no company can be self-sufficient, as all the pieces in the network depend on each other like links in a chain.

Any company refusing to accept its role as cog in the greater Babylonian machine will soon find itself cut off from the services it needs to sustain itself. Social media and payment processing are but two prominent examples.

Sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ roll? Now that these commodities drive our entire market economy, we can see the old Boomer rallying cry for what it really was: a sales pitch. And in this post-Jezebelification world, it’s an offer we can’t refuse.