-Caveat Lector-

At 12:48 PM 7-6-1999 EDT, Kris posted:
>>snip<
>From: "Steven Wallace, Sr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>From:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Ivan Shapiro)
>Date:  7/1/99 8:38:04 PM Eastern Daylight Time
>Subj:  Fwd: EVACUATIONS UNDERWAY
>
>THIRTY MILITARY FAMILIES SUDDENLY LEAVE THE U.S.
>
> Col. Jim Ammerman is the military chaplin that has been exposing
> what is going on in the military concerning the plans of the
> one world conspiracy.  In a recent interview on short wave radio
> with Chris Gerner, Col. Ammerman reveals that some of his air force
> friends have sold their homes and their cars and have suddenly
> moved their families out of the 48 states.
>
> They could not reveal exactly out what they were told, but they
> did say that they saw orders or plans that something was going
> to happen in America, and when it did there could be a 50% death
> rate nationwide. They decided to leave the country....


 Re: Col. Jim Ammerman, "military chaplin"
 -----------------------------------------------
     -> British Intelligence ?
     -> Tavistock MK Special Ops ?


 British Subversion of the United States:
 Who is wagging your neighbor's tongue?

 The militias and Pentecostalism
 --------------------------------
 by Anton Chaitkin
 http://www.larouchepub.com/ahc.html

 The author requests all questions, comments or further
 intelligence leads be sent to Anton Chaitkin c/o
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 "The greatest threat from terrorism in the United States
 comes from people who are associated with a British Church
 of England-run Pentecostalist movement inside the United
 States. It is this apparatus which has structured the
 militias. Now, most people in the militia movement, or
 associated with it, have no part of the intentions of those
 who are behind it, particularly that section in the
 Episcopal Church, or Pat Robertson, who's part of this same
 movement, who are barking -- authentically barking --
 Pentecostalists, who, with their connections with the
 military, deeply embedded in the military, including the
 ... corps of chaplains in the U.S. military, are largely
 controlled, presently, by outright barking
 Pentecostalists... This is the ... main source of the
 internal threat of the potential for terrorism, and other
 kinds of treason inside the United States, today."

  -- Lyndon LaRouche, "EIR Talks," July 30, 1997.


 Two years after the bombing of the Oklahoma City Federal
 building, a stream of lies is pouring through British-run
 media sewers, preparing credulous populists to view
 terrorism, or even civil war, as inevitable.

 The grotesque joke is on the American populists. Their
 paramilitary militias, and Pentecostal sects, are creations
 of the very "Godless internationalists" they believe they
 are resisting. The British Empire high church apparatus
 seeks to reduce the American mind to that of a clown, a
 hypnotized "Christian" who babbles or barks like a dog; a
 "patriot" numbed by anti-government gossip and
 Armageddonism, so that he sees his own nation as his enemy.

 Will these Americans provide cover, and become patsies, for
 criminal outrages by professional terrorists? In hopes
 that, instead, they will get out of the game, and turn
 their righteous anger against their manipulators, we offer
 this report on how the game is rigged.

 This investigation began with a probe into the armed
 standoff between police and "Republic of Texas" members
 demanding the secession of Texas, in April 1997. This
 writer telephoned into the besieged compound and
 interviewed Richard Otto, alias "White Eagle," who said he
 was asking members of militias around the country to come
 to the site, armed for a shootout.

 I checked Otto's background, and then shared my findings
 informally with militia members and others who might have
 been drawn into the provocation. Otto, it turns out, had
 been trained and set into motion by an Air Force officer
 who toured the world practicing New Age pagan rituals, in
 consultation with senior British intelligence drug-rock-sex
 gurus such as Gregory Bateson. This unappetizing profile,
 subsequently spread around by wary militants themselves,
 helped to discredit and defeat the provocation.

 While Otto and his band surrendered on May 3, reports
 flooded into this news service of continuing, outrageous
 provocations. Among these was the bizarre case of an
 anti-government Texas demagogue with important military
 connections, one Jim Ammerman, whose incitements have been
 widely circulating among separatists and militia members.

 A Pentecostal clergyman and retired Army colonel, Ammerman
 now controls chaplains currently serving in the U.S. Armed
 Forces around the world, as well as within prisons, and
 even in the Federal Bureau of Investigation. He claims
 supernatural prophetic powers, preaches the imminent end of
 the world, denounces the U.S. government as illegal, and
 says the President has deserved execution. During the April
 siege, Ammerman "mediated" between the Texas separatists
 and the FBI.

 As EIR inquired further into the origins of the Ammerman
 operation, and how it is protected within the U.S.
 military, a much broader picture came into view. Described
 here are:

    + Colonel Ammerman's agent methods;

    + Britain's militia adventures among Ammerman's clients,
      and the Oklahoma City bombing;

    + the highest-ranking U.S. general who was captured by
      Pentecostal mind-benders, and who created Ammerman's
      anti-government agitation bureau;

    + how British Empire master-race theorists concocted
      Pentecostalism; their colonial religious experiments
      among blacks in the United States and Africa;

    + the America-hating, feudalist, high church aristocrats
      and globalists who pushed through "charismatic
      renewal"; and

    + the national security danger from this British-owned
      military, paramilitary, and religious apparatus,
      including such operatives as Pat Robertson.


 Colonel Ammerman: treason in the Army

 A videotape is circulating among the militia networks,
 entitled "The Imminent Military Takeover of the United
 States." This is a speech by the Rev. Jim Ammerman to the
 Prophecy Club of Topeka, Kansas. Ammerman warns that the
 President, aided by masses of foreign troops already on
 American soil, will soon put the nation under martial
 law -- if God does not end the world before the current
 President can act. Ammerman decrees that President Bill
 Clinton should long ago have been executed, for avoiding
 the Vietnam draft.

 Ammerman, who retired in 1977 as a U.S. Army colonel and
 chaplain, is described by the Prophecy Club as a former
 Green Beret and "CIA official" with 26 years in the
 military, and top-secret security clearance. He is the
 leader of some 200 chaplains now serving in the U.S. Armed
 Forces under the banner of his group, the Chaplaincy of
 Full Gospel Churches. His chaplains presumably speak in
 tongues and perform supernatural cures, as does he. He
 tells his audience that his chaplains provide him with
 inside information about military activities ordered by
 what he claims is the illegal dictatorship of the U.S.
 President.

 Ammerman's frantic tapes and faxes have been pushed all
 over the populist and Pentecostal milieu, and to the
 members of the Republic of Texas group. Douglas Towne,
 manager of a ghostly Ammerman-led intelligence group called
 the Mount Rushmore Foundation, told this reporter that the
 Ammerman circle had extensive communications with the chief
 provocateur in the siege, Richard Otto ("White Eagle").
 Towne calls Otto "a real soldier ... just like Tim McVeigh
 [convicted in the Oklahoma City bombing], ... who can't be
 shaken or broken, confident that he has backing."

 In recent weeks, Ammerman has spread the warning, or
 threat, that some form of terrorist act will soon occur,
 giving the "illegal" U.S. government the pretext for the
 imposition of martial law.

 Why is our government "illegal"? Ammerman's fellow Prophecy
 Club speaker, Ralph Epperson, explains that the United
 States was founded by Luciferians, Illuminati
 communist-masons, in order to usher in Satan's rule.

 Ammerman himself is a furious Anglophile. He warns of
 foreign soldiers on U.S. bases, especially Germans, whom he
 calls "enemy troops"; but to him, nothing British is
 foreign. He reviles the U.S.A. historically. John Kennedy's
 mafia background got him killed, after he had passed the
 time during the Bay of Pigs crisis by womanizing; Abraham
 Lincoln was a dictator, understandably murdered, he claims.
 Ammerman lies that President Clinton has murdered many
 people to cover his crimes. He thus creates a climate in
 which Clinton's murder would be "understandable."
 Meanwhile, he pretends to strangers that God has told him
 secrets about their personal problems, and that he has
 supernatural powers to help those who will suspend their
 reason.

 This purported Christian minister, on whose authority the
 Pentagon employs a large number of its chaplains throughout
 the world, is no single bad apple. As we shall see, his
 chaplaincy is a British intelligence and Anglican Church
 project, involving a former top-level U.S. Army general
 with responsibility for counterinsurgency, whose brain was
 scrambled by Pentecostal operatives.

 Ammerman lies, whipping up anti-government activists,
 maneuvering them into terrorism or what looks suspiciously
 like terrorism. The British have acted through other
 channels, in tandem with Ammerman, triangulating propaganda
 fire against the same audience of potential patsies.


 Britain's U.S. militias and Oklahoma City

 Just before the April 19, 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, Lord
 William Rees-Mogg, the London Times's strategist of the
 Conservative Revolution, issued a false report designed to
 provoke armed clashes between "citizen militias" and the
 U.S. government. Rees-Mogg's report was in the March 22,
 1995 Strategic Investment newsletter, which is published
 jointly by himself and James Dale Davidson, the head of the
 U.S.-based National Taxpayers Union. The Rees-Mogg
 provocation was very widely circulated, by fax and other
 means, among populists in the U.S. Western states. It read
 as follows:

 "The slaughter of dozens of women and children in Waco by
 government stormtroopers under the command of Field Marshal
 Reno may pale in comparison to what has been planned for
 late March [elsewhere the date is given as March 25]: a
 nationwide BATF/FBI assault on private militias as the
 prelude to a possible declaration of martial law throughout
 the United States. All leaves have been canceled for
 BATF/FBI personnel... Government agent provocateurs are set
 to plant fully automatic and heavy weapons, like rocket
 launchers, on the property of militia leaders. Every
 militia in the country -- and there are dozens, many of
 which are well-armed and well-led by former or even active
 duty officers -- is on a state of Red Alert. Should Reno be
 stupid enough to actually attack them militarily, there is
 going to be a lot of blood.

 "The establishment media is programmed to immediately
 thereafter thunderously bellow for nationwide gun
 confiscation and even martial law."

 In a later interview with this reporter, Soldier of Fortune
 writer James Pate claimed credit for originating the story
 put out by Lord Rees-Mogg; Pate pretended it was fed to him
 by a source in the Treasury Department Bureau of Alcohol,
 Tobacco and Firearms (BATF). Colorado-based Soldier of
 Fortune magazine, a global recruitment channel for
 mercenaries and assassins, was started up in the 1970s with
 seed money from British Special Air Services operatives in
 Africa.

 On March 25, 1995, reacting to the Rees-Mogg provocation,
 about 125 hapless militia activists turned out at Cuero,
 Texas, to see whether they would be arrested or slaughtered
 on the predicted date. At the rally, Texas Constitutional
 Militia attorney Carl Haggard, touted as a national militia
 spokesman in the Soldier of Fortune April issue then on the
 newsstands, demanded that the militiamen drop politics, and
 prepare themselves with straight military training. Haggard
 is a former corporate attorney for the Anglo-Dutch multi,
 Shell Oil.

 The same day as Lord Rees-Mogg's memo went out, March 22,
 1995, a very spooky British agent named Jon Roland faxed
 and e-mailed this warning to journalists and militias: "We
 have ... reports of possible plans for atrocities to be
 committed by agents against innocent persons and blamed on
 militia activists. The atrocity targets include ... homes
 and families of ... government agents, judges, and elected
 officials. This would provide a pretext for labeling
 militiamen `terrorists.' ... Crowded public places, to be
 bombed and the bombings blamed on militia leaders, with
 evidence to later be planted on them." Four weeks later,
 168 died in the Oklahoma City blast.

 Jon Roland, the bizarre "prophet" of the bombing, had
 earlier been promoted in the British press as a leader of
 angry Americans. Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, the London Sunday
 Telegraph's Washington correspondent, from a prominent
 British intelligence family, had begun his reportage on
 America's anti-government paramilitary groups in a Dec. 4,
 1994 article datelined Dallas.

 "The Texas Constitutional Militia," or "TCM," wrote
 Evans-Pritchard, "is growing at phenomenal speed... `We
 have penetrated the government's electronic intelligence
 system and we've turned it against them,' says Jon Roland,
 a former civil rights and environmental activist who helped
 set up the TCM. `There are lots of Little Brothers watching
 Big Brother.'|" The quote refers to George Orwell's novel
 1984, in which the dictatorial government, "Big Brother,"
 creates false opposition movements secretly under its
 control. Orwell's novel is modelled on British Empire
 practice, as in Kenya, where the British set up ineffective
 opposition to colonialism as "countergangs" to subvert true
 independence movements.

 The private Texas Constitutional Militia was in fact
 started by Roland. Militia members say that Roland showed
 up in south Texas in April 1994, around the first
 anniversary of the Waco massacre. He advertised for
 patriots to turn out to a "muster," telling those who
 showed up that he would put them into business as a private
 militia. He prescribed the form of organization, such as he
 had used to start up militias in other states: seven-man,
 self-contained cells, within county groups, to guard
 against treachery. And he produced a list of contacts which
 would keep them in touch with authentic information about
 the national scene.

 The conservatives who joined were a bit puzzled when Roland
 identified himself as a "secular humanist," which is
 anathema to Christian conservatives -- but perhaps his
 other credentials were in order.

 In an April 27, 1995 interview with this author, Roland
 spoke expansively about his background. He said that his
 "good buddy" Ambrose Evans-Pritchard had put him "in touch
 with intelligence agents around the world." He meets
 periodically with these Evans-Pritchard intelligence
 community contacts, Roland said, and they give him "inside
 information."

 Roland said he had been sarcastic when he told the militia
 members he was a secular humanist, and that he is currently
 a Zen Buddhist. He explained that he has long been an
 activist of the "international federalist movement"; he
 advocates the formation of a "true constitutional world
 government." An ultra-Malthusian environmentalist, Roland
 has "worked closely with the leadership of the Friends of
 the Earth," as well as Greenpeace, inhabitants of Prince
 Philip's stable of environmentalist groups. Roland claims
 that even as few as "tens of thousands of people, using
 modern technology, will eventually destroy the Earth" if
 they are allowed to exist "scattered all over the
 landscape." Echoing Prince Philip and the World Wildlife
 Fund, Roland said that "overpopulation" causes Africans "to
 kill each other."

 Militia founder Roland has been a computer specialist for
 the U.S. Air Force, as an officer and contractor, since
 1967. He says that he received specialized training from
 the Army's 101st Airborne Division at Fort Campbell,
 Kentucky/Tennessee, the home of the psychological warfare
 unit that assaulted Panamanian leader Gen. Manuel Noriega.
 He has written on "Third Wave" computer strategy themes in
 the Futurist, organ of the World Future Society. He was
 long a member of a British intelligence front, the L5
 Society, promoting Britain's utopian counterstrategy to the
 hated John Kennedy's Apollo space program.

 Six days after the Oklahoma City bombing, NBC TV's
 "Dateline" program featured an interview with Roland,
 portrayed only as an angry militia leader and computer
 specialist, who warned of a civil war in America.

 Speaking later to this author, Roland provided a list of
 his associates in the militia movement that Roland has
 worked at organizing throughout the United States. First on
 the Roland list was Bradley P. Glover, a Kansas
 paramilitary leader.

 During July 1997, Glover and six other persons were
 arrested on charges of plotting to bomb U.S. military
 bases, beginning with Fort Hood, Texas. The FBI said that
 Glover and an associate were arrested on July 4 near Fort
 Hood, in possession of various weapons, and that others in
 on the alleged plot were charged with possession of pipe
 bombs and machine guns. The arrests allegedly resulted from
 Missouri state police infiltration of paramilitary groups.
 Glover was featured in the Wichita Eagle on April 30, 1995,
 as perhaps the pre-eminent Kansas militia leader. He is
 said to lead about 1,000 armed men in the southern half of
 the state. In a 1995 interview, Glover told this reporter
 that he had initiated the militia movement in Kansas in
 November 1994. Glover said he was a former Naval
 Intelligence officer, but that any contacts that he might
 have with intelligence agencies at present are "none of
 your business."

 Glover created a movement "against the globalists."
 Informed by this reporter about Jon Roland's British and
 World Federalist affiliation, Glover replied that he would
 have to decline to state whether he himself favored or did
 not favor world government.


 General Haines and Operation Garden Plot

 There is an ironic reality, a dangerous half-truth, in the
 provocative warnings about martial law and military
 takeover, issued by the British lords and their U.S.
 assets.

 Interviewed by this reporter on May 22, 1997, Jim Ammerman
 stated: "There is a network of colonels and above,
 throughout the military, who would stand by the
 Constitution and against the President. They know who they
 are, and they are in close communication with each other.
 They could control the country if they need to."

 The "multi-jurisdictional task force" is a repeated theme
 in Ammerman's exhortations to the militias. The military is
 allegedly now combined, under the Federal Emergency
 Management Agency, with other departments of the Federal
 government and with local governments. When the President
 tries to use this overreaching military against the people,
 Ammerman maintains, the "good" military officers will side
 with armed citizens against the President.

 Curiously, Ammerman's own organization was created at the
 request of an Army officer, Gen. Ralph E. Haines, Jr., who
 personally supervised the military policing of the
 population, against which Ammerman directs his rhetoric.

 General Haines had been vice chief of staff of the U.S.
 Army in 1967-68, when he was in charge of counterinsurgency
 preparations in the continental United States. He worked
 with the full resources of the Army under him, including
 military intelligence capabilities, to plan to cope with
 black ghetto riots and civil disturbances during the
 Vietnam War. Haines moved his troops into Detroit and
 Washington, D.C., as riots hit American cities before and
 after Martin Luther King's assassination. General Haines
 went public in an April 11, 1968 press conference,
 describing his "Operation Garden Plot." He had planned and
 directed the military arrangements for the takeover of
 every single American city, and arranged the linkages
 between the military and Justice Department, local police,
 and state governments.

 The April 14, 1968 New York Times reported that Haines
 "said that detailed military planning for the summer began
 in February. The `garden plot' preparations were national,
 he said, including `every city you can think of.' Many
 officers who were to be assigned to specific cities in a
 military mobilization visited them in mufti [civilian
 clothes] to familiarize themselves with the terrain, the
 social and economic problems of potential riot areas, and
 the police with whom they would work if called, the general
 said."

 It was this General Haines who asked Ammerman to create his
 Full Gospel Chaplaincy. In his book, Supernatural Events in
 the Life of an Ordinary Man, Ammerman says that at first he
 resisted the Haines project, but at length acceded to it.

 The Defense Department received the petition for acceptance
 of the Full Gospel Chaplaincy in June 1983. After 13 months
 of resistance by military traditionalists, expressed by a
 bitter fight within the board of chaplains, the petition
 was approved in July 1984. This was at the height of the
 covert operations run though the military and the National
 Security Council by then-Vice President George Bush and his
 London allies, and such of their flunkies as Lt. Col.
 Oliver North (ret.), an Episcopalian speaker-in-tongues.

 Colonel Ammerman, the pretended "anti-New World Order
 crusader," gave George Bush a thank-you salute. Ammerman's
 1991 book, After the Storm, about the religious conversions
 of U.S. soldiers during the Persian Gulf War, opens with
 President George Bush's prayer proclamation as a preface.

 The Haines-Ammerman project was a component of Britain's
 Pentecostalist political initiative, set in motion within
 the United States following World War II. This British
 initiative was to leap ahead in the United States in the
 1960s. Haines would be inducted, dazed, and mind-battered
 into its service in 1971, while he was commander of the
 Continental U.S. Army Command. Retiring from the Army in
 1973, at age 59, Haines then embarked on a second career,
 in the netherworld of political and covert operations
 peopled by active-duty, retired, and reserve officers.

 In 1978, Haines led a group of American Episcopalian
 speakers-in-tongues, to Canterbury, England, for a global
 meeting of the Anglican Church under Queen Elizabeth's
 Archbishop Donald Coggan. Haines and others, colonials and
 Brits alike, launched a world crusade to spread
 Pentecostalism under Anglican guidance.

 An Episcopal colleague of Haines, Gen. Albion Knight, U.S.
 Army (ret.), in a discussion with this reporter on June 5,
 1997, lavishly praised the Haines-Ammerman project. A
 nuclear weapons and logistics specialist, Knight is now a
 Conservative Revolution leader in Howard Phillips's
 Taxpayers Party. He explained the strategy put in gear at
 the 1978 Canterbury meeting: Get away from stuffy high
 churchism. Get with the people. This hard-charging
 Anglicanism is "exploding in the Third World"; Africa is
 especially targetted. Intimately identified with the
 British authorities and the Church of England, General
 Knight manages the Church Information Center, which, he
 says, "feeds information to around 125 leaders, an
 intelligence network in the Anglican world."


 How the general got zapped

 In an interview with this reporter on July 28, 1997,
 General Haines said he asked Colonel Ammerman to initiate
 the new chaplaincy organization when he and Ammerman were
 in Europe in the late 1970s. They had both been speaking at
 a Heidelberg, Germany, military unit of the Full Gospel
 Businessmen's Fellowship International -- a covert,
 masonic-like core organization of the British religious
 initiative created in the early 1950s.

 Haines described his own fall into the "spirit-filled"
 world. At that time, military officers, scientists, and
 others leaders of America's military-industrial complex
 were being hunted as prizes. He said his wife was "baptized
 in the Holy Spirit" around 1967 or 1968, some three or four
 years before his own induction. This gave her "something to
 occupy herself with" while Haines was commander of the Army
 for the Pacific region (1968-70), with responsibility for
 the logisitics of the Vietnam War.

 In 1970, Haines became commander of Continental Army
 Command, headquartered at Fort Monroe, near Norfolk,
 Virginia. His wife began working with the Pat Robertson
 organization as a volunteer. Through his wife, and one of
 Robertson's close associates, an invitation was issued for
 Haines to speak at a rally of the Full Gospel Businessmen's
 Fellowship, at a Buffalo, New York hotel, on July 24, 1971.

 He said he went there thinking he would give a moderate
 Christian speech, such as he had given before to the
 Kiwanis and Rotary clubs. He showed up July 23, the day
 before he was to speak, in order to "case the joint." But
 they had him sit at the head table, next to Harald
 Bredesen. This Bredesen is one of a small central clique of
 operatives in the Pentecostal initiative, working under the
 coordination of British Empire agent David J. du Plessis,
 whose career will be reviewed below. Bredesen is a
 professional mind-bender in what is best termed Britain's
 "occult bureau." He inducted Robertson into the game around
 1960; Bredesen and the Full Gospel Businessmen then built
 up Robertson into a multibillion-dollar political empire.

 This is how Haines depicted his capture: "The `businessmen'
 [in the audience] testified; tears ran down their cheeks. I
 was getting very uncomfortable. I signalled to my aide,
 let's get going, let's get out of here. But Harald leaned
 over to me; he said, Are you charismatic? I thought it
 over. I answered, I don't think so. What did charismatic
 mean? I thought of George Patton.

 "Harald was the speaker. I thought, when in Rome, shoot
 Roman candles. People were putting up their hands [in
 uncontrolled fervor]. I put my hands up a little bit -- the
 discreet Episcopal level. People asked me, `General, what's
 your problem -- why only half mast?'

 "After Harald gave his talk, there was renewed praising of
 the Lord. My hands crept up to fully extended. I felt
 things happening to me. I felt things beyond my
 comprehension. It was not elation. I was dazed by it.
 Everyone crowded around me -- they could all see something
 was happening. People closed in on me -- I got out --
 I went to my room; I wanted to be alone. Harald came and
 ministered to me for a short time.

 "The next day I saw that the speech I was to deliver was
 pabulum. What would satisfy these people? The people were
 saying, `The general got zapped last night.' So though I
 used the core of what I had prepared, I now spoke
 differently, tailoring it to what had happened. I then
 thought, I don't know what God wants of me but I'm ready to
 do what He says."

 What happened, when General Haines became possessed "by the
 Holy Spirit" at that rally? In a recent article in Stephen
 Strang's Charisma magazine, Bredesen explains "the way
 demons operate. Unclean spirits come into a medium, violate
 her personality and speak through her." But rest assured,
 what Bredesen and his sponsors are doing is different. "The
 Holy Spirit doesn't want mediums, robots or zombies." Do
 you want to become God's partner? Bredesen instructs you,
 "Don't speak words your mind understands. As long as you
 do, your mind will remain in control.

 "Don't listen to yourself. Can you imagine a little child
 learning to talk? Does he say, `Ma-ma-ma-ma,' and then stop
 with, `I can't say that. That's not language'? No, he just
 hugs his daddy's neck and prattles away." Charisma
 publisher Stephen Strang is a trustee of a U.S.-based core
 leadership team of mind-benders, incorporated as the
 Charismatic Bible Ministries, along with Ammerman, Oral
 Roberts, and others in this British outreach initiative.
 Strang also publishes New Man magazine, organ of the
 recently formed Promise Keepers cult. In a recent issue,
 under the title "Worm Training," a cult guide named
 Wellington Boone explains the religious problem and how
 this gang solves it:

 "People have not yet learned how to become broken... We
 are called to be `worms.' ... A worm never protests... Can
 you say, for Christ, `I am a worm and am no man'? ... Jesus
 was crushed like a worm. He was slapped. They spat in His
 face until it ran down His cheeks... God doesn't raise
 anything that is not dead.

      "If we allow God ... to work into us the idea of
      `worm-training,' it would be revolutionary. We
      would gain a worm's-eye view of what God
      wants... When we really meet Jesus and allow
      ourselves to be crushed ... the impact will rock
      this world."


 The 'mystery' of British-Israel solved

 Nowadays, 50,000 men and boys are periodically herded into
 a stadium to babble incoherently, to weep and laugh
 hysterically for the Promise Keepers. Or, at a specially
 rigged church at the Toronto, Canada airport, troubled
 worshippers come from far way to be miraculously cured;
 they fall into trances on the floor and bark like dogs, in
 "worship." Civilized humanity is obliged to ask, how has
 this come about?

 The main figure in the creation of today's Pentecostalism,
 British agent David J. du Plessis, insisted that this
 phenomenon has no history whatsoever: It simply happened.
 Writing in 1956, du Plessis claimed, "It [is] clear that it
 was no man-made cult of `tongues.' Only the `power' of
 which Jesus spake, could have caused its miraculous growth
 and establishment" up to that point, from the beginning of
 the twentieth century. As the "charismatic renewal," a new
 Pentecostal movement, was just then being geared up in the
 1950s, du Plessis lied that "there has never been a man or
 a movement than can claim the credit for having planned or
 propagated this world embracing Pentecostal Revival. It is
 simply the supernatural work of the Holy Spirit ... to
 bring the `Full Gospel Message' to the whole world in this
 generation... This sudden move towards mass evangelism
 lately ... cannot be attributed to anything else than the
 spontaneous move of the Holy Spirit."

 We shall give here the first serious historical account of
 the "planning and propagating." We speak now of the high
 church principalities and powers who have built this new
 Tower of Babel, who look down with contempt upon their
 captive babblers, their low churchers, the herd, the worms.


 continued....




.

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