I kind of feel a bit that way lol. That's basically what I'm imagining. What I can't reconcile with this theory are the 'predictions' or statements of things that would happen, or were reported to have happened, that didn't happen or haven't happened yet. Then we appear to get these 'deltas' in relation to things years later. I think perhaps there were many 'contingencies' that were posted about, some of which are called in to action, some of which aren't. It could also be that a certain level of disinformation was used, on purpose.
There were claims that what’s about to happen was going to be biblical.
They may or may not be true, but there were prophecies that Messiah would come in the Bible. Those claims waited at least 400 years or longer.
Regardless of whose side everyone turns out to actually be on, all of this has been a good reminder that the God of Ibrahim, Ysaac, and Yakov seems to work in anniversaries and by events, and not on our timelines of how we want things to happen within some clock-based deadline.
Here’s a fun question:
If the narrative hadn’t been shaped a certain way, would the enemy have called for Messiah to be crucified?
It seems like future proves past.
I kind of feel a bit that way lol. That's basically what I'm imagining. What I can't reconcile with this theory are the 'predictions' or statements of things that would happen, or were reported to have happened, that didn't happen or haven't happened yet. Then we appear to get these 'deltas' in relation to things years later. I think perhaps there were many 'contingencies' that were posted about, some of which are called in to action, some of which aren't. It could also be that a certain level of disinformation was used, on purpose.
There were claims that what’s about to happen was going to be biblical.
They may or may not be true, but there were prophecies that Messiah would come in the Bible. Those claims waited at least 400 years or longer.
Regardless of whose side everyone turns out to actually be on, all of this has been a good reminder that the God of Ibrahim, Ysaac, and Yakov seems to work in anniversaries and by events, and not on our timelines of how we want things to happen within some clock-based deadline.
Here’s a fun question: If the narrative hadn’t been shaped a certain way, would the enemy have called for Messiah to be crucified? It seems like future proves past.
https://qalerts.app/?q=biblical
I maybe wrong but I swear i've heard Bannon describe saying things 'are going to be biblical' many many times.