Video: Empires, the West, Russia and Theology
A theological foundation for understanding International Relations begins with the Tower of Babel and the Beasts of Daniel 7.
A theological foundation for understanding International Relations begins with the Tower of Babel and the Beasts of Daniel 7.
An attempt to create a structure, based upon theology, within which we can understand global and historical forces and movements. My source material is Daniel, Chapters 2 and 7, and Revelation 13 through 19 and the story of the Tower of Babel in Genesis 11.
I note the similarities between Social, Communism, National-Socialism, and the current Secular Liberal Capitalist orders (they are more similar than different).
Democracy today is more like Lenin’s Dictatorship of the Proletariat — it refers to an ideological set of outcomes, not what people want.
The Gospel of Jesus Christ was sent specifically to Europeans after the Resurrection. Europeans would be — and were — the people who would be faithful in caring for the vineyard and bringing forth the fruits thereof to the Glory of God. (Matthew 21:43)
God specifically targeted toward Europe — Whites — for salvation; this short article will argue why that is true.
The heart of the argument lies in whom the Scriptures were written to. The Scriptures were written in only a European tongue (Greek) after the Resurrection. They were written to European peoples. No longer would the Scriptures be written in a Semitic tongue — Hebrew was utterly replaced by Greek.
Perhaps Christ’s parable of the two sons is applicable — the first son refused and later repented. The other son initially agreed to serve his father, but then turned away. (Matthew 21:28-31). Is that not the story of the Jews who utterly rejected God? John 8:44-59. And of the Europeans who, though pagan, returned to their Father?
Paul wrote his Epistles to Europeans. They were geographically, linguistically, and morphologically European. Paul’s epistle to the churches in the region of Galatia went to a White Celtic people. The people living in the region of Galatia, in central Anatolia, were Europeans and they spoke a Celtic language. Even the name “Galatia” is called Galatian because it will peopled with Gauls. Roman writers called the inhabitants of Galatia “Gauls or Celts.” “The term ‘Galatians” came to be used by the Greeks for the three Celtic people of Anatolia.” The term Anatolia, and even Asia, reference the “east.” As in, that eastern area of the Greeks (Anatolia). Ditto for Asia — it was they eastern areas of European settlement, specifically in relation to the European Greeks and European Romans. …