(Before It's News)
Yesterday evening, the Brookings Institute had a debate over whether or not the United States should put ‘boots on the ground’ in its conflict with the Islamic State.
It was a debate between secularists over a religious war which completely ignored the role of both theology and Revelation:
which clearly demonstrates that, when focused on something else, people can actually be blind to something that is right in front of them.
The role of Revelation and theology—and the reality of theological rather than political motivations—is the ‘Invisible Gorilla’ that the secularists of the Brookings Institute are blind to.
The mostly likely retort, of course, is that politics is, for me, the ‘Invisible Gorilla’.
Not at all.
Politics and the secular analysis is all that is propagated by academia, by the diplomats at the United Nations, and even by the Jewish Voice for Peace.
I have listened to that perspective for at least the past 35 years.
And I have found it to be utterly and completely deficient.
And the reason for why conflicts such as these have NEVER been resolved.
Thus, the basis for my proposal for a curriculum to counter religious extremist violence:
Michael (Chapter 12, verse 1 of the Book of Daniel, Sura 2, verse 98 of the Quran, Column XVII of the Scroll of the War of the Sons of Light & Chapter 3, verse 12 of the Revelation of John) and
Sarah–>Elijah–>John the Baptist–>Mohammed–>Elizabeth (Chapter 12, verse 13 of the Book of Daniel and Chapter 11, verse 14 & Chapter17, verses 10-13 of the Gospel of Matthew) for:
Seven Women, Seven Churches and Seven Sisters )
Hagar–>the apostle Mary–>Danielle (1982-1987)
(March, 1987—the http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap960705.html)
Isaac–>the apostle John–>Robin (1986)
Ishmael–>the apostle Peter–>Cindy (1992)
Jacob–>the apostle Thomas–>Linda (1987-
Esau–>the apostle, Judas–>Susan (1970)
Isaiah’s wife–>the apostle James–>Kimberly (2000-
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