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	<title>Comments on: Economic Disaster Will Bring Down USA: The Beast Is Coming</title>
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		<title>By: menofissachar</title>
		<link>http://menofissachar.wordpress.com/2008/11/25/economic-disaster-will-bring-down-usa-the-beast-is-coming/#comment-17</link>
		<dc:creator>menofissachar</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 00:54:04 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Betty,
Proper English usage entails the use of a device known as the &quot;paragraph.&quot;  Basically, the paragraph separates discrete units of thought, allowing the writer to develop an argument, and the reader to follow that argument.

Without the use of paragraphs, a writer appears to be engaging in one long rant, with neither structure nor organization.

Especially when one is citing one conspiracy theory after another to demonize a theology without ever once saying anything about why one should actually not believe said theology.

Just so you know, the pretrib view is actually the dominant view in Christianity today.  This primarily due to the fact that the amillennial churches have experienced dramatic declines in membership, while evangelical and pentecostal churches - which overwhelmingly embrace the pretrib view - have gained correspondingly in membership.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Betty,<br />
Proper English usage entails the use of a device known as the &#8220;paragraph.&#8221;  Basically, the paragraph separates discrete units of thought, allowing the writer to develop an argument, and the reader to follow that argument.</p>
<p>Without the use of paragraphs, a writer appears to be engaging in one long rant, with neither structure nor organization.</p>
<p>Especially when one is citing one conspiracy theory after another to demonize a theology without ever once saying anything about why one should actually not believe said theology.</p>
<p>Just so you know, the pretrib view is actually the dominant view in Christianity today.  This primarily due to the fact that the amillennial churches have experienced dramatic declines in membership, while evangelical and pentecostal churches &#8211; which overwhelmingly embrace the pretrib view &#8211; have gained correspondingly in membership.</p>
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		<title>By: Betty</title>
		<link>http://menofissachar.wordpress.com/2008/11/25/economic-disaster-will-bring-down-usa-the-beast-is-coming/#comment-16</link>
		<dc:creator>Betty</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Jan 2009 09:11:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://menofissachar.wordpress.com/?p=17#comment-16</guid>
		<description>CHUCK  MISSLER  -  COPYIST !

Many these days are abandoning the pretribulation rapture view, and the June, 1995 article by Chuck Missler (”Byzantine Text Discovery: Ephraem the Syrian”) reveals why there is such a mutiny! First of all, the authoritative scholar that Missler cited, Dr. Paul Alexander, referred only to “Pseudo-Ephraem” and not to Ephraem the Syrian. (If an unsigned ancient manuscript resembles the real Ephraem but there is a question of authorship, they assign it to “Pseudo-Ephraem” - the word “pseudo” meaning “possibly.” For some groundless reason, Grant Jeffrey, the one who reportedly found the “discovery,” changed Dr. Alexander’s terminology! For more info on Jeffrey, Google “Wily Jeffrey.”) And Missler’s scholarship is also questionable. According to the Los Angeles Times (July 30, 1992), about one-fourth of Missler’s 1992 book “The Magog Factor” (which he co-authored with Hal Lindsey) was a daring plagiarism of Dr. Edwin Yamauchi’s 1982 book “Foes from the Northern Frontier”! Four months later Yamauchi’s publisher revealed that both Lindsey and Missler had promised to stop all publishing of their book. But in 1995 they were found publishing “The Magog Invasion” (which was either a revision or a replacement of “The Magog Factor”) - which had a substantial amount of the same plagiarism! (Dave MacPherson’s 1998 book “The Three R’s” has complete documentation on this and other pretrib scandals.) After listing “1820″ as the reported date of the birth of pretrib (he should have said “1830″), Missler sees a pretrib rapture in that Medieval writer’s phrase “taken to the Lord” and, since he evidently favors rewriting others instead of researching, is unaware that Dr. Alexander explained that this phrase really means “participate at least in some measure in beatitude” - which has reference only to doing acts of virtue on earth and not being raptured away from earth! Alexander added that the same ancient writer held to only one final second coming (and not to any prior coming) which would follow the time of Antichrist! (Readers can Google “Deceiving and Being Deceived” by MacPherson to see how groundless the Pseudo-Ephraem claim is and to learn how desperate pretribs are to find any pre-1830 evidence for their escapist view. Dr. Robert Gundry of Westmont College has also demolished the Pseudo-Ephraem claim in his 1997 book “First the Antichrist.”) Since Missler also leans on Thomas Ice, readers can evaluate Ice’s qualifications by Googling “America’s Pretrib Rapture Traffickers,” “Thomas Ice (Bloopers),” “Thomas Ice (Hired Gun),” and “Pretrib Rapture Diehards” (the latter part). For further light on the 179-year-old, fringe-British-invented pretribulation theory, Google or Yahoo “Pretrib Rapture - Hidden Facts.” Finally - why would anyone who has the brains of a rocket scientist want to be taken up with the concept of an any-moment pretrib rapture? The answer may well be that there’s more money in elevating a rapture than launching a rocket!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>CHUCK  MISSLER  &#8211;  COPYIST !</p>
<p>Many these days are abandoning the pretribulation rapture view, and the June, 1995 article by Chuck Missler (”Byzantine Text Discovery: Ephraem the Syrian”) reveals why there is such a mutiny! First of all, the authoritative scholar that Missler cited, Dr. Paul Alexander, referred only to “Pseudo-Ephraem” and not to Ephraem the Syrian. (If an unsigned ancient manuscript resembles the real Ephraem but there is a question of authorship, they assign it to “Pseudo-Ephraem” &#8211; the word “pseudo” meaning “possibly.” For some groundless reason, Grant Jeffrey, the one who reportedly found the “discovery,” changed Dr. Alexander’s terminology! For more info on Jeffrey, Google “Wily Jeffrey.”) And Missler’s scholarship is also questionable. According to the Los Angeles Times (July 30, 1992), about one-fourth of Missler’s 1992 book “The Magog Factor” (which he co-authored with Hal Lindsey) was a daring plagiarism of Dr. Edwin Yamauchi’s 1982 book “Foes from the Northern Frontier”! Four months later Yamauchi’s publisher revealed that both Lindsey and Missler had promised to stop all publishing of their book. But in 1995 they were found publishing “The Magog Invasion” (which was either a revision or a replacement of “The Magog Factor”) &#8211; which had a substantial amount of the same plagiarism! (Dave MacPherson’s 1998 book “The Three R’s” has complete documentation on this and other pretrib scandals.) After listing “1820″ as the reported date of the birth of pretrib (he should have said “1830″), Missler sees a pretrib rapture in that Medieval writer’s phrase “taken to the Lord” and, since he evidently favors rewriting others instead of researching, is unaware that Dr. Alexander explained that this phrase really means “participate at least in some measure in beatitude” &#8211; which has reference only to doing acts of virtue on earth and not being raptured away from earth! Alexander added that the same ancient writer held to only one final second coming (and not to any prior coming) which would follow the time of Antichrist! (Readers can Google “Deceiving and Being Deceived” by MacPherson to see how groundless the Pseudo-Ephraem claim is and to learn how desperate pretribs are to find any pre-1830 evidence for their escapist view. Dr. Robert Gundry of Westmont College has also demolished the Pseudo-Ephraem claim in his 1997 book “First the Antichrist.”) Since Missler also leans on Thomas Ice, readers can evaluate Ice’s qualifications by Googling “America’s Pretrib Rapture Traffickers,” “Thomas Ice (Bloopers),” “Thomas Ice (Hired Gun),” and “Pretrib Rapture Diehards” (the latter part). For further light on the 179-year-old, fringe-British-invented pretribulation theory, Google or Yahoo “Pretrib Rapture &#8211; Hidden Facts.” Finally &#8211; why would anyone who has the brains of a rocket scientist want to be taken up with the concept of an any-moment pretrib rapture? The answer may well be that there’s more money in elevating a rapture than launching a rocket!</p>
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		<title>By: Renowned Economic Forecaster Says US Headed For Total Collapse &#171; Start Thinking Right</title>
		<link>http://menofissachar.wordpress.com/2008/11/25/economic-disaster-will-bring-down-usa-the-beast-is-coming/#comment-4</link>
		<dc:creator>Renowned Economic Forecaster Says US Headed For Total Collapse &#171; Start Thinking Right</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Nov 2008 01:04:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://menofissachar.wordpress.com/?p=17#comment-4</guid>
		<description>[...] R. Jeffrey wrote a book entitled Final Warning: Economic Collapse and the Coming World Government which came out in 1995.  He concluded his chapter 14, &#8221;The Coming Economic Collapse,&#8221; [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] R. Jeffrey wrote a book entitled Final Warning: Economic Collapse and the Coming World Government which came out in 1995.  He concluded his chapter 14, &#8221;The Coming Economic Collapse,&#8221; [...]</p>
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