Soul Trap. Wayne Sr. Stewart
in striving after the wind, so as to better please a God who cannot be satisfied because we are indeed, but puppets on a string that the Almighty is holding to a higher double standard. And yes. I will prove it. How? By offering you those verses that bind in the form of a visually muted noise as if reflected off the distorted mirrors of a carnival funhouse, where it says, “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God.”
Now see Genesis 17:1 where God said of it: “I am the Almighty God; walk before me, and be thou perfect.”
I will give you a moment to collect yourself. After all, we are still only in chapter one.
As for revealing the highly guarded secret behind the greatest story never told, I give you the man Judas Iscariot, and his plight as it relates to chasing after the wind. Or, if you prefer your truth over easy: the flipside to that coin I spoke of. See Matthew 19:28 where Jesus said, albeit for edification: “Verily [truly] I say unto you, that those who have followed me [referring to the twelve apostles verses the masses] in the regeneration when the Son of man sits in the throne of his glory, you also will sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel.” (This is how I know that Jesus is addressing the apostles, verses the masses. I point this out because it’s imperative that you understand my writing style, and the way in which I choose to deliver those secrets found hiding within the Bible. This means that it’s incumbent upon you to understand the meanings of those words I use, to include the way in which I use them, along with their intended implications if not significance. By this, I mean: you may have to read something more than once before fully coming to grips with it. Why? Because everything’s connected, is why. To a truth, Soul Trap is like a long string of pearls, albeit pearls of spiritual wisdom where each and every gem is an epiphany unto itself.)
Having said that, here is where we run headlong into our first acerbic biblical truth. It happens within the confines of a deeper personal understanding when you realize that, yes. Jesus was indeed, referencing the twelve apostles and not the spiritually mottled masses. Moreover is that he is, in fact, excluding the masses. The next acerbic truth; and unquestionably the more astringent of the two; manifests itself where Jesus says that the twelve thrones of heaven are being held in reserve for the twelve apostles so as to sit in judgment over the twelve tribes of Israel.
I know, and let me guess: so what. Right? Well, I highlight this particular biblical ideologue because, didn’t one of the twelve have Jesus killed in an act of betrayal, and then commit the cardinal sin of suicide, as a result?
Ah huh.
You, my cerebral beloved, just experienced an intellectual awakening designed to stimulate the dormant and or “sleeping” part of the brain as manifested through the efficacies of a deeper understanding. You would better know it as one of those spiritual gems in the form of an epiphany that I promised you, as wrought from those individuals who knuckled down declaring to never let the truth get in the way of a good story. Believe me when I tell you that they’re not only out there, but are patrolling the highways and byways of life in droves. They have even done their best to try and stymie the production of this book. Why? Because “they” have an agenda of religion to uphold in the form of a vested interest, is why. Even so, you would be right to suspect that this agenda of theirs includes you and yours as a family of Christians. And yes. We will be getting to that.
Yet, there is more. It has everything to do with Mark 14:21, albeit for edification, where Jesus said of Judas: “The Son of man indeed goes, as it is written of him. But woe to that man by whom the Son of man is betrayed! Better were it for [him] had he had never been born!”
What was it again, that the Bible said about this as it relates to Judas Iscariot and his part as turncoat? Oh! That’s right. It was Ecclesiastes 7:9, where it says, “Be not hasty in your spirit to be angry: for anger resides in the bosom of fools.”
What we discover, then, is that one of twelve ain’t got nothing on seven of nine.
With that, I ask you: what kind of God says something like this out of anger, concerning the life of one of his father’s creations? I will tell you who: a deity that is not who or what he says he is, is who. Otherwise, his father would have never granted him that kind of emotional authority when it comes to this. But that doesn’t mean he can’t, or won’t try. Why? Because something unseen compels him, is why. You know, just like it did with Judas, when first he turned the son of God over to the authorities. See Matthew 5:39, albeit for edification, where Jesus said pertaining to acts of treachery: “I say unto you that ye [what?] resist not evil: but whosoever smites thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also.”
Question: how does a marionette jump up and play the game of life when it’s forcibly cast into that role, and never told that a power greater than itself is controlling its every action? This is especially true when that higher power has led it to believe that it’s acting according to freewill. Worse yet, is that it will be held accountable according to that illusion. And yes. We know this to be true because of where Matthew 27:5 tells us that Judas committed suicide because of it. Then there is Mark 4:21 where Jesus said that, he too, can only do and go “…as it is written of him.” And yes. You really need to think about that, if only because he’s admitting that life is scripted.
Yet, these discoveries are but the tip of the proverbial iceberg—and they are legion! These are those pearls of spiritual wisdom that I promised would challenge if not permanently change everything about God and the Bible you ever thought you knew to be true. Offered as further proof that Jesus is not who or what he says is, I give you St. John 6:70. This being where he said of it, albeit for edification: “Have not I chosen you twelve, and one of you is a devil?” 71 He spoke of Judas Iscariot the son of [Simon Zelotes:] for it was he that would betray him as one of the twelve.”
Moreover is that, it’s this tortured soul as a dissenting imp, that Jesus says will lord for all eternity in heaven while seated on a throne of judgment? Gwad help us if he’s talking about putting him in charge of anything more magnificent than that porcelain throne found in the men’s room: even the men’s room of eternity. Otherwise, we’ve got problems. Big problems. Why? Because of where St. John 6:70 tells us that Jesus says he chose a devil to help him carry out his work.
Ah huh.
By the way: so glad you could join us because, your world is about to forever change.
At that, I once again ask you: why would the son of God reserve a throne in heaven (even if only porcelain) for he who was bent on having him killed, also said to be a devil, who then committed suicide? The simple answer is to tell you that “they” have been less than honest with you. Ah, but they have. And they are. That is because St. John 21:7 tells us how Jesus truly felt about Judas. You know. That he loved him knowing full well that he was an egregious work of the devil. With that, I give you Mark 1:34 of the original 1611 KJV edition, albeit for edification. “Jesus healed those who were sick, and cast out many evil spirits. But he would not permit the demons to speak [why?] because they knew him.”!
Do you see the totality, of what these biblical passages labor to show you? Again, stay tuned. We are, after all, only in chapter one.
Concerning just why “they” are plotting deception against you and yours while exercising the convoluted waters of religion as their weapon of mass distraction, I give you the admission of Deuteronomy 30:15. That being where Moses told his people (through inference, that is to mean all Christians beholding to their idea of religion,) saying, “I have set before you this day life and good, and death and evil. 16 I, therefore, in the name of God, command you this day to love the Lord thy God, to walk in his ways, and to keep his commandments and his statutes and his judgments. 17 But if you refuse, 18 then I tell you here and now that you will perish. 19 I call upon heaven and Earth to record this day against you, to witness that I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing.”
Commands? Did that say, he commands? Yes. Moreover is that, he not only orders us to love the Almighty, but adds the caveat “or else.” I ask you: what kind of God needs to break the will of its servants, in order to stay in power? Now there is a damn good question. And as an omnipotent being lording over all creation he has to do this, why? The correct answer is to tell you that it’s because