Thursday, June 24, 2021

I

 


would strongly encourage everyone to watch the following two videos:


Funny how using the actual name of the video didn't result in it being turned up in my search results :-).


So I'll just post the link to the first one instead:


Scientist and the Elite Try to Hide What Really Happened at CERN, Demonic Entities, Extra Dimensions 


And:

Return of The Nephilim - Chuck Missler




Chuck Missler


There is a third video of a sermon entitled 

"Gods Demonic Angels" 

but strangely enough it is no longer in my history, nor could any search result locate it.Ten years IT experience and have taught classes on internet search tips and tricks BTW :-) I find that a lil odd as it was done by a mega-church pastor in Texas I believe it was, and I remember not being a big fan of his but watched the sermon anyway based off sermon title alone.

Anyway, if I find it I'll post it as well as it goes right along with these two.


I love you baby :-).

Seriously, I would watch those two videos if I was you.


Hey Honey

 


I love you baby




:-).

Friday, June 18, 2021

Luis Elizondo, Former AATIP Director, on UFOs and National Security (Advanced Aerospace Threat and Identification Program)

 

"Wherever these technologies come from they are clearly more advanced than any earthly technology known to our intelligence services...We urgently need our best scientific and intelligence collection tools applied to understanding what our pilots are witnessing."




Options:

Mr Elizondo didn't mention it but one option being put forth is 
equipment malfunction

Pilots instrumentation readings, FLIR Radar ect. Yeah, right...

Secret US Tech.
Then why we all talking about it if its so secret? And pilots are being encouraged to come forth and share their experiences?

Adversarial Technology (China, Russia) 
How did they leapfrog us tech wise (with all our intelligence gathering and surveillance apparatus?) and why are they still stealing our secrets?

The forth one is the one I'm going with 

"It's a different paradigm completely"


Oh you bet it is alright.

Revelation 9:1-12

The fifth angel sounded his trumpet, and I saw a star that had fallen from the sky to the earth. The star was given the key to the shaft of the Abyss. When he opened the Abyss, smoke rose from it like the smoke from a gigantic furnace. The sun and sky were darkened by the smoke from the Abyss. And out of the smoke locusts came down on the earth and were given power like that of scorpions of the earth.  They were told not to harm the grass of the earth or any plant or tree, but only those people who did not have the seal of God on their foreheads. They were not allowed to kill them but only to torture them for five months. And the agony they suffered was like that of the sting of a scorpion when it strikes.  During those days people will seek death but will not find it; they will long to die, but death will elude them.

The locusts looked like horses prepared for battle. On their heads they wore something like crowns of gold, and their faces resembled human faces. Their hair was like women’s hair, and their teeth were like lions’ teeth. They had breastplates like breastplates of iron, and the sound of their wings was like the thundering of many horses and chariots rushing into battle. They had tails with stingers, like scorpions, and in their tails they had power to torment people for five months. They had as king over them the angel of the Abyss, whose name in Hebrew is Abaddon and in Greek is Apollyon (that is, Destroyer).

The first woe is past; two other woes are yet to come.


Mr. Elizondo goes on to say:

"Its foreign adversarial or it's something quite different."

"The director of national intelligence does not think it's Russian or Chinese technology."

"All describing a craft performing in ways well beyond our current capability."

"If you had this type of technology you probably wouldn't need to invest so much in military, because if you will you had this "checkmate" type technology/capability where everything else is obsolete."

(Oh it's checkmate alright)

"The facts are painting a far more compelling picture than what we thought."

"I want to delve into with where we are with modern day science...But in reality the universe and physics isn't binary, it's not binary at all, in fact there's all sorts of opportunities and options on what this could be...the majority of the universe around us is not perceivable...WIFI signals going through your body, Cosmic Radiation coming in from the cosmos, there's neutrinos coming in from the sun, there's radar coming in from the local airport, these are all realities and you can not interact with it because we just don't have the tools to do so...A radio telescope looking at the sky will see things you couldn't see before... you see the ultraviolet you see the infra red spectrum, you see nebula...This could be something from under the oceans...yes from outer space. It seems day by day this is shifting from human technology, we don't know yet, but to something way more profound."

"...We are dealing with technology that is multigenerational...several generations ahead of what we would consider next generation technology...something that could be 50-1000 years ahead of us...They can outperform anything we have in our inventory and were pretty sure they can outperform our advasaries have in their inventory...then yes you can go down that rabbit hole of speculation...Quite frankly all options are on the table till their no longer on the table...."

"We are just now getting to the point that were accepting this as reality whatever this is"

"This could be something that is Extra hyper-dimensional. Extra -dimensional in a quantum physics sense, we know that the universe is full of shortcuts and loopholes."

"40 years or so you had this other paradigm (of science)called quantum physics. Someone once described it as a box sitting on the ground and in walks a dog and all the sudden two cates walk out."

Matthew 19:26
"Jesus looked at them and said, “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.”

"There are 100 cases or so out there displaying technology we don't have."

Jeremiah 32:27
Behold, I am the Lord, the God of all flesh: is there any thing too hard for me?


"I believe this is a topic that involves all of humanity."

"There seems to be some sort of intersection between these (UAP) sightings and our nuclear technology whether it be nuclear propulsion or nuclear power or generation and nuclear weapons systems. Furthermore those same observations have been seen overseas in other countries, they too have had the same incidences. That tells us this is global in nature."

"There seems to be an interest in water. These things tend to be seen in and around water."

"You don't expect a hypersonic aircraft to do a 90 degree turn."

I just said a few minutes ago. There has has never been a more urgent time to accept Christ as your personal lord and savior as right now.

The laws of physics allows for the miracles of old to be true. Yet man is still going to deny it. How much longer you think that gives humanity?

I'd believe this man and take what hes saying to heart if I was you.
 This is from someone who a few short weeks ago did not believe in UFO's UAP's, or anything like that. 

This isn't the 70's with the tin foil hats etc.

Like the one guy who left a comment on this video said:

"Let those who have wisdom understand, "As it was in the days of noah, so shall be the coming of the son of man. "


Exactly.

Eternity is at stake, choose wisely.







Hey Honey

 


I love you baby.



:-).

Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Sir Rodger Penrose Interview

 

Big bang is a continuation of a past universe – 2020 Nobel-winning physicist


Sophie Shevardnadze: Sir Roger Penrose, physicist, mathematician, philosopher, 2020 Nobel Prize winner in physics, so great to have you with us today, sir Roger. Right, so when reacting to your Nobel Prize, you said that black holes have become increased importance in our understanding of the universe. So let me ask you as a lay person, why is the study of black holes so important?


Roger Penrose: Well, there's more than one reason. They're important partly because they are such strange things. We're used to, you know, space continuing more or less as it's like, and to find these strange objects, which seem to be so different, where you, if you got too close, you might fall in and never be able to escape. And it's a very strange phenomenon. There are important for other reasons. One of the reasons has to do with the term entropy, I have to explain what entropy means. It's more or less randomness. And there is a thing called the second law of thermodynamics, which tells you that things get more and more random as time goes on. We have to keep the entropy down. This is how we exist, that's where we get the structure, structure forms and structure can be propagated, and we want to keep the entropy down all the time. Now in black holes, this is where it all ends up. And why we have a universe which is interesting and complicated, is really because – partly because of the black holes, because this is where ultimately, the entropy goes down the black holes, and we can then live off the residue, which is the low entropy of the rest of the universe. This is a simplified picture. But in a sense, although it's indirect, black holes are absolutely central to our existence. 


SS: Okay. At the centre of a black hole lies what's called the singularity, right –?


RP: Yes.


SS: – where density and mass become infinite. And the theory of relativity, which explains how gravity governs our universe breaks down in the centre of a black hole. And the gravity conditions there are too extreme for the theory of relativity to work, as far as I understand.


RP: Yes. That’s correct.


SS: So what kind of a theory about the universe will hold its own at the heart of a black hole?


RP: Well, we don't know, what you would seem to need is a theory of quantum gravity. Now, you see, there's an interesting story here. Because when you had proved my theorem, and that was to do with black holes, and this has to do with the singularities in the future, you could fall into the singularity, and it's the end. The opposite side of this picture is the beginning. We have in the Big Bang, we have another singularity. And when I did my work, Stephen Hawking picked up on it and developed it mainly for cosmology. And he was more interested in the singularity in the past. And I remember, I was in Princeton in the United States. And we were going to a conference, and we had to go in separate cars from Princeton. And I noticed in one of the cars in the backseat was Jim Peebles. Jim Peebles was going up, and I thought, ‘Oh, I'll take my chance and would ask Jim why don't cosmologists think of all these complicated kinds of singularities that you get in the future? We know many solutions of the Einstein equations, and they’re very complicated and you cosmologists don't seem to talk about them.’ And he looked at me and he said, ‘Because the universe is not like that.’ I thought, ‘Oh, my gosh, it's not, is it?’ Because the microwave background is all very, very regular all over the sky, tells us the Big Bang was very, very smooth and regular, and not like the singularities in the future. They're very different. So if we are to have a theory of quantum gravity, which explains the singularities, it's a very, very, very strange theory, which has to be different In the future from in the past, and that's not like the quantum mechanics we know. All the theories of physics apart from the statistical theory, this is the statistical phenomenon of the second law of thermodynamics, everything seems to be symmetrical in time, backwards or forwards. What's the difference? So I thought, this is very odd. There must be some very strange theory, which explains the difference. For many, many years, I tried to think of a strange theory of quantum mechanics and I didn't get anywhere. But my student, Paul Tod, had a different way of thinking about the beginning. I'd thought about it a little myself, but he really worked it out. But the main point is, according to Paul's idea, is that you could extend the universe to before the Big Bang. That is to say, our Big Bang is the continuation of the remote future of what I call a Previous Aeon. Now the word aeon, I like to spell it aeon, that’ one of the spellings, it's a word which I looked it up in the dictionary to make sure it was not a million years or some length of time, it's an indefinite length of time. So I'm calling an infinite length of time. So our Aeon began with a Big Bang, and will continue to this remote future. There was an aeon, I say, prior to ours, its remote future became our Big Bang, and signals can get through. And two types of signals which we have explored – I had colleagues, one was with my Armenian colleague Vahe Gurzadyan, and we looked for signals, gravitational wave signals, from collisions between supermassive black holes, the waves coming out from the previous aeon, we could see them, and we believe we do see them. And a Polish group also looked and they also concluded that they see them. Nobody pays any attention. Because this is not the usual cosmology.


SS: You’ve written in your book where you're quite sceptical about the current application of quantum mechanics in physics, which seems to be quite in vogue right now. And you say that in the real world, quantum mechanics doesn't make much sense, hence Schroedinger’s cat being a paradox. But even if it’s hard to grasp, this paradoxical nature of it, with non-locality, superposition, and other mind-blowing aspects, does that mean it’s necessarily wrong?


RP: I think you're talking about my book ‘Fashion, Faith, and Fantasy in the New Physics of the Universe’? Yes, do express scepticism. Let me talk about the faith еhat is the quantum mechanics. And what I'm trying to say, as you mentioned the Schroedinger’s cat, and Schroedinger himself is trying to say that there is a problem with quantum mechanics, people tend to interpret it a little differently from Schroedinger himself. Schroedinger was saying, ‘Well, according to my equations’, matching Schrodinger talking, ‘you could have a cat, which is dead and alive at the same time’. And he's really saying, using this example, this is ridiculous. And that you couldn't have a dead and alive cat at the same time. The consequences of his own equation is that you have a cat which is dead and alive at the same time. Quantum mechanics is inconsistent with itself. This is sometimes people say quantum mechanics is the best theory of physics we have ever had. I understand why they say that. But theory is inconsistent with itself. And I don't think a theory that good should be self inconsistent. Now you see, since quantum mechanics work so well, people don't like to use the word inconsistent. They like to say, ‘Oh, it's it's amazing, or it's incomprehensible, or it's mysterious’, see? But I say, it can't be quite right. And this is what Dirac says this is what Einstein and what Schroedinger says. It's not quite right.


SS: Okay, so I get your point, because it's provable, and unprovable, and you're saying the same thing about the string theory, which is also quite popular nowadays, and offers a very fantastical parallel universe-laden worldview. But for you, it doesn't hold up because of lack of hard experimental evidence. So is it just our current limitations in our experiments? Or is the string theory completely improvable?


RP: I think there's a big difference between sting theory and quantum mechanics. String theory has no evidence to support it. Quantum mechanics has an enormous amount of evidence to support it. So there is no comparison. See, I don't like string theory very much. You see when I first heard about string theory, I did like it. It was explained to me by Leonard Susskind  and I thought it was a very beautiful idea and I was quite taken by it. But when I learned it had to have a space-time that was 26 dimensions, I said, ‘Okay, no’. When they got it down to 10 dimensions – still no, that's wrong. If there's four dimensions, one time through space, and if you tie up the other ones into a little ball, and it comes too small to see, that doesn't help, it doesn't work very well. I don't think it works. So I formed the idea quite early, that that theory is not correct whereas quantum theory is certainly correct to a large level. It may not be completely correct but at one end of the scale, it is very, very close to be correct. So you have to say, what is it that makes it not quite correct? Well, that is where gravity comes in. So what I say is the union between general relativity and quantum mechanics is not that you bring the machinery of quantum mechanics to bring it into the fold of quantum mechanics. No, it's an even-handed marriage, there has to be give on one side and on the other side. Sure, Einstein's theory, when you look at tiny little space is 10 to the minus 33 centimeters, okay, maybe quantum gravity plays a role there. Maybe in the singularities, yes, you've got the sort of problem that comes in. But the main place where quantum mechanics and gravity have an effect on each other is the effect of gravity on quantum mechanics. It's the other way around. And this is to explain the collapse of the wavefunction. So I think, sure, we need to study how they interplay with each other, but don't have a view that quantum mechanics must be left intact, you must say, take the view that quantum mechanics must yield in the circumstances of the collapse of the wavefunction to gravity.


SS: Sir Penrose, you have a rather daring theory of your own about human consciousness, which is rooted in quantum mechanics. And one of your points is that human thinking is not a series of executed algorithms, which means that any attempts to actually create a truly functional artificial intelligence using current computing powers are doomed. So in your view, artificial intelligence that is equal to a human brain is an impossible thing, right? Do I get it correctly?


RP: You have it right. Yes, you have it right. I mean, I don't know what artificial intelligence will do. And you know, they can play chess very well. It plays Go very well. I have some ideas about that but nevermind. Sure, it can do computations. We know that. I mean, it can do arithmetic much better. I mean, my father's Brunsviga machine where you turn the handle and it did arithmetic, that can do arithmetic much better than I can. But that's not the point. You see this dates back to when I was an undergraduate student in Cambridge. You see, I was doing pure mathematics. I was doing algebraic geometry. Then when I was a graduate student I got interested in physics and in mathematical logic, those were two subjects. And I went to lectures by Hermann Bondi on general relativity that was not my subject, but yeah, interesting, very good lectures, wonderful expositions he made. Another course on quantum mechanics by Paul Dirac – beautiful, completely different style, and I got my understanding of quantum mechanics from Dirac. The third course was a course by a man called Steen on mathematical logic, and I had been very puzzled by Goedel’s theorem. You see, I thought Goedel’s theorem seems to prove that there are things in mathematics that you cannot prove. I thought this is not very pleasant. I don't like the idea. I went to the course of Steen. I learned about Turing machines, I learned about computability, I knew what that meant. I then learned about Goedel’s theorem, he described the theorem. He says if you have a system of logic, where you have axioms and rules of procedure, and provided you believe that the methods of proof within that system always give you a truth, so that say, you follow the rules and if the rules tell you true, do you believe it's true? You believe it's true if you believe the axioms are genuine, if you believe the rules of procedure only give you truths from all truths. Okay, so if it proves it's true, I believe it. Now if you have that point of view, what does Goedel do? He shows a statement, which says in a certain sense, ‘I’m not provable’. Now, you go through the procedures and you see yes, if you trust the rules, this statement is true and yet you cannot prove it by those rules. Now, those rules you could put on a machine, I knew about Turing machines. These algorithmic systems, sure, they're the same as computers. That means that this computational system, if you believe that what it says is true, if you believe all those segments, then you must believe the thing beyond its scope is true. Now, how do they do that? It does that by understanding, it understands what the rules mean. I mean, it doesn't because it doesn't have understanding. That's what I regard as the difference. What does your consciousness do that is not done by the algorithmic system, it understands what it's doing. Now, what is understanding? I don't know what understanding is, but whatever it is, it is something which is not following an algorithm. So it's not a computational procedure. Then I started to think, well, what can it be? Is it something in the world? And is it some mystical boozy whoosh that comes in from here, who knows where, that gives us some mysterious soul that enables us to understand things that a computational device cannot do? I didn't believe that. I thought, okay, what's going in our brains is material, it's just like the material in my computer. It's like a material in this lamp. It's like everything else. It's organised differently, perhaps, but it's still the same physical stuff. Okay, how do we see non-computable things in the world? Of course, now we know we can compute, not us but some people can compute black holes going around each other, swallowing each other, the signals they produce in gravitational waves. If you build LIGO detector, now the Nobel Prize, you can see these signals, which follow what the calculations tell you that black holes spiraling into each other do. Sure, you can do general relativity on a computer. What about quantum mechanics? Yeah, you can put Schroedinger’s equation on a computer. Then I go back to Dirac’s first lecture. What was his first lecture? He gave a talk where he talked about the superposition principle. He said, ”Okay, an electron can be here, or an electron can be here, or it can have a state where it's here and here at the same time.” He takes out his piece of chalk. He breaks it in two (I think he did break it in two). He says, “A piece of chalk can be here too, but it cannotbe clicked in two, and be here and here in the same time.” My mind wanders, I look out the window. I’m thinking about something else. Then he finished his explanation. He comes back, I have a vague memory, he's saying something about energy. I have no idea what he said. He goes on, he talks about quantum mechanics. So I'm left with this puzzle. What on earth is it that makes the piece of chalk behave differently from an electron? He must have explained it to me, but I didn't understand. So I go on thinking that must be where the problem lies, something about the collapse of the wavefunction, which makes small things when they get too big, they can't somehow exist in two places at once. The wavefunction collapses under the weight of gravity, in some sense. So that was kind of a vague thought. But I nevertheless thought that. If consciousness depends on that thing, there has to be in the brain somewhere where the collapse of the wavefunction whatever that physics is, is harnessed by the brain. Now it's the opposite of what many people used to think. Many people such as Vigna, and I believe, Von Neumann used to believe that least possible that it's conscious being observing the system that collapses the wavefunction. So it's our consciousness which collapses what we look at, Yyou see. My view is the opposite. It's not that. It's what makes the consciousness is the collapse. So it's the other way around. I have no idea. I thought of writing a book. Now, it took me a long time actually to galvanise myself to write the book. This was ‘The Emperor's New Mind’. Eventually, I did decide to write a book partly because I heard some of the – I think it was Marvin Minsky and Edward Fredkin, talking about what computers could do in the future. And you have these two computers talking to each other, and as you walk up  to the computer, they've already communicated more ideas with each other than the entire human race. And I thought, well, I know where you're coming from. But I don't have that view. I think understanding is something else, not a computer. And so I thought, well, I will try to explain my point of view. And then I realised I have to learn about neurophysiology. So I have a section where I learned about the Hodgkin-Huxley theory of nerve propagation. And I think, “Can I get enough coherence?” You have to have a quantum system to preserve itself up to a sufficient level, that it actually does something in the brain. Nerves? Well, the nerve signal propagates its electric field all over the brain. So it's no hope. I got to the end of the book, I had to finish it, I did something I didn't really believe in. And that was the end of the book. Rather, you know, a disappointment at the end. Nevertheless, a few people read my book, including Stuart Hameroff. Now, Stuart Hameroff is an anesthesiologist, that’s the way they call it in the United States –


SS: We actually did an interview with him. So I know exactly what you're talking about.


RP: Oh, did you? Interesting. Now he told me about microtubules. I didn’t even heard of them you see. So he said, ‘Okay, these little tubes, this is probably the sole solution to your problem’. I thought, gosh, is this another crackpot? I get crazy letters from people. And that's where I look it up, is a microtubule real? Yeah, it's real. So I thought this is very interesting. So I got to talk to him. He came to England, and we had long discussions and then we had many other discussions. Not only are they more promising, because they're small structures, but they're very symmetrical structures. So I was very impressed by the symmetry that you get in these little microtubules. And I thought there was a much better chance. So we then got together and we formulated our orchestrated objective reduction theory, which Stuart, I mean, he does the biology and the neurophysics and all that stuff, I don't understand that stuff, and I do the physics, he doesn't understand the physics very well. So we get together and complement each other in this way.


SS: Well, Professor, I mean, Sir Roger, it's been fascinating listening to you, I had millions of questions prepared for you. But instead, we had this brilliant lecture on your behalf on all existing theories, and which of them stand ground and which not. And I thought, this is much more interesting than me asking you silly questions. So thank you so much for this wonderful insight into how our world functions beyond this dimension. So thank you very much. And if possible, maybe we can do this one more time.


RP: My pleasure. I've enjoyed it.


SS: Thank you so much, Sir Roger.


RP: Thank you. Goodbye.

Hey honey

 



I love you sweetheart.

Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Something In The Air

 




"Call out the instigators

Because there's something in the air

We've got to get together sooner or later

Because the revolution's here, and you know it's right

And you know that it's right

We have got to get it together

We have got to get it together now..."


Deal.

Hey Honey

 



I love you so much sweetheart :-).


TTYS Baby

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

Rapture Links

 

Got Questions Links:


What are the strengths and weaknesses of the pretribulational view of the rapture (pretribulationism)?


What are the strengths and weaknesses of the midtribulational view of the rapture (midtribulationism)?


What are the strengths and weaknesses of the posttribulational view of the rapture (posttribulationism)?


Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins  in their book,  

"Are we living in the end times?"

 List the following as Rapture passages:


John 14:1-3 

Romans 8:19, 

1 Corinthians 1:7-8, 

1 Corinthians 15:51-53, 

1 Corinthians16:22, 

Philippians 3:20-21, 

Philippians 4:5, 

Colossians3:4, 1 

Thessalonians 1:10, 

1 Thessalonians 2:19, 

1 Thessalonians4:13-18, 

1 Thessalonians 5:9, 23, 

2 Thessalonians 2:1 

1 Timothy 6:14, 

2 Timothy 4:1,8, 

Titus 2:13, 

Hebrews 9:28, 

James5:7-9, 

1 Peter1:7, 13, 

1 Peter 5:4, 

1 John 2:28-3:2, 

Jude 1:21, 

Revelation 2:25, 

Revelation 3:10. 


And this is their list of Second coming passages:


Daniel 2:44-45, 

Daniel 7:9-14, 

Daniel 12:1-3, 

Zechariah 14:1-15, , 

Zechariah 12:10, 

Matthew 13:41, 

Matthew 24:15-31, 

Matthew 24:64 

Mark 13: 14-27, 

Mark 14:62, 

Luke 21, 25-28, 

Acts 1:9-11, 

Acts 3:19-21, 

1 Thessalonians 3:13, 

2 Thessalonians1:6-10, 

2 Thessalonians 2:8, 

1 Peter 4:12-13, 

2 Peter3:1-14, 

Jude1:14-15, 

Revelation 1:7,  

Revelation 19:11-20:6. 

Revelation 22:7, 12, 20.


They say:

When properly understood, the scriptures are quite clear on the subject. I believe they teach that the rapture will occur before the tribulation begins.”


Well I'll believe scripture before I'll believe what any man believes about it (And you should also in regards to what I say and write) and I wholeheartedly agree, “When properly understood, the scriptures are quite clear on the subject”


Matthew 24:29-30 

(Christ speaking)

“Immediately after the distress of those days “‘the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light; the stars will fall from the sky and the heavenly bodies will be shaken.’ “Then will appear the sign of the Son of Man in heaven. And then all the peoples of the earth[c] will mourn when they see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory.

There is no verse that says..."Immediately in the middle of the distress of those days", or... "Immediately before the distress of those days". That is the only verse like that and God himself in the flesh just told you when it's going to be. I wouldn't question it. If you fell for other interpretations just admit you were wrong ask for forgiveness and move on. Lord knows I've been deceived by Satan. We just don't have the time to get all hung up on it. Admit when were wrong, ask for forgiveness, move on. Pretty simple.

The Bible doesn't talk about the timing of the rapture a whole lot because the Lord God Almighty in the flesh just told you when it's going to be. 

It's a settled point. What is the question here? 

Other than...

Matthew 24:3-4

The Signs of the Times and the End of the Age

Now as He sat on the Mount of Olives, the disciples came to Him privately, saying, “Tell us, when will these things be? And what will be the sign of Your coming, and of the end of the age?”

And Jesus answered and said to them: “Take heed that no one deceives you."


Maranatha.





Hey




 

Honey. 

I love you baby.