Wednesday, May 8, 2013

From Boston to Chechnya and back via France and the Age of Enlightenment

Click here to see what inspired: From Boston to Chechnya and back via France and the Age of Enlightenment



Judge Jeanine starts by referencing the Statue of Liberty and the message incribed thereon.  I think we might reevaluate the Statue of Liberty as just one more idol, a false god. It is likely to have been the devil inspiration and the french free masons who sent her to us. Certainly the statue could (should?) be seen as an affront to God for the worship it inspires. God in Christ are the Ones we are to worship in Spirit and in Truth. The Statue of Liberty has no relation to God and the church at all. If you ask me, the source of it, a French free mason and sculptor, had to be influenced by the devil who inspires the free mason occult society even to this very day! 

The references to "Liberty Enlightening the World" also suggest a connection with the Illuminati. I once thought the free masons just a cult, a weird playboy club, even if George Washington and Bill Clinton were both masons. But things are becoming know about masons and the powers above them that are a bit chilling. Truly the prince and power of the air does lead about the children of disobedience. Satan offered Jesus all the kingdoms of the world if Jesus would bow and worship him. Jesus refused him; other men have not!  Though God does superintend all that the devil does, it is true that the devil has some legal authority over those who do not follow God in Christ. And we know that the hierarchy of the Dark Kingdom attends the high places of the world, the seats of human governments being very much high places. Where ever power is found, satan will be found exercising it or coveting it.   

From wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statue_of_Liberty

The Statue of Liberty (Liberty Enlightening the World; French: La Liberté éclairant le monde) is a colossal neoclassical sculpture on Liberty Island in New York Harbor, designed by Frédéric Bartholdi and dedicated on October 28, 1886. The statue, a gift to the United States from the people of France, is of a robed female figure representing Libertas, the Roman goddess of freedom, who bears a torch and a tabula ansata (a tablet evoking the law) upon which is inscribed the date of the American Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776. A broken chain lies at her feet. The statue is an icon of freedom and of the United States: a welcoming signal to immigrants arriving from abroad.

Also from wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fr%C3%A9d%C3%A9ric_Bartholdi  

Bartholdi served in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 as a squadron leader of the National Guard, and as a liaison officer to General Giuseppe Garibaldi, representing the French government and the Army of the Vosges. In 1875, he joined the Freemasons Lodge Alsace-Lorraine in Paris. In 1871, he made his first trip to the United States, to select the site for the Statue of Liberty, the creation of which would occupy him after 1875.


Above is a photo of Bartholdi and below a picture of "the sign of the Master (mason) of the Second Veil" also known as the "sign of Napoleonic Grandeur." There is some controversy over Napolean (the French would be tyrant) being a Free Mason, but there is none about the sign of the second veil. 





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