It's Dangerous to be Right Part 3
by Pastor Mark Downey
March 22, 2015
Scripture Reading: Mt. 6:30-34
The psychology of identity denial is a preemption to Holocaust denial for those who deny Christ. In other words, it never ceases to amaze me how far the enemy can push the envelope, to expand upon the insignificance of trivia, in lieu of the most important truths to turn this world around. It is not only the polar opposites of racial integrity vs. mongrelization, but a juxtaposition of priorities. What did Jesus say the priority was? What is the first thing we should seek? Is it the proper spelling and pronunciation of a smorgasbord of sacred names? Is it deciding who or what is ultimately culpable for individual and national sins? Is it how wet or dry we baptize? Do any of these things have anything to do with our following Jesus' commands that will establish whether or not we are a Christian and whether it is possible or impossible for the Christian who obeys the command to save their nation? Jesus said, “Seek ye first the Kingdom of God, and His righteousness” Mt. 6:33. What exactly is the Kingdom? It is basically four things: people, land, laws and a king. One thing we know for sure is that “The Kingdom from Heaven suffers violence and the violent take it by force” Mt. 11:12. I mention the Holocaust, because of the enormity of its propaganda and the influence it's had upon winning the hearts and minds of people. When in fact, it is the greatest hoax of the 20th century compared to the very real slaughter of ten times the “6 million” and the astounding thing about it is that the perpetrators were jewish and the victims were White Christians. I speak, of course, of the Bolshevik red terror upon Russia. Let me quote the celebrated Pulitzer recipient and Russian dissident Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: “We cannot state that all Jews are Bolsheviks. But, without Jews there never would have been Bolshevism. For a Jew nothing is more insulting that the truth. The blood maddened Jewish terrorists had murdered 66 million in Russia from 1918 to 1957.”