As False Prophecy Movie Hits Theaters, Will America’s Churches Fall to Its Corruption?

As False Prophecy Movie Hits Theaters, Will America’s Churches Fall to Its Corruption? October 1, 2018

I’m just going to go on record now as being completely against any church that might entertain the idea of having a movie night showing of “The Trump Prophecy.”

“The Trump Prophecy” is the new film that covers the so-called prophetic vision of firefighter, Mark Taylor.

According to Taylor, he had a visit from demons, angels, and eventually God in 2011, and was told at that time, “The Spirit of God says I’ve chosen this man Donald Trump for such a time as this.”

That was around the same time Donald Trump was on Fox News a lot, pushing the birther theory and offering a reward for President Barack Obama’s “real” birth certificate.

So we know it didn’t happen then. Donald Trump was not the next president. He wasn’t even in the running until 2015.

The movie was picked up by Liberty University’s film department and used as a Spring film project, pushed by Liberty President Jerry Falwell, Jr., a rabid Trump supporter.

Many Liberty students objected to the film and began an online petition to try and stop what they felt would ultimately, irreparably damage the school’s reputation.

That ship has already sailed, thanks to Falwell’s sniveling toadyism.

So the film will open in 1,200 theaters across the nation, beginning on Tuesday and Thursday.

Producer Rick Eldridge says his movie has a clear purpose: “Our end goal is to get people in theaters and see a film that will reignite patriotism and call people to pray for our country and leadership.”

That is something that can be stressed (and should be) without attaching it to an adulterous, abusive, unrepentant Manhattan con artist.

I’m just saying…

I mean, truly, I do not recall the Evangelical rush to pray for President Barack Obama.

I don’t even recall that same fervor for President George W. Bush.

I do remember a lot of Evangelical leaders in outrage over the adulteries and abuses of President Bill Clinton.

Am I wrong in believing standards and Christian principles should be on secure ground, at all times, for all leaders?

Meanwhile, some of those Evangelicals are willing to strip away any self-esteem or credibility to back Donald Trump.

Woodland Park evangelist Andrew Wommack said Satan was keeping some Christians from seeing how God is using Trump for divine purposes.

“I do believe that there is a demonic deception that is blinding people,” Wommack said in a video and article published July 4 by the Christian Post.

Wommack shouldn’t be leading anybody.

And James Dobson, the Focus on the Family founder who now leads the Family Talk ministry here, pleaded with members of Intercessors of America last January to pray and fast to protect Trump, reported Newsweek.

“This country will be in serious trouble if they’re successful in impeaching this man,” said Dobson, who endorsed Trump.

Unbelievable.

Indeed, Mark Taylor is riding high on his new fame as a “prophet of God,” although he does not belong to any church and sits under no church leadership or counsel.

In fact, according to Taylor, the majority of our churches are pretty much part of a satanic cabal.

Taylor says he has not been part of a church for years, and churches are absent from the Trump prophecy movie. One of Taylor’s prophecies condemns churches with 501©3 nonprofit tax status. “Ninety-five percent of our churches (are in) a covenant with the kingdom of darkness,” reads the prophecy.

Now, I have been markedly disappointed in some of our churches and their willingness to chase after the Trump lie, but I’ve never suggested any of them were satanic. I’ve only asserted that they’ve been misled by political pursuits.

Taylor also finesses his words by not calling himself a “prophet,” but a “prophetic voice.”

Yeah. That’s pretty much the same thing.

After grabbing Evangelical headlines with his Trump prophecy, Taylor got excited. He said the prophecy about Trump was only the start of the “words” given to him by God.

He has 23 of them, so far, and oddly enough, they almost all seem to hinge on alt-right conspiracy theories.

So, besides predicting two terms for Trump, wherein he’ll sit five Supreme Court justices, he also foresees the overturn of Roe v. Wade.

He sees a wave of Republican wins in the November midterms.

Within a few months, Taylor said in a Sept. 12 telephone interview, Trump will unleash “a wave of arrests against thousands of corrupt officials, many of whom are part of a massive Satanic pedophile ring.” Then, military tribunals that will “make Nuremberg look like a cakewalk” will prosecute and lock up thousands of treasonous Americans, including former President Barack Obama and other members of his administration, presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and fired FBI director James Comey. (Taylor claims this process already has started, but the news media, which he called “the enemy of the United States,” is “not giving people the truth.”)

Does any of that sound familiar?

If you’ve spent any time on social media and are familiar with QAnon and 4Chan message boards, it probably does.

Trump’s planned border wall (The spirit of God says, “The border, the border, is a 2000-mile gate, that’s flowing across with demonic hate. I will use my President to shut this gate and seal it shut.”)

Gee. Trump just called them rapists and murderers. This guy is saying they’re satanic.

Trump’s campaign promises to surround him with “only with the best and most serious people” (“I AM putting together America’s dream team”).

Ok. We can go ahead and call “BULL!” on this one.

Of course, no alt-right, Trumpian huckster would be complete without some love for Mother Russia.

(“The ties that were severed between America and Russia, will begin to mend” as the two nations partner to fight lSlS, the elite, the globalists and the Illuminati).

The Illuminati, eh?

Seriously. My Bible suggests that in the last days, Russia, along with Iran will rise up and make war against God’s people, Israel. Nowhere in the book does it suggest Russia will be the good guys.

Maybe Taylor should probably ease back on some of those “prophecies” when he admittedly rejects sitting under biblical teachings.

Taylor also prophesies that Pope Francis will be the last pope after God exposes his corruption; that “the light from the full moon … agitates the demonic, and brings out the worst in people,” and that “the Illuminati and the Freemasons are using a special frequency to change people’s DNA in order to make them oppose President Trump.”

I don’t really know what to say about that one, folks.

I get being upset at Pope Francis. He’s got a lot to answer for.

I don’t get the notion that the Illuminati and Freemason’s are changing people’s DNA, or that DNA has anything to do with our politics, even if it was possible to change it.

Hot Tip: It’s not.

Some are speaking out against the nuttiness of Taylor, thank goodness.

“You usually find biblical prophets speaking truth to power,” said John Fea, history professor at Messiah College in Pennsylvania and author of “Believe Me: The Evangelical Road to Trump.”

“The prophet Nathan condemned King David’s sin with Bathsheba. Nathan would never say what Trump’s court prophets have said: ‘I am going to give you a mulligan for this sin because you are going to appoint pro-life Supreme Court justices.’”

Exactly.

Maybe if Taylor studied the prophets of old and saw how God’s prophetic word was carried out, he’d see that there are few instances of God telling his prophets to ignore sin.

Brad Christerson, sociology professor at Biola University in Los Angeles, wrote about contemporary prophets and apostles in the 2017 book “The Rise of Network Christianity: How Independent Leaders and Changing the Religious Landscape.” He said he worries about the potential abuses of political prophecy.

“The followers of contemporary ‘prophets’ seem to have a high tolerance for error,” he said. “When bold predictions from prophets turn out to be wrong, as they often do, the prophets do not seem to lose support from the faithful, but move on and continue to make new predictions, many of which are used primarily to motivate the faithful to action, such as turning out to vote.”

This is not of God. Full stop.

As I pointed out last week, there are those who push the false theology of 7 mountain mandate, a belief that Christians are to storm the gates of various areas of culture (including politics) in order to make the world safe for the return of Jesus Christ, as if he needs us.

Taylor’s ridiculous [non] prophetic word on Trump is just another facet of falsehood being forced on the Body of Christ.

My hope is that no Bible-believing church falls for this nonsense, or promotes this movie and this false prophet in any way.

Pray, church, and be ever watchful, because the enemy and his foot soldiers are invading, and there will be a price to pay for falling asleep.

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