Sunday, December 23, 2012

The Illuminati Card Games are just that, a game!

Illuminati is a standalone card game made by Steve Jackson Games inspired by The Illuminatus! Trilogy by Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea.

The game has ominous secret societies competing with each other to control the world through sinister means, including legal, illegal, and even mystical. It was designed as a "tongue-in-cheek rather than serious" take on conspiracy theories.

It contains groups named similarly to real world organizations, such as the Society for Creative Anarchy and the Semiconscious Liberation Army. It can be played by two to eight players.

Depending on the number of players, a game can take between one and six hours.

The Illumanti Card Game is just what it claims to be, a game.

It is not a means by which the Illuminati are allegedly preparing the world for every dastardly and nasty deed they have in store for humanity.

It should not then be referred to in that context once an event such as 911 has taken place as being the Illuminati warning the world beforehand.

Any suggestion in that area should not be treated with any real seriousness at all.

There are yet other sections of Freemasonry that stand over and above the Illumanti.

Accordingly, the Illuminati are not at the top of heap when it comes to designing world wars, or even choosing whom their Antichrist is going to be and when they intend to bring him forth.

Those in the Illuminati may number into the thousands but those who are in the top rungs of the world government may number but a scant few.

Those who designed to game must have had some insider knowledge relative to the plans of the Illuminati but that still does not prove that those who designed the game were Illuminati, and any such suggestion contrary to that should be treated with disdain and genuine scepticism.

WHY I AM NOT A DISPENSATIONALIST; John Nelson Darby is recognized as the father of dispensationalism later made popular in the United States by Cyrus Scofield's Scofield Reference Bible. Charles Henry Mackintosh, 1820–1896, with his popular style spread Darby's teachings to humbler elements in society and may be regarded as the journalist of the Brethren Movement. CHM popularised Darby more than any other Brethren author. As there was no Christian teaching of a “rapture” before Darby began preaching about it in the 1830s, he is sometimes credited with originating the "secret rapture" theory wherein Christ will suddenly remove His bride, the Church, from this world before the judgments of the tribulation. Dispensationalist beliefs about the fate of the Jews and the re-establishment of the Kingdom of Israel put dispensationalists at the forefront of Christian Zionism, because "God is able to graft them in again," and they believe that in His grace he will do so according to their understanding of Old Testament prophecy. They believe that, while the methodologies of God may change, His purposes to bless Israel will never be forgotten, just as He has shown unmerited favour to the Church, He will do so to a remnant of Israel to fulfill all the promises made to the genetic seed of Abraham. I am not a dispensationalist; it is unbiblical.