The
Confrontation Between Russia and the US Found In the Bible, and the
Outcome Doesn't Look Very Good For America
by Rev. Paul
J. Bern
I'm
quite sure everyone is well aware by now of the rising tensions
between Russia and the United States over Syria, the Ukraine, and the
Crimean peninsula. Although the roots of US-Russo tension go back to
the late 1940's, let me give a brief history of events between the
two countries over the last 7 years or so. In March 2007, the U.S.
announced plans to build an anti-ballistic
missile
defense installation in Poland
along with a radar
station in the Czech
Republic. U.S. officials said that the system was intended to
protect the United States and Europe from possible nuclear missile
attacks by Iran or
North Korea.
Russia, however, viewed the new system as a potential threat.
Vladimir Putin warned the U.S. that these new tensions could turn
Europe into a "powder
keg". On 3 June 2007, Putin warned that if the U.S. built
the missile defense system, Russia would consider targeting missiles
at Poland and the Czech Republic. On 16 October 2007, Vladimir Putin
visited Iran to discuss Russia's aid to Iran's nuclear power program
and "insisted that the use of force was unacceptable."
Despite U.S.-Russia relations becoming strained during the Bush
administration, Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev and U.S. President Barack
Obama struck a warm tone at the 2009
G20 summit in London and released a joint statement that promised
a "fresh start" in U.S.-Russia relations.
In May
2012, Russian General Nikolay
Yegorovich Makarov said that there is a possibility of a
preemptive strike on missile
defense sites in Eastern
Europe, to apply pressure to the United States regarding Russia's
demands. In July 2012, two Tu-95
Bear bombers were intercepted by NORAD
fighters in the air
defense zone off the U.S. coast of Alaska, where they may have
been practicing the targeting of Fort
Greely and Vandenberg
Air Force Base. Later in August 2012, it was revealed that an
Akula-class
submarine had conducted a patrol within the Gulf
of Mexico without being detected, raising alarms of the U.S.
Navy's anti-submarine
warfare capabilities. Following the collapse of the government of
Viktor
Yanukovych in Ukraine,
in March 2014 Russia annexed Crimea
on the basis of a controversial referendum.
The U.S. submitted a UN Security Council resolution declaring the
referendum to be illegal; it was vetoed by Russia on March 15 that
same year; China abstained and the other 13 Security Council members
voted for the resolution. As unrest spread into eastern Ukraine in
the spring of 2014, relations between the U.S. and Russia worsened.
Russian support for separatists fighting Ukrainian forces attracted
U.S. sanctions.
After one bout of sanctions announced by President Obama on July 16,
2014, Putin said sanctions were driving Russia into a corner that
could bring relations between the two countries to a "dead-end”.
From March 2014 to 2016, six rounds of sanctions were
imposed by the US, the EU, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Japan.
Due to the situation concerning Ukraine, relations between the United
States and Russia are at their worst since the end of the Cold war.
In early October 2015, U.S. president Obama called the way Russia was
conducting its military campaign in Syria a "recipe for
disaster"; top U.S. military officials ruled out military
cooperation with Russia in Syria. Secretary of Defense Ashton
Carter and other senior U.S. officials said Russia's campaign was
primarily aimed at propping up Assad, whom U.S. president Barack
Obama had repeatedly called upon to leave power. Since then there
have been incidents where Russian aircraft have flown by, and
narrowly missed, US Navy ships patrolling in the North Sea and the
Caspian Sea. Russian military aircraft have been intercepted off the
Alaskan and California coasts while they were probing Us military
defenses. As tensions continue to rise between these two countries,
the risk of a nuclear exchange greatly increases. Being a resident of
a large metropolitan area, my only consolation in the event of a
nuclear attack would be that my death would likely be instantaneous.
These
worrisome trends can be found in the Bible in a number of places.
Since much has been written and discussed about the Book of
Revelation, with some of the teaching being very good and some not so
much, I will bypass that for now. Today, I want to compare what is
written in the Book of Jeremiah chapter 51 with current events, and I
find some alarming similarities. For example, verses 6-9 read as
follows: “Flee from Babylon! Run for your
lives! Do not be destroyed because of her sins. It is time for the
Lord's vengeance; he will repay her what she deserves. Babylon was a
gold cup in the Lord's hand; she made the whole earth drunk. The
nations drank her wine; therefore they have now gone mad. Babylon
will fall and be broken. Wail over her! Get balm for her pain;
perhaps she can be healed. We would have healed Babylon, but she
cannot be healed; let us leave her and each go to his own land, for
her judgment reaches to the skies, it rises as high as the clouds.”
Babylon?
What was the prophet Jeremiah writing about here? One thing for sure
– it wasn't the ancient Babylonian Empire, which had conquered
ancient Israel by the time this was written. Although there are a
number of places in the Bible that can be cross-referenced with this,
one of the most extensive is in Revelation chapter 18. To sum it up,
“mystery Babylon”, as it is called there, turns out to be the USA
(please see http://wp.me/p4uvMi-ep
for a fully detailed commentary, it's just a 5-minute read). So when
Jeremiah wrote that we should flee for our lives, it wasn't just a
suggestion. He was imploring all to whom this prophecy applied to get
the heck out of there. A lot of Americans – thousands each month,
both Christian and secular – have been going to live in other
countries for quite some time now, and they are leaving in increasing
numbers. Many of them say they made the decision to leave after
reading Jeremiah 51. “Do not be
destroyed because of her sins. It is time for the Lord's vengeance;
he will repay her what she deserves.”
What sins was Jeremiah writing about here? Where should I start, I
wonder? Polluting the earth would be one. The nations of the world,
with China being the worst offender and America following close
behind, have poisoned earth's land and waters to the point that huge
masses of animals are dying off all at once. More people suffer
respiratory ailments, from asthma to lung cancer, due to air
pollution than die each year from cigarette smoking!
Oppression
would be another sin. According to Wikipedia, the US is currently
involved in 75 conflicts all over the world. These wars of various
types are all being fought over natural resources for the exclusive
benefit of the American Empire and the super-rich elites who control
it, to the complete detriment of everyone else. This American
oppression continues unabated here at home too – just ask any
person of color or other minorities and you'll likely get an earful.
The other, and biggest, sin is the eviction of God and Jesus Christ
from our governments and our schools. If there are those who want
“freedom from religion” as they call it, then that is entirely
their affair. I will respect their beliefs so long as they respect
mine and that of other Christian folks, that's what the 1st
Amendment to the US Constitution is there for. To prevent school-age
kids from being taught about any theological subjects is a different
matter altogether. That's not what our Constitution says at all, and
humankind has offended God in this regard whether they realize it or
not! “...she made the whole earth
drunk. The nations drank her wine; therefore they have now gone mad.”
I don't think Jeremiah was talking about alcoholic beverages here, I
think he was referring to excessive wealth and profit –
materialism, if you like – resulting from the US being the economic
and military center of the world. After all, riches, fame and fortune
can all be intoxicating as well, and even more so.
“Babylon
will fall and be broken... We would have healed Babylon, but she
cannot be healed; … her judgment reaches to the skies, it rises as
high as the clouds.”
This could not be more clear. Other nations would have helped us out
when America falls, but there will be nothing anyone can do. “Her
judgment... rises as high as the clouds”. To me at least, this sure
looks like Jeremiah was describing a large mushroom cloud from an
atomic blast. As I said in the beginning, this looks very much like
it's not going to end well for the US. How far into the future this
prophecy is, no one can say for sure. The rest of chapter 51 is
equally inflammatory towards “Babylon”. Let me quote one more
time from further down in this same chapter: “You
who live by many waters and who are rich in treasures, your end has
come, the time for you to be cut off. The Lord Almighty has sworn by
himself: I will surely fill you with men, as with a swarm of locusts,
and they will shout in triumph over you.” (Jeremiah 51: 13-14)
“you who live by many waters” is an unmistakable reference to the
USA. What other country is besides many waters (having two coasts)
and rich in treasure? “To be cut off” means being cut down or
pruned decisively, When written in reference to a country, people or
nation it means military defeat. So this is unmistakable! We better
start praying for America, that we would be spared her fate! We had
better start praying for world peace as well, meaning the return of
Jesus Christ, because without him there can be no peace. In the
meantime, I'm considering applying for a passport, but I will still
be praying while I wait for it to arrive.
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