2022/09/12
56. Armageddon and the Seventh Angel (Revelation 15-16)
The
last one of the seven plagues of the seven angels in the Book of Revelation is
the following verses. "And they [the three foul spirits] assembled them
at the place which is called in Hebrew Armaged'don. The seventh angel poured
his bowl into the air, and a loud voice came out of the temple, from the
throne, saying, 'It is done!'" (Revelation 16:16-17). The foul spirits,
or evil spirits, are the spirits of those who died demonized (Satanized) and
remained on earth with their wills firmly attached to their knowledge that has
incorporated "man's accidental information" (cf. this blog №49). Therefore,
the place the will of the evil spirits is separated from its human knowledge is
"Armaged'don," and it is indeed the place of an apocalyptic battle
for them. It is where the parable of the weeds that Jesus spoke of becomes real
(cf. Matthew 13:24-30). The will and knowledge of the evil spirits are divided
by "the reapers." Their knowledge, which has taken in "man's
accidental information," is separated from their will and bound in bundles
to be burned. And their will, after detached, becomes able to come into the
Mass, the destination of the "way for the kings" (Revelation 16:12). The
Eucharist brings these wills one by one to the Father by its own death when
eaten by the faithful. So, Armaged'don, a place where the volition and
knowledge of the evil spirits are separated, is the square at the gate, so to
speak, through which they come to the Mass. In order for the evil spirits to
get there, they need the faithful, who make the "way for the kings"
appear (cf. this blog № 55). The contents of the bowl, poured into the air by
the seventh angel, will illuminate and protect the faithful on their way to the
Mass (cf. this blog №50). God's illumination will be seen as a disaster to the
evil spirits who assembled the kings at Armaged'don. These verses of Revelation
coincide with the following seventh key passage in John 10. "And many
came to him; and they said, 'John did no sign, but everything that John said
about this man was true.' And many believed in him there" (John
10:41-42). These people, among those who believed in Jesus in the Gospel of
John, were the first people who cited John the Baptist and believed in Jesus. Things
that John the Baptist had said that they mentioned include the following words:
"Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!"
(John 1:29); "he was before me" (John 1:30); "this is
he who baptizes with the Holy Spirit" (John 1:33); "this is
the Son of God" (John 1:34). The very these people, who came to Jesus
and said that "everything that John said about this man was true,"
will become the Christians who, in the future after Pentecost, will manifest
"the way for the kings" and declare unequivocally, before the Holy
Eucharist in the Mass, the words that our heavenly Father had revealed to
Peter: "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God"
(Matthew 16:16) (cf. this blog № 32). Then, "a loud voice came out of
the temple, from the throne, saying, 'It is done!'" And "there
were flashes of lightning, voices, peals of thunder, and a great earthquake
such as had never been since men were on the earth, so great was that
earthquake" (Revelation 16:18).
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