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May 6, 2025 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
48:02
We've ALREADY been granted unconditional salvation by God, and it applies to EVERY PERSON on Earth
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You know, given the Christian Zionist support for war right now, you know, Israel and so on, I've been asking a lot of questions publicly about the way Christianity is practiced or the way it's taught or some of the history of Christianity, etc.
And I want to give you an update on that because I had a really wonderful thing happen.
I'm recording this on Monday.
And I had posted a message to social media that asked some pretty direct questions about the nature of the Bible and Christianity, etc.
And I got a lot of very helpful...
Responses today, for some reason, this one really resonated with a lot of people.
I got a lot of great responses and I even spent over an hour on a call with my Bible mentor who really helped bring a lot of clarity on all of this to me.
And understand, by the way, I'm going to read you my post or part of it and go into, I think, the interpretation of what's happening spiritually and in the eyes of God, etc.
But I always want to preface that by saying that I'm a student.
I'm on a journey just like you.
None of us have all the answers.
And I never try to force my beliefs about God or the Bible on anybody else.
You are, of course, completely welcome to have your own beliefs.
And, you know, I've taught Bible sermons to the best of my ability, best of my knowledge, you know, comet impact theory and things like that.
Yeah, you know, some Christians think it's interesting.
Some Christians don't believe any of that at all, and that's okay.
I mean, I think it's right to be curious and to ask questions, and I think God wants us to think about what the Bible says, not just sort of swallow it blindly.
So I posted the following.
I said, I still haven't received a satisfactory answer on this rather obvious question from any Christian follower or pastor, etc.
And here's the question.
If knowing Christ is the only way to get to heaven, as nearly all Christians currently believe, then what happened to all the people who lived on earth before Christ was born?
And that would include literally every person in the Old Testament, plus Mesoamericans, ancient Chinese, Indians, Amazonian tribes, you know, it would include ancient Africans, etc., indigenous people all over the world.
Do Christians, this is the question I ask, Do Christians actually believe that all those people were sent to hell by God, even if they were good people who lived in alignment with God's teachings?
Did Noah go to hell because he lived long before Christ existed?
I mean, I'm asking this, you know, facetiously.
Obviously, I don't think Noah went to hell.
I think Noah went to heaven.
But I ask the question, did Abraham go to hell?
David, Jeremiah, Moses, you know, you get the idea.
And I said, I have yet to hear a serious answer on this.
Well, now I've received a lot of serious answers on this, and some from Catholics, by the way, who had interesting explanations.
I received support documents and links, and for example, one person sent me links about how it's not considered a sin to be ignorant of the existence of Jesus.
So that if you are legitimately I forgot the word that was used.
Innocently ignorant of the existence of Jesus, then you cannot be punished by God for simply being ignorant.
So that was one explanation.
But the best explanation I got was from my Bible mentor, who has helped me over the years.
And he's been very patient with my journey as I attempt to understand.
I laugh at myself about Attempting to understand everything about the Bible and what God wants for us, etc.
But he gave me such incredible clarity, and I want to pass this along to you because I think you might find this valuable, too.
You may have the same questions I have.
In fact, if you're a curious, intelligent person like I am, you probably have had these questions, and maybe you've already answered them.
But if you haven't answered them...
You might find these answers to be really, really helpful.
And here's the first answer.
And he gave me from early Old Testament, Deuteronomy 29. This is God's renewal of his covenant with the people.
The people that Moses was trying to represent, etc.
And remember, this was long before the birth of Christ.
This is after Moses led the Israelites out of captivity to Egypt, etc.
And as my Bible mentor explained it, this covenant was made between God, this renewed covenant, was made between God and all people on earth.
All people.
Not just the Israelites, and not just people of the Middle East, not even just Christians, but all people.
And it's a covenant of salvation.
And what it means is that salvation is a free gift from God to all people on earth.
And as my Bible mentor explained it to me, and I believe I'm being faithful to his words, that you do not earn salvation.
It has already been given.
Okay, so that's a first big aha.
And I know some people will say, what?
What do you mean you don't earn salvation?
Well, salvation is different from eternal rewards, which we'll get to.
It makes sense, actually.
Stay with me on this.
But salvation is already given.
You don't have to earn it.
In other words, God will save your soul.
Doesn't mean that there won't be some ramifications or repercussions or consequences if you...
We're a wicked person, for example.
Again, we'll talk about that in a minute.
But God has already saved your soul and the soul of everyone on planet Earth.
And this covenant was made long before Christ.
And what this means in this covenant, which I'll read some of it for you here from Deuteronomy 29. This covenant means that earning salvation, well, it doesn't even have to be earned.
Going to church does not get you salvation.
Reading the Bible does not get you salvation.
Even saying that Christ is my Savior is, although perhaps that is beneficial, especially if you're learning from the words of Christ, etc.
But according to God, that is not a requirement for salvation because he granted all of humanity salvation long before the birth of Christ.
And if you read Deuteronomy 29, let's start with verse 9. And this is Moses speaking to the Israelites that he had gathered at the request of the Lord, by the way.
And he says, And by the way, I'm going to continue, but I do want to remind you that none of this was written In English, obviously because English did not exist for many centuries later.
So this was all probably written originally in Hebrew, and so it's been translated.
We'll talk about translations here in a minute, too.
So verse 11, together with your children and your wives and the foreigners living in your camps who chop your wood and carry your water, you are standing here in order to enter a covenant with the Lord your God.
A covenant?
The Lord is making with you this day and sealing with an oath to confirm you this day as his people, that he may be your God as he promised you and as he swore to your fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
I am making this covenant with its oath, not only with you, this is the critical part, not only with you who are standing here with us today in the presence of the Lord, our God, But also with those who are not here today.
And who are those who are not here today?
Everybody else on earth.
All the other people were not there that day.
And so that answers one of my questions, which is, well, what about the Hindus?
What about all the Chinese and the Han Dynasty that was, by the way, far more populous than was the Middle East and Jerusalem in the day?
Right around the birth of Christ.
You know, the Middle East at that time was not, by any stretch of the imagination, the predominant population of people or even the dominant civilization on the earth.
There were other civilizations in Mesoamerica.
There were maybe more tribal groups in Western Africa, but the Han Dynasty was already well-developed at the time.
And in India, There were, of course, Indian civilizations and, you know, Hinduism, etc.
that existed in that time.
Now, of course, Islam didn't appear until centuries later, but there was Hinduism and there was the Chinese dynasties.
So there were a lot of other people in the world beyond what Christ could have even interacted with, you know?
And all these other people could not have known Christ.
And even today, there are many people all over the world who have no interaction with Christianity or Christ or the Bible or churches or anything of that kind.
But God made a covenant with all of them.
And salvation has been given to everyone.
So you might be thinking, well, I thought salvation came from...
Christ, that he's the one who offered us salvation.
Well, as it's explained to me, at least this is my understanding, God had already offered salvation and Christ offers redemption from sin.
So Christ redeems the sins of man so that men and women, humans who are unclean, their souls may even exist in the presence of God.
So, this is like a one-two punch, a two-for-one special.
God already saved you, but it is important to allow God to work through you.
So, if you reject God, then that's different.
And we'll talk about ramifications.
If you're a Satanist or whatever, if you...
working through you, then yeah, that's different.
But you don't have to earn salvation.
However, thankfully Christ came along and died for the sins of all people everywhere, which also includes all people outside of Christianity, people outside of the Middle East.
And also, as it was explained to me, it includes people who had already previously died before Christ.
So Christ came along and redeemed even the dead of their sins.
And in essence, at least as I understand it, Christ has redeemed all future people for all their sins too.
So Christ was sent to us by God as a super enlightened being in human form in order to teach and then to redeem.
Okay, but God had already made a covenant with all of humanity that your soul would be saved by God.
Now, that doesn't mean that there aren't consequences for sin.
So, again, this is how I understand it, because even in my conversation with my Bible mentor, I was quoting Revelation and that list of all the sins that If you've done those things, if you're a coward, if you're a liar, if you're a thief, if you're a murderer, etc., God sends you to the lake of fire, which I always thought the lake of fire was hell.
And it turns out, at least according to my Bible mentor, that that's not the case.
It's not actually hell.
It is the judgment of God that happens before your soul is ultimately purified.
And then you are eventually resurrected with a new body, new form on earth in the new world.
All things new, you know, Revelation 22 and beyond.
Which I have taught that, from my perspective, I thought that God destroys all of earth with the seven comets and the seven trumpets and then that heaven is in a different realm.
That is not of the earth because there's no sun, there's no moon, etc.
And if you've heard any of my sermons, I've talked about how God shakes every mountain flat, destroys every wall, every city, kills everybody.
But then there's kind of like a post-comet rapture where all the souls are lifted up and judged and then the good ones join him in heaven and the evil ones are sent to hell.
Well, my Bible mentor says that's not...
His interpretation is that there's a new heaven on earth and that everybody is saved, but those who were wicked suffer through potentially a thousand years of swimming in the lake of fire with all the other wicked people, so it's a kind of limbo, it's a kind of hell on earth, at least if I'm understanding it correctly.
So how does God actually judge those who are wicked?
And how does God give you credit, so to speak, not that we have a point system or anything, but how does he give you credit for your deeds?
Don't your deeds matter?
Because I believe deeds matter, and I've had this debate with some Christians who say, no, deeds don't matter at all.
Only faith matters.
You know, you've probably heard that from Christians, or maybe you believe that yourself.
I don't know.
But I've heard that from people like, all you have to do is say that You accept Christ as your Savior, and it doesn't matter what your deeds are.
You don't have to help anybody.
And I've always disagreed with that.
Completely disagreed with that, because, well, that's not what Christ taught, that the deeds actually do matter.
That's important.
We must help others.
We must act in a way that is selfless, a way that is for the greater good of other human beings.
Even if it costs us something personally.
And that's exactly what my Bible mentor said.
He said, look, in the big picture, God is trying to take you from a state of being self-centered and transition you into a state or uplift you into a state of being other-centered.
So that is obviously putting others first, taking actions and performing deeds that That are gifts to others or that help uplift humanity or uplift human knowledge or freedom or kindness or freedom from suffering or help clothe the unclothed or feed the starving, etc.
That the deeds matter.
And this is what God actually sees in you.
As it was said to me, God sees your light.
God sees your light and Jesus knows your deeds.
And whether or not you go to church or read the Bible or whether or not you even know Jesus in your life, God knows your light.
And if you are a person who is a person of love and kindness and light with God that is being other-centered rather than self-centered, God looks upon you favorably.
And that makes sense to me.
That's actually very consistent with what I have believed this whole time, that knowing Jesus is a great experience.
It's a great advantage.
It's a great, you know, Jesus is a great mentor.
His lessons are timeless and profound, obviously.
But all these people around the world who never knew Jesus, they can still be seen as good people in the eyes of God.
Worthy people, redeemed people, if they earned that through their deeds.
And that makes a lot of sense to me.
Now, I know there are some Christians who get pretty bent about all of this because then they challenge you and say, well, you're saying that Buddhists can go to heaven.
Yeah, that's exactly...
I am saying Buddhists can go to...
Of course they can.
Why wouldn't Buddhists be able to go to heaven?
And, you know, Some of the more mainstream Christians, well, they don't know Christ, or they haven't accepted Christ.
But God made a covenant with all humans, and they fulfill the covenant with God if they're a good person.
Maybe there's some evil Buddhists somewhere who are sinister, wicked Buddhists, but I doubt it.
I think most Buddhists are good people.
I mean, most people overall are good people.
So God's covenant wasn't limited to just Jews, for example.
Even though that's the group.
I mean, the Israelites, that's who Moses had gathered there in Deuteronomy.
But he didn't limit it to just Jews.
He didn't say, only you.
He said, everybody who's not here, too.
That's everybody, everybody.
Like everybody on the planet.
Now, your eternal rewards are determined by your deeds.
So that's the form of God's judgment.
If you've been a very, very good person, Then you will receive a higher reward from God on Judgment Day, which is, of course, after this physical life.
Whatever may result in that.
Whether it's just a natural death or a nuclear war or a giant seventh trumpet space comet slamming into Earth.
Whatever it is, your physical body that you're in right now is not eternal, but your soul is eternal.
There's going to be eternal rewards assigned to you based on what you have done.
How have you treated others?
Have you overall treated people with kindness?
Have you overall operated in a way that is aligned with God's teachings, like protecting life, protecting the innocent, which is highly relevant given the situation with Israel right now?
Starving children to death is not a good...
You don't want that on your record in your book of life when God's judgment day comes.
You advocated starving children.
Okay, that's a tick mark.
You get a penalty for that.
And you might have to be subjected to some extra redemption, some extra reconciliation lessons or however that works in heaven with your soul.
But according to my Bible mentor, everybody's saved, even the sinners.
It's just that there are different consequences in the afterlife.
Your eternal rewards are earned, good or bad.
If you're a horrible, wicked person your whole life and you treat everybody like dirt and you are the cause of pain and suffering and destruction, you're going to have a horrible afterlife, probably.
For quite some time, maybe a thousand years, who knows?
I'm not sure time's going to work the same, but who knows?
And then you're going to be redeemed.
You're going to be purified.
And hopefully you will learn the lesson by that time.
But if you've been a good person, like a really good person, despite your ethnicity or your religion or whether you go to church or not, etc., you will have much greater rewards.
And remember, salvation is a free gift from God that has already been granted to all of us.
All right, so that's what I learned from some of the feedback today.
And I am fully aware that some Christians will go crazy hearing some of that.
Like, no, it's not that way.
It's this way.
And it's okay.
It's all right.
What I just shared with you makes sense to me.
Now, I also posted an article.
This is before I had the conversation with my Bible mentor, but I posted an article called Jesus Never Spoke English.
It says, historical facts on why the Bible you're probably reading has been altered, redacted, or hidden from much of its original meaning.
And I posted that story on Natural News.
Now, you can go check it out on naturalnews.com.
And what I was trying to point out, I've heard from some Christians that say, well, the Bible is the Word of God.
It's the only Word.
Like, this is the absolute Word of God.
God wrote it.
And, of course, that's not even true at all.
God didn't write it.
He worked through men to pen the Bible, and he wrote a lot more through men that is missing from the Bible.
Remember, this is just part of my quest for knowledge and understanding.
Just want to know how God's creative universe actually works.
And so imagine my frustration learning that some of the translations of the Bible are not faithful to the original words.
And the original words were written in Hebrew or Aramaic, typically, or Arabic.
And Greek in some cases.
And the entire English language did not even exist.
I mean, old English in modern-day Western Europe didn't even come around until, what, like the 6th century or something like that with some Germanic influences there.
I mean, if you heard English in the year, you know, 550, you probably wouldn't even understand what they're saying.
Like the English we speak today.
But that was centuries after Jesus even lived.
And yet, most of us Christians in America were reading the Bible in English and thinking that these are the words that Jesus spoke.
And technically, Jesus didn't speak any of these words because he never spoke English.
He spoke Aramaic, which almost none of us can read or speak.
So, like, that's point number one.
I wish I could read the original language, the original, you know, reports of what Jesus said in his own language.
So I pointed that out, and then I pointed out that, you know, look, the Bible was created by men.
It was recorded by men, it was written by men, and it was translated by men, and it was redacted.
Men are fallible.
Men have perception bias.
Men have memory bias or memory loss.
Men have sometimes political agendas, of course, right?
I mean, obviously, lots of political agendas.
So they would shape the different books of the Bible over time in order to fulfill their desires of what they wanted the people And then they called it the Word of God when it actually wasn't always faithful to the Word of God.
And as a result, the Bible that we have today is, of course, it's not a carbon copy of either what Jesus said or what God would want us to know.
It doesn't mean that it doesn't have value.
It has tremendous value.
And I've greatly enjoyed learning from the Bible.
But we know that throughout history, We have been misled often by various institutions, whether they be governments or the Vatican or whatever, that has its own agenda and tries to put an overlay onto things for its own reasons to influence us.
And we need to be aware that that can also apply to the Bible, because if we want truth, we want the Word of God, we want the Word of Jesus.
Then we need to understand the history of how the Bible came to be.
And I believe that a personal relationship with Jesus is critical to really understanding all of this.
And the Bible can be a great starting point for that, by the way.
You know, I'm not rejecting the Bible at all.
I'm just saying we need to go deeper than just the English translated words.
Part of pointing this out, I even asked my AI engine, Enoch, which is named after, of course, the Book of Enoch, which is one of the deleted books of the Bible.
You know, some irony there, but also there's the Book of Giants, etc.
So Enoch represents hidden knowledge or lost knowledge.
Well, I asked Enoch to give me a list of some of the contradictions that are in just the Gospels.
Just the first four books there of the New Testament.
And if you look at Matthew and Luke, they provide accounts of the birth of Jesus.
And Matthew and Luke, they have very different accounts.
And for example, Matthew traces Jesus' lineage through Joseph to King David via Solomon, listing 28 generations from David to Jesus.
But Luke...
Traces it through a completely different line back to David via Nathan, not Solomon, listing 42 generations.
And there are many other examples of this, like the birthplace of Jesus and Jesus' travel and the flight to Egypt and then his return to Nazareth, etc., where Matthew, Mark, or Luke, or John, in various renditions of this, various retelling of it, they contradict each other.
If a Christian, a typical Christian, comes along and says, well, you can't question the Bible.
It is the Word of God, and every word is God's truth.
Well, then, which story is, let's say if there are two competing stories from Matthew and Luke, which story is the Word of God and which story is false?
See?
Because they both can't be true.
Right?
So, now...
You might say, well, that's nitpicking.
You can't nitpick the Bible.
I'm not.
I don't care how many generations there were.
I care about what Jesus taught us, not how many generations he was separated from David.
But you can't say that every word in the Bible is always true and it's always the Word of God because there are so many cases of the words contradicting each other.
Like, who visited Jesus' tomb?
So, in Matthew, it says, well, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary visited his tomb.
In Mark, it says there was Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, and Salome.
And then in Luke, it says, well, it's Mary, it's Joanna, and then it's other women, too.
It's like, wait a second.
And then in John, it's only Mary.
So, here's four different accounts of who visited Jesus' tomb.
Or even the question of was the stone in front of the tomb, was it already rolled away or not?
In Matthew it says an angel rolls away the stone in front of the women, but in Mark it says that the women find that the stone was already rolled away.
And again, you might say, well, that's nitpicking.
Who cares about who rolled away the stone?
Well, what about Jesus' last words on the cross?
That seems kind of important for Christian history.
Well, Matthew and Mark, Have a totally different account of Luke, which is totally different from John.
So there's three different versions of the last words of Jesus on the cross.
So again, I'm not trying to nitpick.
I'm not saying that his words weren't important, but which words were actually said?
Which words are the word of God?
And honestly, we don't know the answer.
And there are, you know, seemingly endless examples of this.
And we have to understand, again, that the Bible was written by men.
Just like you and I, we have imperfect memories.
We have imperfect perceptions.
We have biases of the world around us.
And when we write down what we see, even if we all see the same event, we will write down very different accounts.
And some of those accounts are more accurate than others, you know?
And some of those accounts are not accurate at all.
And some of those accounts end up in the Bible.
So it doesn't take away from the core spiritual lessons, obviously.
And I'm not saying that it makes the Bible useless by any means.
It's just that the kind of blind obedience to every word, like every word must be true.
In English, makes no sense to me.
In fact, it's nonsense.
Because a lot of the words have been wildly mistranslated, and some of them intentionally mistranslated, in order to pervert the original meaning.
And I think even Old Testament Hebrew scholars will admit to this, or maybe they're even talking about this publicly, there are a lot of mistranslations.
I wish I could read Hebrew.
I wish, honestly, I wish I could read and speak every language in the world because that would make understanding history so much easier, but not enough time in one human lifetime probably to learn all those languages.
So, you know, we do the best we can.
But when we are reading an English translation, that is but an echo of the original words.
And so we have to enrich our experience and our knowledge.
Through other ways to know God.
And that means having a personal relationship.
And that means, at least in my opinion, seeing God in the life that surrounds us.
And I've said this before, and I've even published sermons on this, but I see God's creation everywhere, all around me, in the herbs, in the food, in the nutrients, in the trees, in the grass, in the animals.
In every living thing that we are blessed with, right?
So the miracle of creation, I mean, yes, you can read about it in the pages of the Bible, and that's important, but you can also experience it.
You can experience it in watching a stream, or watching a tree, or marveling at the night sky, and it's like, wow, this was created.
You know, there are so many ways to experience the presence of God in your life.
And I say that to encourage you to not limit it to just one way.
You know, hopefully we can experience God in our lives through a multitude of ways and we can understand that God wants us to ask questions.
God wants us to help others.
God expects us to be good people.
And it's not even really that complicated.
I mean, most of us know in our gut what is good and what is evil.
You kind of know it when you see it.
And being good, I've even said this before, being good and getting into heaven is not difficult.
It's really not.
And I think there's a tendency to vastly overcomplicate it.
And I think there's also an institutional bias in the church, whatever, especially the megachurches, etc., where they want You know, control over people.
They want to have control, and they want to tell you that the only way to God is through them.
Like, you have to go to their church to get to God.
Like, they're the gateway to God.
And I'm sorry, but that's a lie.
That's a lie.
There is no church that can prevent you from going to heaven.
See what I'm saying?
There is no church that can prevent you from going to heaven.
A church is not your gatekeeper.
God already has a covenant with you directly, and Jesus already died for your sins directly.
You are already going to heaven.
It's already done.
That's a done deal.
Isn't that a relief?
You're already going to heaven.
The only question is, what are your rewards in heaven?
What have you earned?
Are you going to earn some corrections and some lessons?
And maybe some suffering, or have you earned maybe a far better experience in heaven?
And interestingly, my Bible mentor doesn't believe in the existence of hell the way we describe it in Western culture, like this fiery place where you burn for eternity.
And he says that hell is actually, well, at least some descriptions of it, Are mistranslated from the original Hebrew.
That it's really not, it's not the torment that we are told.
It's actually about cleansing and purifying the human soul.
So we think of hell as a place of torment and really sort of inflicting suffering, you know, to get vengeance upon a wicked soul or something like that, like serving time.
But according to my Bible mentor, hell is actually a problem.
It's a process of cleansing and purifying the soul to separate out the wickedness and to redeem the soul.
And that is a process, and it's probably a very difficult, maybe painful process.
Maybe it's hellish in the process.
Imagine a wicked person's soul dying and then realizing, holy crap, there is an afterlife, right?
That's shock number one.
Oh, wait.
You mean I'm going to be held responsible for all this stuff?
Imagine a wicked person.
Someone who kicked dogs or something.
Or someone who's a child trafficker dies and then stands before God and is like, oh, crap.
God's real?
Imagine that.
You don't want to be that person.
That's for sure.
Because that's going to be hellish.
Even then, after the purification, after the redemption, whatever it is, at least as I'm being told by people who know much more than I do about this subject, that even that sinner is redeemed because of God's covenant and Jesus died for your sins.
Honestly, that's a hard truth for me sometimes.
Because, I mean, I'll admit it, honestly, don't you want child traffickers to suffer?
You know?
Don't you want God to inflict hell upon them, right?
I just want a little bit of vengeance against really wicked, evil people who cause a lot of suffering.
Look, I admit it.
I'm not afraid to admit it.
I want those people to suffer a little bit.
Maybe a lot in the afterlife.
But...
Apparently they've already, in essence, they've been saved too.
And I guess I'm going to have to somehow accept that.
I was really hoping that they would suffer longer for the wickedness that they carried out, you know?
I'm a little bit disappointed that there's not more punishment for the wicked.
But you see, that's just...
My own limitation on being more Christ-like, I guess.
Like, I'm not there yet to where I can just forgive everybody.
I'm not!
I'm not!
I can forgive a lot of people, and I have for a lot of things, and I do, and, you know, forgiveness is part of what I practice.
And there's still some things I cannot forgive, you know?
Like, you know, child molesters or child mutilators or whatever.
I'm not in a place where I can forgive that.
God is.
I suppose Jesus is.
I'm not.
I'm not there.
So it's a journey for all of us.
I don't know about you.
Can you forgive child molesters?
I don't know.
I'm just not there.
So like I said, look, it's a journey.
And wrapping this up here, again, you don't have to agree with anything I said here.
I hope that you share the idea with me that we are all trying to learn, essentially, the rules of God's creation.
How does it work?
And what is expected of us?
And I'll tell you this, I have the values that I have, and I'm very grateful for this, the values that I was taught by my mother and father and grandparents, etc., my values are very much God-like or Christ-like values, like valuing human beings, valuing animals, working to end suffering, having empathy, having compassion.
And those values are what drive me every day.
And I'll also add that those values can sometimes make your life way more complicated.
Because, you know, a wicked, evil person that cares nothing about anybody else.
They're not really bound by any kind of inner morality or they just do whatever they want because they don't care.
They don't think they're ever going to be judged.
But I care about people.
I have morality.
I can't do something that would harm an innocent person.
And I can't stand by silently and watch other people be harmed.
This is why I'm speaking out about Gaza.
Because I know that God condemns those.
Who kill innocent children.
There's no question.
So I can't stay silent about that.
I care about other human beings.
And that's just the way I was raised.
Those are the values I have.
It's part of who I am.
And I suppose I should be very thankful because those are values that we need more in our world.
Sometimes we're told that you should ask yourself, like, if everybody in the world acted like you, Would the world be a better place or a worse place?
And I genuinely believe if more people shared my values, our world would be a much better place.
Number one, people wouldn't be suckered into psyops all the time and false narratives and government deception and corporate deception, etc.
If everybody knew what I knew, we would be a much more free society.
We would be more decentralized.
And if people acted the way I act, Which is, by default, I treat people with politeness and courtesy, etc.
You know, the first time I meet somebody, I treat them with a sense of politeness and the assumption of human dignity.
And then the second time I meet them, I just treat them the way they treated me the first time.
And that seems to work.
But if everybody treated everybody like that, then our world would be a lot nicer place in which to live.
There's no question about that.
So, look, I mean...
I make mistakes too, and I don't get everything right, and I'm sure that we're all going to learn some important things, and we're all going to be given some lessons, however that comes in our life or after our life, because none of us are God, none of us are Christ, and we're not perfect beings.
But we can always strive to be more Christ-like in our actions each and every day.
And if we do that, Then God loves us.
Well, actually, it turns out God loves everybody anyway.
But, I mean, God will recognize our efforts with our just rewards after this life.
So we really do set into motion our own consequences, and that's probably a law of the cosmos.
So that's my take on all of this, and thank you for your patience.
Thank you for hearing me out.
Thank you for all those who reached out to me.
And for those of you who have an issue with what I'm saying here, thank you for listening anyway.
Thank you for pondering this.
And maybe I've given you a couple points to think about as well.
But for me, this has offered a lot of clarification.
God has already offered salvation to everyone.
And Jesus died for everyone's sins.
And you don't have to earn salvation.
But you do earn your eternal rewards, whatever those may be.
So that's kind of the summary of what I've just said here for 45 minutes.
All right.
Thank you for listening.
God bless you all.
And I mean that sincerely.
I want God's blessings to fulfill you, to give you peace and abundance and knowledge and empowerment and a sense of purpose.
And I wish that blessing upon each one of you listening to this.
And I just hope and pray that we can find together, we can find some peace in this world and that we can defeat wickedness and Satanism and all the evil that's out there.
It's going to take some effort, that's for sure.
But thank you for listening.
Take care, everybody.
God bless.
God bless.
Welcome to the Mother's Day special sale event at healthrangerstore.com slash Mother's Day.
And we appreciate moms everywhere.
We love you for what you do, your love for the world, for bringing fellow human beings into this world and teaching them how to live in a healthy, uplifted way.
That's really important.
So we've put together these great discount kits for you.
One of them is called Mom's Energy Support Kit.
And how much energy does...
The mom in your life need?
She needs enough energy to slap you silly if you say something inappropriate, probably.
So, in order to help you achieve that, go ahead and show what's on my desk here.
We've got the Mom's Energy Support Kit.
It's got organic bee pollen.
It's got Fairtrade organic freeze-dried instant coffee, Groovy Bee Organic MCT oil, concentrated mineral drops, that's the one you see in the background there, and 100% organic hand-roasted Whole bean coffee that's honey processed from Honduras.
All of this is available to help the mom in your life.
Maybe she's the mom of your children.
Maybe you're the mom.
Or maybe you're a mom who also has a mom and you want to help your mom be recognized for all the love and joy that she has given to the world.
This is a great way to do it, especially if your mom loves high-quality coffee, right?
So check it out, healthrangerstore.com.
Now, a couple of things.
This is discounted about 26% compared to buying these separately.
Also, you get double points during this wholesale event, which ends May 11th.
So double points, it's equivalent to about 10% back on your purchase in points that you can use on future purchases.
And then on top of that, we also have other kits that you may want to consider that have free gifts, such as Mom's Ultimate Pamper Kit, as well as Mom's Aromatherapy Oasis Kit, which are also seriously discounted.
In one case, more than 40% discounted for the Pamper Kit.
With a free gift of a pine needle spray.
So check all that out at healthrangerstore.com slash Mother's Day.
And happy Mother's Day to all the moms out there.
And notice that I did not call you birthing persons.
I called you moms.
Because that's the truth.
You're the mom.
And society should recognize you for your contributions.
Thank you so much.
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