Title: Bruce Lipton - Where Mind and Matter Meet (Fascinating) Source:
[None] URL Source:[None] Published:May 30, 2011 Author:Bruce Lipton Post Date:2011-05-30 14:57:11 by christine Keywords:None Views:904 Comments:16
A comment by Eric Stratton on another thread really struck me in conjunction with this thread. Along with the positive power of prayer, Lipton also makes reference to the negative energy of hateful thoughts and how they affect their targets.
ERIC STRATTON QUOTED IN FULL IN ORDER TO AVOID TAKING ANYTHING OUT OF CONTEXT:
"I don't think anyone blames the masses for anything. It was the masses, not the Jewish leadership that did that.
Look at the sheople in this country, the non-Jewish sheople, every bit as complicit as to what's going on as those were back then. It takes a wise and special thinker to not be among the sheople, that wisdom comes from God/Jesus, but it is also freely given to them by Him, ... upon their asking.
Ergo, it is rational to assume that most simply do not ask, seek, attempt to learn and enlighten themselves. Don't know what to say about that particularly, but it's not a raving endorsement of morality no matter how you slice it. In fact, in this country and no doubt elsewhere, what people trade that wisdom for is astonishing, the very things that Jesus said not to focus on. IMO the contingent calling themselves "christian" in our country are bringing on judgement faster than any other group out there today.
IMO there is no question whatsoever that those calling themselves Jews yet who are not Jews are the antichrist and antichrist system. Either way, what is being done in the name of those that via whom the nation of Israel was spawned, is absolutely nothing short of antichrist/evil in its purest form.
When one considers Eph. 6:12, ...
12 For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places.
... coupled with much else in Scripture, such as how all but every (never say never and quite perhaps every) reference in the New Testament that contains the word "Jew(s)" (except for simply stating that a person was one et al.) involves them trying to kill, arrest, or otherwise bring some kind of harm or falsely accuse someone. Then couple that with Jesus' mention of The Synagogue (not church or any other reference) of Satan, and the picture clears up rather interestingly.
Now I could be wrong, but I don't think so."
ODDLY SIMILAR TO LIPTON'S DOCUMENTARY, BUT MORE SUCCINCT.