The Secret Kingdom Pat Robertson Pdf Reader

Pat RobertsonFor printing our articles please copy the web page by highlighting the text first -then click copy in the browser- paste the article into a wordprogram on your computer. When the text is transferred into word,click to save or print.Pat Robertson's 700 Club or 7000 who have not bowed theirknees to charismatic ecumenismPat Robertson began CBN as a Christian variety show that brought the audienceinterviews, testimonies and informed them on culture changes that were notconducive to the church. CBN covered the daily news and events of our world andthat which would affect the church.During the 80’s and early 90’s people were turning to the new age/occult andWicca for answers. There were many who appeared on the program that had a goodcontribution and were able to give the gospel through their testimony of beingsaved from the occult and other religions.

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Much of the reporting was of personalexperiences with Christ. The programs also featured many who had atestimony of being delivered from these deceptions.The owner and host of the 700 club, Pat Robertson is well known throughoutChristianity and in some places well respected. Robertson openly endorses charismatics, all of them,with no discretion.

And he has had nearly every fringe charismatic on hisprogram showing his agreement with them. People like Benny Hinn, Copeland,Rodney Browne, etc. Covering everything that called itself revival.Pat Robertson's Christian Broadcasting Network News Report ofAugust-September 1996, endorsed the Pensacola revival, “Thousands of pastorshave visited the church and report that their own churches are being affected bythe 'Pensacola Outpouring.” The report also mentioned David Yongi Cho, pastor ofthe world's largest church in Seoul, South Korea, received a vision concerningthis revival in 1991. God revealed to Cho that He was going to bring revival toAmerica and that it would begin in Pensacola.

Many view Pat Robertson as a right-wing religious nut. Regardless of how you view him as a person, if you have the ability to separate what he says from what you think he is (or what the media has told yo he is), and you can extrapolate (as most intelligent people can), then this book is enlightening.This book helps answer writer Pam Keller's questions and comments about the general direction of the United States of America and its place in the rest of the world:We have spent two or more decades Many view Pat Robertson as a right-wing religious nut. Regardless of how you view him as a person, if you have the ability to separate what he says from what you think he is (or what the media has told yo he is), and you can extrapolate (as most intelligent people can), then this book is enlightening.This book helps answer writer Pam Keller's questions and comments about the general direction of the United States of America and its place in the rest of the world:We have spent two or more decades intentionally de-industrializing our economy. Why?We have intentionally dumbed down our schools, ignored our history, and no longer teach our founding documents, why we are exceptional, and why we are worth preserving.

Students by and large cannot write, think critically, read, or articulate. Parents are not revolting, teachers are not picketing, school boards continue to back mediocrity. Why?We have now established the precedent of protesting every close election (now violently in California over a proposition that is so controversial that it wants marriage to remain between one man and one woman. Did you ever think such a thing possible just a decade ago?).We have corrupted our sacred political process by allowing unelected judges to write laws that radically change our way of life, and then mainstream Marxist groups like ACORN and others to turn our voting system into a banana republic. To what purpose?Now our mortgage industry is collapsing, housing prices are in free fall, major industries are failing, our banking system is on the verge of collapse, Social Security is nearly bankrupt, as is Medicare and our entire government. Our education system is worse than a joke (I've taught college courses and know precisely what I am talking about.) The list is staggering in its length, breadth, and depth.

It is potentially 1929 x 10. And we are at war with an enemy we cannot name for fear of offending people of the same religion who cannot wait to slit the throats of your children if they have the opportunity to do so.We have a president whose idea is to create and fund a mandatory civilian defense force stronger than ourmilitary for use inside our borders. Why?Change is indeed coming and when it comes, you will never see the same nation again.Don't forget that in the past, Germany was the most educated, cultured country in Europe. It was full of music, art, museums, hospitals, laboratories, and universities.

And in less than six years - a shorter time span than just two terms of the U. Presidency - it was rounding up its own citizens,killing others, abrogating its laws, turning children against parents, and neighbors against neighbors All with the best of intentions, of course. The road to Hell is paved with them. The problem with Pat Robertson is not so much how the media portrays him as a 'bigoted, fundamentalist Christian, right-wing zealot' (page 263), as it is how he portrays himself as one in, for instance, his 1991 book The New World Order, in which he goes on at great length to convince the reader that a shadowy group of people spent the better part of the 20th century trying to take over the world and form a one-world government in a sort of new world order, or NWO. Its first credibility problem The problem with Pat Robertson is not so much how the media portrays him as a 'bigoted, fundamentalist Christian, right-wing zealot' (page 263), as it is how he portrays himself as one in, for instance, his 1991 book The New World Order, in which he goes on at great length to convince the reader that a shadowy group of people spent the better part of the 20th century trying to take over the world and form a one-world government in a sort of new world order, or NWO. Its first credibility problem starts with the back cover, with quotes like 'Shocking.'

, 'Riveting.a page turner', 'reads like a spy thriller.chilling.I couldn't put it down', which are, of course, attributed to absolutely no one.Robertson displays his literal, narrow-minded and paranoid world view right in the introduction. He calls John Lennon a hypocrite for writing a song like 'Imagine' yet still leaving a fortune to his 'Japanese-born' wife because Robertson's mind can only see the literal content a song about the beauty of the potential oneness of humanity with nothing dividing it, and can't grasp its obvious poeticism. This is probably worth less than two stars, but it was entertainingly bad enough that I did read the whole thing, so I can't just give it one. Going over it this time, I was surprised at how dated the 'timely' and 'prescient'(in 1990) information in it already is, but also how timeless the right-wing conspiracy line is in its essentials.In an era before the Tea Party, Pat Robertson was the extremely wealthy voice of Evangelical extremism. He had been a successful Televangelist at the time when This is probably worth less than two stars, but it was entertainingly bad enough that I did read the whole thing, so I can't just give it one. Going over it this time, I was surprised at how dated the 'timely' and 'prescient'(in 1990) information in it already is, but also how timeless the right-wing conspiracy line is in its essentials.In an era before the Tea Party, Pat Robertson was the extremely wealthy voice of Evangelical extremism. He had been a successful Televangelist at the time when that scam was gouging billions of dollars out of poor and ignorant Americans, but he had always had a more political bent than his fellow get-rich-quick preachers.

Probably as a result, he avoided the sex scandals that brought several of his colleagues down, and even managed to be a semi-serious contender in Republican primaries a couple of times.He also wrote book like this one (more than most Televangelists could manage), warning of the direction America was headed. The warnings are nothing new - a one-world government is going to steal American sovereignty and reduce its citizens to slavery in the name of idealism, while really benefiting an elite group of financiers and apparatchiks.

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What's interesting is that he manages to repeat them, without letting on their traditional allegiances to anti-Semtism and fascism. That's not to say that his hands are clean (I'll get to that in a moment), but that there is no overt racism in this book, no use of the language of prejudice. In that sense, I do think he managed to start the extreme Right in a new direction, which has resulted in their 'mainstreaming' to the degree that wackos like Sarah Palin and Rick Santorum now appear to be middle-of-the-road conservatives.Look deeper, of course, and the real sources of what Robertson is arguing begins to become clear. He argues that the wealthy and powerful are in cahoots with Communism and civil disorder, and tries to tie it together in the name of the 'Illuminati,' a code-word that hides the real villains of many of his sources. For example, he quotes from Nesta Webster's writings approvingly, without mentioning that she openly identified the villains a Jews, or that she was affiliated with the British Union of Fascists. He doesn't actually cite the, but many of his arguments are derived directly from it. He has managed to re-package a traditionally racist/fascist argument in such a manner as to give it a certain amount of acceptability.Which raises the question of whether Robertson himself is an anti-Semite.

It's hard to say. He's careful to speak approvingly of Israel, and not to implicate them in the conspiracy. He even ridicules Idi-Amin for doing so in front of the UN. Surely he noticed that most of the sources he drew from denounced Jews, and sometimes other races, as enemies of civilization. But what did/does he believe?

That's hard to say. He's a slippery one, possibly more interested in his own power and influence than in ideological consistency. Those who have followed him, in terms of believing in him, seem to do so without question - they're not racists unless he says it's OK to be racist.In the end, it probably doesn't matter. As a demagogue, Robertson's danger isn't in specific points of his program, but in the ways in which he manipulates ignorance to increase its influence on the political sphere. And this, sadly, he has succeeded at tremendously, if not decisively. Others now carry on the tradition. Possibly this could have been prevented if more of his opponents had read this book.

Pat Robertson Net Worth

Marion Gordon 'Pat' Robertson is a controversial televangelist from the United States. He is the founder of numerous organizations and corporations, including the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ), the Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN), the Christian Coalition, Flying Hospital, International Family Entertainment, Operation Blessing International Relief and Development Corporation, and Marion Gordon 'Pat' Robertson is a controversial televangelist from the United States. He is the founder of numerous organizations and corporations, including the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ), the Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN), the Christian Coalition, Flying Hospital, International Family Entertainment, Operation Blessing International Relief and Development Corporation, and Regent University.

He is the host of The 700 Club, a Christian TV program airing on channels throughout the United States and on CBN affiliates worldwide.Robertson is a Southern Baptist and was active as an ordained minister with that denomination for many years, but holds to a charismatic theology not traditionally common among Southern Baptists. He unsuccessfully campaigned to become the Republican Party's nominee in the 1988 presidential election. As a result of his seeking political office, he no longer serves in an official role for any church. His media and financial resources make him a recognized, influential, and controversial public voice for conservative Christianity in the United States.

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