Thursday, April 12, 2018

Wake Up Out Of That Drowsiness And .... {Eph 5:14}


Part 1 of 3 Part Series On The Prelude To The  Last 7 Years!

We  are now in the run in to the last 7 years of this wicked Eon. An Eon is a period of time, of varying length,  but differs from eternity in that it has a definite beginning and a definite end. The Word for Eternity (Aidios) is only used twice in the whole of the New Testament. Eon is used in all other cases. The last 2 Eons ended in catastrophe and this one, Eon number 3 (Gal 4:4)  will  also end with amazing turmoil  at the coming of our lord Jesus. There are 2 future Eons before we can speak of eternity.! The 1000 year Kingdom followed by The New Heaven & New Earth:

"Isaiah 17 has yet to be fulfilled and may well be 
the next major event on the prophetic calendar"     {2018?}


Chapter 17: Verse 1 --4 

The burden of Damascus. Behold, Damascus is taken away from being a city, and it shall be a ruinous heap.
The cities of Aroer are forsaken: they shall be for flocks, which shall lie down, and none shall make them afraid.
The fortress also shall cease from Ephraim, and the kingdom from Damascus, and the remnant of Syria: they shall be as the glory of the children of Israel, saith the Lord of hosts.
And in that day it shall come to pass, that the glory of Jacob shall be made thin, and the fatness of his flesh shall wax lean.


Mark Of Beast   Draft 1

Kuwait to Pass Law to “DNA Tag” Everyone Like Cattle, Including All Touri

While it sounds like an Orwellian nightmare, the reality is this is slowly creeping up on us everywhere. Central banks are going to start requiring biometrics for identification, for your security they say. Japan has already announced that all tourists will be required to use their fingerprints as currency while in the country. India has forced biometric IDs on its entire population. In fact, the United Nations is pushing for universal biometric ID cards for every single man, woman, and child on the planet
In the first law of its kind anywhere in the world, Kuwait has decided it will not only “DNA tag” everyone presently in the country as part of a new “integrated security database,” but all tourists will be required to submit a DNA test before they can even enter the country.
Facilities for blood and saliva collection will be set up at the Kuwait International Airport, and there will be “consequences of rejecting” these procedures which the Kuwaiti government says it is putting in place in order to track everyone just in case someone commits a crime.



Mark Of Beast Draft 2

MasterCard, Zwipe announce fingerprint-sensor card

On Friday, MasterCard and Oslo, Norway-based Zwipe announced the launch of a contactless payment card featuring an integrated fingerprint sensor. Say goodbye to PINs. This card, they said, is the world’s first contactless payment card featuring an integrated fingerprint sensor. PC Mag noted the simplicity of the card procedure: hold your thumb against the fingerprint ID on your credit card and wave it over a contactless payment station. When your transaction goes through, the machine beeps. PC Mag said the card is scheduled for next year. “Our belief is that we should be able to identify ourselves without having to use passwords or PIN numbers. Biometric authentication can help us achieve this,” said Ajay Bhalla, president of enterprise safety and security at MasterCard. Bhalla is no stranger to contactless technology and what it could mean for MasterCard. He led the early rollout of MasterCard’s PayPass contactless technology in 14 Asian markets and established partnerships, one of which enabled commuters to make contactless MasterCard payments on Singapore’s public transport network. Last month, he remarked on the future of biometric payments, saying “the idea of running out for some milk, walking into a store and using your thumb print to make the purchase has sounded futuristic, even if the technology has been in place for a while.” He added, “We have already had great success in Africa, with financial inclusion projects which use biometrics to identify millions of cardholders.”