Ola Ilori (31 May 2008)
"THE DAY WILL NOW COME - WITHIN THE NEXT TWO WEEKS!!!"


HI DOVES,

In Scripture we read,

"...That Day will not come unless the falling away comes first and the man of sin is Revealed..." (1Thess.2:3)

 

I believe that the rapture will occur within the next two weeks.

 

Which means the Falling Away has happened and the man of sin has been revealed

 

The Falling Away happens when the Christian Age comes to an end.

 

What really does it mean?

 

It means, when hundreds of millions of men and women have not acknowledged Jesus Christ has their Lord and God, but wrongly believe they are Christians because they go to church, pray or read the bible.

 

It is from the acknowledgement of Jesus Christ as our Lord and God that we continuously receive His Holy Spirit, who transforms us into images of Christ. Which means, over time our sinful lifestyle will change into one that is acceptable and well pleasing to God.

 

What we have today is many people claiming to be Christians, without the life style to match. What this really means is that the Holy Spirit has never worked in them, because they never really accepted Jesus Christ has their Lord and God.

 

I believe that the man of sin is Tony Blair. Check out the article below. Confirmations of his true identity are too obvious to be dismissed.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1022816/Blair-Theres-life-money-We-know-Tony-But-did-mention-Cherie.html

Blair: 'There's more to life than money' (We know, Tony. But did anyone mention it to Cherie?)

By James Chapman
Last updated at 12:25 AM on 30th May 2008

 


Wealth: Cherie and Tony Blair

Since stepping down last year, Tony Blair has earned a small fortune on the lecture circuit and with his consultancy jobs.

But now the former Prime Minister has insisted financial matters must be secondary to those of faith. In fact, his words may be seen as a gentle remark upon his wife Cherie's apparent appetite for accumulating wealth.

Her new memoirs are littered with references to worries over his salary, a mortgage 'the size of Mount Snowdon' on their £3.5million London townhouse, not to mention their £4million country seat in Buckinghamshire.

But her husband says: 'Without spiritual values, there is an emptiness that cannot be filled by material goods and wealth.'

As he prepared to launch his Tony Blair Faith Foundation in New York today, Mr Blair vowed to 'spend the rest of my life' seeking to unite the world's religions.

The former PM  -  whose spin chief Alistair Campbell famously declared 'we don't do God'  -  also claimed that his religious conviction gave him the courage to take unpopular decisions during his ten years in No10 .

Mr Blair said last year he had been wary of talking about his faith during his time in Downing Street for fear of being seen 'as a nutter'.

A committed Anglican since his teenage years, he converted to Roman Catholicism after leaving Number Ten last year.

In an interview with Time magazine, he made no direct reference to the Iraq war, but claimed religion had sustained him during his worst periods as Prime Minister.

'You don't put a hotline up to God and get the answers,' he said. 'The worst thing in politics is when you're so scared of losing support that youbdon't do what you think is the right thing.

'What faith can do is not tell you what is right, but give you the strength to do it. I think faith gives you a certain strength and gives you a support in doing a job as difficult as leading a country and gives you that strength and support.'

The interview is accompanied by pictures of Mr Blair 'on the road' in his role as Middle East peace envoy.

He will announce today that his foundation will seek to bring together six faiths  -  Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism and Sikhism.

It is to be run by his former No10 aide Ruth Turner, who was arrested in the 'cash for peerages' inquiry, but cleared of any wrongdoing.

Mr Blair said faith should be a 'civilising force in globalisation'. One of the first priorities of the foundation, he said, would be to bring different religions together to help fight the spread of malaria.

'If you got churches and mosques and those of the Jewish faith working together to provide the bed nets that are necessary to eliminate malaria, what a fantastic thing that would be,' he added. 'That would show faith in action, it would show the importance of co-operation between faiths.'

In an accompanying video, Mr Blair said he had been thinking about setting up the foundation for a long time  -  before he stepped down.

'The purpose of it is so that we achieve a greater understanding between the different religious faiths, so that we make platforms for action by those faiths and deal with some of the biggest issues in the world.'

'But also so that we show that faith is something positive, a force for progress.'

Since he left office last June, Mr Blair is estimated to have signed deals worth nearly £10million. He won a £5million advance on his memoirs, a £2.5million salary after being signed up by the U.S. investment bank J P Morgan, and £2million for an adviser's role with the Swiss finance firm Zurich.