Saturday, July 11, 2026

Sunday Observance, the Mark of the Beast: The Shared Error in Adventism and Armstrongism




Dale Ratzlaff’s article “Sunday Observance, the Mark of the Beast” (July 9, 2026) powerfully dismantles a core teaching of Seventh-day Adventism: that the seventh-day Sabbath is the seal of God while Sunday observance is (or will become) the mark of the beast. Drawing directly from Ellen G. White’s writings and the central role of the third angel’s message in Revelation 14, Ratzlaff shows how this doctrine functions as a powerful evangelistic lever—instilling fear of God’s wrath and the plagues to drive people into the SDA Church as the “remnant.” 

He rightly notes that this teaching is not peripheral but foundational to historic Adventism, often eclipsing the clear gospel message. What many in Armstrongite circles may not fully appreciate is that Armstrongism taught essentially the identical heresy.

Herbert W. Armstrong’s booklet The Mark of the Beast (and related works such as Who Is the Beast?) explicitly identified Sunday observance as “the mark of the beast.” He taught that the mark is the pagan Sunday—Sunday worship, Christmas, Easter, and related observances—which the Roman Catholic Church would ultimately enforce through a revived Holy Roman Empire (the end-time “beast”). Keeping the seventh-day Sabbath, by contrast, was presented as the identifying “sign” between God and His true people, the necessary mark of loyalty that would protect believers from receiving the beast’s mark.

Successor organizations retained this framework with only minor variations. Sabbath-keeping remains the visible sign of God’s people, while a future Sunday law enforced by the beast power is viewed as the mechanism by which the mark will be imposed. The eschatological drama is strikingly similar to Adventism: a final test over the day of worship, with economic boycott (“no one may buy or sell”), persecution, and divine wrath falling on those who receive the mark.

Both movements, despite real differences (Adventism’s emphasis on Ellen White and the investigative judgment versus Armstrongism’s British-Israelism, annual holy days, and Herbert Armstrong), converged on the same fundamental error: reading Old Covenant sign language directly into New Covenant eschatology and making a specific day of the week the decisive test of loyalty to God in the last days.

Ratzlaff’s central contention is biblically sound: Nowhere does Scripture identify Sunday observance as the mark of the beast.

Revelation 13–14 describes the mark as something received in the forehead (mind/allegiance) or hand (action) as a sign of worshiping the beast and its image. The text is silent about any particular day of the week. The mark represents ultimate loyalty to the antichrist system—false worship, satanic deception, and opposition to the Lamb—not a civil law about Sunday rest.

Early Christians, under the inspiration of the apostles, worshiped on the first day of the week (the Lord’s Day) in commemoration of the resurrection (Acts 20:7; 1 Corinthians 16:2; Revelation 1:10). They did so without any sense that they were receiving “the mark of the beast.” 

Paul’s warnings in Colossians 2:16–17 and Galatians 4:10 concern legalistic judging over days and festivals, not an endorsement of one day as an eternal seal or another as an eternal mark.

Ratzlaff correctly highlights how this teaching has been used to create fear and division rather than to proclaim the finished work of Christ. It turns what should be a matter of Christian liberty and conviction (Romans 14:5–6: “One person regards one day above another, another regards every day alike. Let each be fully convinced in his own mind”) into a salvific test. Both Adventism and Armstrongism effectively add Sabbath observance as a necessary work alongside faith in Christ—an approach that undermines the sufficiency of the gospel.

Armstrongites who have inherited this teaching face the same chain of fear that Ratzlaff describes among Adventists. Many who have left or questioned the movement cite the legalistic weight of “must keep the Sabbath or risk the mark” as a significant burden. Dale Ratzlaff’s New Covenant emphasis offers genuine liberation here.

Under the New Covenant:

  • The old covenant, including its specific sign of the seventh-day Sabbath given to Israel at Sinai, has been fulfilled and rendered obsolete (Hebrews 8:6–13; Jeremiah 31:31–34).
  • Jesus is the substance; the weekly Sabbath, annual festivals, and other shadows pointed to Him (Colossians 2:16–17; Hebrews 4:1–11).
  • True rest is found in Christ Himself (“Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest” — Matthew 11:28). Christians are not under the Mosaic law as a covenant of works but under grace, with the law written on hearts by the Spirit.
  • The moral principles behind the Ten Commandments (love for God and neighbor) continue, but the specific ceremonial requirement of seventh-day rest as a binding legal test does not transfer unchanged into the New Covenant community.
The early church did not treat Sabbath-keeping as a salvific requirement or as the seal that distinguishes true believers from those destined for the mark. They enjoyed freedom in Christ while maintaining regular worship and rest. Sunday observance among Christians arose naturally from the resurrection, not from compromise with paganism or the beast.

Ratzlaff’s critique therefore has direct merit for Armstrongites:

  1. It exposes the shared root error: both groups misapply Old Covenant Israel’s sign/seal language to the New Covenant church in the end times.
  2. It calls believers back to the sufficiency of Christ rather than Christ-plus-Sabbath-observance as the protection against the mark.
  3. It removes the unbiblical fear that has bound many sincere people, allowing them to focus on the clear gospel: salvation by grace through faith in Jesus alone, with the Spirit producing obedience from the heart.
  4. It aligns with the apostolic pattern of Christian liberty regarding days (Romans 14) while still affirming the value of regular corporate worship and physical/spiritual rest.
Dale Ratzlaff’s article, though written primarily for those leaving or questioning Adventism, speaks powerfully to Armstrongites as well. The teaching that Sunday observance is the mark of the beast is not a unique Adventist error—it is a shared heresy rooted in an inadequate understanding of the New Covenant. Scripture never makes a particular day of the week the decisive eschatological test. 

The mark of the beast is about allegiance to the beast system; the seal of God is ultimately the Holy Spirit and faith in the Lamb (Ephesians 1:13; 4:30; Revelation 7:3; 14:1–5).

For those still influenced by Armstrongite theology, Ratzlaff’s work invites a return to the rest that is in Christ alone—not a rest earned or maintained by keeping the right day under threat of the mark, but the finished rest purchased by the blood of the Lamb. In Him we find true freedom, true worship, and true security. “One man regards one day above another, another regards every day alike. Let each man be fully convinced in his own mind” (Romans 14:5). That remains sound New Covenant counsel for all who trust in Jesus

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Breaking News: Ohio Ideastream Public Media Exposé On Dave Pack and Restored Church of God

 

Marc Cebrain and Kevin Denee (Dave Pack's son-in-law)

55 Reasons Everyone Else Is Wrong and Crackpot Prophet Is the Last Real Prophet on Earth

 


Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, and anyone still trapped in a Church of God splinter group, rejoice! The end of the world is technically still on the schedule… it’s just been moved. Again. 

Crackpot Bob Thiel, fearless leader of the Continuing Church of God and self-appointed final Philadelphian on the planet, has dropped not a warning, not a hint, but a 55-point manifesto explaining in exhaustive, soul-crushing detail why the Great Tribulation cannot possibly start until 2030 at the earliest. That’s right — while lesser prophets were foolishly eyeing 2026 or 2027 like amateurs, Bob was over here doing the real math. And by “real math,” we mean “whatever makes every single competing COG group look like bumbling Laodicean clowns who will be caught completely by surprise when the actual end times finally bother to show up.”

According to Bob, Jesus was very clear in Matthew 24: certain signs must happen first. A seven-year deal from Daniel 9:27 still hasn’t been confirmed. Therefore, by the sacred rules of prophetic arithmetic, the Tribulation is legally barred from beginning for at least another 3½ years. It’s not prophecy — it’s contractual law. God apparently runs on Bob’s calendar.

And if, by some miracle, Israel signs the exact peace deal Bob has been waiting for this summer, then we can all pencil in Jesus’ return for 2033. How thoughtful of Bob to give us the precise year. Most false prophets only guess the decade. Bob gives you the fiscal quarter.

But the real meat of the 55 points isn’t the dates. Oh no. The real meat is the comprehensive demolition of every other Church of God group on Earth. UCG? Wrong. LCG? Wrong. PCG? So wrong they might not even be converted. CG7? Preterist heretics. RCG? Don’t even get him started. Every single one of them has either added extra unbiblical requirements, misunderstood the King of the North, failed to recognize the final Elijah (conveniently Bob), or committed the unforgivable sin of not agreeing with Bob Thiel.

It’s less a prophecy article and more a 55-point Yelp review of the entire COG ecosystem, rated “Would not survive the Tribulation.”Bob helpfully reminds us that only the true Philadelphians (read: people who read his website) will be protected. Everyone else? They’ll be shocked when the King of the North invades the USA first, exactly as Bob predicted. Because nothing says “humble watchman” like spending thousands of words explaining why literally everyone who left or disagreed with you is going to get blindsided by events you yourself have now conveniently scheduled for 2030.Is the end of the world near?Yes.Just not until Bob Thiel finishes explaining, in 55 bullet points, why it can’t possibly be near yet.

In the meantime, feel free to live your life, pay your taxes, and maybe plant a tree or two. According to the one man who has cracked the prophetic code that has eluded every other COG leader for decades, you’ve got at least until early 2030 before things get interesting.

Unless, of course, Bob updates the article next week with 56 points.

Stay tuned. The countdown to the countdown has begun.

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Priscilla and Aquila: The Biblical Power Couple Bob Thiel Can’t Quite Spin Into Submission


Priscilla and Aquila: Partners Who Actually Did the Work

In the mid-first century, while Emperor Claudius was busy expelling Jews from Rome, a married couple named 
Priscilla (also called Prisca) and Aquila packed up their tentmaking business and headed east. They landed in Corinth just in time to meet a traveling tentmaker-preacher named Paul. The three of them hit it off immediately. Same trade, same faith, same willingness to work with their hands so the gospel could keep moving. Paul stayed with them, and they worked side by side (Acts 18:1-3).

That was only the beginning of their remarkable mobility and ministry. 

They later traveled with Paul toward Ephesus. In that city, they encountered the eloquent but incompletely informed Alexandrian preacher Apollos, who was boldly proclaiming Jesus in the synagogue while still knowing only the baptism of John. Priscilla and Aquila heard him, took him aside, and together “explained to him the way of God more accurately” (Acts 18:26). Apollos went on to become a major force in the early church. The couple who quietly corrected him never asked for credit.

They hosted house churches — first in Rome, later apparently back in Ephesus. Paul calls them his “fellow workers in Christ Jesus” who “risked their own necks” for his life, adding that not only he but “all the churches of the Gentiles” owed them thanks (Romans 16:3-4). When Paul writes from prison, he still sends greetings from “Aquila and Priscilla… with the church that is in their house” (1 Corinthians 16:19). Near the end of his life, he greets them again in Ephesus (2 Timothy 4:19). They were mobile, courageous, doctrinally sharp, hospitable, and apparently tireless.

Notice something the text itself keeps doing: Priscilla’s name appears first in several key references. In Romans 16, in the common modern rendering of Acts 18:26, and elsewhere. In the ancient world, name order was not random. It often signaled prominence or initiative. The biblical authors were not shy about letting Priscilla’s name lead.

Enter Crackpot Bob's VersionWriting on his COGwriter site, he writes about what he calls “The Christian team of Priscilla and Aquila.” He correctly notes that the Bible sometimes lists Priscilla first and graciously allows that this “is not to say that she was necessarily superior.” He recounts their tentmaking partnership with Paul, their move from Rome, and their instruction of Apollos. He even mentions that they hosted churches in their home and risked their lives.

Then comes the familiar pivot.

When Crakcpot Bob reaches the scene with Apollos, he writes that when “Aquila and Priscilla heard him, they took him aside…” — conveniently flipping the order that appears in many English translations and in the Greek text itself. He is quick to stress that Priscilla did not instruct men. 

The “team” framing does a lot of heavy lifting here. It allows acknowledgment of Priscilla’s presence while ensuring no dangerous ideas form about a woman actively participating in the theological formation of a prominent male teacher.

It is a neat bit of theological footwork. Celebrate the couple. List Priscilla first when it costs nothing. Then, the moment actual teaching happens, quietly put the husband’s name in front and remind everyone it was a joint operation. The underlying message is clear: whatever Priscilla contributed, it must be understood as safely under male headship so no one gets ideas about women teaching men — even privately, even alongside their own husbands, even when the text itself refuses to bury her name.

This is the same interpretive instinct that turns every New Testament example of women in ministry into an exception that proves the rule rather than evidence that the early church operated with more flexibility than later systematizers prefer.

Crackpot Bob's article also folds their story into the larger Continuing Church of God narrative about the “true church” being located in Ephesus rather than Rome. That is his prerogative, of course. But it means the couple’s actual lives — their bravery, their doctrinal precision, their willingness to host churches wherever they landed — become supporting evidence for a particular denominational claim rather than a straightforward celebration of two remarkable disciples who simply did the work.

The flaws are not in the facts that Crackpot Bob reports. The facts are mostly there. 

The flaw is in the anxious framing: the immediate qualification that Priscilla listing first does not mean superiority, the reordered names when teaching occurs, and the insistence on “team” language that functions less as description and more as damage control. It is the rhetorical equivalent of praising a woman for her contributions while making sure everyone knows she stayed in her lane.

What the Text Actually ShowsPriscilla and Aquila were genuine co-laborers. They shared a trade that funded ministry. They shared a home that became a church. They shared the risk of protecting Paul. They shared the responsibility of correcting and equipping Apollos. The New Testament writers felt no need to constantly insert “under her husband’s authority” disclaimers because the partnership was obvious and functional.

Their story does not require modern readers to choose between “team” and individual contribution. It simply shows two people whose gifts and courage complemented each other so well that the early church remembered them together — often with Priscilla’s name leading. That is not a threat to a healthy marriage or sound doctrine. It is an example of what fruitful Christian partnership actually looked like before centuries of later tradition tried to flatten it.

Crackpot Bob is free to read the story through the lens of his cult gender assumptions. The rest of us are equally free to notice that the biblical text itself is considerably less anxious about Priscilla’s prominence than some of its later interpreters appear to be.

Priscilla and Aquila risked their necks for the gospel. The least we can do is let them keep the order of their names.

God’s Special “No Huge Mistakes” Insurance Policy Current Sinful Church of God Leaders Use




Nothing quite warms the heart of Church of God members than hearing their  leader casually announcing that he has achieved a level of spiritual excellence most of us can only dream of: zero major sins since baptism. And not only that — God Himself has apparently signed a binding contract promising that this same leader will never, ever be allowed to make a huge mistake that could damage “the Work.”

Because if there’s one thing the New Testament makes crystal clear, it’s that God has a VIP tier for certain ministers where catastrophic errors are magically rerouted like spam emails. This is the current thinking of Bob Thiel, Dave Pack. Gerald Flurry, Gerald Weston and almost all other COG leaders. All of these guys are grievous sinners yet we are supposed to give them a pass and pretend they are on a higher plain than us.

Remember when Rod Meredith said this:

We have brethren right now – and my word doesn't prove it to you – one thing I'm grateful, we have a lot of very human people in the work, but at least the leading ministers overall have been the most dedicated, the most solid, the most loyal men closest to God that I have ever experienced since the earliest days of the Church when just Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong were the father figure and mother figure. Pretty quick after that human nature came in and people were playing games – not horrible, I'm just saying we had a lot of [it], very obvious – now so many of the men like Mr. Ames, and Dr. Winnail, and Mr. Gerald Weston and others have been tested and tried, and tried and tested, and they have been walking with God, they've been put through the mill so to speak, and you have a group of men, that if anything happens to me, that have been tried and tested for DECADES, DECADES in the way of God. Will they make mistakes? YES! Did Mr. Armstrong ever make mistakes? Of course he did; he said many times, he said, "Herbert Armstrong has made HUNDREDS of mistakes." But he said, "God has never allowed me to make a huge mistake to destroy the Work." So he'll let us make little mistakes, but not huge mistakes, and then he'll straighten it out in his time.

Beautiful. Truly inspiring. It’s like having a divine bouncer at the door of your life who says, “Sorry, major sin? Not on my watch. Huge organizational disaster? Absolutely not. But feel free to stub your toe on minor errors — those build character.”

It must be a wonderful life, knowing you are incapable of ever doing anything seriously wrong or sinning in any significant way. That kind of logic is about as credible as claiming to be “doubly blessed” and then starting your own church. (This is why Pack refuses to apologize for lying to his followers, why Flurry will never tell his followers he is not a king and why Thiel will never correct the abysmal corruption in Africa - they don't care because they think they are not accountable).

According to this theology, Herbert and Loma Armstrong were basically sinless saints walking the earth in white robes until “a bunch of sniveling, backbiting members” showed up and introduced human nature into the equation. Because nothing says “humble servant of God” quite like blaming the entire body of Christ for your own potential shortcomings. The members didn’t just cause problems — they apparently corrupted the previously flawless leadership by their very presence. It’s the theological equivalent of saying, “I was doing fine until all these imperfect people started existing near me.”

The real crown jewel, though, is the claim that God has personally vetted a small group of men so thoroughly that He will now actively prevent them from making any mistake big enough to damage the Work. 

Little mistakes? Sure, God’s cool with those. 

Huge ones? Nope. Divine force field engaged. 

This is apparently what “walking with God” looks like in practice: decades of testing that result in supernatural error prevention, available only to the top tier. The rest of us regular humans? We just have to muddle through with normal consequences, repentance, and the terrifying possibility that our mistakes might actually matter.

Here’s where it gets especially delicious. This entire framework is pure Old Covenant cosplay wearing New Covenant clothing. 

Under the Old Covenant, sure — there were special anointed leaders who sometimes received extraordinary protection for the sake of the nation. Even then, most of them still managed to spectacularly crash and burn (David, Solomon, and roughly 90% of the kings of Israel and Judah would like a word).  
But the New Covenant did something rather inconvenient for this kind of thinking: it ended the special protected class. Jesus became the one and only sinless High Priest. The rest of us — including every minister who has ever lived — supposedly received the Holy Spirit and the ongoing reality that we still sin, still make big mistakes, and still need grace, accountability, and occasionally public correction. Paul called himself the chief of sinners after writing half the New Testament. Peter had to be publicly rebuked by Paul. 

The idea that any modern COG leader has graduated to “God will never let me destroy the Work with a huge mistake” level is not faith. It’s spiritual entitlement with a halo filter.

This theology is incredibly convenient. It means:
  • No need for genuine accountability structures.
  • Any major failure can be reframed as “God allowed a little mistake that He’s now straightening out.”
  • The members remain “very human” while the leadership enjoys near-infallibility on anything that actually counts.
History has selectively rewritten so that the Armstrongs were perfect until the ungrateful rabble arrived. And, that long held belief that the original evangelists of the Radio/Worldwide Church of God were essentially sinless because God needed them to accomplish his mighty work. And even if they sinned, it was minor sins.

It’s almost as if the system was designed to protect the institution and its top men rather than reflect actual biblical teaching on human nature.

According to this worldview, some men have reached such a rarefied spiritual plane that God has installed a “no huge mistakes” clause in their contract. The rest of us are left with the old-fashioned New Covenant arrangement: daily repentance, mutual accountability, and the constant awareness that we are all capable of serious error.

How fortunate for the rest of us that these specially protected leaders exist to guide us.

After all, what could possibly go wrong when the people in charge believe God Himself has promised to stop them from ever making a truly catastrophic mistake?

Nothing. 

Absolutely nothing.

Except, of course, all the times it has.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

From Morning Stars to Martian Puppet Masters: Wade Cox Makes History, Aviation, and Basic Logic Look Stupid in One Glorious Brain Fart

 



Wade Cox’s “Transfer of the Rule of the Morning Stars” has ben posted in the so-called "Christian" Churches of God Facebook page as if it is propehcy timeline detailing the endtimes. It is a fever-dream asinine load of garbage written by an Armstrongite splinter-group coordinator, who, like Bob Thiel has apparently decided that the Bible is too vague and needs his personal charts of doom attached to it.

Wade Cox, self-appointed Coordinator General of the "Christian" Churches of God and professional date-setter, has graced us with yet another masterpiece of eschatological fanfiction. This time he’s not content with just moving the apocalypse to 2030 and blaming the Hillel calendar for everything. No — he’s now claiming the Fallen Host (disguised as aliens)actually started the American Civil War and every single war since then. He also insists the US government has been reverse-engineering demonic spacecraft technology to design new aircraft.

This is the same theological sludge (but with added twaddle)that has been peddled by various Armstrongite offshoots for decades: British-Israelite-adjacent tribalism, obsessive Old Testament legalism, rabid anti-Trinitarianism, and a pathological need to set dates that the Bible explicitly forbids anyone from setting. Cox just adds extra layers of calendar autism and a cast of thousands of demons, popes being executed on Roman hills, sapce aliens, interstellar techonolgy, Islam, and humans turning into literal elohim (little gods). It is blatant heresy from start to finish, and it deserves to be mocked with the full force of sarcasm it has earned.The Date-Setting Industrial Complex (Because Matthew 24:36 Is Just a Suggestion)Cox has the entire end of the world choreographed down to the day:

  • Time of the End allegedly began at Purim 2026 (early March).
  • WWIII / Sixth Trumpet war kills a third of mankind.
  • Empire of the Beast consolidates by Trumpets 2026.
  • Two Witnesses (Enoch & Elijah) arrive at Atonement/Jubilee ~September 20-21, 2026.
  • They die on or around March 28/31, 2030.
  • Christ returns March/April 2030 (Day 1264 of their ministry).
  • Second Exodus finishes by Day 1335.
As of July 7, 2026, we are supposedly deep into the Great Tribulation, with the Northern armies (Russia/East) having already swept into Europe, destroyed NATO, occupied the Middle East, reduced Damascus to rubble, set up military HQ in Gaza, and generally been busy killing hundreds of millions while the Beast power takes over the planet.

Instead, the big news is a NATO summit in Ankara, ongoing Russia-Ukraine tensions, and some Iran-related strikes in the Strait of Hormuz. 
  • No global thermonuclear exchange. 
  • No third of humanity dead. 
  • No Witnesses calling fire from heaven on the Temple Mount. 
  • No concentration camps for Trinitarian clergy. 
Just another summer of geopolitical posturing.

This is the same genre of prophecy that Herbert Armstrong used to sell magazines with. His big one was 1975. It didn’t happen. The splinters have been moving the goalposts ever since. Cox is just the latest guy with a spreadsheet and a Messiah complex.The Bible says no one knows the day or the hour (Matthew 24:36). Cox has not only named the day, he has named the *intercalary month* and whether it’s a Sabbath or not. That isn’t boldness. That’s the theological equivalent of writing “I know better than Jesus” in crayon.

Cox has the end of the world choreographed down to the day, including the exact intercalary month. The Bible says no one knows the day or the hour. Cox has not only named the day — he has blamed aliens for starting the Civil War to set the whole timeline in motion.

As of right now in July 2026 his “Time of the End” that supposedly began at Purim has produced… nothing apocalyptic. The demons must be slacking. Or maybe they’re too busy helping the US Air Force design the next stealth fighter.

In his article he discusses the Godhead.
The Godhead According to Cox: Satan Was the Morning Star Landlord for 6,000 YearsIn Cox’s cosmology:

  • There is “Eloah” (the One True God).
  • There are multiple “elohim” (gods).
  • Satan (the other Morning Star) was literally put in charge of Earth by God for the full 6,000 years.
  • Christ is the subordinate Elohim who gets the job in 2030.
  • The fallen host will be sent to “the Pit of Tartaros in the Euphrates Basin.”
  • The elect will be resurrected as elohim (gods) to rule with Christ.
Cox’s view of God is already heretical nonsense — multiple elohim, Christ as subordinate, humans becoming little gods, Satan as literal planetary CEO for 6,000 years. Now he’s added that these same space demons started the bloodiest war in American history. Calling mainstream Christianity “Baal worship” while claiming UFOs kicked off the Civil War is peak cultic inversion. The early church would have laughed this man out of the room just as the modern church today does.

This is not Christianity. This is warmed-over Arianism with a side of polytheism and a Satan who is basically God’s property manager who got a bit handsy with the tenants. It directly contradicts the biblical presentation of the one true God in three Persons, the full deity of Christ (John 1:1, Colossians 2:9, Hebrews 1:3, etc.), and the complete defeat of Satan at the cross rather than him being a divinely appointed planetary CEO until 2030.

Calling Trinitarian Christianity “Baal worship” and “Satanic Sun Cult” while promoting this two-Morning-Stars, humans-become-gods nonsense is peak cultic inversion. The early church spent centuries fighting exactly this kind of subordinationist garbage. Cox has simply resurrected it with extra end-times cosplay.Calendar Fetishism: The One True Faith Is Getting the New Moons RightAccording to Cox, the single most important issue in the last days is whether you use the “Temple Calendar” or the evil, Satanic, Hillel (rabbinic) calendar. Hillel intercalation in 2026 makes the entire Jubilee year “a month late” and therefore zero days of it are under God’s protection. So if you’re keeping the wrong calendar in 2027, Satan can apparently smite you with impunity on every single feast day.The Witnesses will apparently spend their first 90 days educating people on the correct calendar and then start hitting non-compliant rabbis, Sardis/Laodicean ministers, and random church members with the plagues of Egypt (boils, hemorrhoids, the works) until they submit.This is not biblical Christianity. This is Pharisaic legalism on bath salts. The New Testament is crystal clear that the shadows (including calendar regulations) were fulfilled in Christ (Colossians 2:16-17). Cox has turned the calendar into a salvation issue and a mechanism for divine smiting. It is grotesque.

Only the correct Temple Calendar gives God’s protection. Wrong calendar? Space demons can smite you. And apparently those same demons were busy starting the Civil War in 1861 while arguing about intercalation.

Cox has turned salvation into an argument over New Moons while simultaneously claiming aliens caused every war in modern history. The man’s brain is a special kind of place.
The Two Witnesses FanficEnoch and Elijah show up on the Temple Mount with power to:

  • Stop the rain for 3.5 years
  • Call fire from heaven
  • Send whatever plagues they feel like
  • Cause earthquakes
They will also apparently start executing Sunday-keeping Trinitarians in Jerusalem on arrival.The Bible never names the Two Witnesses. Cox’s choice of Enoch and Elijah is common in some circles but still speculative. Turning them into a supernatural hit squad that enforces the Temple Calendar with hemorrhoids is pure creative writing. The idea that these two men will be running around Jerusalem in 2027-2030 zapping people for wrong feast observance while the Beast power is supposedly in charge is cinematic nonsense.

Enoch and Elijah will show up with superpowers to enforce the calendar. But first, according to Cox, their demonic counterparts already did the hard work of starting the Civil War, WWI, WWII, Korea, Vietnam, and everything else.Because obviously the real reason 620,000 Americans died wasn’t slavery or union or economics. It was space demons testing humanity’s worthiness for the First Resurrection. 

Wade’s historical scholarship is truly groundbreaking. By which I mean it’s in the ground where actual history is buried.

Cox now claims the Fallen Host, appearing as aliens, didn’t just use the American Civil War — they started it. They whispered into the ears of both sides, engineered the division, and ensured maximum bloodshed to weaken America for their long-term takeover.

And it didn’t stop there. Every war since 1861 — World Wars, Korea, Vietnam, Gulf Wars, current conflicts — all orchestrated by the same extraterrestrial deceivers.

[Let that sink in. According to Wade Cox, the real cause of the Civil War was not 4 million enslaved human beings or states’ rights or economic systems. It was gray aliens in flying saucers who wanted to set up WWIII in 2026. Gettysburg was apparently a UFO hotspot. Appomattox was just the aliens getting bored. This is not theology. This is a man who watched too many History Channel alien shows and decided to write his own fanfiction while ignoring every actual history book ever printed.]

He further insists the US Government has been reverse-engineering the demons’ spacecraft technology since WWII to design and build new aircraft. Your fighter jets, stealth bombers, and “next-gen” planes are not the product of human engineers at Lockheed or Boeing. They are stolen demonic alien tech.

[Yes, Wade. The F-35 Lightning II was clearly reverse-engineered from a captured UFO that also happened to start the Civil War 160 years earlier. Human ingenuity is apparently impossible without help from the same space demons who are also running the Hillel calendar conspiracy. The SR-71 Blackbird? Obviously a Tartaros prototype with a fresh paint job. This level of stupidity is almost impressive. Almost.]

The man who can’t get basic 19th-century American history right is also the man who knows the exact day in 2030 when Christ returns. The same man whose 2026 predictions have already failed spectacularly. The same man who thinks your airplane was built with space demon parts.This isn’t just wrong. This is historically illiterate, prophetically bankrupt, and comically stupid.

The Empire of the Beast and the Rest of the Raving

Cox details the Beast power, the destruction of Trinitarian systems, concentration camps for false teachers, a “tithe of the tithe” of 90 million special people, and the Second Exodus by Day 1335.Now with the exciting new twist that aliens started all of it in 1861.

When 2030 arrives and nothing happens (again), Cox will move the goalposts. The aliens will be blamed for the delay. The calendar will be blamed. Everyone who laughed at him will be blamed. Never once will he consider that maybe — just maybe — claiming space demons started the Civil War and built the US Air Force makes him look like a complete idiot.
The Rest of the Raving Insantity:
  • Detailed scenarios of popes being dragged over the bodies of their priests and executed on Roman hills.
  • Concentration camps for false priests, imams, and teachers until the survivors can be “re-educated” not to want to kill them.
  • A “tithe of the tithe” — roughly 90 million special people extracted from 9+ billion to become the Holy Seed and future leaders.
  • Demons still influencing people even after they’re supposedly defeated.
  • The entire non-Cox-compliant world being either converted or dead by 2030.
It is apocalyptic pornography dressed up as exegesis. Every failed date-setting cult in history has produced exactly this kind of granular, confident nonsense right before their dates quietly expire and everyone pretends it was “symbolic” or “conditional.”VerdictWade Cox’s article is a masterclass in everything wrong with date-setting, legalistic, anti-Trinitarian Armstrongite splinter groups. It takes genuine biblical themes (the return of Christ, judgment, the importance of obedience), twists them into a grotesque legalistic timeline, adds a completely unbiblical view of God and Satan, and then has the audacity to present it as “the sequence” that Scripture demands we follow.It is heresy. It is false prophecy. It is the theological equivalent of a man standing on a street corner with a sandwich board that says “THE END IS NIGH… AND I HAVE THE EXACT DATE AND THE CORRECT CALENDAR SYSTEM.”

The tragedy is that people get sucked into these systems, terrified of the wrong calendar or the wrong baptism or not keeping the feasts correctly, while the actual Gospel — salvation by grace through faith in the finished work of the fully divine Christ — gets buried under 6000-year timelines and hemorrhoid plagues.

When 2030 comes and goes without the Second Exodus or the 144,000 serving Christ in a rebuilt Temple while 90 million Holy Seed people run the world, Cox and his followers will do what every other failed date-setter has done: move the goalposts, claim “we never set an exact date,” or blame the lack of repentance.The Bible has already told us how to spot this stuff. Beware of false prophets. This one is particularly loud, particularly detailed, and particularly wrong.

This is not prophecy.

This is not scholarship.

This is a man making himself look spectacularly, historically, and prophetically stupid in real time.

As of July 2026 his timeline is already in the dumpster. Adding “space demons did Gettysburg” to the pile doesn’t save it — it just makes the dumpster fire brighter and funnier.The Bible already told us how to spot this stuff. Beware of false prophets. This one isn’t just false — he’s historically illiterate and aviation-conspiracy-level absurd.When the dates keep failing, the only thing left for Cox to blame will be the aliens he invented to explain why he’s always wrong

Silent Pilgrim