Bible study is our meat and potatoes at Matty's Paradigm, it's what we do. Daily Bible reading is also really important and many of our insights have come from simply following a routine.
The Life of Isaiah
The information that we have suggests that Isaiah was an old man at the time of his death. He saw Jerusalem dwindle in prosperity and fall from powerful to vulnerable.
Ages in Chaos
Immanuel Velikovsky wrote "Ages in Chaos" but the ages aren't in chaos, Earth is about 6,000 years old. Popular science (SciPop) however, can only be chaos. By default.
Next Steps
We're in a stable holding pattern. We have been for quite a while. We're sufficiently disciplined these days as to be able to establish a schedule and stick to it. We've written everyday since November 1, 2017. No days off.
What do we Need to be Saved From?
The Lord is obviously doing a work in our time, COVID-19 and it's still unknown ramifications are proof, the question is: what is it?
Anti-Hell Christian Leadership
We're not here to attack Christianity we're here to destroy the theoretical foundation of popular science (SciPop). However this makes us an outside observer to the predicament that Christianity is in.
Where are We 2020?
The big news for the first half of 2020 is COVID-19 and the impact that it's having on all of our lives. We're still spiraling down the rabbit hole of the pandemic and no one knows how deep it goes.
December 30th
As the end of the age approaches we find ourselves at humanity’s Dunkirk moment. We’ve started the end times revival and our stated goal is to save a billion souls.
October 3rd
Given that social media platforms can reach about 1.6 billion people around the world through smartphones, let's think about this: could we weave our evangelical outreach into the cultural fabric of our time?
September 16th
"Ages in Chaos" is the name of a book by Immanuel Velikovsky, but the ages aren't in chaos. Earth is about 6,000 years old and it's presently stable. Mainstream science (SciPop) is in chaos, however, and it's never stable.
