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The Christian Hunt – Codename: Where’s Waldo?

The history of the Roman Church, more precisely the Roman Catholic Church, is full of oppression, torture and murder of true believers. The Vatican has always essentially been a tyrannical government masquerading as a religious institution. Anyone who did not submit to the dictatorial power and command of the Vatican was considered a heretic and in centuries past, executed for his beliefs.

The Waldensians were a group of believers who originated in the city of Lyon, France, in the late 1170s. Their name is derived from the progenitor of the movement, Peter Waldo. Peter Waldo, who was a wealthy merchant from the city of Lyons, fell into a deep conviction of sin while he was listening to a troubadour who at the time was known for singing ballads about saints.

Recognizing in the Scriptures from the very words of Christ what seemed to be the surest path of salvation, Waldo moved in accordance with the instruction given to the rich young ruler to sell all his possessions and give the money to the poor.

As Waldo’s spiritual maturity increased, he would soon share the Gospel on the streets with a group of attentive followers who were known by names like the Poor of Lyons, the Poor of God, and the Waldensians, among others.

The Waldensians continued to grow in number and spread across the Alps as far as northern Italy. Eventually, these faithful believers who followed the Scriptures closely and knew them well would be considered a threat by the local Roman bishops who had left the people neglected in their own ministries.

As the Roman bishops became increasingly resentful of the Waldensians’ force and compromise, Rome would soon condemn them as heretics, which has historically been elevated to a death sentence.

The Waldenses would soon be driven into the mountains and from there, but by the grace of God, they would successfully survive repeated attacks by Rome for several years. But the savage persecution and slaughter of the Waldensians by the Roman Catholic Church would continue into the 19th century and most likely to this day, covertly.

What is significant about this is that early on, the Waldensians would take their ministry underground and begin spreading the Gospel from town to town in secret meetings. Obviously, the reason for this was that they were being persecuted by the Roman church and were responding to the call to spread the Good News, even in secret, if they had no other choice.

We can also assume that Peter Waldo would have been the most wanted by Roman agents and that his capture or assassination was a priority. The date and cause of death of Peter Waldo are uncertain, but it is possible that he died in Germany in the early 13th century without ever having been captured.

Where does this lead?

When we consider that this group of sincere and devoted followers of God’s Word were persecuted and persecuted throughout Europe for the better part of the second millennium, and that it is safe to assume that Peter Waldo and the Waldenses were hunted like foxes, the subject of this history of Christian persecution begins to give new meaning to the phrase, ‘Where’s Waldo?’

Is this comic character who is sought after among the caricatural drawings of various crowds a symbol of that rare Christian who mixes among populous societies? And how is Waldo identified? Because of the color of his clothes. Are the red and white striped colors of his long-sleeved shirt and his slider recognized elsewhere as a symbol of Christianity? Isn’t the Christmas candy cane representative of the shepherd’s cane with the red stripe being the Blood of Christ that washes us white, as the other stripe?

And who do we know who seems to have a bit of a fetish for the ‘Where’s Wally’ accessory? Doesn’t George HW Bush get a new pair of red and white striped socks every year where he displays them so vividly, or viciously, to the whole world?

A bizarre image related to the missing Malaysian commercial airliner, MH370 shows a man, evidently on a beach somewhere in the Indian Ocean, working on a huge sand sculpture symbolic of the plane. The peculiarity of this photograph is the red and white striped long-sleeved shirt that the artist is wearing.

Although no connection can be made at this time between the missing Malaysian airliner and Christian persecution, there is a connection to something or someone(s) being searched for and this sand sculpting artist wearing what appears to be a T-shirt from “Where’s Waldo?”.

It is my claim that the theme ‘Where’s Waldo?’ it is being used as a hidden code, so to speak, for a global but secret search and identification of true and devout Christian believers.

And it will only take one major event for the hunt to begin. The hounds are barking and howling and pulling on the leash. The riders are already mounted on their steeds, which in turn are snorting and raring to go. A false flag. An EMP firing on some economic or political district. A precisely timed and well-directed ELF wave from a HAARP deflector satellite triggering a network-destroying natural disaster. Some loose planes retrofitted with some loose nuclear bomb bound for Chernobyl and the successor to Fukushima.

Jacob’s Time of Trouble isn’t about Jacob, it’s about Waldo. Waldo is Jacob. Waldo is the prize. Waldo is the fox on the hunt and he should come as no surprise.

by Keith Kampschaefer (5/25/2014)

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