Jan,17, 2026 Sabbath-School Review
By Derek West
Source material, Seven Trumpet Luminescence, Book, 5.2, 2019
The fourth seal, the Pale horse rider of death and hell represents the era of Roman domination of the earth. It is defined as pale because Christianity is the life blood of earth, and throughout its reign of nearly 1500years, which began in 44BC, it was in need of a transfusion of Christianity to install spiritual life into its dominion. It only had a semblance of Christianity even after she, Rome transited from Pagan to Papal Rome in the fourth century. Her flagrant disregard for human life was manifested in her brutality against all men who opposed her concepts of God: She was anemic and also dominated by cold passion to torment her doctrinal opposition: Her rider was “death and Hell followed with him”.
A beast, a heavenly installed collection of humans, not Jesus, also narrated the fourth seal. For Jesus to so do would mean that He lived on earth as her cohort and as an authoritative participant of her excesses. It would infer His union with death and Hell. His administration was too young for a marriage with the Roman Empire. Instead, it began at Rome’s end and with the rise of the Protestant Churches, Powers which grew out of the Roman Catholic dominion. Hence, rather than anyone else, namely any of the four beasts who introduced the first four ruler powers of the world, Jesus began His authority over the Seven Churches which ironically were defined in the first three chapters of Revelation and before the Seven Seals were opened in heaven. He manifests His authority by virtue that He announced gifts of Salvation to each and all the overcomers who therefrom blossomed. Such was a definite indication of His divine authority to save and his careful involvement and monitor over Protestantism. His authority is expressed to be intact until the end of the world.
Jesus’ authority over the Protestant Christian age was further defined in Bible allegory by a parlay to the book of Hosea. Therein, He is counseled to take a wife of whoredom from the daughters of whoredom: a perfect metaphor to illustrate His devotion over Protestantism, the body of Christians who were born out of the mother of Whores, the Catholic Church. Showing also that Jesus was never married to Romanism.
Another Bible metaphor was also given to depict Jesus’ tumultuous relationship to the Protestant Church. Isaiah 57 was used to describe her Protestant involvement in the Slave trade as well as her historical path showing her, England’s, rise from and then fall back into spiritual whoredom. America, and offshoot of English Protestantism, also falls under this indictment.
We anticipate more insight into these issues as we venture deeper into the book beyond page 39.
Sincerely
Derek
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