The Wedding Supper War

The Wedding Supper described in the Revelation is not an elaborate banquet with a white table stretching the length of the earth, where guests must call dozens or hundreds of seats down for someone to pass a plate of food. It is a war. Plain and simple. This might sound surprising at first, but the definition which Scripture consistently provides when investigated beyond any surface reading is this: a violent campaign at the consummation of the age where Christ and His chosen soldiers will exterminate the bastard races. 

Sons of Alphaeus (Mark 3:18-19)

In our previous commentary, we discussed the apostles Simon Peter and the sons of Zebedee, and the epithets Petros and Boanerges which rested upon them respectively. Now we are left with nine more of the original twelve, of whom for the most part we know comparatively less, but that does not mean that there is not still much to discuss. Sometimes less is more, and a small set of interesting details concerning one apostle can reveal a volume of wisdom.

Sons of Thunder (Mark 3:16-17)

When Cornelius fell at Peter’s feet, the apostle lifted him up, saying, “Stand up! I myself also am a man!” (Acts 10:26) Being a Roman, the actions of Cornelius in that instance can be interpreted as a type foreshadowing the shameful conduct of the later Roman so-called “Catholic” Church, which seeking to lord over men would go on to falsely claim that Peter was the first so-called “pope”. The difference between Cornelius and the Catholic Church, is that Cornelius actually got up from off the floor.