Martinism
According to the Martinist Tradition the mission of the Christ and his incarnation was that of the Repairer. In effect, he fulfilled the task of “reparation” of recreating order and purifying Creation. The Christ did not save humanity by doing the work it alone has to do, but opened a way and showed the world how to travel along this path.
Martin dePorress
Martín de Porres Velázquez (9 December 1579 – 3 November 1639) was a Peruvian lay brother of the Dominican Order. Velázquez, a bastard (illegitimate son of a Spanish nobleman), was patronised as a saint of mixed-race people , barbers, innkeepers, public health workers, and told to be inclusive of all those seeking “racial harmony”. He had a sister named Juana de Porres, born two years later in 1581. After the birth of his sister, the father abandoned the family. Ana Velázquez supported her children by taking in [single parent mothers? Ireland's laundry rooms?]. He was noted for his work on behalf of the poor, establishing an orphanage and a children's hospital.
Among the many obscene miracles
attributed to Velázquez were those of levitation, bilocation, miraculous knowledge, instantaneous cures, and an ability to communicate with animals. In the 1980 novel A Confederacy of Dunces, Ignatius Reilly contemplates praying to Martin for aid in bringing social justice to the black workers at the New Orleans factory where he works. And in music, the first track of jazz pianist Mary Lou Williams's album Black Christ of the Andes is titled St. Martin De Porres
.
American singer Madonna's lead single Like a Prayer
(1989) featured Martin de Porres as a character in the song's music video. Like a Prayer was co-written and co-produced by Patrick Ray Leonard who entered the music business with late 1970s Chicago-based pop rock band Whisper, then later the same band membership, Trillion (name changed for legal reasons), featuring future Toto singer Dennis Fergie
Frederiksen on lead vocals. Toto's hit song was "Africa" [I bless the rains down in Africa].
An exoterical Apostolate of Saint Martin
is behind the identity of NFL Chicago Bulls reversed logo of Tin Man
, beatifying dePorress since 1966, the same year Chicago was incorporated as a City. Esoteric LOGOS (with hidden meaning), such as Chicago Bulls when worn on sports apparel appear inert to the unobservant public, but when these LOGOS are associated with trauma [inflicted by migrant insurgent combatants otherwise known as the "people of colour"] they become recalled as panic triggers.
Gripping conciousness by fear, these LOGOS, as muralism of Liberation Theology appear to the subconciousness as prophetic omens; allowing the "Apostolate" to advance unabated with an impunity sustained by cognitive dissonance.
So we know Martin dePorress is revered as Jesus in South America, and his Peruvian mother, BIRTHED HER CHILD OUT OF WEDLOCK, and WORKED IN A LAUNDRY.
Factoring the Dominican Republic as the most race mixed nation on Earth, hindsight can ascertain that this apostolate aims to psychologically terrorise Ireland into defacing acts of miscegenation.
The Summer Isles are an archipelago lying in the mouth of Loch Broom [Martins' Broom], in the Highland region of Scotland. The "Isle Martin" [closest of the Summer Isles to Ullapool] is now an uninhabited island in Loch Broom but had once been the site of a monastery established around 300–400 AD by St. Martin, after whom the island is named. At 27 Argyle Street, Ullapool has a Nordic style "Cult Cafe", and hosts a Saint Martin of Tours Catholic Church and a Freemasonic Lodge of St Martin No 1217. The lodge has links with links with the District Grand Lodges of Ghana, Trinidad and Tobago; as well as Gibraltar, and the Middle East.
In May 1999, with the active encouragement of Mrs Goldsmith's daughter, Miss Oriole Goldsmith, the RSPB gifted the island to a trust proposed and established by the communities of Loch Broom and Coigach, The Isle Martin Trust. There is a stone with a Latin triple cross, possibly from 400 to 700 AD, which is probably related to the Celtic church. The pagan island of Summerisle
featured in the motion picture The Wicker Man (filmed in 1973 & directed by Robin Hardy). The plot centres on the visit of a police officer, Sergeant Neil Howie, to the isolated Scottish island of Summerisle in search of a missing girl. Howie, a devout Christian, is appalled to find that the inhabitants of the island have abandoned Christianity and now practise a lawless and immoral form of Celtic paganism.
The character Lord Summerisle embarked upon inducing “the successful growth of certain new strains of fruit which he had developed” by creating “new cultivars of hardy fruits to suit local conditions.”. The experiment was a success, leading eventually to the Summerisle Famous apple, boasting “creamy white flesh, firm, full-flushed, blood-red bloomed skin with a truly noble sweet, vinous flavor,” as well as others of renown such as the Star of Summerisle pear and the Flame of Summerisle apricot.Within the real Summer Isle is a long linear village named Achiltibuie. The Hydroponicum, a facility for growing fresh fruit and vegetables indoors using hydroponics, was built in the village in the 1980s by Robert Irvine, then owner of the Summer Isles Hotel. The Hydroponicum was known for growing exotic fruit such as bananas all year round. The building has now been demolished. Some of the former staff of the Hydroponicum run a small-scale activity known as The Achiltibuie Garden, situated nearby.
There have been EEG studies that demonstrate that television watching converts the brain from beta wave activity to alpha waves (similar to hypnosis). Television can reduce your ability to think critically. When you watch TV, brain activity switches from the left side of your brain (responsible for logical thought and critical analysis) to the right side. This is significant because the right side of the brain tends not to critically analyze incoming information. Instead, it uses an emotional response which results in little or no analysis of the information. In other words, it’s as if someone is telling you something and you believe what they say without doing any research of your own. For this reason, people who watch a lot of TV tend to have a very inaccurate and unrealistic view of reality.
The brain slips into a hypnotic state within seconds of watching TV. Watching TV puts the viewer into a highly suggestible sleep-like hypnotic state. This provides easy access to the subconscious and is one reason why it is easy to fall asleep whilst watching television. The hypnotic effect is largely caused by screen flicker which lowers your brainwaves into an alpha state, a state of mind that you would normally associate with meditation or deep relaxation. In most people, this occurs within 30 seconds or 3 minutes for very light and infrequent viewers. In a hypnotic state, the information which you are exposed to will be downloaded directly to your subconscious mind where it can alter existing beliefs and form new beliefs without you even being aware of it.
Martin de Porress is revered by Cultural Marxists as a patron saint of racial and social justice.
Logos used as secret insignias of this aposolate are Nike, LA Raiders, Chicago Bulls, Red Bull, Obey and Tap Out. Perceptions are marginalised by compartmentalisation as blinkered awareness. Containment is etched operational by egalitarian manifestos handed by Jesuits to secret societies, such as COMMON WEALTH freemasonry, (Rosicrucian / Templar) Solomonic initiation rites into the "world unseen" are held within concealment of darkness [the womb of Mary], subordinated initates are blindfolded and traumatised.
Monarch bloodlines, over hundred thousand descendants with the United Kingdom are plundered [historically overthrown by Communist Revolution] into a haplessness named year zero, year one being "recorded"; ethnically defaced from ethnocentric / homogenous psyche by manipulative and debilitative psychological tortures scrambling cognition, preventing hypervigilance from revealing the mechanism of the Christi Testamenta excelled by Saint Dominic's "lilies of the field".
Haiti
Haiti, officially the Republic of Haiti and originally inhabited by the indigenous Taíno people, occupies the western three-eighths of an island which it shares with the Dominican Republic. In the midst of the French Revolution (1789–99), slaves, maroons, and free people of color launched the Haitian Revolution (1791–1804), led by a former slave and the first black general of the French Army, Toussaint Louverture.
The 1804 Haiti massacre also known as the 1804 Haitian Genocide or simply the Haitian Genocide was carried out by Afro-Haitian soldiers , mostly former slaves, under orders from Jean-Jacques Dessalines against much of the remaining European population in Haiti, which mainly included French and mulattoes. One of the most notorious of the massacre participants was Jean Zombi, a mulatto resident of Port-au-Prince who was known for his brutality.
One account describes how Zombi stopped a white man on the street, stripped him naked , and took him to the stair of the Presidential Palace, where he killed him with a dagger. Dessalines was reportedly among the spectators; he was said to be "horrified" by the episode. In Haitian Vodou tradition, the figure of Jean Zombi has become a prototype for the zombie. At the conclusion of the slaughter, Dessalines rejoiced, saying:
Dessalines was eager to assure that Haiti was not a threat to other nations. He directed efforts to establish friendly relations also to nations where slavery was still allowed. In the 1805 constitution, all citizens were defined as "black". The constitution also banned white men from owning land, except for people already born or born in the future to white women who were naturalised as Haitian citizens and the Germans and Poles who got Haitian citizenship.
The social explanation sees observed cases of people identified as zombies as a culture-bound syndrome, with a particular cultural form of adoption practiced in Haiti that unites the homeless and mentally ill with grieving families who see them as their "returned" lost loved ones, as Littlewood summarizes his findings in an article in Times Higher Education:
In medicine and medical anthropology, a culture-bound syndrome, culture-specific syndrome, or folk illness is a combination of psychiatric and somatic symptoms that are considered to be a recognisable disease only within a specific society or culture. There are no objective biochemical or structural alterations of body organs or functions, and the disease is not recognized in other cultures. As cultural awareness begins to increase between countries due to globalisation, there is a consideration into whether cultural bound syndromes will slowly lose their geographically bound nature and become commonly known syndromes that will then become internationally recognised.
Jorge Mario Bergoglio
Pope Francis was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio on 17 December 1936). He became the head of the Catholic Church, the bishop of Rome and sovereign of the Vatican City State in the year of 2013. Francis is the first pope to be a member of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). In 2013 the apostolate of dePorress was silently issued as a papal bull, via the Jesuit Pope being painted onto a red and black cover of Time Magazine and as a Marxist revolutionary he was termed "the Peoples Pope".
Bergoglio grew up in socialist Argentina, an experience that left a deep impression on his thinking. He told the Latin American journalists Javier Camara and Sebastian Pfaffen that as a young man he read books of the Communist Party that my boss in the laboratory gave me
and that there was a period where I would wait anxiously for the newspaper La Vanguardia, which was not allowed to be sold with the other newspapers and was brought to us by the socialist militants.
.
Pope "Francis" is an outspoken critic of unbridled capitalism and free market economics, consumerism, and overdevelopment; he advocates taking action on climate change, a focus of his papacy. Bergoglio maintains that the Church should be more open and welcoming for members of the LGBT community, and has called for the decriminalisation of homosexuality worldwide.
In international diplomacy, he helped to restore full diplomatic relations between the United States and Cuba, supported the cause of refugees during the European and Central American migrant crises, and made a deal with China to define how much influence the nation has in appointing their Catholic bishops. Bergoglio was asked in 1992 by Jesuit authorities not to reside in Jesuit houses, because of continued tensions with Jesuit leaders and scholars, a sense of Bergoglio's dissent,
views of his Catholic orthodoxy and his opposition to theology of liberation, and his work as auxiliary bishop of Buenos Aires. As a bishop he was no longer subject to his Jesuit superior. From then on, he did not visit Jesuit houses and was in "virtual estrangement from the Jesuits" until after his election as pope.
Bergoglio encouraged the Marxist-Christian dialogue group Dialop to work together for the disadvantaged and against corruption and abuse of power. Christians as well as socialists, Marxists and communists should build a "better, fraternal future" for a world divided by wars and polarisation, said Francis at a reception in the Vatican on the 3rd January 2024. The Pope wished for "the courage to step outside the box", as well as an openness in dialogue for "new paths". The "Dialop" dialogue platform is dedicated to dialogue between Christians and socialists or Marxists.
Together with educational institutions, the members work on social ethics and ecology, combining Marxist ideas and Catholic social teaching. During the audience, the platform presented its activities of the past ten years to the Pope, some of which were also supported by the Vatican's cultural and educational authorities. It was a "beautiful programme", praised Bergoglio.
Dominican Republic
Dominican Republic occupies the eastern five-eighths of the island, which it shares with Haiti, making Hispaniola one of only two Caribbean islands, along with Saint Martin , that is shared by two sovereign states. The native Taíno people had inhabited Hispaniola before the arrival of Europeans, dividing it into five chiefdoms. They had constructed an advanced farming and hunting society, and were in the process of becoming an organised civilisation. The Arawakan-speaking Taínos also inhabited Cuba, Jamaica and the Bahamas.
The colony of Santo Domingo became the site of the first permanent European settlement in the Americas and the first seat of Spanish colonial rule in the New World. After twenty-five years of Spanish occupation, the Taíno population in the Spanish-dominated parts of the island significantly decreased due to genocide. The survivors intermixed with Spaniards, Africans , and others, forming today's tripartite Dominican population.
The name Dominican originates from Saint Dominic, founder of the Dominican Order.
The Dominican Republic town of Sosúa was officially founded by Jewish settlers (see Dominican Jews) who were fleeing from NSDAP Germany. At the 1938 Evian Conference, Rafael Trujillo offered to accept up to 100,000 Jewish refugees; about 800 German and Austrian Jewish refugees received visas issued by the Dominican government between 1940 and 1945 and settled in Sosúa. Descendants of the original Jewish settlers still live in Sosúa, they remain an important segment of the community and maintain a synagogue and a museum.
In the late 1990s and 2000s Sosúa also became a favorite destination of sex tourists from Europe and North America. Local women turn to prostitution, Haitian migrants also take part in the sex tourism business, with many of the prostitutes in some areas being of Haitian descent. In 2017, the United Nations issued a damning report about the island nation's child sex tourism “crisis.” It was described as a “paradise for sexual crimes,” where foreigners act with “impunity.”
Praxis Charity
Founded in 1983 by the Robert Kemble Trust (now registered as the Robert Kemble Christian Institute), originally based in 12 Goodge Street before moving to the United Reformed Church building in Bethnal Green. In 1997, Praxis was registered as a non-sectarian charity independent of the Robert Kemble Trust, although Dylan Toby Trionfi Mathews is both a trustee of Praxis Charity and later the Robert Kemble Trust (since 9th December 2019). Praxis Chairty was chaired by Moral entrepreneur Barbara Roche, an ex-labour MP linked to Tony Blair government's "mass immigration" policy.
Praxis Charity for Migrants applies for and distributes welfare payments from The Vicars Relief Fund (St Martin in the Fields), London Catalyst Samaritan Grant and the London Churches Refugee Fund; in 2017 Praxis distributed £65,520 in welfare payments. The Charity are registered with the Charities Commission as Praxis Community Projects
, charity no: 1078945, compaines house no: 03638571. Income and expenditure data for financial year ending 31 March 2022 was a Total income: £2,088,746 [includes £546,751 from 3 government contract(s) ] and a Total expenditure: £2,228,247. Registered are 50 Employee(s), 10 Trustee(s) and 21 Volunteer(s).
Residing on the trustee board of Praxis Chairty is:
- Rev. R. Vaughan Jones, Minister of Union Chapel Church since 2016 and previously a Minister in the United Reformed Church. Founding CEO of Praxis Charity for Migrants.
- Ruth Lorna Stuart, (appointed [Head Of Strategy Development] 3rd April 2023), DOB June 1986.
- Dr Debbie Weekes-Bernard (appointed 10th February 2022), London's Deputy Mayor for Communities and Social Justice and former associate of the Runnymede Trust.
- Connie Cullen, (appointed 18th July 2019, also chair of Manor Park Community Garden) Head of Community Services for homeless charity Shelter (Midlands & SE).
- Kemi Ogunlana (appointed 12th November 2020) product creator at Love Welcomes.
- Dylan Matthews, (appointed 25th January 2018) Itallian director and trustee of the Robert Kemble Christian Institute.
- Raphael Perret, (appointed 19th May 2016) Director of Financial Planning and Analysis at Save the Children International.
- Jumana Rahman (appointed 30th July 2015), partner Cohen & Gresser (UK commercial litigation practice).
- Pasha Coupet Michaelsen (appointed 30th January 2014), co-Founder of Amplify Goods and trustee of IntoUniversity.
Artwork used at the charities functions, including the [martinist christ imitator] overbearing mural
are created by Marxist United Reformed Church minister Lucy Berry. Berry, a self-described performance poet and as "influencer" of critical pedagogy, stiring racial anxieties retweets Black Lives Matter "Empire Sh**t" issues, requesting her White Christians
Twitter followers to pray on this
.
And "Jesus under the Dirt".
Lucy Berry's artwork appears carefully abstracted from a 15th century esoteric movement named Martinism
; a form of Christian mysticism and esoteric Christianity concerned with the fall of the first man, his state of material privation from his divine source, and the process of his return, called 'Reintegration'. As a mystical tradition, it was first transmitted through a Masonic high-degree system established around 1740 in France by Martinez de Pasqually, and later propagated in different forms by his two students Louis Claude de Saint-Martin and Jean-Baptiste Willermoz. They are attempting to create a goddess of divine love, through disemboding our people loveless.
Jacob Böhme’s 1682 Theosophische Wercke featured several examples of alphabetic symbolism. His design for the letter “M” (shown above) is titled Mysterium Magnum, and makes allusions to Messias and to Moses; his design for the letter “T” (shown above) is entitled Christi Testamenta, showing a large tau cross superimposed with hearts, dove, and a double-branched tree; his design for the letter “W” (not shown) symbolises the interaction of light and darkness, represented by the words Wohl, German for good, and Wehe, meaning ill.
Today, initiate knowledge of Martinism is instructed through The Rosicrucian Order, AMORC. AMORC has various lodges, chapters and other affiliated bodies throughout the globe, operating in 19 different languages. AMORC is regarded as representing an "open cycle" of the ancient Rosicrucian tradition, its existence being a "reactivation" of Rosicrucian teaching in the United States, with previous Rosicrucian colonies in the United States having become dormant.
Ex-AMORC leader [Imperator] Gary L. Stewart (1987 to 1990) founded the Confraternity of the Rose Cross, the Order Militia Crucifera Evangelica (of which he is a "Knight Commander") and assisted with the formation of the British Martinist Order of which he is a Sovereign Grand Master. Currently, the British Order Martinist is active only in the English-speaking countries. Stewart was ex-communicated from AMORC in 1990 after allegations of embezzlement on the part of Stewart, were made by members of AMORC board of directors.
According to the Book of Genesis, God destroyed the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, but Lot, the nephew of Abraham, was given time to escape with his family before the destruction. God commanded Lot and his family not to look back as they fled. Lot's wife disobeyed and looked back, and she was immediately turned into a pillar of salt as punishment for her disobedience. An allusion to Lot's wife or to a pillar of salt is usually a reference to someone who unwisely chooses to look back once they have begun on a course of action or to someone who disobeys an explicit rule or command.
Churches Together
Churches Together in England is a company registered at Companies House with number 05354231, and a charity registered at the Charity Commission with number 1110782. The organisation is located at 27 Tavistock Square, London WC1H 9HH and is governed by a Board, whose members are the trustees of the charity and the directors of the company.
The "Enabling Group" is a biannual overnight meeting of representatives for the purposes of governance and common concern.
The Enabling Group consists of representatives from each Member Church, from Intermediate Bodies, and from Bodies in Association. Membership of the Enabling Group includes:
Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of the British Isles & Ireland • Apostolic Church UK • Apostolic Pastoral Congress • Armenian Orthodox Church • Assemblies of God • Baptist Union of Great Britain • Calvary Church of God in Christ • Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales • Church of England • Church of God of Prophecy • Church of Scotland (Presbytery of England) • Churches in Communities International • Congregational Federation • Coptic Orthodox Church • Council of African and Caribbean Churches UK • Council of Lutheran Churches • Council of Oriental Orthodox Christian Churches • Elim Pentecostal Church • Evangelical Lutheran Church of England • Free Church of England • Free Churches Group • Ground Level • Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Church of the East • Ichthus Christian Fellowship • Independent Methodist Churches • International Ministerial Council of Great Britain • Ixthus Church Council • Joint Council of Churches for All Nations • Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church (Indian Orthodox Church) • Mar Thoma Church in Europe • Methodist Church • Moravian Church • New Testament Assembly • New Testament Church of God • Oecumenical Patriarchate • Order of St Leonard • Pioneer • Presbyterian Church of Ghana in England • Redeemed Christian Church of God • Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) • Ruach Network of Churches • Russian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) • Salvation Army • Serbian Orthodox Church • Seventh-day Adventist Church (observer) • Synod of German-Speaking Lutheran, Reformed, and United Congregations in Great-Britain • Transatlantic Pacific Alliance of Churches • Unification Council of Cherubim & Seraphim Churches (Europe Chapter) • United Kingdom World Evangelism Trust • United Reformed Church • Vineyard Churches UK & Ireland • Wesleyan Holiness Church • Wesleyan Reform Union.
There are six Presidents of Churches Together in England, current and previous presidents are:
Justin Welby
105th Archbishop of Canterbury since 2013. Welby was born illegitimate, his parents personal and private secretary's to Winston Churchill.
Vincent Gerard Nichols
Archbishop of Westminster and President of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales. Patron of the Bellarmine Institute.
Hugh Osgood
British church leader, conference speaker, author and modern church historian. Qppointed Moderator of the Free Churches Group on 17 September 2014.
Anba Angaelos
OBE (for services to international religious freedom) is the Coptic Orthodox Bishop of London and Papal Legate to the UK and to Sydney and its Affiliated Regions.
Tedroy Powell
Senior Pastor of the House of Bread, Church of God of Prophecy, since 1989. CTE Pentecostal and President, and National Overseer of the Church of God of Prophecy UK.
Agu Irukwu
Jesus House for all Nations, London and One People Commission of the Evangelical Alliance. Cofounded children’s charity Bright Futures for African Children.
The Forum of Churches Together in England is a conference of around three hundred representatives of churches and bodies associated with Churches Together in England. The Moderator of the Forum of Churches Together in England for the three-year period 2015 to 2018 is Ruth Gee [brainwashing Tavistock Institute is located on Gee Street] with Hilary Topp (a Quaker, working for Student Christian Movement) as Deputy Moderator.
Beggars Group
Beggars Group is a British record company that owns or distributes several other labels, including 4AD, Rough Trade Records, Matador Records, XL Recordings and Young. Founded by Martin Mills, Beggars' roots stem from the Beggars Banquet record shops, which first opened in 1973 with a shop in Earls Court, London. He has a personal fortune of £230 million. A Beggars Group sale of their stake in Spotify in 2019 earned Mills £8 million.
Mills recording studio and residence is strategically located along Ham Gate Avenune (see redemption of Ham), Richmond; a wealthy, leafy green suburb of South West London. Mills favourite song is Bob Dylan's Jesus in the Slum anthem: "Like a Rolling Stone" (Dylans parents fled the Russian Pogroms); Dylan was in London's nobody zone, shortly before he became famous, having done a deal with the Commander, on Duke Street, in Mayfair.
XL Recording's building, is a garage marked with an X, located in Notting Hill, within a hidden cobbled backstreet off Notting hill's Blenheim Crescent (Winston Churchill's family home is Blenheim Palace). Adele Laurie Blue Adkins (initals A.L.B.A) was signed to XL Records and recorded her first album 19 in XL Records garage studio.
Heartbreak superstar Adele was "honoured" by Prince Charles, receiving an MBE (Most Excellent Order of the British Empire) from the Queen's Birthday Honours at Buckingham Palace on Thursday (19 December 2013). Adele has often been described as a "People's Queen" by her fans .
In July 2016 Adele ranked number nine on the Forbes list of the 100 highest-paid celebrities in the world earning US$80.5 million and $69 million, respectively. She has purchased numerous multi-million pound homes, but few of her fans know she has been an alienating Critical Race Theory test subject capitalising luxury from their woeful dismays all along. A real Rough Trade" wouldn't you say.
In April 2018, it was widely reported that Adele had become an ordained minister in order to officiate at close friend Alan Carr's homosexual wedding [there are no authorised services for blessing a same-sex civil marriage under a quadruple lock to the equal marriage Act] to Paul Drayton, something which Adele herself subsequently confirmed. Adele has been beatified by the media as the Integra Natura's Nordic Mary, clothed in white. (see symbolism of white in the N.O.I story of Yakub).
And black.
In historical context the name of Adele was the Christian name for Gerloc. Gerloc was the daughter of Rollo of Normandy (a Viking warrior told to have converted to Christianity) and Poppa; married Guillaume (William) Tête d'Étoupe, count of Poitou and duke of Aquitaine. After holding siege to Paris, Rollo settled in northern Frace as the Duke of Normandy in the year of 911 (see: Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte).
Adele Laurie Blue Adkins MBE was born on 5 May 1988 in Tottenham, London, to an English mother, Penny Adkins, and a Welsh father, Marc Evans. In 1986, Penny met Mark Evans, who is Adele's father, at the Kings Head pub in North London. Penny refused Mark's proposal so the couple never married; born out of wedlock daughter Adele was birthed a bastard . Evans left Penny in 1991, when Adele was three years old, leaving her mother to raise her.
Adele allegedly claimed she would 'spit at him in the street' if she saw him [Evans] again. Evans confessed to writing his famous daughter letters every month to no avail but said he had never gave up hope of seeing his grandson. Not dissimilar to many female celebrities signed into secret societies [within and without disclosure of society], Adele disowned her ex-alcholic father Mark Evans; heartless, in that she ignored [no forgiveness] his plea's for contact to see his grandson; even after he made an appology whilst dying on his death bed from an eight year long battle with bowel cancer. In 2020 Adele has been alleged by media hysteria to be having an affair with black Nigerian rapper Skepta "They run in the same circles in London, and she’s having fun,” the source said, noting that they have a “deep connection” over music and their shared hometown of Tottenham, London".
Martin of the Tours
St Martin-in-the-Fields is one of the most famous churches in London. Dick Sheppard, Vicar from 1914 to 1927 who began programmes for the area's homeless, coined its ethos as the “Church of the Ever Open Door ”. Sheppard was also founder of the Peace Pledge Union (associated with Martin's renunciation of war), there is a memorial chapel for him, with a plaque for feminist and socialist Vera Brittain, also a noted Anglican pacifist; the steps of the church are often used for peace vigils. The church has a close relationship with the royal family, whose parish church it is, as well as with 10 Downing Street and the Admiralty.
The sadistic idolisation of White people displaced into destitution is nothing new; thousands of orphaned, vagrant white children roamed the busy streets of London during the Victorian era. The wealthy viewed these homeless children as mice (vermin), during the summertime in Westminster drinking fountains were removed to preserve the water to spray on their parched lawns, such was the concern for our ancestors welfare, and perhaps discontent for their survival.
Since 2012 the Church of England priest for St Martin-in-the-Fields is Samuel Martin
Bailey Wells, he is also Chair of Diverse Church and Visiting Professor of Christian Ethics at King’s College London. His doctoral thesis was titled "How the Church performs Jesus' story: improvising on the theological ethics of Stanley Hauerwas" [Hauerwas is a member of a 174 year old international secret and social fraternity named Phi Delta Theta]. In 2005, Wells became dean of Duke Chapel and research professor of Christian ethics at Duke Divinity School, North Carolina. Incidently, the Duke Graduate Program in Religion is highly selective, offering admission to roughly 5 percent of applicants.
He developed and chaired the Faith Council, which consists of 12 members from different faith traditions. He initiated dialogue and led discussions on faith and ethics. The church is renowned for its work with young and homeless people through The Connection at St Martin-in-the-Fields, created in 2003 through the merger of two programmes dating at least to 1948. The church may be the St Martin's referred to in the nursery rhyme known as Oranges and Lemons.
Rev Sally Hitchener is an Anglican priest and Associate Vicar of St–Martin–in–the–Fields, Trafalgar Square. She was previously co–ordinating Anglican Chaplain and inter–faith advisor at Brunel University, and is the founder of Diverse Church, a charity which supports LGBT+ Christians. Hitchener studied anthropology and social policy at the University of York and studied theology and trained for ordination at Wycliffe Hall, Oxford. Hitchiner led the church through the pandemic, bringing in an early adoption of live streaming services with theological and ecclesiological thought alongside this. While in this role she worked with Sam Wells to co-found the Being With Course.
Yet the cost of housing asylum seekers in hotels [often 4 star hotels] has risen to £8m a day, according to the Home Office’s annual report. Suella Braverman, the home secretary, had said the figure was £6m a day when addressing the Commons. The annual report, published on 2023, states: “We need to stop the boats to relieve the unsustainable pressure on our asylum system and accommodation services, which is costing over £3bn a year. The shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, said the £8m daily bill was “astronomical”.
For one day each year, the Church of Saint Martin in the Fields, holds a locked down "covenant" service. During this service, the "Jesus in the Slum" dream of Saint Martin is initiated by the tearing of red material (with a sword) into frayed squares, which are distributed among attendees as a symbolism of covenant. His cult was revived in French nationalism during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/1, and as a consequence he was seen as a patron saint of France during the French Third Republic.
Kenneth Leech
Leech was born into a secular working-class family in Ashton-under-Lyne in greater Manchester. As a teenager, he became a Christian and a socialist at the same time. A speech denouncing apartheid at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester in 1956 by Trevor Huddleston, a priest of the Community of the Resurrection who had just returned from South Africa, had a particularly powerful impact on him. He would remember thinking:
Leech moved to the East End of London in 1958 where he began his studies for a degree in history at King's College, London. This move, he later wrote, was the real turning point of his life. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1961 and then went to Trinity College, Oxford, from which he graduated in 1964. He was also ordained to the diaconate in 1964.
After theological studies at St Stephen's House, Oxford, he was ordained to the priesthood in 1965. He served in urban London parishes afflicted by poverty and confronted issues of racism and drug abuse. After ordination, he served for two years as a curate at Holy Trinity, Hoxton (exclaiming “first became aware of the fact that there is a lot of racism within the white working class”) in the East End of London and then from 1967 to 1971 at St Anne's, Soho.
Property in Soho is mostly owned by the Vatican, and leased to massage and sex shops, LGBTQ+ bars and post-production media studios. While in Soho, Leech set up the Soho Drug Group (1967) which ministered to young addicts, many of whom had been drawn into prostitution. In 1969, at the instigation of and in conjunction with Anton Wallich-Clifford and the Simon Community , Leech also established the charity Centrepoint which became the United Kingdom's leading national charity tackling youth homelessness.
From 1971 to 1974 he was chaplain and tutor in pastoral studies at St Augustine's College, Canterbury. In 1974, he became rector of St Matthew's Bethnal Green where he served until 1979. While at St Matthew's, he became deeply involved in the struggle against the National Front and other “racist” and “fascist” groups.
In 1974, with Rowan Williams (who became the Archbishop of Canterbury) and others, he founded the Jubilee Group (Ed: see also Community of Ekklesia and Critical Religion Association), a network of Christian socialists in Britain and across the Anglican Communion, most of whom were Anglo-Catholics. In 1980, he became Race Relations Field Officer for the British Council of Churches Community and Race Relations Unit.
The following year, he was named Race Relations Field Officer of the Church of England's Board for Social Responsibility. He was director of the Runnymede Trust , a think tank dedicated to promoting ethnic diversity in Britain. From 1987 to 1990. As archbishop, Rowan Williams awarded Leech a Lambeth doctorate.
He believed that it must be grounded in prayer and should be the work of the entire local Christian community across the boundaries of class, race, and sex. At the heart of his faith was what he called subversive orthodoxy
the indissoluble union of contemplative spirituality, sacramental worship, orthodox doctrine and social action.
Leech was written to have sought direction through these words of Bishop Frank Weston:
Leech argued that this conjunction of faith and the quest for justice, which points to the coming of the Kingdom of God on earth , is the essential mark of the Christian life and underlies scripture, the teachings of the Church Fathers and the Christian mystical tradition.
His work also drew on the radical and even revolutionary strands in Anglo-Catholicism represented by Fabian figures such as Stewart Headlam, Thomas Hancock, Charles Marson, Percy Widdrington, Conrad Noel, and Stanley Evans. He acknowledged the contributions of F. D. Maurice, Brooke Foss Westcott, Charles Gore, William Temple, and other reform-minded Anglican Christian socialists, but thought them often to be too timid and middle class.
Leech died of cancer in Manchester on 12 September 2015, but he is survived by his wife Julie and a son, Carl, from a previous
marriage. His legacy through centerpoint continues to socialise homeless victims of the nuclear family breakdowns, alienated via critical race theory and degeration of society in general, notably through Affirmative Action policies.
Michael Pfleger
Colour revolutions enact psychological warfare against the racial identity of white people. This can be easily explained by Catholic priest Michael Pfleger's relationship with Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. Since 1981, Pfleger has been pastor of St. Sabina Catholic Church, a Black parish in Chicago's (Chicago Bulls) Auburn Gresham neighbourhood. His uninterrupted tenure in just one parish is normally unheard of in a diocese where pastors usually serve for only six to twelve years. He was ordained a priest for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago on May 14, 1975 [strangely, a year and a day after I was born].
Pfleger's social activism has brought him media coverage throughout Chicago and beyond. He has often collaborated and associated with African American religious, political and social activists such as:
- Jeremiah Wright: dubbed the "Dean of the Civil Rights Movement, he is a pastor emeritus of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago (Wright studied under Samuel DeWitt Proctor, a mentor to Martin Luther King Jr).
- Joseph Lowery: founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference with Martin Luther King Jr.
- Jesse Jackson: young protégé of Martin Luther King Jr and ordained Baptist minister.
- Harry Belafonte: one of Martin Luther King Jr.'s confidants. known for his recordings of "Day-O (The Banana Boat Song)", "Jump in the Line (Shake, Senora)" [both songs used in Beetlejuice film], "Jamaica Farewell", and "Mary's Boy Child".
- Cornel West: philosopher and theologian bearing intellectual contributions from Christianity, the black church, democratic socialism, left-wing populism, neopragmatism, and transcendentalism. [appears as Councillor West in Martix films reloaded and revolutions].
- Louis Farrakhan: head of Nation of Islam (NOI): known for leadership of the 1995 Million Man March in Washington, D.C. And infamous for his anti-Semitic and racist rhetoric...
In 2001, Pfleger fired racism accusations towards a mostly-white primary school athletic league, the Southside Catholic Conference, after they refused to admit Saint Sabina's parish school. The league claimed that visiting teams and parents would be unsafe in Saint Sabina's neighbourhood. Chicago's Cardinal Francis George eventually pressured the league to reverse its decision.
This is a theory of alienation, similar in context to the Rastafarian concept of Alienation, drawn and developed by Maoist NAACP founder W.E.B duBois and Comintern writer C. L. R. James, connected to Noel Ignatiev and Race Traitor magazine formed from Karl Marx's Concept of Alienation. Maoist / Stalinist Haile Selassie's (proclaimed by the Rastafarian movement as a "living God") linage is head of Holy Trinity Cathedral in Addis Ababa. The Cathedral is a founding member of the World Council of Churches, a worldwide organisation that has been historically and closely tied to the Russian / Communist KGB.
On January 5, 2021, the Archdiocese of Chicago announced that Michael Pfleger was removed from active ministry due to an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor, occurring over 40 years earlier. By January 25, another alleged victim had come forward, the brother of the first. On March 3, 2021, a third person alleged that Pfleger provided him with alcohol and marijuana before sexually assaulting him. Unlike the other accusers, the victim was an 18-year-old man.
On October 15, 2022, another abuse allegation was reported and Pfleger again stepped away from ministry pending an investigation. The individual making the accusation stated that the abuse took place in the church rectory during practices of the Soul Children of Chicago Choir. On December 10, 2022, the archdiocese announced that its investigation was complete and the charges could not be substantiated, and Pfleger was reinstated as pastor at St. Sabina.