Due to threats upon myself and family, I am required to meet a quarterly quota of articles for this Substack publication.
This is a thought I had for over a month or so, and I wrote down a 10 tweet thread that I never published. I instead copy+pasta’d it to my clipboard, which eventually was removed altogether. No worries, though. The intel is hard to forget, but the segues I made from it will take some time to write out.
I had given some retrospection as to whether or not I should put these sort of thoughts out there, but I really felt compelled by God Himself to throw this at the masses. He had a few weeks to take me out, and I’m still around, so let’s proceed…
Main story: Ascribe all sins onto yourself!
Azazel was a fallen angel for sympathizing with Lucifer
Sympathizing with Azazel does not necessarily constitute the same fate as for those who sympathize with Lucifer
Upon Azazel’s arrival, Lucifer had apparently done him dirty. Made monsters in the image of Azazel to carry out great acts of evil; to which we hear the common Edomist slogan, “ascribe all sins onto Azazel”
I suspect that Azazel hasn’t taken kindly to what Lucifer had done to his image, or the scapegoat that jews (Edomists) make him out to be. I believe this so-called antiChrist is the man himself, fallen angel — Azazel — and his arrival will not mean what so many of us had originally interpreted.
Segue One: Isaac’s twin sons of ancient times; founders of Edom and Israel…
The story goes that Esau and Jacob would later reconcile their past differences, although their ancestors could clearly not.
I heard claims that Jacob was coerced by their mother to steal the inheritance from his older brother Esau (considerably hairier) by wearing goat skin and listening to the prophecy from their father, which was originally meant to be told to Esau. After Isaac realized he had been duped, he apparently hadn’t bothered retelling it; essentially leaving no inheritance to Esau.
Conversely, another story claims Esau sold his inheritance to Jacob for food because he was hungry at the time; a far more believable story (in my opinion) when you come to recognize behavioral patterns of the modern-day jew.
Esau would father the tribe of Edom; Jacob, the Israelites.
I can’t pinpoint exactly where I was getting at here, but it essentially had to do with forgiveness by the jewish people. For those who could not reconcile with their ancestral past, I foretold that Azazel would smite them out of existence.
Segue Two: Jesus Christ.
I had speculated that Azazel carries no animosity towards God, Christ, and the Holy Spirit. I felt as though even if he was destined to never return from his fallen state, he’d still do right by our Lord and His people.
An important distinction to take into consideration is the fact that Lucifer had tainted his reputation beyond repair. So many acts of ‘great evil’ carried out in his own image had made it easy to do.
I believe Jesus’ return is solely dependent on the course of action Azazel takes. The Lord’s arrival may not be necessary if Azazel — my purported “antiChrist” — is of a holy and righteous nature. Conversely, if I’m wrong in my assessment about Heaven’s formerly favored angel, God help us.
*This is also under my interpretation that Lucifer will simply never make a physical appearance during it all, and perhaps Christ Himself. I believe all outcomes will be contingent upon the choice of Azazel.
Very interesting!