If you’ve not had a chance to listen to Charles Malet’s recent Delingpod I highly recommend taking the time.
Charles is an Englishman who harks back to a very different era in our country’s history: Sandhurst graduate, Army Officer, well spoken, impeccable manners… Might be just what the country needs.
He also did a short stint in the police before realising the fraudulent nature of the COVID response and handing in his resignation. In fact one of the most interesting nuggets of information I gleaned from the interview is that all 43 police constabularies across the UK voluntarily agreed to implement lockdown policies. They were not forced / required to by central government. I.e. every single police force is complicit in what happened and needs to be investigated.
More on this another time.
It’s a fascinating development, but not why I’m writing this message.
After listening to the interview I went off to dig into Charles’s work and discovered he is a regular contributor to UK Column, where he’s written a number of extremely well-researched articles about the Church of England.
Now some of you may remember my own conversation with James Delingpole from back in April which, amongst other things, covered my experience working with Genomics England: the UK Government entity which sequences human genomes using technology created by an American company called Illumina.
Towards the end of the interview, James jokingly asked me whether the Church of England was invested in Illumina. At the time we laughed (the proposition seemed ridiculous) and I said I’d look into it.
I didn’t get round to it yet, but Charles Malet already has. And, despite how absurd it sounds, the CoE is in fact a significant investor in Illumina. As well as several other major commercial players in genomics and embryonic research:
Since nearly a third of the Church of England’s top equity holdings are in some way associated with such controversial areas of science, the pattern cannot be dismissed as accidental or coincidental. Should it come as a surprise to learn that the Church of England is not exactly practising what it preaches when it comes to ‘ethical investment’? After all, this information is very much in the public domain. Can these corporations have imagined that they would be able to rely on the Church of England to bankroll such a controversial area of science?
You really couldn’t make this stuff up: CoE investment strategy flies in the face of thousands of years of religious doctrine that is its sole purpose to uphold.
And that’s before you get into the pornographers and weapons manufacturers that also form part of CoE investment strategy.
I strongly recommend taking the time to read the whole of Charles’ exceptional article to understand the full scope of what we’re dealing with. And I will be returning to the Church over the coming months as this remarkable saga continues to play out.
We are truly ‘through the looking glass’ at this point.
From London.
Rubin
Join us on Telegram
Join me on Twitter
Join me on Instagram
I was, at least, a third generation of Church of England churchgoer; my father a clergyman within it. I loved my father and the church too, growing up. Then, in my 40's, someone I loved died. I howled at my God from where I had pitched my tent - camped there in March in order to be nearer the hospital in East Sussex. What I called to the heavens that tempestuous night was "I just want the truth. Please! Show me the truth. Whatever it is I want the truth". The words just came out of me and I didn't really fully appreciate, I now think, what it actually was I was calling out for - but it waas from a place deep inside and the year was 2010.
It was a crazy journey from that camp site in East Sussex which, I only discovered after I had made my camp there, was called 'Heaven Farm' and there is a whole tale to be told in just that one curiosity. But now I know my God in a way that I could never have done within the confines of 'Church teachings'.
Today all my teaching comes straight from scripture without need for an earthly middle man. Indeed, not just the Church of England, but all denominational churches, all 43,000 of them are now dead to me.
It was an indescribable release from bondage, I now realise. 'Churches' are all a snare and a delusion. Not unlike the 'illusion of choice' you mentioned that our Parliamentary system of governance is. In fact I am beginning to think that there is literally only one truth in this God created experience of the knowledge of good and evil.
I meet brothers and sisters along my journey and I do learn from them too, but it all has to be verified in the scripture or it is chucked out.
I wonder, with all thanksgiving, at all the good people doing great work to navigate through this darkness. Even though we may be fully aware of the spiritual truth of this place, we still have to deal with the earthly, low vibrational, evil in the world. I see all the talents needed to accomplish this seemingly impossible task now coming together; as though orchestrated by my God Himself.
I pray strength and all wisdom for, Charles, James and Ben and all thanks and praise to the Lord.
Godspeed to one and all!
Many thanks for that, I suppose all not surprising under the circumstances. I stopped attending a C of E church in 2013 because of the same-sex marriage bill which the bishops did not object too en-mass if at all. The C of E has always been a watered down version of the Roman Catholic Church and these were not what God instituted.
We have top down pyramidal structures rather than bottom up.
If I may attach, I did this short piece in 2020 to ridicule the hierarchical structure if you or anyone is interested.
https://alphaandomegacloud.wordpress.com/c-is-for-church-of-england-or-completely-euseless/