THE BIBLE
The Bible as we know it today is not one book, but a number of books stuck together into one bound book. 
People commonly believe that these individual texts are inspired and I would have to agree that the men who wrote them were inspired by God when they wrote on parchment and paper the words given them by divine inspiration and revelation were the word of God as they received them. I do not believe that everyone who reads the Bible, interprets it, or even translates it has the same degree of divine inspiration.
Words are subjective. Almost every word in the many languages of men has more than one definition and to string those words together in sentences, paragraphs, chapters and books produces a maze of subjective ideas that are  dependent upon some form of interpretation.
 To imagine that we can obtain the living word of God and contain it in a printed book like a genie in a bottle is to imagine that we can eat of a tree of knowledge and know God.  
No one picks up a bible without being tempted to   privately interpret the words and meanings, to grasp its truth with their own intellect and power of judgment. Pastors and preachers often hold up the Bible as if they have the truth in their hands and then proceed as if they can explain and interpret it to you and for you. This is the beginning of power over your mind and heart and with it will come vain ideologies and false doctrines which they will call sound. This is a contradiction of the very instructions contained within the pages of the very book they hold up before you. [1]
            
              [1] Psalms 24:4  He that hath clean hands, and a pure heart; who hath not lifted up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully.
           
   
"Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private   interpretation." 2 Peter 1:20 
No degree of education, no corporate body, no church, nor man or woman can be assured their interpretation of what is written by those inspired authors   is correct. Reading or studying the Bible can not guarantee that you know the   truth or know God or Christ. To imagine that you can know the word of God by studying any book is to imagine that you can be saved by your own efforts and works. 
"Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me." John 14:6  
Everyone is just as susceptible to error with or   without the Bible because everyone can be deceived and words and phrases are subject to personal and subjective interpretation because that is the nature of language. It is no fault of the Bible. This is proven by the over 40,000 different denominations,   the hundreds of years of murder and mayhem produced by Churches who use the   Bible as the bases of their faith and belief instead of the individual divine revelation of Christ through the Holy Spirit.
Ultimately the Bible tells you that it is your God   given conscience, through His divine revelation, that will be key to true knowing of God and becoming one of God/s peculiar people.What is in the book is subject to your interpretation of the words contained in it.
            "For this [is] the covenant that I will   make with the house of Israel after those days, saith the Lord; I will put my   laws into their mind, and write them in their hearts: and I will be to them a   God, and they shall be to me a people:" Hebrews 8:10-13 
The Bible is not there to give us the "word of God" through obtaining personal knowledge of good and evil by studying that book. The value of the Bible as a tool is   to show us by a testimony that we do not yet know the "word of God" and cannot know Him without   God giving you His word directly on your heart and on your mind   first.
"And hereby we know that we are of the   truth, and shall assure our hearts before him." 1 John 3:19 
The word of God lives in the hearts and minds of those   who will receive it. To imagine that you can only know the word of God by reading and studying the Bible is to lack faith in the very truth that is clearly found in that text, Old and New. Those who read the Bible can be just as deceived as those   who do not read the Bible.
"But this [shall be] the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel; After those days, saith the LORD, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they shall be my people." Jeremiah 31:33  
There is no doubt that people will cling to the Bible like the idolater clings to his graven images. They turn  that blessed gift into a tool that keeps souls from receiving the living word of God in their hearts and minds because. This gift of God was not given to men so that they could pick and choose, and privately interperate the text to gain power of]ver the minds of men in denominations of men. You cannot know  God or His living word by reading it in a book and simply  plucking truth from the pages like fruit from a tree. 
This is the imagination of your own thought. 
"And thou, Solomon my son, know thou the God of thy father, and serve him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind: for the LORD searcheth all hearts, and understandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts: if thou seek him, he will be found of thee; but if thou forsake him, he will cast thee off for ever." 1 Chronicles 28:9  
You cannot find your way to eternal life by your own   knowledge or interpretation of ancient text. Christ told us over and over what we must do to obtain eternal life.[2]
          
          
              [2] Matthew 19:16  And, behold, one came and said unto him, Good Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?... And he said unto him... keep the commandments.[ also Mark 10:17, 29-30,  Luke 10:25, Luke 18:18]
John 3:15-21  "That whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life.And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil...  For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved.  But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God."			  
 
           
 
It is vanity to think you can hear and know the living word of God by your own study of a book written even inspired men. That is like saying you can know the word of God by your own effort. as if you are saved by their inspiration, as if flesh and blood can reveal God to you. 
The real word of God must be revealed in spirit and truth in your own hearts and minds by God through Christ and not by your own efforts or study of the revelation of others passed down through the subjective language of men nor the private interpretation of pastors or preachers, theologians or theosophists. 
It is the Holy Spirit only, sent by Christ, that will give us true knowledge   of God. That Holy Spirit listeth where it will and must lead you individually to   the truth. That is why Christ sent it to guide and comfort His servants.
If you are going to be a part of the body of Christ,   His Holy Church, each of you must find that Spirit of Christ. It does not dwell   in books nor in deeds but in your heart and in your mind.
Use the Bible. Do not worship it nor idolize it or grant it power that is God's alone.
"All scripture [is] given by inspiration of God, and [is] profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:  That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good work" 2 Timothy 3:16
To be brothers in Christ we must   have a common Father and that relationship comes from the Spirit of God dwelling   in each of us.
Anything else is merely us plucking fruit from the tree   of the knowledge of good ad evil.
The Bible as we know it 
The Bible as we know it today did not exist at the time this was written. 
The word scripture is from graphe meaning writings, things written. It is not a term exclusive to the Bible.
There were many writings that did exist such as the books of the Old Testament, and other books mentioned in the Bible, but not included in the modern text. The Q Gospels and the sayings of Jesus seem to predate our copies of Matthew, Mark, and Luke and seem to be a source if not the guide for those texts.
The Gospels of Thomas and Philip seem to compliment the accepted books in the Bible, although they may come into conflict with dogmatic and religious interpretation of those texts. Are they inspired and by what authority can we exclude them from inspired texts?
Even if these extra texts are not inspired they can be used for learning and study. We use concordances and dictionaries to determine the meaning of the text and those who wrote those books used many Greek and Hebrew texts to come to their own conclusions and interpretations.
I believe that there are inspired writers who were excluded from the Bible.
I do not wish to detract or extract from the validity of those original texts, but it might help people overcome a misconception of the teachings of Christ and the prophets if they understood the history and reason of the acceptance or rejection of the many Holy Scriptures of those early days of His Holy Church.
The  Allurement of Wolves
Flavius Salerus Constantinus has been  touted in some historical accounts as the first Roman Emperor who was  converted to Christianity. Was Flavius the King and Emperor really a  man propagating the Gospel of Jesus? He alleged that an apparition of  Christ told him to put XP (khi, hro)1 on his shield, on the eve of the battle against Maxentius, his  empirical rival in Italy. Did Jesus alter his position on exercising  authority? 
 “And  he said unto them, The kings of the Gentiles exercise lordship over  them; and they that exercise authority upon them are called  benefactors. But ye shall not be so: but he that is greatest among  you, let him be as the younger; and he that is chief, as he that doth  serve. For whether is greater, he that sitteth at meat, or he that  serveth? is not he that sitteth at meat? but I am among you as he  that serveth.” Luke 22:25, 27. [Mt 20:25. Mr 10:42.]
Did Constantine obey this command of  Christ? 
Constantine was truly a man of visions.  He had also claimed a vision of the sun god in 310 while in a grove  of Apollo in Gaul. In 313 AD, Constantine and Licinius as co-emperors  had joined together in “issuing the Edict of Milan, which granted  toleration” for his version of Christianity under their binding  authority. “As guardian of Constantine’s favored religion”,  certain churches and bishops were “given legal rights and large  financial donations.”2 
These “financial donations”, funded  by the spoils of war and compelled taxation, subjected the Churches  who accepted them to the benefactors who exercise authority.  Christians had been guaranteed their lawful rights by emperors  before. Constantine did not free the church, but seduced a small  portion of it into a “legal status” with the offering of  “deceitful meats” and the dainties of his royal table.
A struggle for power soon began between  the two commanders, from which Constantine emerged victorious.  Constantine betrayed Licinius and had him and all his family put to  death. He had thousands of people put to death in mass exterminations  of any who opposed him. 
 “Beware  of false prophets, which come to you in sheep’s clothing, but  inwardly they are ravening wolves. Ye shall know them by their  fruits. Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?”  Matthew 7:15, 16
The more I study the detailed thorns of  Constantine’s life and those ministers he and his successors  appointed over men, the less I am convinced of any fruits of the Holy  Spirit in their questionable conversion. There were thousands upon  thousands that suffered and toiled under their “exercising  authority”, with tens of thousands who died at their murderous,  bloody hands. The testimony of their lives bears witness to the  purity or impurity of their souls.
“Constantine intervened in  ecclesiastical affairs to achieve unity; he presided over the first  ecumenical council of the church at Nicaea in 325.”3 He claimed the office of Pontifex Maximus or High Priest, till  he died. As the ruling High Priest, he had demanded that the bishops  of the Church come to his council. There were over 1800 known bishops  at that time and barely 300 came. He sat on a golden throne, claiming  to be the “Bishop of Bishops”, not a servant of servants, but as  a dictator. 
Of those who came, the historical  record showed that, they were financially rewarded with the spoils of  his imperial rule. Extravagant gifts of gold, silver, property, and  privilege were bestowed on these collaborating bishops who accepted  his rule from the top down. Those bishops who sanctioned his  benevolence and title of “bishop of bishops” are difficult to  justify. His gifts had been taken from fields of corpses and an  overtaxed populations. If ever there was a sin of the Nicolaitan  branded on the head of men, it was here at this council of hypocrisy.  How could men justify this fundamental departure from the teachings  of Christ by becoming the state Church of Constantine? 
Fortunately, these men were a small  minority. True Christian faith continued to thrive in those who  remained in the liberty of Christ. Those who did not answer his call  or questioned his assumed authority were sent packing or, in the  years to follow, were labeled heretics and cast out of the graces of  these despotic ‘bishops’, or simply murdered as heretics.
 In 381 A.D., the Council of  Constantinople was convened by Theodosius I. Only 150 bishops  attended condemning various religious groups that did not heed the  call of the emperor. Theodosius was as much a tyrant as Constantine and more a  murderer of thousands.
Several emperors had earlier guaranteed  the protection of the Church. The idea that the Church was  “legalized” may not be far from the truth, but what exactly does  that mean? There was now an official Church of Rome established by  men who found favor with the rulers of Rome, but were they true  Christians? Or were they taking the name of the Lord in vain?
The legalizing of the Christian church  was more a legalizing of certain collaborative sects of churches who  claimed to be Christian and were willing to turn a blind eye, or at  least give a grateful wink, to the autocratic oppression by these  manipulating chiefs of state in exchange for exemption, if not wealth  and protection. 
Christ would not appeal to Rome to save  his life, but these men petitioned Constantine and his senate, not to  save their own life, but to take the lives of others. Abraham would  not take a buckle, but these men took lavish gifts of gold and  silver. They seemed to be “the lovers of soft things” like   Essenes spoken of in the courts of Herod.
These sects and governments have been  able to control the writing of history throughout the ages. But,  probably even more importantly, they promoted the compilation of the  books we know today as the Bible. “The 27 books of the New  Testament are only a fraction of the literary production of the  Christian communities in the first three centuries.”4 There is no clear record of how some writings were excluded and how  others were chosen to be placed into what some referred as the canon. 
There is one thing clear from the  historical record. Large numbers of Christian sects fled the judgment  and persecution of the legalized church and their allies of  force, fear, and violence. This union of church and state was not one  sanctioned by God, nor did it bear much resemblance to the ways  preached, demonstrated, and taught by Jesus. 
Their fornicating relationship was  self-serving, proud, violent, and oppressive. From Augustus to  Constantine, the emperors still held the title, if not the office of Apo Theos, Originator of gods. 
There is little doubt that the men, who  exclude so much from the compilation of the New and the Old  Testaments, did so with less than noble purposes, if not evil intent.  This is not to say that those writings are not now authentic or  valid, but their relationship with the Roman state can only lead one  to believe that there may have been self-serving exclusions. These  were not the Apostles who made the final decision concerning Bible  content, but someone quite different. We can only assume that, what  some men meant unto evil, the God of Heaven shall turn for good.
It was centuries before these apostates  were able to crown rulers who began an aggressive policy of bloody  “reform”. With these new institutions, the beast rose again and  brought about the inquisition, annihilation, and extinction of  millions of people who were seeking God’s Kingdom in spirit and in  truth. The persecution of the early Christians by some emperors was  nothing compared to the persecution of Christians and others by this  unholy alliance of Church and State.
The  Church
The Church was not a homogeneous group  marching with goose-step uniformity. They did not trim the corners of  their beards to identify themselves from other groups, nor were they  steeped in identifiable traditions of robes and rituals. They looked  like Greeks, Samaritans, Jews, and gentiles. They looked like  everyone because they were everyone and anyone but they turned toward  the ways of God’s kingdom, instead of the ways of the gentile  governments. 
They were heterogeneous and  diversified. Yet, through their system of ministers and the teachings  of Christ, they formed a self-disciplined network across the empire  and beyond. That union of spirit and brotherhood was absolutely  essential for their survival during the social, political, economic,  and even geological catastrophes that plagued mankind during the  decline and fall of the Roman Empire. The godly character and virtue  of that system will prove invaluable as the modern empires of the  “world” continue to decay and decline into a similar frightful  fate.
Identifying the Church from those who  took that Name in vain is a matter of understanding what the Church  truly was to be and do. What was the Church meant to be and  accomplish for the people who daily sought His Kingdom and desired to  obey His commandments?
There were men in those early days who  were called the Patristic writers of the Church. Men like Ambrose,  Jerome, Augustine, and Gregory the Great. They are presented by some  as the “patriarchs of the Church”. But are these patrons of Jesus  Christ or did they take to a different path? Their philosophies often  seem to contradict the teachings of Jesus as well as the traditions  of the ancient Hebrews and the Bible itself.
Jerome, around 400 AD,  believed that women were bad news for men and that they were  uncontrollable, excessively passioned, and unreasonable. Although, the writings and opinions of Jerome  and others were enormously influential in defining what has been  historically touted as the Church in the medieval world, their  conclusions seem to fly in the face of God’s creative instincts.
 “And  the rib, which the LORD God had taken from man,  made he a woman, and brought her unto the man.” Genesis 2:22
Jerome inferred that women  were inferior “they degraded men.”5
 “And  Adam said, This [is] now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she  shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man. Therefore  shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto  his wife: and they shall be one flesh.” Genesis 2:23, 24 
 Women do not degrade men. A good woman  is a blessing or a curse, depending on the heart and soul of the man.  It is only weak, selfish, and proud men who blame their sin on God’s gift. The nature of women is not responsible for man’s  sin and choice.
Another early author of this church  sect was Ambrose. By the voice of the people, Ambrose was elected as  bishop of Milan. But these were “instant Christians”,6 formed at the emperor's command, not by repentance but by order to  be baptized, just add water. 
Ambrose, was the son of the governor of  Gaul and a former high Roman official. He had asked the emperor if he  could become Bishop of Milan and was granted that right by this  self-appointed Bishop of Bishops. Before Ambrose could accept  this position, he had to take time to research what Christianity was,  for he had no idea. He returned sometime later with his own  doctrines.
Ambrose considered a bishop as an  “aristocratic figure” and formulated the Church according to the  “ways of Rome issuing decrees, edicts, and commands”, rather than  serving as a subject, minister, and servant of the people. He also  displayed a fierce hatred of women that was carried into the middle  ages. He was intolerant of other religions and actually argued in the  Roman Senate that all other religions should be stamped out. This  seems in direct opposition to the teachings of Jesus. The idea that  other religions should be persecuted by Roman force and policy seems  to fly in the face of the injustice of the Crucifixion itself.
 “Touch  not; taste not; handle not; Which all are to perish with the using;  after the commandments and doctrines of men?” Colossians 2:21-22
These people, by a majority vote, chose  a single, top-down ruling bishop for thousands and, at the command of  a tyrant and his Edict of Milan, were not Christians of repentance,  although, they may have been baptized with water and fanfare. The  Milan Church, its hierarchy of authority, was established by the  spirit and character of Constantine, not by Christ. Much of what we  see as the Church has come down through this tainted religion and  apostasy. To understand the Church and its position in the Kingdom of  God, we must go back to its origin, which is Christ, not Constantine.
 “Ye  are bought with a price; be not ye the servants of men.” 1  Corinthians 7:23
 The Separate Church
The Church and the congregation of the  people continued in free association, working out their own salvation  with fear and trembling. They imposed, by their presence, a powerful  force of freedom and liberty for almost a thousand years. By their  brotherhood, they were able to keep kings retreating to their castles  so that freeman could walk down God’s paths, living at liberty in  spirit and in truth.
 “Those  captured by pirates and robbers remain free.”7
Many believe that America was once a  free country and has lost much of those freedoms. This land is as  free as it ever was. When my ancestors came here in the 1600’s, it  was a free land. There were impenetrable forests, bears, lions, and  wild uncivilized aborigines. There were dangers, perils, and  hardships at every turn, but freedom is found, like the Kingdom of  God, first, in your heart and your minds. Freedom is not comfort nor  convenience. Man is bound by his words, appetite, or fear, by his  allegiance, given or bought, by his own covetousness and his lack of  faith, not by the circumstances in the world around him. It is your  vise that binds you and your virtue through Christ that sets you  free.
 “Things  captured by pirates and robbers do not change ownership.” 8
The solitary retreat and fasting, like  Christ in the wilderness, plays an important part in the development  of the soul. But true fasting is about abstaining from self  indulgence not punishing the body through deprivation and neglect.  Even the Levites, who had their homes amongst the people for service,  had their suburbs and lands in common for their retreat.
Monasticism played an important role in  the development of the Church, but monasticism was not really defined  generally as we know it until the late middle ages. Until then, there  were a variety of practices and traditions. In most studies of broad  and diverse subjects, it is often convenient to the teacher to group  peoples and customs into categories and classes, sometimes at the  expense of the truth. 
Yes, there were eremitic monks  who were hermetic individuals who lived solitary lives of prayer and  study as holy men, rejecting all the pleasures of the world in abject  poverty. But they were not the rule. They were remembered because of  the dedicated nature of their life and, as the Essenes, because their  communal buildings survived the test of time. The truth of their  purpose and practice may have been lost in the partisan reporting of  it. 
There seems to be enough pain in a life  of service that one needs not seek out more pain and discomfort for  suffering’s sake alone. Although, solitude for periods of time may  be beneficial, I cannot imagine that God put us here on earth simply  to reject and deny every aspect of our existence and life just  because it might afford some pleasure or comfort. And can we really  live as servants of mankind, feeding His sheep, if we never come in  contact with any of them? These centers of monastic life were places  of training and study, not hermitage of isolation and deprivation.
There were other more communal monks  that were of several types, such as the Basil and Benedictine. These  forms of Monastic life styles eventually formed what we see as  monasticism in Europe, but, again, that was in the Middle Ages. To  look at the Middle Ages and assume that the Church in that time  period was even similar to the early Church will lead to a  super-erroneous picture of what Christ intended the Church to be.
The History of the Church was, by no  means, presenting one doctrine of religious zealots spanning the  globe. The idea of Petrine Succession from Peter as the head of the  Church was a minority concept of little more than general respect.  There were no geographical jurisdictions for Bishops, for the  kingdom, not being here nor there, is not geographical. The  ministers of the kingdom were more like the public servants of the  mobile nation of Israel than medieval or modern Churchanity.
The true Church operated relatively  well in the first thousand years after the destruction of Jerusalem.  It had little to do with central authority until it ran afoul of  persecution coming from disparate sects, which often enjoyed the  generous graces of despots. 
The faithful Church’s function and  achievements in ministering to the Kingdom of Heaven on earth did not  fit well into modern history books, which were fostered, written, and  censored by the promoters of central Benefactors who exercised authority, one over the other. The true precepts of  Christianity were so successful that no king rose to prominent power  over the Kingdom of Heaven on earth for almost a thousand years,  beating a previous record of four hundred years from Moses to Saul.
There are many stories that tell us of  the princes of the Kingdom, as in the account of Saxons marching up a  European river toward the castle of a would-be king who had done, at  least, some sort of injustice to men. His Ambassador returned after,  what that kingly usurper believed to be, lengthy negotiations, only  to report that he could find no one to bargain with, for “They say  they are all kings.” 
The Church had brought to these lost  sheep the good news of the Kingdom, where there was no king and every  man did according to his God-given conscience. It was not a kingdom  that was new, but was the ancient kingdom of Israel, where God  prevails. It did not have the rituals and robes of the Pharisees.  It was not like the nations where men crowned men to guarantee the  safety of each other at the expense of liberty. There was liberty  among the sons of God, as long as they accepted the responsibility of  protecting their neighbors' rights as if they were their own. 
Men sought the kingdom. Some were pure  and pious and some mixed their search with anger, impatience, and  hostilities. Yet, their search and contemplation upon the message of  Christ altered the course of nations and history. But when men turned  from God’s law, they soon felt the whips of corrupted rulers and  suffered under the bondage of despots.
 “If  we will not be governed by God, then we will be ruled by tyrants.”  William Penn.
Jesus was the rightful heir of that  promised Kingdom and the people flocked to His message of liberty, to  His Free Dominion under one God, the Father in Heaven, not the would  be Fathers on earth.
 “But  whoso looketh into the perfect law of liberty, and continueth  [therein], he being not a forgetful hearer, but a doer of the work,  this man shall be blessed in his deed.” James 1:25
The people of Europe and their rugged  individualism was a fertile ground for such blessed messages brought  by the early refugees from the persecution of the civil powers of  Rome. The decaying cities of the Roman Empire often displayed their  own brand of corruption. God’s kingdom is practical and wise. It  does not guarantee perfection, but shows us the imperfection of our  own hearts and minds. It demands spiritual and moral growth, or  demonstrates the evidence of its absence in our lives. The Kingdom  must be written on our hearts first.
 “But  seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all  these things shall be added unto you.” Matthew 6:33
Others systems, which run contrary to  God’s plan and Jesus’ gospel, lead to deception, though they can  often conjure up measures of success and order for a period of time.  Their affluence is often a lie built on debt and established by  spending the future of the next generation for the comfort,  indulgence, and apathy of the present. In almost all cases, they feed  avarice and sloth with repose and slumber. The strong are made weak  and the weak are debilitated. Faith, hope, and charity atrophy as  covetousness and avidity amplify.
There were many who said that they were  the Church. There were many who said that they were seeking the  kingdom of God. God is judge. Right knowledge and good fruits help us  see the truth of God’s kingdom and the Gospel of Jesus Christ,  which tells us that His Kingdom is at hand. Though understanding the  Kingdom is, in part, the product of preaching the truth of the  Kingdom in word and deed, it is really the divine revelation of God  in our own hearts and minds that grants us the faith and grace to  know and do the will of our Father. 
 “But  rather seek ye the kingdom of God; and all these things shall be  added unto you.” Luke 12:31
The precepts of God’s kingdom have  remained the same because God has remained the same. What people see  as new is often just a return to the precepts and principles long  forgotten or twisted out of any recognizable form. Seeking the  kingdom always requires a measure of repentance. It is humility that  allows us to turn from what we have been taught as true to what, in  the depths, of our being we know is true. 
Explanations of history, examination of  words and phrases, may bear witness to the precepts of the Kingdom of  God, but flesh and blood cannot reveal it. One may recognize the  kingdom as they see the truth of what has already been revealed to  them in their hearts by God’s grace. The pattern of the Kingdom is  as redundant in history as fingers and toes on a man.
Where two to ten families, who love the  ways of God, can come together in congregation, loving one another as  they love God and themselves, you have the beginnings of the Kingdom.  If they practice their faith in Christ and His way, then their love,  and charity will bind them and seal them from harm. Like the planks  of Noah’s Ark, sealed inside and out, they will weather the storms  of the millennium riding the waves of tribulation, and the beast  shall die upon the earth as it does in their hearts.
The time to begin your journey toward  the Kingdom begins by the turning of your heart toward God and your  hands and feet toward His service. By serving one another by faith,  hope, and charity, according to His will, we shall find our way into  His everlasting Kingdom within our reach.
 “Church.  In its most general sense, the religious society founded and  established by Jesus Christ, to receive, preserve, and propagate his  doctrines and ordinances.”
 “A  body or community of Christians, united under one form of government  by the profession of one faith, and the observance of the same  rituals and ceremonies.”9
 
Footnotes: