Jack Chick Tracts - Read here!

Cornerstone and Christianity today are not Christian Magazines - although they portray themselves to be Christian magazines - they are front organizations - set up to deceive and misinform Believers. They slandered Dr. Alberto Rivera also and when confronted could not give any tangible evidence for their claims.

The slander of John Todd does not in any way discredit his testimony which he gave decades ago has proven to be true again and again and again. In fact, so much so that now many people are going back and researching what he said in those meetings, Guno. It's the reason they murdered him. You should know that.


Note this - John Todd exposed the evangelical television con men who were receiving major funds from the illuminati - men such as Ralph Wilkerson - Melody land - in fact there were so many on their payroll - (these guys became millionaires and built mega churches -like Kenneth Copeland - like Joel Osteen - Rick Warren - Bob Tilton - and others) that when John Todd wanted to give his life to Jesus Christ and pray with a minister he had to contact Jack Chick to find out who was for real! There are that many false teachers that have infiltrated the churches! Imagine it! It's true! What do you think these people were going to do when he exposed some of them? Endorse him?!!! Wake up, Guno. It only proves even more that Todd was the genuine article.
 
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Ex - Witches / ex - Satanists also - have come out and said that John Todd was right in his testimonies about the occult and how it operates. Of course they will be accused of being liars too. It's what happens when secrets get exposed. The people involved deny it. Should that surprise anyone? No.
 
Cornerstone and Christianity today are not Christian Magazines - although they portray themselves to be Christian magazines - they are front organizations - set up to deceive and misinform Believers. They slandered Dr. Alberto Rivera also and when confronted could not give any tangible evidence for their claims.

The slander of John Todd does not in any way discredit his testimony which he gave decades ago has proven to be true again and again and again. In fact, so much so that now many people are going back and researching what he said in those meetings, Guno. It's the reason they murdered him. You should know that.


He died in a mental institution, he was nuts, he was arrested for rape in SC
 
He was moved all over the country and the charges against him were false, Guno. He was murdered by the Illuminati he exposed. As he was born into the Todd / Collins family and exposed the family secrets. They were none too happy with him. As you hail from NC - Satanist headquarters for the eastern side of the United States I'm sure you understand what "unhappy with him" means. Right?
 
John Todd (1949-2007; aka John Wayne Todd, John Todd Collins, Lance Collins and Christopher Kollyns) was a fundamentalist Christian apologist and a convicted rapist and child molester. He was a 1970s sensation on the Christian church circuit claiming to have been born into a family of witches who groomed him for eventual placement on a high council of Druids known as the Illuminati. His tall tales were used as source material by Jack Chick for several of his tracts and comic books on the occult. During the time he said he was a Satanist (circa 1968) he was actually a storefront preacher and follower of the "Jesus only" theology of William Branham. Ironically, during some of the time after he claimed to have converted to Christianity (circa 1976) he was running a Wiccan bookstore.


John Todd claimed that a conspiracy of witches and druids was in control of world events, and that they were about to enact a plan to stamp out "Bible-believing Christianity" and make witchcraft the official religion of the United States. He further claimed that he knew of all this because he himself had briefly been placed on the high council of the Illuminati, but then converted to born again Christianity and was now going to blow their cover and warn the Christian world of their plans. He appears to have gone through two periods on the evangelical circuit making these claims. During the early 1970s he was making the rounds among Pentecostal and Charismatic churches, the same grounds frequented by Mike Warnke. He reappeared during the late 1970s on the independent Baptist church circuit making the the same claims, and in addition denouncing the Charismatic movement as a creation of the Illuminati. In between he seems to have returned to witchcraft for a couple of years.

He was, for a short while in 1978-79, a hot topic in Christendom. The apparent reason seems to be because his "testimony" dovetailed nicely with conspiracy theories then being circulated by the religious right about then-President Jimmy Carter. John Todd said Jimmy Carter was the Illuminati's main man, who they intended to place in power as the Antichrist. Jimmy Carter was in fact a born-again Christian, but since when did the religious right let facts get in the way of their political agenda?

He also claims to have started Christian Rock as part of the Illuminati's plan to take over the churches with rock & roll's Satanic beat, with a $8 million (or $4 million - his testimony changed from time to time) dollar check from Illuminati/Witch HQ to Chuck Smith of Calvary Chapel, which is just stupid.

Another fun allegation made by John Todd: "Phillip Rothschild ordered one of his mistresses to write an 1100-page book that would describe to all witches how they would take control of the World through the Illuminati: It's called Atlas Shrugged.

John Todd eventually started making wild claims that many large fundamentalist Christian ministries were funded by and secretly promoting the agenda of the Illuminati, at which point he was investigated by Christianity Today[2] andCornerstone magazines [3] and found to be an outright fraud. A book from an evangelical Christian publisher, The Todd Phenomenon by Darryl Hicks by David Lewis (New Leaf Publishers, 1979) looked into and debunked Todd's claims.

In 1987, Todd was arrested for the rape of a University of South Carolina student and further charged with molesting two child students of the karate school where he worked. He was sentenced to 30 years, but was released in 2004 to the Behavioral Disorder Treatment Unit run by the South Carolina Department of Mental Health, where he died on November 10, 2007

He was a seriously mentally ill kook Jeri and he died in the nut house
 
I've got a good idea! Let's let John Todd give his testimony and let the listeners decide whether or not John Todd is the real deal or not, Guno? In fact let's examine closely what John Todd (Collins) has to say about his own family and about the Illuminatist book. He will also cover the Bohemian Grove - Satanic rituals - etc in this video - I believe - if not I'll post more of his videos to make sure that the listeners are able to hear that part of his testimony too.

Here you go:



John Todd exposes his former family, the Illuminati
John Todd Collins of the Illuminati bloodline occultist family, the Collins, exposes the madness of the Illuminati after becoming a Christian.
 
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The recent phenomenon of Satanic Panic originated during the 1970s and gained traction during the 1980s and 1990s, when a widespread belief took hold within American evangelical Christianity that a vast underground network of Satanists is in control of secular society.

Satanic Panic - RationalWiki

:uhoh3::uhoh3::uhoh3::uhoh3::tinfoil:
Wiki is your source? Ha! ha! Why don't you go to You tube and type in testimonies of ex - Satanists? You're in for an education! Go to Google and type in books by ex-Satanists - better yet - why don't you order yourself a copy of The Witch Doctor and the Man under the Sea by Dr. Pat Holliday and really give yourself an education, Guno?

You're in for a rude awakening if you don't believe there is any such thing as Witchcraft & Satanism. You've got people openly admitting their practice of Satanism on this board. Open your eyes and come out of denial.
 
Ex - Witches / ex - Satanists also - have come out and said that John Todd was right in his testimonies about the occult and how it operates. Of course they will be accused of being liars too. It's what happens when secrets get exposed. The people involved deny it. Should that surprise anyone? No.


And just who are these people? :uhoh3::uhoh3:
 
The recent phenomenon of Satanic Panic originated during the 1970s and gained traction during the 1980s and 1990s, when a widespread belief took hold within American evangelical Christianity that a vast underground network of Satanists is in control of secular society.

Satanic Panic - RationalWiki

:uhoh3::uhoh3::uhoh3::uhoh3::tinfoil:
Wiki is your source? Ha! ha! Why don't you go to You tube and type in testimonies of ex - Satanists? You're in for an education! Go to Google and type in books by ex-Satanists - better yet - why don't you order yourself a copy of The Witch Doctor and the Man under the Sea by Dr. Pat Holliday and really give yourself an education, Guno?

You're in for a rude awakening if you don't believe there is any such thing as Witchcraft & Satanism. You've got people openly admitting their practice of Satanism on this board. Open your eyes and come out of denial.


Jeri , I know some people who were involved in that kook stuff , who finally escaped that fundy nutter stuff

What Was the Satanic Panic of the 1980s

Satanic Panic The Creation of a Contemporary Legend Jeffrey S. Victor 9780812691924 Amazon.com Books
 
Mazes, Monsters, Charlatans, Satan and Suicide: A Short History of the Satanic Panic
by Matt Staggs on March 21, 2014 in News


.

One of my favorite pieces of Satanic Panic-era propaganda has to be Jack Chick’s “Dark Dungeons” religious tract. One of hundreds of such tracts created by evangelist Chick, “Dark Dungeons” is the story of two young women led astray by the fantasy role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons. One of them, Marcie, commits suicide after her thief character “Black Leaf” dies and the other, Debbie, is initiated into witchcraft after her cleric character Elfstar advances to eighth level. As the diabolical Dungeon Master “Ms. Frost” leads Debbie further from the loving arms of Jesus, her mysterious friend “Mike” pops up to tell her that she’s in grave danger. Following a visit to a mustachioed minister, Debbie repents and burns all of her D&D materials instead of saving them to sell on eBay in twenty years when she needs beer money.

Gamers, as well as most people with an ounce of sense, see “Dark Dungeons” for the hysterical kitsch it is, and rather than angering D&D players, it mostly amused them. I know my group loved it (“Where’s the real spells?” “No, Black Leaf!”) when we were kids. My parents didn’t buy into the Satan rumors that surrounded the game, or anything else I liked. Not all of my friends were so lucky: They had to hide fantasy novels, D&D manuals, heavy metal albums and other “Satanic” materials to keep them from being burned or thrown away by their parents. Others suffered in far worse ways: They were sent to camps for “troubled youth” or private Christian schools.

- See more at: Mazes Monsters Charlatans Satan and Suicide A Short History of the Satanic Panic - disinformation
 
John Todd (1949-2007; aka John Wayne Todd, John Todd Collins, Lance Collins and Christopher Kollyns) was a fundamentalist Christian apologist and a convicted rapist and child molester. He was a 1970s sensation on the Christian church circuit claiming to have been born into a family of witches who groomed him for eventual placement on a high council of Druids known as the Illuminati. His tall tales were used as source material by Jack Chick for several of his tracts and comic books on the occult. During the time he said he was a Satanist (circa 1968) he was actually a storefront preacher and follower of the "Jesus only" theology of William Branham. Ironically, during some of the time after he claimed to have converted to Christianity (circa 1976) he was running a Wiccan bookstore.


John Todd claimed that a conspiracy of witches and druids was in control of world events, and that they were about to enact a plan to stamp out "Bible-believing Christianity" and make witchcraft the official religion of the United States. He further claimed that he knew of all this because he himself had briefly been placed on the high council of the Illuminati, but then converted to born again Christianity and was now going to blow their cover and warn the Christian world of their plans. He appears to have gone through two periods on the evangelical circuit making these claims. During the early 1970s he was making the rounds among Pentecostal and Charismatic churches, the same grounds frequented by Mike Warnke. He reappeared during the late 1970s on the independent Baptist church circuit making the the same claims, and in addition denouncing the Charismatic movement as a creation of the Illuminati. In between he seems to have returned to witchcraft for a couple of years.

He was, for a short while in 1978-79, a hot topic in Christendom. The apparent reason seems to be because his "testimony" dovetailed nicely with conspiracy theories then being circulated by the religious right about then-President Jimmy Carter. John Todd said Jimmy Carter was the Illuminati's main man, who they intended to place in power as the Antichrist. Jimmy Carter was in fact a born-again Christian, but since when did the religious right let facts get in the way of their political agenda?

He also claims to have started Christian Rock as part of the Illuminati's plan to take over the churches with rock & roll's Satanic beat, with a $8 million (or $4 million - his testimony changed from time to time) dollar check from Illuminati/Witch HQ to Chuck Smith of Calvary Chapel, which is just stupid.

Another fun allegation made by John Todd: "Phillip Rothschild ordered one of his mistresses to write an 1100-page book that would describe to all witches how they would take control of the World through the Illuminati: It's called Atlas Shrugged.

John Todd eventually started making wild claims that many large fundamentalist Christian ministries were funded by and secretly promoting the agenda of the Illuminati, at which point he was investigated by Christianity Today[2] andCornerstone magazines [3] and found to be an outright fraud. A book from an evangelical Christian publisher, The Todd Phenomenon by Darryl Hicks by David Lewis (New Leaf Publishers, 1979) looked into and debunked Todd's claims.

In 1987, Todd was arrested for the rape of a University of South Carolina student and further charged with molesting two child students of the karate school where he worked. He was sentenced to 30 years, but was released in 2004 to the Behavioral Disorder Treatment Unit run by the South Carolina Department of Mental Health, where he died on November 10, 2007

He was a seriously mentally ill kook Jeri and he died in the nut house
thank you. Jerry's slavish devotion to these hucksters is bordering on obsession
 
The recent phenomenon of Satanic Panic originated during the 1970s and gained traction during the 1980s and 1990s, when a widespread belief took hold within American evangelical Christianity that a vast underground network of Satanists is in control of secular society.

Satanic Panic - RationalWiki

:uhoh3::uhoh3::uhoh3::uhoh3::tinfoil:
Wiki is your source? Ha! ha! Why don't you go to You tube and type in testimonies of ex - Satanists? You're in for an education! Go to Google and type in books by ex-Satanists - better yet - why don't you order yourself a copy of The Witch Doctor and the Man under the Sea by Dr. Pat Holliday and really give yourself an education, Guno?

You're in for a rude awakening if you don't believe there is any such thing as Witchcraft & Satanism. You've got people openly admitting their practice of Satanism on this board. Open your eyes and come out of denial.
Satanists......:cuckoo:
 
Remember the Satanic Panic
By Philip Jenkins
Lecturing recently, I mentioned the American witch-hunts of the 1980s and 1990s. When the audience looked puzzled, I explained that I was referring to the Satanic Panic of those years, the wave of false charges concerning ritual child abuse and devil cults that made regular headlines in the decade after 1984. The explanation helped little.

Even people who had lived through those years, who had been following the media closely, had precisely no recollection. Lost in memory it may be, but the Satanic Panic needs to be remembered, if only to prevent a renewed outbreak of this horrible farrago. And when better than in the 30th anniversary of the affair's beginning?


It all started in southern California, in Manhattan Beach, in the Fall of 1983. A woman told police that her son had been sexually abused at a highly reputable preschool run by the McMartin family. Her charges became ever wilder and more implausible, not surprisingly given that she was a paranoid schizophrenic. This dubious background did not prevent local police from warning all McMartin parents that their children might have been abused -- always a great way of preventing public alarm! -- and referring potential victims to a local psychological counseling service.

Over the following months, counselors interviewed hundreds of children, using questions that might have been quite appropriate when treating the genuinely abused, but which should never have been used in a prosecutorial context. In 1984, the case broke in the most lurid terms. Seven teachers were accused of a mind-numbing list of atrocious crimes, including the mass rape and torture of children, and the killing of small animals to instill fear. Other allegations involved the ritualistic use of urine and feces, and bizarre acts involving robes and occult symbols. Seven years of trials and investigations followed.

Plenty of later accounts have revealed just how these charges were created in the lengthy dialogues between the therapists and the utterly baffled children, who wanted to respond helpfully to weird questions about "dirty acts" and "bad touches." Suffice it to say that none of the alleged acts was ever substantiated, and the case produced no convictions. Soon, though, the McMartin case evolved to become the precedent for an imaginary national and even global crime-wave. Similar charges now appeared in multiple cases across the US, and overseas -- in Britain, Canada, France, the Netherlands, South Africa, and Australia. "S.R.A." -- Satanic Ritual Abuse -- became the theme of professional conferences and publications worldwide.

It must have been a scientific reality: it even had its own acronym!

S.R.A. charges became the basis of a florid mythology, in which the nation's pre-schools had been infiltrated by Satanic cultists, who used toddlers in their dark rites. Reputedly, such evildoers were both numerous, and lethal. Cults were allegedly involved in human sacrifices, some associated with such notorious serial killers as David Berkowitz, New York City's Son of Sam. By some estimates, Satanists in the 1980s were responsible for fifty or sixty thousand murders in the US annually -- at a time when the total number of all American homicides was around 25,000 a year.

But how could such vastly powerful cults have established themselves overnight? A deep-rooted history was soon forthcoming, in the form of alleged memories of cult abuse originally depicted in the 1980 book Michelle Remembers. (Probably, the Michelle story helped shape the original McMartin allegations). With startling unanimity, baby boom-aged women in therapy sessions nationwide were reporting McMartin-style abuse dating back to the 1950s and beyond. Some told of bearing babies for cults to sacrifice.

By the early 1990s, "recovered memory" was a flourishing and highly profitable subfield of the therapeutic profession. Patients had a near-guarantee that they would recall hideous acts of violence and molestation at the hands of Satan's henchmen, who usually happened to be their own parents.

And it was all bogus, from start to finish.


And the con man, Jack chic made a bundle off this stuff , what a friend he has in je$u$
 
But the main reason the more outlandish forms of the Satanic Panic have receded is that they’re no longer necessary. The Satanic Panic no longer needs to bid for attention from the fringes because it now enjoys a central place in American religion and American politics. It has become institutionalized in the teavangelical political-religion that remains centrally focused on its opposition to imaginary Satanic baby-killers.

Here’s how it works and why it became necessary:

You’re sitting in your car, driving to the mall, stuck in traffic just like everybody else. In this way, and in every way, you look just exactly like everybody else, you feel just like everybody else, you are just like everybody else.

But you know you’re not supposed to be just like everybody else. You’re supposed to be different somehow. Your life is supposed to be focused on and shaped by a religious devotion that sets you apart. You’re supposed to be a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people. You’re supposed to look and feel and be better than everybody else, but you have no idea what you’re supposed to be doing to make that true. Or maybe you have some idea of what that would mean — some vague notion of what it would mean to take up your cross and follow — but that just seems too daunting, too unpleasant, too hard.

So you settle for a shortcut. If you can’t raise the bridge, lower the river. If you can’t set yourself apart by acting more like Jesus, you can set yourself apart by pretending that everybody else is acting more like Satan. All those other people who seem just like you might be secretly evil. They’re not disciples of Jesus, like you are, so they must be disciples of Satan. And even though they look and act and live just like you do, there must be secret, coded signs that reveal their true evil agenda of evilness. They must actually be Satanists who kill babies so that they can have lots of dirty sex, and who have lots of dirty sex so that they can kill babies.



Read more: The Magic School Bus and the Satanic Panic that ate Christianity
 
Fundy Christianity has gone through phases from the Satan scare, to when the ten members of the European union got together and they claimed it was a sign of the beast with ten horns of the end times to the holy laughter , great scams all . all big money makers!!! and the old stand by faith "healing"
 
John Todd (1949-2007; aka John Wayne Todd, John Todd Collins, Lance Collins and Christopher Kollyns) was a fundamentalist Christian apologist and a convicted rapist and child molester. He was a 1970s sensation on the Christian church circuit claiming to have been born into a family of witches who groomed him for eventual placement on a high council of Druids known as the Illuminati. His tall tales were used as source material by Jack Chick for several of his tracts and comic books on the occult. During the time he said he was a Satanist (circa 1968) he was actually a storefront preacher and follower of the "Jesus only" theology of William Branham. Ironically, during some of the time after he claimed to have converted to Christianity (circa 1976) he was running a Wiccan bookstore.


John Todd claimed that a conspiracy of witches and druids was in control of world events, and that they were about to enact a plan to stamp out "Bible-believing Christianity" and make witchcraft the official religion of the United States. He further claimed that he knew of all this because he himself had briefly been placed on the high council of the Illuminati, but then converted to born again Christianity and was now going to blow their cover and warn the Christian world of their plans. He appears to have gone through two periods on the evangelical circuit making these claims. During the early 1970s he was making the rounds among Pentecostal and Charismatic churches, the same grounds frequented by Mike Warnke. He reappeared during the late 1970s on the independent Baptist church circuit making the the same claims, and in addition denouncing the Charismatic movement as a creation of the Illuminati. In between he seems to have returned to witchcraft for a couple of years.

He was, for a short while in 1978-79, a hot topic in Christendom. The apparent reason seems to be because his "testimony" dovetailed nicely with conspiracy theories then being circulated by the religious right about then-President Jimmy Carter. John Todd said Jimmy Carter was the Illuminati's main man, who they intended to place in power as the Antichrist. Jimmy Carter was in fact a born-again Christian, but since when did the religious right let facts get in the way of their political agenda?

He also claims to have started Christian Rock as part of the Illuminati's plan to take over the churches with rock & roll's Satanic beat, with a $8 million (or $4 million - his testimony changed from time to time) dollar check from Illuminati/Witch HQ to Chuck Smith of Calvary Chapel, which is just stupid.

Another fun allegation made by John Todd: "Phillip Rothschild ordered one of his mistresses to write an 1100-page book that would describe to all witches how they would take control of the World through the Illuminati: It's called Atlas Shrugged.

John Todd eventually started making wild claims that many large fundamentalist Christian ministries were funded by and secretly promoting the agenda of the Illuminati, at which point he was investigated by Christianity Today[2] andCornerstone magazines [3] and found to be an outright fraud. A book from an evangelical Christian publisher, The Todd Phenomenon by Darryl Hicks by David Lewis (New Leaf Publishers, 1979) looked into and debunked Todd's claims.

In 1987, Todd was arrested for the rape of a University of South Carolina student and further charged with molesting two child students of the karate school where he worked. He was sentenced to 30 years, but was released in 2004 to the Behavioral Disorder Treatment Unit run by the South Carolina Department of Mental Health, where he died on November 10, 2007

He was a seriously mentally ill kook Jeri and he died in the nut house
thank you. Jerry's slavish devotion to these hucksters is bordering on obsession

If you will read through the thread you'll find that Guno brought him up and I responded. Guno has a fixation on John Todd which leads me to believe Guno is concerned with anyone that exposed the occult and their secrets - which John Todd did do. Todd was falsely charged in order to put him in prison - move him around the country until finally they transferred him to yet another place and there he was taken away in a helicopter never to be seen again - the people closest to the case say he was murdered and I would have to agree with them. The letters of John Todd from prison - which are available on you tube are quite telling in what lengths certain people went to silence him. I believe John Todd died a martyr for Jesus Christ.

How did they get to him? My belief is the hedge of protection was broken in his life - he had backslid and the door was opened for the enemy to attack him. Had he not backslid I believe he would be alive today. Because the God Todd serves is the One true God and the authority he was given in Luke 10:19 is more than enough to keep any Christian who is abiding in Christ. It is when a Christian backslides that they are open to enemy attack.
 
Speaking of John Todd. Let's do the book that was first printed for his testimony. It is based on a true story. It is called, The Broken Cross. by Chick publications. It's also available to see on you tube - I believe - in comic book reading story.

The history behind this book - is that 10,000 copies were printed to be distributed at the Worlds Fair to get out the word. (for free)

There was a convention with thousands booking to attend at that particular event. When the news broke that 10,000 copies of the Broken Cross would be distributed at that convention - the entire thing was canceled suddenly. Todd said in his testimony that the people who were putting the convention on were so fearful of the information being put out in the Broken Cross story - that they had decided to lose thousands upon thousands of dollars rather than to see Todd's book get into the hands of the people who had booked to attend.

That in itself is an outstanding endorsement of the book.

I do not have the inclination to download the photos and pages so I will just type it out here for those who would like to read the printed version.

It's got a great deal of information that people will appreciate learning about. For some, it could save their lives.
 

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