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Sunday, April 2, 2006

Info Post
The Jubilee Resources Webb [yes, that's how they spell it] Site has kindly provided a 12-page prayer of renunciation and rebuking of Freemasonry, suitable for use by you as a Freemason, or if you're just haunted by the fact that an ancestor was a Freemason.

This prayer covers it all, paragraph by paragraph. Repeat it, and you're invoking Jaaaay-Suz to save you from Witchcraft, which the prayer calls the "principle Spirit behind Freemasonry." Cast out Satan, Baphomet, the Anti-Christ, the Angels of Death and Deception, plus... long-term headaches and epilepsy will go away!

There's a Prayer Paragraph designed to save you from every Blue Lodge degree, every York Rite degree, and every Scottish Rite degree by name. Apparently praying this prayer even helps you overcome fear of gang assault and rape, those fears having been brought on by you having become a Master Mason.

The final paragraph mentions all other Masonic organations including DeMolay, Rainbow Girls, Order of the Eastern Star, and the Shrine. But wait — you get more! This prayer will also release you from your bondage to the Elks, Odd Fellows, Buffaloes, Ku Klux Klan, Foresters, Woodmen of the World, and even the Druids.

The organization that posted this strange document, the Oaks of Righteousness, is located in Atlanta, Georgia. It's uncertain if they are part of a church, or freelancers. The site features a husband and wife team — Richard and Virginia Robinson — calling themselves pastors, dressed in matching dress shirts. Digging through their website further, I find recurring themes that they're trying to help their prey, er, clients, get rid of "generational" sins. Sheesh... it's bad enough we gotta worry about our own shortcomings; these folks think we're damned 'cause Old Grand Dad had a drinking problem or was too shrewd in business, or worse — didn't go to church!

The Oaks of Righteousness team seems to be loosely affiliated with a "multi-cultural" church called Liberty Church, located in Marietta, Georgia, a suburban area north of Atlanta. This site features eight more couples in similar pose and similar shirts as the Robinsons. Apparently each couple "pastors" a different congregation within the same church. Maybe it's an MLM pyramid — Multi-Level Ministry. Who knows?

Read the PDF file here.


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