Her Ways Are Moveable
By Prophet Jacob R. Blandford
"Lest thou shouldest
ponder the path of life, her ways are moveable, that thou canst not know
them."
(Proverbs 5:6 KJV)
"I have decked my bed with coverings of
tapestry, with carved works, with fine linen of
(Proverbs
In the first 9
chapters of the Book of Proverbs, there are many warnings against the sin of
adultery, which is the 7th Commandment. God delights in a faithful
marriage between a man and a woman. Any sex outside of marriage is a
sin. There is also another form of adultery, which is spiritual adultery
or spiritual fornication. That is when a man or woman of God breaks
covenant with God and worships or serves a false god. It is called
idolatry, which are the 1st and 2nd Commandments. And it is a serious
sin. So, Proverbs 1-9 not only warns us about physical or sexual
adultery, but also spiritual or religious idolatry.
With that said,
most of my Philadelphian Protestant and Baptist brethren would agree that the
Whore or Harlot from Revelation 17 & 18 is
Now when it comes
to biblical texts everybody knows that Bible-believers get their Text (the
Received Text) from
But Catholics and
Laodiceans get their biblical texts from
Now, we
Bible-believers are straight shooters. We tell you up front we believe
the Holy Book (KJV 1611) from cover to cover. And anybody in the world
can get a dollar store KJV and read it, and check out what we believe for themselves.
However, you
can't pin down an Alexandrian because "her ways are moveable... that thou
canst not know them" (Prov. 5:6). She
doesn't have just one Bible—she has scores of bible versions! If you
don't like one, just move to another! That is called 'multiple
authorities' and it basically makes your own opinion to be the final authority
rather than "It is written". The Alexandrian doesn't stand for
anything ‘inspired’ but nebulous and imaginary 'originals' that no one has ever
seen! This harlot even emulates the Bible-believing church with her own
"two-edged sword" (Prov. 5:4), just like
the Protestant word of God in Hebrews
This is the
difference between a wishy-washy, whimsical Christian (see Eph.