Just digging into more of the prophecy stuff (about 1/3 into the book) where it mentions a haven of the remnant:
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Revelation+20%3A9-10&version=KJV
> 9 And they went up on the breadth of the earth, and compassed the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city: and fire came down from God out of heaven, and devoured them.
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> 10 And the devil that deceived them was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever.
"the camp of saints". So it is talking about a gathering of good people. Then it mentions "the beloved city". The name "David" means beloved of the jews. No idea what the original greek text said here. But I strongly suspect that it will be obvious to the people there when the gathering takes place. And it says *camp* not city (or citadel), and that attempts to attack it will be repelled by an energy weapon high above in orbit, is my surmise (there is several references to spacecraft in Revelation).
The interesting thing in this is El Salvador literally means "the savior" and the capital city is called "San Salvador" which is "Saint Savior".
But wherever it is, I think it's going to be known soon.
The second, 20:10, makes a reference to the lake of fire. As regards to the Atlantean myths, there is good reason to believe this refers to a volcano, and specifically, the main one on the Canary Islands, Teneriffe, was referred to by the ancient greeks as "Tartarus" which is their word for the lake of fire, now commonly called Hell. Either that refers literally to this location.
I have no idea yet what this could concretely be, if it is indeed coming very soon, but it seems to me that it might not be somewhere that is expected, and it may not be somewhere that you would have thought would be safe if there was another little barrage from the Taurids or any other debris heading our way. (and I've always found it weird how much they hype the whole "deflect the asteroid with a nuke" ideas being talked up at NASA and by others).
I'm not a christian in the sense that I reject most of the catholic canon about Jesus, the birth, the death, the trinity, and it pleased me to read that there was a man, who led a rebellion against Rome, who was very successful, a demagogue, who raised great support to kneecap the empire. To me the important parts about Jesus were always the parts about rejecting human authority, and the rest seems like, and concretely resembles ancient pagan rituals.
#biblestr