The National
Council of Churches
An Unholy
Alliance
Part I
Lea Sylvester
The establishment left has always had
multiple outlets for its views. One
prominent outlet has been the National
Council of Churches. The National Council of
Churches (NCC), known as the Federal Council
of Churches prior to 1950, has been the
primary representative organization of the
American Establishment. The NCC has been
overwhelmingly leftist since its beginning
in 1908.
From a Christian perspective, the only true
freedom or liberty we can obtain is through
Jesus Christ. Therefore, it is logical that
one way to infiltrate a “system” that
promotes/ed ideals contrary to the goal of
leftists, (in this case the belief in and
teachings of Jesus Christ), would be to
become a part of them and change them from
within. This is what has happened with the
NCC. Indeed, no one can disagree about the
great apostasy seen within churches today.
The “environmental justice,” the
“multi-faith movement” and many other topics
are addressed by the NCC and instead of
promoting biblical views, it distorts and
contorts Scripture to justify its ideals.
The “marriage” of today's churches,
specifically here in the United States, has
formed an “unholy alliance” in the National
Council of Churches.
The trend that is proving to be accepted
worldwide is convergence; unification are
taking place across the planet on at least
four fronts: economic, legal/political,
religious, and technological. Ideas about a
one-world currency, once relegated to the
zany-conspiracy category, are being taken
seriously. Recently,
Wired
editor David Wolman wrote, “It would
behoove us to seriously analyze the pros and
cons” of a one-world currency.
Never before has the United States become so
entangled in both the letter and spirit of
so many international treaties and
tribunals. America has invitations to join a
host of international conventions that would
usurp existing federal law. The
Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, for
example, would revise American copyright
law. Our State Department already has thrown
U.S. Support behind UN Human Rights Council
Resolution 16/18, which is fundamentally at
odds with the traditional understanding of
the First Amendment.
There is also a convergence of religions,
even going beyond the Chrislam movement that
seeks to create a theological partnership
between Christianity and Islam. (see
chrislam.org) One vital change agent in this
movement is the NCC and the WCC (World
Council of Churches). When President Obama
was reelected, the Dali Lama, Tibet's
Buddhist head of state, congratulated and
praised him as the man who “inspired the
world with a call to take responsibility for
the problems we face as global citizens.”
This “call” is creating a religious melting
pot focused on issues like environmentalism
and eradication of world poverty, with a
spiritual component.
Keeping with these policies, the National
Council of Churches is doing its part to
assist in making the fusion of religions a
reality.
The NCC claims the authority to speak
for some 42 million Christians in America.
It includes
thirty-three denominations representing most
of the major Protestant and Orthodox
Churches in the United States. In addition,
more than a score of denominations not
actually members of the N.C.C. have
participated actively in its radical
programs. The
National Council functions through dozens of
interlocking departments, grouped under four
major divisions, overseeing the N.C.C.'s
international operations. The program is of
such magnitude that in 1968, alone, the
National Council of Churches expended over
$19 million on a worldwide network of
Leftist projects. In that year, however, the
N.C.C.collected
$24,819,000 from gullible American
Christians and tax-exempt Leftist
foundations.
The N.C.C. has consistently propagandized for every conceivable
Leftist program, from federally forced
integration to complete disarmament of the
United States. From its office in
Washington, D.C., the National Council's
spokesmen regularly appear before Committees
of Congress to lobby for the causes of the
Far Left, though the National Council has
never registered under the Lobbying Act of
1946. And, despite its having been
repeatedly exposed as a fraud the N.C.C. has
somehow continued to maintain not only its
reputation for legitimacy, but its
tax-exempt status as well. It is very well
shielded indeed, and rooted in a conspiracy
against Christianity in America which goes
back more than eighty years.
A full decade before the turn of the
century, the seeds of the Marxist "social
gospel" were already being planted within
our major seminaries and divinity schools by
returning American theologians who had
studied in England and Germany. There they
had become infected with the virus of a
Conspiracy which had already changed much of
the spiritual and moral structure of Europe.
After awhile, of course, America produced
her own clerical conspirators.
One of these was
Walter Rauschenbusch.
In 1885,
Raushenbusch was graduated from the
prestigious Rochester Theological Seminary,
thoroughly indoctrinated in the Socialist
tenets of "Ilumanism" — a philosophy calling
itself a religion but substituting faith in
man for faith in God. As the atheist Karl
Marx noted: "Ilumanism is really nothing
else but Marxism." Rauschenbusch was both a
Ilumanist and a Marxist. Thus, in 1892 he
and a group of Comrades organized "The
Brotherhood of the Kingdom" to promote their
radical beliefs along Fabian lines. Walter
Ranschenbusch declared: "If ever Socialism
is to succeed, it cannot succeed in an
irreligious country. It must start in the
churches."And start in the churches it did.
By the turn of the century, Marxist plans
for the capture of our churches were
proceeding apace. The Federal Council
of Churches was born and as is said, the
rest is history.
The National Council of Churches has
notoriously promoted communism since its
inception. Many who may read this might want
to check with their religious organization
and ask why they must belong to such an
organization (if theirs does). Do not slay
the messenger, however. This is a matter of
record. This is not fictional nor is it
exaggerated in any manner. In fact, the NCC
promoted the removal of prayer from public
schools. Does this shock anyone? It
shouldn't. The NCC also condemned U.S.
Troops for their actions in Vietnam.
Does this sound like a “Christian”
organization? It is not. This subversive
organization, comprised of most organized
churches in America, has helped instill the
widely-accepted false doctrines being pushed
in churches today. Is it any wonder so many
do not know the truth and absolutely argue
(or attempt to do so) when given the truth.
For truth is something most have never heard
and if so, not accepted.
Comments to:
sylvester.lea@gmail.com
For sources, see National Council of Churches An Unholy Alliance,
Part II