Saturday, May 10, 2014

Putin “Vision” Of War With “Satanic America” Terrifies Kremlin



A stunning memorandum originating from the Presidential Office relating to President Putin’s highly protected and secretive 4-day visit to the Valaam Monastery late last month has terrified the Kremlin today as it states that the massive nuclear war strike drills conducted this past week were “directly related” to a “vision” the President had in which he “saw” that Russia would soon stand alone in battling a United States which is now being controlled by “Satanic” forces.
According to this memorandum, Putin had his “vision” on 28 April while he was seeking the “solace and silence” of the Valaam Monastery as US-backed NATO forces continued flooding into the border regions of  Russia as the Ukrainian Crisis continues to escalate.
The Valaam Monastery is a stauropegic (subordinated directly to a Patriarch or Synod, rather than to a local Bishop) Russian Orthodox Church monastery in Karelia, located on Valaam, the largest island in Lake Ladoga, the largest lake in Europe, and is often referred to as the “spiritual home” of Putin.
Important to note about Putin as it regards to his “visions”, this memorandum notes, is that it has long been known/suspected that he is one of the “seven special children” designated, educated and protected by the Church that have guided Russia for nearly 100 years towards what is commonly refereed to in Christianity as theapocalypse.
Putin, it should be remembered, has been “described as a mystery” with no records surviving of any ancestors, or any people, with the surname “Putin” beyond his grandfather Spiridon Ivanovich (1879–1965), who was a chef and cooked for Vladimir Lenin, Lenin's wife Nadezhda Krupskaya, and on several occasions for Joseph Stalin, and who had been “secretly baptized” to the Church by his mother when he was a child.
Likewise to be remembered, Stalin (a former Orthodox seminary student), with the backing of the Church, toppled Lenin in 1924 after the catastrophic Communist ledanti-religious campaign and persecutions that saw nearly all of the Orthodox clergy, and many of its believers, shot or sent to labor camps.
Upon Stalin taking power he was unable to immediately halt the persecution of the Church, but by the late 1930’s he was able to mitigate the Communist damage so that by the 1980’s there were still over 50 million believers, but only about 7,000 registered active churches in Russia.

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