Here I am going to make a solitary presentation on a subject which I have discussed quite often in many of our longer series of Biblical commentaries. There is nothing more disappointing than seeing an Identity Christian, or at least, someone who professes to understand Christian Identity truths, who still carries the baggage of the denominational churches and their false doctrines, doctrines which were constructed centuries ago by a priesthood which sought little else but to maintain its own control over the minds of the people, usually in concert with various governments. This is especially true where those doctrines are persistently maintained by such Christians, but are clearly contrary to the plain word of Scripture. https://christogenea.org/podcasts/adamic-eternity-greatest-discovery
William Finck on Fri, 07/10/2015
Positive Christianity in the Third Reich - Part 07
Here we conclude our presentation of Positive Christianity in the Third Reich by Professor D. Cajus Fabricius
Watchman's Teaching Letter #5 September 1998
JUST WHO IS THIS PATRIARCH, JUDAH? (Part 5)
https://emahiser.christogenea.org/watchman-s-teaching-letter-5-september-1998
Watchman's Teaching Letter #13 May 1999
JUST WHO IS THIS PATRIARCH, JUDAH? (Part 13)
https://emahiser.christogenea.org/watchman-s-teaching-letter-13-may-1999
William Finck on Sat, 07/17/2010
Genealogy, or Geography?
There has long been a tendency among the people of our race to draw their allegiances along geographical lines, often to the detriment of the more natural genetic allegiances. When we move into a land, and multiply and spread ourselves throughout it, we tend to adopt regional names for ourselves. Thus we have Norsemen and Franks, Englishmen and Germans, Yankees and Rednecks, and Buckeyes and Tarheels, and yet they all came from the same place. After years of separation, we then have situations where the aliens in a land, eventually accepted to one degree or another, and for one reason or another, are esteemed to be closer in relationship to us than our own cousins from other lands. And so a crowd of Americans – in spite of their own English descent – may be seen cheering on a negro against an English boxer in a game, simply because the negro is wearing an American insignia. That is just one modern example. More dreadfully, a tribe of Benjamintes would go to war against the surrounding related tribes to defend crimes perpetrated by men of dubious background, and for that the entire tribe was at one time reduced to merely a few hundred, nearly being decimated entirely. https://christogenea.org/podcasts/genealogy-or-geography-clifton-emahiser-july-18th-2010
William Finck on Fri, 10/30/2020
On the Wisdom of Solomon, Part 13: The Beauty of Wisdom
Making these presentations on the Wisdom of Solomon, we have already presented more than a few arguments in support of our profession that Solomon was indeed the author of this work. However in some of those arguments, it might appear as if we may claim that Wisdom was originally written in Greek, and that is not necessarily true. In earlier portions of this commentary, and namely in Part 2 where we had addressed many criticisms of the work, several times we made references to “the author or translator” of the work. We will not lay claim to know with certainty what was the original language of Wisdom, as there is no definite evidence. But if the original language was indeed Hebrew, it cannot be proven conclusively that the work was not translated by a learned scribe at a time much later than Solomon’s own. https://christogenea.org/podcasts/wisdom-solomon
William Finck on Fri, 12/20/2019
What is Religion?
When I first came to Christian Identity, I gave much thought to the meaning of the word religion. Perhaps this sermon by Bertrand Comparet, titled What is Religion?, had helped to stimulate that process. The primary definition of the word religion in the Oxford Dictionary is “the belief in and worship of a superhuman controlling power, especially a personal God or gods.” But although that is what it has come to mean, I believe the original sense of the Latin word from which it was derived has a much deeper meaning, and that this deeper meaning is relevant to our Christian Identity profession. The Latin word religio was used in a manner much like we use the word religion today. But the related word religo is a verb meaning to tie back or tie up, and religatio is a tying back or up. So, according to The New College Latin & English Dictionary, the word religiosus, which is probably the closest antecedent to our word religious, was used to refer to something which was “subject to religious claims, under religious liability.” Liability is “the state of being responsible for something”, so there is the connection to the meaning of the root word religo, in the sense of being tied or bound to a thing. https://christogenea.org/podcasts/what-religion
William Finck on Fri, 05/29/2015
Positive Christianity in the Third Reich, Part 1
Here we shall present Positive Christianity in the Third Reich by Professor D. Cajus Fabricius