Ye Shall Be as Animals
The transhumanist deception
The insatiable Titan Kronos was represented as a god called Surtur in the Marvel film, Thor: Ragnarok. Essentially, this is Kronos rebranded.
Surtur is shown in chains within a fiery prison in the opening to the movie. His character, which was introduced to readers of Marvel Comics in 1963, was based on Surtr, a jötunn, which was a type of supernatural entity in pre-Christian Germanic religion.
As leader of the Titans, it is probable that Kronos, as leader of the rebellious “sons of God” in Genesis 6:1–4, now lives in Tartarus (per 2 Peter 2:4; remember, the English “hell” in that verse is the Greek tartarōsas, not Hades)—a fiery realm, bound in chains, waiting to return and commence the end of the age—what Norse mythology calls Ragnarok, where Surtr is foretold to bring forth flames that engulf the earth.
This reads like a “fake news” version of Revelation 9, where the abyss is opened and horrific locust-like things led by this entity under a new epithet, Destroyer (Abaddon, or Apollyon), torments those without the seal of God on the foreheads for five months.
Kronos is also portrayed as a huge, monstrous, fiery horned creature in the film Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters. It’s as if the same CGI artist rendered all of these.
Etymologically, qrn also gives us the words corn and kernel. Mind you, a kernel is much more than a seed. It is also used in computing to describe the core of the operating system.
KRONOS becomes more and more apt, doesn’t it?
We mentioned hybrids and theriomorphic creatures earlier. These are images of hybrid creatures. In school, we are taught mythology as if it’s nothing more than a collection of fanciful tales and life lessons. However, the old gods were real, and many of them had animalistic attributes—a concept called theriomorphism.
Pan with his horns and goat legs, Zeus in the form of a swan or bull, the centaur Chiron, the sphinx, gryphon, and the Sumerian apkallu are but a few examples of theriomorphic gods. It may be that the small ‘g’ gods, the bene ha-elohim of Genesis 6 and Psalm 82, have the ability to transform matter from our time/space continuum into whatever appearance they choose to take—meaning they can alternate form, gender, or even species. Some of these beasts may also result from an ancient genetics and/or epigenetics program.
This is an excerpt from our 2024 book The Gates of Hell. If you want to own a copy, it’s available in paperback, as a Kindle e-book, and as an audiobook at Amazon and Audible.
The fictional KRONOS operating system of our opening scenario is a sentient ASI that consumes other programs, just as the Titan king swallowed his children, altering their code to incorporate them, thereby upgrading itself. Likewise, the ever-growing field of genetics and epigenetics is a means to alter our own code, granting us the capability to upgrade ourselves. This is the Transhumanist agenda.
It is nothing more than an old lie repackaged: Ye shall be as gods.
One reason Sharon chose to set her fiction series, The Redwing Saga, in the 1880s, is because science and mysticism formed a nexus in the late nineteenth century that inevitably led to our current drive towards genetic alteration, AI, hybridization, and Transhumanism—not to mention paganism and transformational spells. The enlightenment movement and industrial age gave birth to Darwinism and atheistic thought, which decoupled man from a Creator god.
In the early nineteenth century, Mary Shelley explored this new paradigm in her novel Frankenstein, which was subtitled The Modern Prometheus. Her protagonist, Victor Frankenstein, sought to become god by creating life out of death, but instead created a new and vengeful deity.
With Darwinist thought infecting both laboratories and pulpits, it seemed inevitable that scientists explore ways to create life from death—or better yet, defeat death entirely, to live forever without any need for a Savior. It was a return to the Genesis 3 lie: Ye shall be as gods.
This quest for eternal life gained traction in 1842, when Karl Wilhelm von Nägeli first observed chromosomes beneath the glass of his microscope—and since that moment, scientists have continued to search for ways to improve upon the human species. To defeat death at last. To sneak back into the Garden.
It is a field called eugenics.
Self-Directed Evolution is the driving force behind Transhumanism, but the idea dates back to the late nineteenth and early twentieth century eugenics movement. This idea that mankind can breed a better human owes its root to Darwinism, which severed humanity from the Genesis account and hurled it into an abyss without God.
Note the logo for the Eugenics Movement is a tree—as if we can find our way back to the Tree of Life on our own. The effort has been ongoing since not long after the Fall, but it’s really ramped up since the beginning of the nineteenth century.
Sir Francis Galton, a half-cousin to Charles Darwin, coined the term eugenics in 1883. The following is an excerpt from a 1904 essay by Galton, read on May 16 of that year, to a meeting of the Sociological Society at London University’s School of Economics:
The aim of eugenics is to bring as many influences as can be reasonably employed, to cause the useful classes in the community to contribute more than their proportion to the next generation.[1]
Galton went on to explain how this might be accomplished. There are three stages to be passed through, he said.
(1) It must be made familiar as an academic question, until its exact importance has been understood and accepted as a fact. (2) It must be recognized as a subject whose practical development deserves serious consideration. (3) It must be introduced into the national conscience, like a new religion.[2]
You are more than likely aware of how the Nazi party adopted this idea of a eugenics “religion,” but very few Americans are taught that the drive for “fitter families” and elimination of those considered unfit or inferior began right here in the United States in 1907,[3] when Sharon’s home state of Indiana enacted a bill to force sterilization of those deemed unfit to procreate. Forced sterilizations continued on American Indian reservations right up until the 1970s, with some of these procedures listed as “tonsillectomies.”[4] Later, these unlucky women would wonder why they never conceived, only to learn they had no ovaries when visiting a local doctor.
Adolf Hitler and his Nazi party gave notoriety to the field of eugenics in their search for the Superman or Übermensch, as described by Frederich Nietzsche. Hitler hoped to use breeding programs to give rise to this new species and achieve the apotheosis of man. However, eugenics and its dark associations have been rebranded in the twenty-first century as Transhumanism, and now, over a century later, Galton’s three-fold plan is nearly complete: Transhumanism has gained academic importance—the need to improve the species is accepted as fact—and it is slowly becoming entrenched within the national conscience as a new religion.
[1] Sir Francis Galton, “Eugenics: Its Definition, Scope, and Aims.” The American Journal of Sociology Volume X (July 1904); Number 1. https://galton.org/essays/1900-1911/galton-1904-am-journ-soc-eugenics-scope-aims.htm, retrieved 3/3/24.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Oddly, as we noted earlier, 1907 was the same year Aleister Crowley channeled the texts that formed the basis of his new occult religion.
[4] Erin Blakemore, “The Little-Known History of the Forced Sterilization of Native American Women.” JSTOR Daily, Aug. 25, 2016. https://daily.jstor.org/the-little-known-history-of-the-forced-sterilization-of-native-american-women/, retrieved 3/3/24.
