My family and I visited Palmyra, NY this summer.  Besides visiting an old Nephite mound that Alvin Smith was buried on, we spent most of our time in the actual town of Palmyra visiting museums.  I kind of got the creeps in that town when I started digging into its history.  I got the distinct impression that there were very dark forces at work.

My guess is this; the adversary knew where the plates were buried and collected some of his “best” followers to the area in advance in order to present a formidable force against the initiation of the work in this dispensation.  If you think about it, not much of real importance occurred there.

Other than the most important events of the First Vision, getting the plates from the place where they were deposited and the first printing of the Book of Mormon, the town played no other significant role in the translation and setting up of the Church and eventual growth and explosion of this modern miracle.  Most of it occurred outside that area – out of necessity.  There simply was too much opposition. 

My assessment of the town, was there was much occult.  There was much baseness in the population – most likely due to the influence of the canal in the area.  There was prostitution and magic and much else.  At a later time (1860-1870’s), the mainstay religions of the day appear to have gotten their footholds established and the area seems to have matured (or the garbage went underground) with the Victorian push.

There is an older Palmyra in Syria where things were not very good, either.  Where the occult flourished with Baal worship.  ISIS destroyed the “temple” of Baal there a while ago.  Now, they will resurrect it in NYC; JUST LOVELY……

I agree with this article.  Someone highly placed allowed it to be destroyed over there and now it is being allowed to come to Times Square in modern Babylon as a symbol of our impending destruction as we have fully embraced the culture of Baal:

http://ift.tt/1SgB6GW

I wish this were some kind of joke.  But it is not.

from THE WOOD ZONE http://ift.tt/1REyUMx

http://ift.tt/eA8V8J

My family and I visited Palmyra, NY this summer.  Besides visiting an old Nephite mound that Alvin Smith was buried on, we spent most of our time in the actual town of Palmyra visiting museums.  I kind of got the creeps in that town when I started digging into its history.  I got the distinct impression that there were very dark forces at work.

My guess is this; the adversary knew where the plates were buried and collected some of his “best” followers to the area in advance in order to present a formidable force against the initiation of the work in this dispensation.  If you think about it, not much of real importance occurred there.

Other than the most important events of the First Vision, getting the plates from the place where they were deposited and the first printing of the Book of Mormon, the town played no other significant role in the translation and setting up of the Church and eventual growth and explosion of this modern miracle.  Most of it occurred outside that area – out of necessity.  There simply was too much opposition. 

My assessment of the town, was there was much occult.  There was much baseness in the population – most likely due to the influence of the canal in the area.  There was prostitution and magic and much else.  At a later time (1860-1870’s), the mainstay religions of the day appear to have gotten their footholds established and the area seems to have matured (or the garbage went underground) with the Victorian push.

There is an older Palmyra in Syria where things were not very good, either.  Where the occult flourished with Baal worship.  ISIS destroyed the “temple” of Baal there a while ago.  Now, they will resurrect it in NYC; JUST LOVELY……

I agree with this article.  Someone highly placed allowed it to be destroyed over there and now it is being allowed to come to Times Square in modern Babylon as a symbol of our impending destruction as we have fully embraced the culture of Baal:

http://ift.tt/1SgB6GW

I wish this were some kind of joke.  But it is not.

via IFTTT