This video is about two things: 1) the passage of time since our apostle prophesied concerning the snatching away, and 2) teachers and what they teach.
You are not
crazy to believe that these are the final days of Millennium 6. The people who ARE crazy are the ones presenting dubious/laughable "evidence" trying to prove to us that these in no way could be the final days. In fact, these people insist that there are 500 years remaining until the second coming of Christ and that, in the meantime, every member of the body of Christ must die. And they say these things with confidence.
One teacher who has been teaching confidently along this line, insisting (contrary to Paul's assertion) that every member of the body of Christ MUST die, is Clyde Pilkington. And I know people who have been shaken by Clyde's teachings, thinking that maybe they are the crazy ones for looking for Christ in the air every day.
Well, here is some news for you. I found a YouTube short video of Clyde from recent days. I did not product this video; as I just told you, I stumbled across it. It came up in my "YouTube short" feed. What I head on this video shocked me.
This video is less than a minute long; I tack it on
at the end of this MZTV presentation. In this video, Clyde says, "I teach some things that are wrong." He doesn't say he USED to teach some things that are wrong (although he admits that also), but that he currently teaches wrong things. He then admits that he was horribly wrong about things in the past. Okay, we all were. Right? But then we learned right division, rules of Scriptural interpretation, and laws of language. Years and years went by and we studied to show ourselves approved (2
Timothy 2:15). Right? Well, not in this case.
Because at the end of this short video, Mr. Pilkington says, "I am still horribly wrong about things."
What?!
Now, none of us who teach are infallible. Obviously. We can all be mistaken. Obviously. Our faith and our beliefs are always being adjusted. Obviously. But for a teacher to admit that, just as in the past, he is STILL "horribly wrong about things"—what does this tell us about the teacher? It seems to me that such a teacher is hedging all his "bets." It tells me that he is subliminally telling people,
"Please don't take anything I say too seriously because I've been horribly wrong in the past and I'm still horribly wrong."
If I were someone who has been depending on Clyde to lead me into the truth, I would be devastated by this admission. Yes, it's honest all right. Horribly honest. It seems to me that Clyde might be feeling the heat of some or all
of the exposure and rebuke that has taken place on THIS channel, and is now imploring those who have practically staked their lives on his teaching to, basically, stop counting on him. Stop assuming that he knows what he's talking about. Stop assuming that, after three decades of Scripture study, he would have somehow graduated from the "horribly wrong" category to the "approved" category.
You would never hear me say this. It's not that I'm infallible or that I can't be adjusted or that I have everything figured out. It's just that I have studied over the last forty years to show myself to be approved rather than "horribly wrong." And it's not like the man said, "I COULD be horribly wrong." He said, "I am STILL horribly wrong."
Let this be a comfort to all who have thought, due to Clyde's teaching, that they were the unqualified believers.
And please do not say that I'm taking the man out of context. I did not produce this context. This context was produced, I am assuming, from someone within the Pilkington camp. I don't know that for sure.
I am just reiterating: I did not produce this. I found it.
Grace and peace.
Thank you, and I'm sorry I have to publish this.