What if the Bible changes people claim to remember are not just bad memory, misquotes, or internet folklore? In this episode of Broadcasting Seeds, Bennett Tanton sits down with John Kirwin of Wake Up or Else and Altered Bible to discuss one of the most controversial claims in modern Christian truth-seeking: that physical and digital copies of the Bible may have been supernaturally altered. John lays out his argument through the lens of the Mandela Effect, the doctrine of preservation, end-times prophecy, spiritual warfare, CERN, D-Wave quantum computing, and the disturbing possibility that God may allow a famine of the Word as judgment. The conversation also goes deeper than Bible changes alone, asking a bigger question: do Christians know the Living Word, or do they only know the book? This episode explores alleged Bible changes, unified misremembering, prophecy, deception, discernment, cessationism, spiritual gifts, and why waking up without Christ at the center can become its own trap. The transcript centers heavily on John Kirwin’s claim that the terms “Bible,” “Scripture,” and “Word” are often conflated, and that preservation may not mean what many Christians assume it means. Topics include: Mandela Effect, Bible changes, altered scriptures, doctrine of preservation, Amos 8:11, Daniel 7:25, end-times deception, CERN, D-Wave, supernatural reality, spiritual warfare, cessationism, miracles, and Christian discernment.
John Kirwin:
Wake Up or Else: https://wakeuporelse.com
Altered Bible: https://alteredbible.com
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-broadcasting-seeds-podcast--6402290/support.
Books-
What We Have (Grid Collapse Series Book 1)What We Have (Grid Collapse Series Book 1)
The War You Didn’t Know You Were In: Understanding and Winning the Spiritual Battle
CREATURES AT THE EDGE: Cryptids, Archetypes, and the Human Encounter with Mystery (At the Edge Series)
The Last Witch Hunter’s Journal
Website
YouTube
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Afficher plus
Afficher moins