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Saturday, January 29, 2022

What Happened To Pontius Pilate?

This Roman governor is one of the most hated figures in the Christian religion

Pontius Pilate was definitely a real historical figure. We know this because in 1961, an inscribed slab of limestone was found in Caesarea Maritima (modern-day Israel) and it stated that he was the Roman governor of Judaea under the reign of Emperor Tiberius and during the time when Jesus was alive. Documents relating to his governorship have also been found among ancient texts in Rome.


According to the Four Gospels of Christianity, Pilate oversaw the trial of Jesus after he had been accused of treason by the Sanhedrin Jewish council. The charges of treason existed because Jesus had called himself the “King of all Jews,” something that was illegal while Judaea was under Roman occupation. However, the council really wanted Jesus gone because he was gaining followers fast and they considered him a political threat.

Pilate had been the governor of that part of the Roman empire since 26 AD (and would continue to be until 36 AD). During that time, he hadn’t managed Judaea very well. He’d ordered the introduction of many pagan symbols in sacred Jewish institutions, thus angering the local populace. So by the time Jesus was brought before him, he wasn’t in a position to anger them any further.


He had a talk with Jesus and apparently, he initially found him innocent. But the crowd outside the courthouse shouted that they wanted him dead and Pilate eventually caved and gave them what they wanted. Jesus was whipped to the bone, made to wear a crown of thorns, and crucified. Then he rose again three days after his death, proving to his followers that he really was the son of God (again, according to scriptures).

And so Christianity continued to grow until it became the religion with the largest following in the world. But despite the important role Pontius Pilate played in its origin, the majority of people today don’t know anything about the rest of his life.

So What Became of Pilate After the Crucifixion?
According to most historical texts, Pilate and the Roman Empire as a whole were not particularly affected by the supposed miracle of Christ’s resurrection in 30 or 33 AD. The next few years were business as usual for them.


The Four Gospels may have maintained that Pilate was simply a ruler who could easily be swayed by public opinion — as outlined above — but other historical (non-religious) sources assert that he was quite heartless and brutal in general. There were numerous other accused rebels who subsequently met a similar fate to Jesus under his rule. You see, the Roman Empire had laws that outlined appropriate punishments for any crime, but those laws only applied to its citizens. And the people of Judaea were not citizens so Pilate could be as cruel as he wanted.

This narrative is supported by the writings of Philo of Alexandria — a Jewish philosopher — who summarized the governor’s reign in 50 AD as having been marked by “briberies, insults, robberies, outrages and wanton injuries, executions without trial, constantly repeated, ceaseless and supremely grievous cruelty.”


Other historical records also detail how at one point, Pilate stole funds from a Jewish temple and used them to build an aqueduct to Jerusalem. When the local populace found out, they protested outside Pilate’s town hall. So he had soldiers dressed as civilians infiltrate the unarmed crowd and then beat a bunch of the protesters to death using clubs.

As you can probably tell by now, Pilate was not really a benevolent or popular governor at all. But his crowning failure occurred when a bunch of Samaritans were looking for artifacts that were supposed to have been buried by the Prophet Moses near Mount Gerizim. Pilate mistook their gathering there as a potential insurrection so he sent his soldiers to massacre them — even though the Samaritans were unarmed.

Some of the survivors later complained about this to the Roman governor of Syria, Lucius Vitellius, and Pilate was soon recalled to Rome to be judged by Tiberius. That’s why his term as governor ended in 36 AD. However, while he was on his way, Tiberius died of old age and was replaced by Caligula. Most Roman emperors at the time were not in the habit of honoring all the appointments of their predecessors, and Caligula, in particular, was not too concerned with legal matters so the trial never happened.


Pilate just retired from politics and survived on a state pension and whatever money he stole from the people of Judaea. He died at an unknown date either in modern-day France or Switzerland.

After his death, a great amount of lore spread through Europe about Pilate. You see, the Roman Empire didn’t embrace Christianity until the rule of Emperor Constantine in the 4th Century. So the early Christians constructed a new narrative about Christ’s crucifixion that didn't portray the corrupt former Roman governor in a bad light. They just wanted to avoid being persecuted any more than they already were.

But this had unintended consequences: the Jews were blamed for Jesus’ death instead. Fake letters that were supposedly written by Pilate began to be circulated among believers as early as the 2nd century. They portrayed him as a kind soul who also converted to Christianity. Other accounts such as the “Acts of Pilate” detailed how Pilate supposedly said, “I have found in [Christ] no grounds for the death penalty. Therefore I will have him punished and then release him.”


But the Jewish crowd wanted him dead and argued against this by declaring, “His blood be on us and our children!” As in, they’ll take responsibility for killing the son of God. If this sounds ludicrous to you, that’s probably because it is. This quote was composed hundreds of years after Christ’s death and as already stated, its purpose was to shift the blame from Pilate to the Jews.

However, it was for this reason that during the subsequent millennia, Jews all over the world would often be persecuted by (some) Christians.

When the Roman Empire finally became Christian, the blame for Jesus’ death was reassigned to Pontius Pilate. Monks wrote new manuscripts which stated that he had been punished by God and was executed or committed suicide upon returning to Rome. But the damage — regarding the Gospels which blamed the Jews — was already done.


And in reality, for all the crimes he had committed, Pilate never suffered any punishment (except perhaps eternal damnation).  This article was not written by me, but by an unknown author on the internet.

William James Roop, M.A.B.S.

Roop-Crappell Ministries

Hospice Care and Life

The Trucking Tango

Apostolic Theological Seminary


Saturday, January 22, 2022

Died And Went To Heaven

Hello everyone.  Praise the Lord!

An elderly woman died and went to Heaven, she came back with God’s message. This is not my testimony, but her's. In the end you can believe what you want.


Heart Stopped For 11 Minutes!

Charlotte Holmes was having her routine checkup with her heart doctor in 2019, when her blood pressure suddenly spiked. Hence, the doctor advised her to get admitted to the hospital immediately, because she could have another stroke or a heart attack with her condition. The medical authorities then tended to her to get her blood pressure down.

Danny, her husband, who was also in her hospital room, suddenly heard words from Charlotte, while doctors and nurses worked on her. She started talking about flowers, when there were no flowers in the room. Then Charlotte’s heart stopped, and she clinically died for eleven minutes!

While this was happening in Charlotte’s hospital room, her spirit already left her lifeless body. And she could see from above, everyone in the room. Then she went to heaven where angels led her!


“Everything in heaven worships God,” she described as she saw flowers and grasses swaying with the music.

“I can’t convey to you what heaven looked like because it’s so above what we can even imagine a million times,” Charlotte added. “There’s no fear. It’s like pure joy..”

Also, Charlotte saw deceased family members in heaven standing behind who looked like they were in their thirties. And then behind them was a light so bright—it was the Heavenly Father.

After experiencing heaven, God also showed her what it looks like in hell.

“After seeing the beauty of heaven, the contrast to seeing hell is almost unbearable,” she recounted. She saw a lake of fire, with a multitude of souls screaming in the flames! 


She was told to go back and to warn the people of the earth! Repent of your sins according to Acts 2:38. For the Lord is returning soon to judge sinners, and to renew the earth. 

William James Roop

 Roop-Crappell Ministries 

 Hospice Volunteer Stories 

 The Trucking Tango 

 Apostolic Theological Seminary 


Saturday, January 15, 2022

Soteriology

Hello everyone.  Praise the Lord!

Here is a subject often taught in Bible colleges around the world.  Since most people cannot go to Bible college, I am sharing this teaching to everyone.


What Is Soteriology, and Why Should Every Christian Know This Term?
“Soteriology” isn’t the kind of word you see in a sermon title. It’s definitely not a word directly from Bible. But without the concepts this term describes, the Bible would be a far shorter book—and a far sadder story.

What Is the meaning of Soteriology? Soteriology is the doctrine of salvation. In short, it describes why we need saving, who saves us, how he saves us, and the purpose we’ve been saved for.

Topics such as redemption, propitiation, justification, and sanctification all fall under the umbrella of soteriology. Many heresies, such as the debate about the Trinity is soteriological.

That all sounds important, but it also sounds like a dictionary of theology definitions. Would the average Christian really benefit from studying soteriology? After all, everything comes down to Acts 2:38.  Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized, every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.


For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. (John 3:16, NIV). Some would say that this is the plan of salvation. The real plan of Salvation is actually found in Acts 2:38, so yes we do need to learn about Soteriology!

If we know Christ, and we know about his sacrifice, do we really need to know why it works?

What Is the Difference between Christology and Soteriology?
Soteriology is about salvation. Christology is about the Savior. Each subject informs the other—but there is a reason they each have their own field of study.

Acts 2:38 is a powerful summary of Christ’s work on the cross, and it gets to the heart of God’s plan for salvation: the Savior. But what did the Savior save us from? Why couldn’t we save ourselves? What are we being saved for?


Salvation is the story of how God restored us to a right relationship with him. And that story isn’t limited to Acts 2:38, or even the New Testament—it fills the Bible cover to cover.

What Does the Bible Say about Soteriology?
Soteriology’s premise is that humanity needs salvation from sin. If we don’t understand what we’ve lost through sin, how can we understand what we gain through salvation?

Genesis 1-2 describes God’s perfect creation and humanity’s perfect relationship with God, creation, and each other. But in Genesis 3, humanity broke each of those relationships with sin. Instead of trusting God, we hid from him (Genesis 3:8). Our relationships with each other devolved into selfishness and conflict (Genesis 3:12, 16). Even creation itself groaned from the burdens of sin, suffering, and death our actions caused (Genesis 3:17-19, Romans 8:19-22). The rest of Scripture describes humanity’s attempts to restore these relationships—and God’s grand plan for a solution.


In the Old Testament, that solution appears to be the nation of Israel. Humanity had a terrible track record (Genesis 4-11), but there was still hope. After all, individual humans such as Abel, Enoch, Job, and Noah had lived righteous lives. Perhaps a select group of people could learn to follow God and set an example for the world. Perhaps someday, the world could be saved through them (Genesis 12:1-3).

In Exodus and Leviticus, God gave Israel detailed instructions on how to avoid sin and pursue righteousness—and even how to atone for sin through animal sacrifice. For centuries, God guided Israel through this Law and through sending leaders and prophets to hold them accountable. But time and again, Israel failed.

YHWH warned Israel and Judah through all his prophets and seers: “Turn from your evil ways. Observe my commands and decrees, in accordance with the entire Law that I commanded your ancestors to obey and that I delivered to you through my servants the prophets.”  But they would not listen and were as stiff-necked as their ancestors, who did not trust in YHWH their God. They rejected his decrees and the covenant he had made with their ancestors and the statutes he had warned them to keep. They followed worthless idols and themselves became worthless. They imitated the nations around them although YHWH had ordered them, “Do not do as they do”  (2 Kings 17:13-15, NIV).


“Therefore, you Israelites, I will judge each of you according to your own ways, declares the Sovereign Lord. Repent! Turn away from all your offenses; then sin will not be your downfall. Rid yourselves of all the offenses you have committed, and get a new heart and a new spirit. Why will you die, people of Israel? For I take no pleasure in the death of anyone, declares the Sovereign Lord. Repent and live! (Ezekiel 18:30-32, NIV),

I sent my prophets to cut you to pieces—to slaughter you with my words, with judgments as inescapable as light. I want you to show love, not offer sacrifices.  I want you to know me more than I want burnt offerings. But like Adam, you broke my covenant and betrayed my trust (Hosea 6:5-7, NLT).

Even with clear instructions on how to live holy lives and a clear system to atone for sin, God’s chosen people followed Adam’s sinful footsteps. God pleaded with them and shouted at them through the prophets. He punished them (drought, plague, exile, etc.) to lead them to repentance. But even with prophets’ guidance, a beautiful temple, and sacrifice after sacrifice, something still wasn’t working.


Had God’s plan of salvation failed?

The truth was the Old Testament sacrificial system was never meant to be the solution. Instead, it was meant to prepare the way for something better. The sacrificial system reminded humanity of the gravity of sin. It helped humanity understand the need for propitiation, a payment for sin.

For since the law has but a shadow of the good things to come instead of the true form of these realities, it can never, by the same sacrifices that are continually offered every year, make perfect those who draw near. Otherwise, would they not have ceased to be offered, since the worshipers, having once been cleansed, would no longer have any consciousness of sins? But in these sacrifices there is a reminder of sins every year. For it is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins (Hebrews 10:1-4, ESV).

After hundreds of years of trying and failing to overcome sin through human struggle and imperfect animal sacrifice, humanity was shown how much they needed God’s help. And in their desperation, God pointed to the solution he’d planned all along—the Messiah.


Surely He took on our infirmities and carried our sorrows; yet we considered Him stricken by God, struck down and afflicted. But He was pierced for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was upon Him, and by His stripes we are healed. We all like sheep have gone astray, each one has turned to his own way; and YHWH has laid upon Him the iniquity of us all. He was oppressed and afflicted, yet He did not open His mouth. He was led like a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is silent, so He did not open His mouth (Isaiah 53:4-7).

Jesus came as a perfect sacrifice—the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world (John 1:29)! And it’s because of the Old Testament that we can understand what “Lamb of God” means and why a lamb was necessary. We needed someone who could carry “the punishment that brought us peace.”


Adam and Eve failed. The people before the flood failed. Israel failed. Their sacrifices failed. But by showing us time and again that humanity couldn’t overcome sin on our own, God prepared us to accept salvation as his free gift.

For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord (Romans 6:23, ESV).

That’s a glorious, life-changing truth! But soteriology doesn’t stop with the moment of salvation. After all, the Bible doesn’t stop with Resurrection Sunday. There’s still an important question soteriology seeks to answer: what have we been saved for?

Why Is the Doctrine of Salvation so Crucial to Christianity? The purpose of soteriology is to help us understand just how much God has done for us. And perhaps the most forgotten part about salvation is that God’s work in us doesn’t end at the cross.


Our guilt ends at the cross. Our sin’s condemnation ends at the cross. Our separation from God ends at the cross. But our journey with God has only begun.

After freeing us from sin’s punishment, God begins to free us from sin’s control. The Holy Spirit becomes our guide, leading us in the process of sanctification: becoming more like Christ. This is what we have been saved for. To live joyful lives of freedom, pursuing righteousness not out of fear, but out of a love for God and others (Mark 12:30-31; Galatians 5:13).

This is what God meant when his prophets said lavish sacrifice paled in comparison to love, justice, and humility (Hosea 6:6, Micah 6:6-8). God isn’t content to simply free us from punishment through sacrifice. He wants us free from sin itself. He wants to give us a new life full of love and purpose.

That’s why soteriology is so important. If we start and stop with Acts 2:38, we miss the beauty and purpose of God’s greater plan—or worse, we fail to live it to its fullest.


Not every Christian needs to have a firm stance on the Oneness of God. Not every Christian needs to know the official names of every heresy. But every Christian should know why we need saving, who saves us, how he saves us, and the purpose we’ve been saved for  .I found this article on the internet and thought I should share it. It was originally written by Tim Pietz, but I had to heavily edit it, to clean up the false doctrine, and poorly selected Scripture verses.

William James Roop, M.A.B.S.

 Roop-Crappell Ministries 

 Hospice Volunteer Stories 

 The Trucking Tango 

 Apostolic Theological Seminary 


Saturday, January 8, 2022

Voices Told Him To Shoot People!

Hello everyone.  Praise the Lord!

Here is an example of a demon-possessed man, filled with one or a multitude of demons causing an incredible evil and wicked act!

An ex-Marine sharpshooter who is accused of killing four people in Florida says “voices” told him to shoot people. The thirty-three year old African-American, Bryan Riley, is accused of fatally shooting four people at a home early in Lakeland, Florida, on a quiet Sunday morning.

He is charged with first degree murder, attempted first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder of a law enforcement officer, shooting into a building, second degree arson, and armed burglary with assault/battery, by the Polk County Sheriff’s office.

According to a police affidavit, Riley shot at deputies who entered the home, which led to him exchanging fire with the suspect. Riley held his first court appearance on Monday, where a judge ordered that he be held without bail.


When Riley surrendered, he was taken to a hospital with a gunshot wound. He allegedly attempted to grab an officer’s gun while being transported. During an interview with police, Riley admitted to shooting several people and said "voices" instructed him to it!  He also acknowledged, that he did not know the people who were killed and wounded in the shootings.

One of the four people killed has been identified as forty-year-old Justice Gleason. Riley also killed a thirty-three-year-old woman and a three-month old infant she was holding!  Riley said he shot the baby because “I’m a sick guy. I want to confess to all of it and be sent to jail,” according to the affidavit.

The infant's sixty-two-year-old grandmother was also shot and killed, as was the family's dog!  An eleven-year-old was rushed to the hospital with severe injuries!


Riley also said the victims begged him to stop as he continued shooting, the affidavit said. He further said he set a nearby pickup truck on fire as an “exit strategy!"

William James Roop, M.A.B.S.

Roop-Crappell Ministries

Hospice Care and Life

The Trucking Tango

Apostolic Theological Seminary


Saturday, January 1, 2022

Pub Ghost

Hello Everyone.  Praise the Lord!

Hayley Budd is convinced 'weird things' have long been going on at The Lansdowne Pub in Cardiff, Wales, and recently. she believes she caught a smoking gun on camera.


The thirty-three-year-old was taking a break on July twenty-sixth, when a chair seemingly slid across the room of its own accord! The mother-of-three is in no doubt this was the doing of a resident ghost dubbed by regulars as 'Lady Lansdowne'.

Hayley is worried the 'ghost' could leave her short-staffed. Reflecting on the creepy encounter, she said: "I wasn't looking at the chair, I was looking at my phone but I saw it out of the corner of my eye." I heard it as well so I asked a customer if they had seen anything and they'd also heard the noise.

I always try to find the most logical explanation so in the video, you can see me looking to see if it was something in my bag that had moved then I was trying to tell myself that maybe it was the wind. I've tried to recreate it so many times but there's no logical explanation. I checked the CCTV to make sure I hadn't been imagining it.


"I wasn't frightened enough to quit my job, and run out of there, but I was really shocked. I wasn't expecting to see that at all. I don't frighten easily so I still sit at that table on my breaks."

However, while Hayley might not be easily spooked, she's a tad concerned that these weird goings-on could leave her short-staffed. Who moved that chair? Got Lady Lansdowne written all over it. She said: "One girl who works here, thought she'd bumped into another member of staff, but when she turned around, he wasn't there."

Nobody has ever physically seen her [the apparent ghost] standing in front of them, but a couple of weeks ago, the chalkboard started randomly swinging. A lot of the staff have said that if anything like that happens when they're there, then they'll go home, so I hope Lady Lansdowne takes that into consideration, because I don't want to be short-staffed."


It seems the challenge for Hayley then will be convincing her employees that the invisible lady means no harm. She said: "Weird things do happen, but nothing quite as blatant and obvious as this!"

There's a long-term rumor among the regulars, about a woman haunting the pub, and people who live in the flats above the pub say there are strange goings on up there. When I close the pub and there are no customers, I'll go into the cellar to do paperwork or change a barrel and it sounds like there's furniture moving upstairs but when I go up, everything is as I left it.

I'm not scared just because I've worked here for eight years, and she's never done anything that's a cause for concern. She clearly just wants to make herself known.

William James Roop