Who am I? I am not just a mortal but a true prophet and angel, Deuteronomy 18:15-22; Daniel 12:1-3 Michael, divinely appointed by God. I have been sent to prepare the way for the return of Christ, a mission of utmost urgency and responsibility.
According to Matthew 24:31, Jesus sent a group of angels to help me accomplish the mission. These angels are already here worldwide from all nations by incarnation.
If the world had yet to expect us to come before Jesus came, they probably read the wrong book or read the book badly.
The earth is toxic because there are too many poisonous leaders running it. We find false leads in our homes, churches, politics, education, etc. God says that His people have had enough. They can't take any more; they're tired. That's why they all fall into the same hole--one can't save the other from falling in! God will end our suffering.
My group and I have a solution to make the world perfect for Jesus's second coming. He will make it pure by the end of the millennium.
When I asked God how I would identify these angels, He provided a simple yet profound answer: 'Anyone who wears the same uniform as you and kicks the ball in the same direction is on your team.' This divine guidance is a source of reassurance for me and should be for you, too.
I hope humanity doesn't make the same mistake as Noah's time and doesn't ignore the last messenger of God. We must heed this divine message.
By reading Luke Chapter 15, I find Jesus' doctrine in three great parabolas. His doctrine is to save and hold humanity.
The first parable: A man who has a hundred sheep, if he loses one of them, doth not leave the ninety and nine in the wilderness and go after that which is lost until he finds it.
The lost sheep who represent people who do not know the Lord yet. The ninety-nine sheep are people who already know the Lord.
That means God doesn't need anyone lost. He used his pertinence to find the one who lost.
The second parable is about a woman with ten pieces of silver; if she loses one piece, she does not light a candle, sweeps the house, and diligently seeks until she finds it.
The second parable used different objects but had the exact figure and result.
The third parable is about a lost son who asks his father for his part of his fortune so that he can go out and enjoy his life. The father gives him a part of the fortune, and the son wastes the fortune. After he wastes all his bark at his father's house as a servant, the father surprises him by arranging a great party.
Then, the other son, who stayed with the father, was furious. He was the one who deserved the party because he had never been to one. The father told him his brother was lost, and he found them, so why did he deserve a party like that?
The lost son represents people who left the Church, while the other son represents those who stayed in the Church.
When I translated these three parables, I realized that all people would be saved, which meant they would not be lost.
Matthew 20:1-16 makes it more great news for humanity when I link this parable with an order parable.
A man who, as a plantation put, people to work multiple times during the day and a last group at the end of the workday. When the work is done, the man pays them the same amount--those who work all day are very mad with the owner, but the owner tells everyone he will pay for a day of work.
After so many complaints, the owner said he did nothing wrong; he did what he wanted with his money.
The owner was brilliant. Before he hired the group, he made a deal with them about how much he would pay.
I need the world to know that Jesus is not coming to judge anyone but for deliverance. He's coming to establish his government to bring peace to humanity.
P.A. Fritz Michel