Here’s a fun fact they never teach you in Sunday school or civics class:
For centuries, the tribes of Israel lived without a king.
No centralized government.
No standing army.
No tax authority.
No political class.
They had elders. Families. Judges. A shared moral code.
And above all, a refusal to place one man above another.
When the people demanded a king, God didn’t endorse it.
He didn’t bless it.
He didn’t celebrate it as progress.
He warned them—clearly and explicitly—what authority would do to them.
Their sons would be taken.
Their daughters would be taken.
Their labor, their land, their freedom would be taken.
And then God did something most people misunderstand: He allowed the choice.
Not because He supported kings, but because He respects free will—even when it leads to chains.
The people weren’t rejecting Samuel. They were rejecting God.
And God does not force Himself on those who choose authority over truth.
Choose divine law, or choose the consequences of rejecting it.
There has never been a third option.
What they asked for wasn’t order.
It was authority.
And authority always demands sacrifice.
Molech Was Never Just an Idol
The Bible talks about Molech like a monster—and for good reason.
Children burned alive.
Innocence fed to fire.
Death justified as necessity.
But here’s the mistake most people make:
They read Molech as an ancient superstition instead of a pattern.
Molech isn’t defined by statues or chants.
Molech is defined by logic.
“Some must die so the system can survive.”
That’s it.
That’s the entire religion.
Doesn’t matter if the altar is stone or paperwork.
Doesn’t matter if the fire is literal or bureaucratic.
Once a system claims the right to kill the innocent for stability, prosperity, or order…
You are no longer dealing with morality.
You are dealing with Molech.
The State Is Molech With Better PR
Strip away the flags, the anthems, the speeches, the slogans.
What is the State, at its core?
An institution that claims moral authority to use violence and demands human sacrifice in exchange for security.
War? Necessary.
Collateral damage? Tragic but unavoidable.
Starvation under sanctions? Acceptable losses.
Poisoned water? An oversight.
Mass death under socialism? For the revolution.
Debt slavery? For the greater good.
Same altar.
New language.
The difference between ancient Molech worship and modern governance isn’t ethics—it’s branding.
Rome Was the Molech of Jesus’ Time
Jesus didn’t live under a neutral government.
He lived under Rome—the most powerful State on Earth.
Rome conscripted sons.
Rome taxed people into starvation.
Rome crucified dissenters in public as a warning.
Rome called it peace.
Sound familiar?
Jesus never tried to seize power.
He never ran for office.
He never asked for reform.
He did something far more dangerous.
He refused legitimacy.
“Render unto Caesar” wasn’t submission—it was exposure.
Give Caesar his coins. He owns nothing else.
No armies.
No man-made laws.
No violence.
Just truth, conscience, and voluntary obedience to a higher law.
Rome demanded obedience backed by death. Jesus demanded nothing—only truth.
That’s why they killed Him.
Not because He was violent.
Because He made their authority irrelevant.
I’ve said it before and I will say it until my dying day: Jesus was an anarchist.
He believed in voluntary order, decentralized governance, mutual aid and truth.
Modern States Are Still Feeding the Fire
Nothing has changed since Rome — the scale has just inflated.
The 20th century didn’t disprove the Bible.
It confirmed it.
Soviet Russia.
Maoist China.
Pol Pot.
Millions dead.
Not by accident.
By design.
Remove divine law.
Replace it with ideology.
Authorize killing in the name of progress.
Same result.
Every time.
And today?
The future sacrificed before it can speak.
Men sent to die in wars they didn’t choose.
Communities poisoned by corporations protected by regulators.
Families crushed by inflation and debt to preserve the system.
People don’t worship Molech consciously anymore.
They just accept his logic as “reality.”
The True Divide Has Always Been the Same
This isn’t left vs right.
It isn’t religious vs secular.
It isn’t conservative vs progressive.
Those are just distractions to keep you from seeing the truth of the situation.
The real issue everyone should be thinking about is divine law vs man-made authority.
Yahweh vs Molech.
Life vs utility.
Convenience vs Privacy.
Conscience vs compliance.
Government vs Voluntary Order
There is no neutral ground.
You either believe:
life is sacred
no one has the right to rule another
innocence is not negotiable
Or you believe:
some must die
authority decides who matters
the system comes first
One builds free people.
The other builds altars.
Final Note — The Challenge
I’m not trying to convince you.
I’m here as a mirror. What do you see when you compare yourself to what I’ve shown you?
You don’t get to claim rebellion while defending institutions that kill children.
You don’t get to scream “freedom” while outsourcing murder to the State.
You don’t get to wear punk like a costume while kneeling to Molech’s logic.
You already picked a side.
The only question is whether you’re honest about it.
So here’s the challenge:
If your system requires innocent blood to function, burn it down.
If your morality ends where authority begins, it’s not morality.
And if you say you’re free while defending the altar — you’re not a rebel.
You’re just better behaved livestock.
Choose.


