Are “The Elite” Smart? Worldly Knowledge Versus Godly Wisdom
In a nutshell, yes, the so called, “Elite” are extremely smart and clever. They command a vast reservoir of worldly knowledge, but having knowledge does not mean they have Godly Wisdom, which can only come from The Bible, and “The Elite” traditionally find The Bible anathema, repugnant, and counterproductive to their agendas and their intentions for social control and unilateral dominance.
We call them “The Elite” because of their power and abilities to govern over others through their Bloodlines, technological superiority, and psychological sophistication. These are not people to be trifled with. “The Elite” are among the most sophisticated scientists and psychosocial engineers in all of human history. You have to know what you're up against to escape their wicked designs. They are Elite Intellectuals, but that does not make them any less wicked or evil. Often we put The Elite in parentheses, “The Elite”, in order to make reference to their lesser power when compared to The Kingdom of The Lord and Christ, but nevertheless, they are still the Elite thinkers of all time, and that’s why they rule over The Earth with their statecraft, intricate pseudoscience, Hermetic magick, and technological wizardry.
You can consider the term, “The Elite”, as shorthand for The Jesuit Vatican Military Order of Priests, if you will, whose tentacles spread out to include The Freemasons, The Illuminati, Satanists, Luciferians, Mystery Schools, The Royal Bloodlines, Top Social Scientists, The Top Thinks Tanks, Titans of Business, The Network of Higher Education and Ivy League Universities, Top Psychologists, Technological Geniuses, Astronomers, Astrophysicists, Physicists, etc…To not recognize their intellectual superiority is to underestimate their power and fall prey to their machinations.
I talk about their Canaanite roots in my book, Seed Wars, quite a bit. Indeed, they are evil. People need to understand the difference between Hebrew and Jew. The Hebrews are the line of Adam through Seth to Noah to Shem to Abraham to Isaac to Jacob. Jacob is Israel (Genesis 35:10) and the Israelites are his 12 sons and their descendants. Their book is the Torah. The Jews are the Edomites descended from Esau and his Canaanite wives. Their book is the Babylonian Talmud, and also the Kabbalah and Zohar. To this day, they spit on the Torah, Orthodox Jewry anyway.
The word, “Kay-nee”, was a patronymic derived from the word “qayin”. There are several competing interpretations of the meaning of the etymology. Early modern critical biblical scholars supposed that the name was a rendition of Hebrew, “Qeyniy”. According to the German orientalist Wilhelm Gesenius, the name is derived from the name, “Cain”, the same name as Cain the son of Adam and Eve. However this may simply be the ancient Hebrew transliteration or phonetization of the Kenites' name in their own language.
Cain, being the first Earth born son of a human being through The Fallen Angelic Serpent, it's no wonder God was so offended. Although, had Cain refrained from doing evil, God might have loved and accepted him, just as he loves and forgives each and every one of us today. But Cain rebelliously followed all the ways of the flesh in his Baal worship, where Serpent and Heliocentric Sun worship dominated, below the 31st parallel, also the domain of Enki. Enki was the Sumerian God of Water, Knowledge, Crafts, and Creation, and one of the Anunnaki. He was later known as Ea or Ae in Akkadian (Assyrian-Babylonian) religion, and is identified by some scholars with Ia in Canaanite religion. The name was rendered Aos in Greek sources (e.g. Damascius).
But make no mistake. They form a group of the most sophisticated and powerful intellectuals and social engineers in all of human history, including Aldous Huxley, Carroll Quigley, Carlo Rovelli, Sigmund Freud, Christopher Hitchens, Neils Bohr, Robert Oppenheimer, Noah Harari, Machiavelli, Noam Chomsky, Richard Dawkins, B. F. Skinner, Pythagoras, The Jesuits, The Royal Society of London, The Tavistock Institute, Hermes Trismegistus, Aristotle, etc... These are The Elite thinkers of all time in physics, politics, and social science. The reason they are in control is because their intellectual sophistication is at the highest level. They are extremely smart and few even understand the level of their sophistication.
However, Intellectualism does not necessarily correlate with morality or God's Will. To say that they are not smart is to not understand their writings and work. When I expose the evil that these Canaanites plan in my books, I uncover the bottomless pit of epistemological sophistication that they embody. Make no mistake they are smart beyond comprehension, largely due to their inspiration from Lucifer, who is The Bringer of The Light of Intellectual Power. Nevertheless, these Canaanites are wicked, and ultimately, all their machinations will be consumed in the Supremacy of Christ's Holiness in the end.
From Bible Study Tools:
God predicted that in the last days knowledge will increase, but the knowledge of the world is not the same as biblical knowledge.
What does the Bible say about knowledge? How does it differ from wisdom? What happens when people are ignorant of the knowledge of God, and why is knowledge important for Christ-followers?
What Does the Bible Say about Knowledge?
In the Bible, the word “knowledge” first appears in Genesis. God placed a tree of the “knowledge of good and evil” in Eden, and commanded Adam and Eve not to eat of the tree. When Satan questioned God’s commandment in Eve’s presence, she chose to disobey God, as did Adam (Genesis 3:1-6). This first couple knew intellectually about good and evil because of God’s command, but they understood good and evil experientially—as well as the devastating consequences of their choice—in disobedience.
Knowledge is neither ethically nor morally neutral. The world encourages knowledge of all things, but not all knowledge is good. That’s why Paul said, “I want you to be wise about what is good, and innocent about what is evil” (Romans 16:19).
Author and spiritual coach David Sanford wrote, “‘Good’ knowledge is what God wants us to know, believe, and heed. ‘Evil’ knowledge is what Satan wants us to know, believe, and heed. It didn’t start with Eve’s first bite. Instead, it started with everything the Serpent said—that Eve decided to believe.”
The battle of people choosing between good and bad knowledge continues throughout Scripture and to our present day. Christ-followers are instructed to examine and meditate on the Word of God, because the knowledge God wants us to know is from Him. “Real knowledge,” Sanford says, “is from God the Father (James 1:16-18), God’s Son Jesus Christ (John 14:6), and God’s Holy Spirit (1 John 2:20-27).”
Christians cannot trust their deceitful hearts to point them in the direction of good knowledge, and Satan always tries to trick people (Jeremiah 17:9; John 10:10). Godly discernment and wisdom must be added to knowledge. As believers learn to fear God, the “knowledge of the Holy One” brings understanding (Proverbs 9:10).
Some Insightful Scriptures about Knowledge?
The Bible has so much to say about knowledge, both good and bad.
The Bible teaches that creation reveals the knowledge of God (Psalm 19:1-2), which is infinite. Human knowledge can cause pride and grief (1 Corinthians 8:1b; Ecclesiastes 1:18), and worldly knowledge is often opposed to biblical truth (1 Timothy 6:20-21). Godly knowledge comes from fearing the Lord—being in awe of Him and submitting to Him (Proverbs 1:7).
True, good knowledge comes from God as a gift—from “His own mouth”—to those who have understanding (Daniel 2:21; Proverbs 2:6). Believers can ask God for more knowledge (Psalm 119:66). One blessing of good knowledge is that wisdom preserves the life of those who have it (Ecclesiastes 7:12b).
Christians are instructed to grow in knowledge of Jesus (2 Peter 3:18); and they will find that godly knowledge will be pleasant to their soul (Proverbs 2:10).
How Is Knowledge Different from Understanding and Wisdom?
Basically, knowledge is information we gain through reasoning, experience, or people, and wisdom is the ability to judge what is right and true. Understanding is another term the Bible uses that acts as a bridge between knowledge and wisdom.
In “You Don’t Know What You Don’t Know: Knowledge, Understanding, and Wisdom,” Hugh Whelchel charts the differences between the three terms. Whelchel says that at first glance the terms seem almost interchangeable, but there are differences.
Knowledge, he says, deals with knowing the facts. People with knowledge can “collect, remember, and access information,” but they might not know what to do with that information. A person can be knowledgeable without being wise.
Understanding, Whelchel says, is “the ability to translate meaning from the facts. Those with understanding can “extract the meaning out of information”—seeing the what, how, and why—enabling a person to produce life principles.
Wisdom, then, is “knowing what to do next, given an understanding of the facts and circumstances.” A person with wisdom knows which principle to apply in a given context and do the right thing.
The subject of knowledge first deals with our intellect. God has intellect (Romans 11:34), and His universe was created with truth and logic. He created human intellect, giving mankind the ability to think, comprehend, reason, and remember. In Isaiah 1:18, people are urged to “reason” or consider with Him concerning sin and how to be forgiven. Knowledge is important to know God and what He expects of us.
God says to love Him with our whole being, including the mind. Because human knowledge is limited, and without God the intellect is “darkened,” humans are unable to grasp truths about God (1 Corinthians 2:14) without Him. Indeed, thoughts without God are hostile to Him and a reason for sinful pride (1 Corinthians 8:1b).
Human intellect needs to be redeemed so believers will have “the mind of Christ” and have their thoughts transformed (1 Corinthians 2:16; Romans 12:2). When a Christian asks God for wisdom and turns to the Word of God and the truth of the Gospel, God reveals His perspective about man’s condition and His purposes in and through the believer.
Whelchel noted that the word “disciple” literally means “a learner.” Christians are called to acquire knowledge of God in order to know what they are called to do. Believers hold to the Lord’s teachings so they can live in the truth (John 8:31-32).
R.C. Sproul wrote in his article “Walking in Wisdom,” “Careful study of the Bible is necessary for true discipleship. … Our Lord calls for a continued application of the mind to His Word. A disciple does not dabble in learning. He makes the pursuit of an understanding of God’s Word a chief business of his life.”