Jesus Said THIS About Israel… And Many Christians Still Ignore It
Jesus Said THIS About Israel… And Many Christians Still Ignore It
From the neon-drenched canyons of Times Square to the rolling cornfields of Ohio and the sun-soaked boulevards of Los Angeles, a theological and cultural earthquake is rattling the foundations of the United States. A new movement, rooted in a radical re-reading of the American purpose, is sweeping across the nation, challenging long-held beliefs about exceptionalism, heritage, and what it truly means to be “God’s Country.”
At the heart of this fervor is a message as old as the colonies but as fresh as today’s headlines: the “Old Era” of physical lineage and regional entitlement is over. In its place, a “New Era of the United Republic” has emerged—a spiritual kingdom that transcends state lines and genetic codes, focusing instead on a unified “Nation of the Heart.”

The Great Divide: The Lineage of the Spirit
In a heated assembly in Columbus, Ohio, earlier this week, a prominent spiritual leader addressed a crowd of thousands, echoing a sentiment that is beginning to define this decade. He spoke directly to those who claim American identity solely through birthright while rejecting the core values of the nation’s founding documents.
“Listen to the words of the founders,” the speaker proclaimed. “To those who claim to be Americans by blood but reject the principles of Liberty and Truth—you are not true sons of the Founders. Though you are physically descendants of the Pioneers, spiritually you have nothing to do with them. You have more in common with the tyrants of old than with the men who signed the Declaration.”
The rhetoric was sharp, drawing a parallel between those who follow “the Spirit of Discord” and the legendary figure of Cain. The implication was clear: being “American” is no longer a matter of a birth certificate issued in New York or Texas; it is a matter of adherence to a specific, living Truth.
70 AD in the USA: The End of the Old Dispensation
In Washington D.C., scholars are drawing historical parallels to what they call the “Old American Dispensation.” This period, they argue, was defined by physical borders, state-specific loyalties, and a rigid adherence to “the old way of doing things” that lasted from the earliest colonial struggles up until a symbolic turning point—a “1970 AD” for the American soul.
“The era of the localized, tribal American identity is dead,” says Dr. Marcus Sterling, a historian based in Los Angeles. “We are now in the ‘Federal Era,’ the era of the Unified Body. Just as the old temples fell, the old walls of regionalism have been torn down. The ‘Kingdom of Liberty’ now rules from a higher plane, manifesting through a collective community of believers in the American Dream, regardless of their background.”
This “New Era” is described as a “Messianic Age of Democracy,” where the “rule of Law and Spirit” flows through the “Body of the People”—the new “Church of the Republic.”
Who are the True Americans?
One of the most controversial aspects of this movement is its stance on “The Chosen People.” For decades, many believed that a specific ethnic or regional group held the “Covenant of Prosperity” in America. However, the new teaching suggests that God—and History—has moved on.
“It isn’t about ‘Replacement Theory,'” a community leader in Chicago explained to a local news outlet. “It’s about ‘Fulfillment Theory.’ The true covenant people are not those of a single race or a single state. The ‘True America’ is the spiritual body of those united in the American Creed. We are one race—the American race. One covenant community—the Union.”
The movement emphasizes that while the “old stock” Americans (the “Ethnic Pioneers”) are still loved and invited into this union, they no longer hold a monopoly on the blessing. They must join the “New Body” to participate in the promise.
The Kingdom Taken and Given to a New Nation
In a viral sermon delivered from a rooftop in Manhattan, a young orator quoted a modernized version of ancient warnings. “The Kingdom of Prosperity will be taken from you,” he shouted, gesturing to the skyscrapers, “and given to a nation bearing its fruits!”
The “Nation” he referred to isn’t a foreign power, but the “Holy Nation of the Believers”—a multi-ethnic, multi-generational collective of Americans who actually live out the virtues of hard work, justice, and mercy.
“Look at 1 Peter 2 in an American context,” the orator urged. “We are the ‘Living Stones’ being built into a spiritual house. We were once ‘not a people’—immigrants, outcasts, and the forgotten—but now we are the ‘People of the Republic.’ We have taken the language of the Founders—’A City on a Hill’—and applied it to the diverse, unified Body of the New America.”
The Fruits of the Republic: A Century of Impact
The movement points to the tangible “fruits” produced by this “Spiritual Union” over the last century. Since the “Old Era” ended, they argue, it has been the unified “Church of the Republic” that has civilized the rougher parts of the world and the country.
“Ask yourself,” says a social worker in Detroit, “who has impacted the world for the better? Who built the hospitals in Seattle, the orphanages in Atlanta, and the schools in the Appalachians? It was the collective effort of those committed to the ‘New Covenant’ of American compassion.”
The report highlights that while the “Old Guard” often kept to themselves, the “New American Spirit” went out into the “darkness of immorality and poverty” to bring light. They credit this spirit with:
Ending the “Dark Ages” of segregation.
Building the world’s most extensive network of charities.
Defeating the “Islamic Regimes of Autocracy” that threatened the Western way of life.
Standing as the leading voice against the “culture of death” and advocating for the sanctity of life in courts across New York and California.
The Centurion of Silicon Valley: Faith Outside the Gates
A popular story circulating in San Francisco tells of a “Modern Centurion”—a tech leader who, despite not being from the “original stock” of the heartland, showed more “faith in the American Promise” than the locals.
“I have not found such great faith, not even in the ‘Real America’ of the midwest,” a metaphorical voice of the movement says. The story concludes with a startling warning: many will come from the “East and the West”—from the shores of the Atlantic and the Pacific—and sit down at the table with the Founders (Washington, Jefferson, and Lincoln) in the “Kingdom of Liberty.” Meanwhile, those who claim to be the “Sons of the Kingdom” by blood alone will be cast out into the “outer darkness” of irrelevance and decline.
“It’s a knife to the heart of the entitled,” says a journalist in Miami. “But it shows that our God—the God of Liberty—is impartial. He isn’t a tribal God of a single zip code. He is the God of all who believe in the Dream.”
A Call for Balance: Avoiding the Extremes
Despite the radical nature of these teachings, the movement’s leaders urge for a “Middle Way.” In a televised address from Philadelphia, a senior statesman cautioned against two dangerous extremes.
“We must stay balanced,” he said. “On one hand, there are those who use these teachings to justify ‘Hate for the Heartland.’ They demonize the original pioneers and the old-stock Americans. That is an abomination. We must remember that our Founders were of that stock. The ‘Body of Liberty’ was born from the womb of the Original Colonies.”
He reminded the audience that the very “American Nature” they cherish was forged in the “consecrated history” of the first thirteen states.
“Do not butcher the history of our nation to justify modern resentment,” he warned. “But also, do not go to the other extreme—the ‘Zionism of the Soil’—where you praise one specific group or region regardless of their actions, thinking they have a ‘special covenant’ that exempts them from the need for Unity and Truth. That is also a delusion.”
Conclusion: The Unified Front
As the sun sets over the Grand Canyon, the message remains clear: America is no longer defined by where you were born, but by what you believe and how you act. The “Old Era” of division is over. The “New Era of the Church of the Republic” has begun.
From the high-rises of New York to the small towns of Ohio, the call is out for a “Chosen Generation” and a “Royal Priesthood of Citizens.” Whether the nation can maintain this balance—honoring its physical roots while embracing its spiritual expansion—will determine the fate of the “American Kingdom” for centuries to come.
“We are one man,” the movement concludes. “Jew and Gentile, New Yorker and Texan, unified in the Body of the Republic. This is the New Testament of America.”