Why They Don’t Want You Knowing About the Nephilim | Pastor Allen Nolan Sermon
SHOCKING TRUTH PASTOR ALLEN NOLAN REVEALS WHY THEY HIDE THE NEPHILIM
Deep in the heart of Oklahoma, a pastor steps to the pulpit with a message that cuts through centuries of silence and sends ripples of unease across congregations and online platforms alike.
Pastor Allen Nolan, founding leader of Cornerstone Fellowship in Tahlequah, doesn’t shy away from the Bible’s darkest corners.
In his gripping sermon series “Don’t Be Deceived,” he pulls back the veil on one of scripture’s most explosive mysteries: the Nephilim.
These weren’t mere myths or oversized humans from Sunday school tales.
They were something far more terrifying—hybrid offspring of fallen angels and human women that corrupted the earth so completely that God unleashed the Flood to wipe the slate clean.

And according to Nolan and mounting voices in biblical scholarship, the powers that be—whether institutional, academic, or spiritual—have every reason to keep this knowledge buried.
The tension builds from the very first verse.
Genesis 6:1-4 describes a time when “the sons of God saw that the daughters of humans were beautiful, and they married any of them they chose.”
Their union produced the Nephilim—translated as “fallen ones” or giants—who became “the heroes of old, men of renown.”
But this wasn’t romantic folklore.
It was cosmic rebellion.
These “sons of God,” widely understood in ancient Jewish texts and by many modern expositors as angelic beings known as the Watchers, abandoned their heavenly posts, descended to Earth, and defiled creation itself.
The result?
A race of violent, superhuman giants whose bloodlust and depravity filled the world with such evil that only Noah’s family escaped judgment.
Imagine the scene unfolding like a nightmare: Two hundred Watchers, led by figures like Samyaza, swear a blood oath on Mount Hermon.
They teach humanity forbidden knowledge—sorcery, weaponry, cosmetics, astrology, and the secrets of the cosmos.
Their giant children devour resources, then turn on mankind, drinking blood and spreading terror.
The earth cries out under the weight of this hybrid horror.
God binds the fallen angels in chains of darkness, awaiting final judgment, while the Flood erases their monstrous progeny.
Yet echoes remain.
Numbers 13 spies report seeing Nephilim descendants in Canaan—the Anakim, Rephaim—beings so colossal that the Israelites felt like grasshoppers.
Goliath himself, slain by David, carried their bloodline.
Pastor Nolan dives into this with unflinching clarity.
In sermons exploring angels and demons, he connects the dots: these entities weren’t destroyed forever.

Their spirits, disembodied after the Flood, became what we know as demons—restless, seeking hosts, deceiving humanity across generations.
This isn’t dusty theology.
It’s a living warning for today.
Nolan’s series ties Nephilim directly to modern obsessions with UFOs, aliens, and unexplained aerial phenomena.
What if the “ancient astronauts” and extraterrestrial visitors reported worldwide are not visitors from distant stars, but the same deceptive spirits and their hybrid agenda resurfacing in the last days?
The sermon asks the uncomfortable question: Why does mainstream culture, science, and even parts of the church downplay or ridicule this biblical account?
The drama intensifies when considering the cover-up.
Ancient texts like the Book of Enoch—quoted by Jude in the New Testament and found among the Dead Sea Scrolls—detail the Watchers’ crimes with chilling precision.
Enoch, the man who “walked with God” and was taken to heaven without dying, witnesses their judgment.
He sees the giants’ rampage, the angels’ imprisonment, and the coming reckoning.
Yet this book, preserved in Ethiopia and revered by early church fathers, was sidelined from the Western canon.
Why?
Nolan and others suggest the full story threatens comfortable narratives.
It reveals a supernatural war behind human history, where fallen entities manipulate bloodlines, governments, and knowledge itself to prepare for an end-times return.
Picture the stakes: If Nephilim were real, then humanity has been targeted for genetic and spiritual corruption from the beginning.
The Flood wasn’t random judgment—it was emergency intervention against hybrid invasion.
Post-Flood, smaller giant clans resisted Israel’s conquest, their defeat underscoring God’s sovereignty.
But prophecy hints at recurrence.
Jesus Himself warned that the days before His return would mirror Noah’s time.
Matthew 24:37—“As it was in the days of Noah, so it will be at the coming of the Son of Man.”
What characterized Noah’s days?
The Nephilim incursion and total moral collapse.
Nolan urges believers to see parallels in today’s genetic tampering, transhumanism, AI, and reports of “alien” encounters that mimic demonic possession or deception.
The sermon pulses with urgency.
Why don’t “they” want you knowing?
Because truth empowers resistance.
Elite institutions, archaeological gatekeepers like the Smithsonian, and secular academia have long faced accusations of suppressing giant skeleton discoveries across America and beyond—bones of beings eight to twelve feet tall or more, often dismissed as hoaxes or misidentified.
Conspiracy researchers cite old newspaper accounts of massive skulls with double rows of teeth, tools too large for normal humans, and burial mounds bulldozed or hidden.
Whether fully verified or not, the pattern fuels suspicion: acknowledging biblical giants disrupts evolutionary timelines and materialist worldviews.
It points to a Creator actively intervening against supernatural corruption.
Nolan, with decades of pastoral experience and degrees in Biblical Languages and Theology, grounds everything in scripture while acknowledging extrabiblical sources for context.
He doesn’t sensationalize for clicks but equips his flock against deception.
In “Don’t Be Deceived,” he explores how demons—possibly Nephilim spirits—masquerade as benevolent aliens or ascended masters.
Modern abduction stories, cattle mutilations, and sudden technological leaps echo the Watchers’ ancient teachings.
Fallen angels promised enlightenment but delivered destruction.
Today’s “disclosure” movements may be prelude to greater lies, preparing hearts for the ultimate strong delusion described in 2 Thessalonians.
Tension mounts as Nolan contrasts views.
Some interpret “sons of God” as godly Sethites intermarrying with Cain’s line— a human-only explanation avoiding angelic rebellion.
Yet this struggles against Job’s usage of “sons of God” for angels, Jude’s reference to angels abandoning their proper domain, and Peter’s mention of spirits in prison.
The angelic view, dominant in Second Temple Judaism and early Christianity, explains the supernatural scale of evil that necessitated the Flood.
Giants weren’t just tall; they were tyrannical hybrids blending heavenly power with earthly flesh, nearly erasing pure humanity.
Noah was “perfect in his generations”—possibly genetically untainted.
The emotional core hits hard.
These revelations aren’t academic trivia.
They expose the invisible war raging around us.
Ephesians 6 calls believers to armor up against spiritual forces.
Knowing the enemy’s playbook—genetic hybridization, forbidden knowledge, fear-based deception—fortifies faith.
Nolan’s congregation leans in as he paints the picture: a pre-Flood world of unimaginable wickedness, giants roaming, angels in open rebellion, humanity on the brink.
God’s mercy preserved a remnant.
That same mercy calls us today amid rising chaos, moral inversion, and signs in the heavens.
Archaeological whispers add fuel.
Megalithic structures—Stonehenge, Baalbek, ancient American mounds—defy conventional building explanations.
Some theorists link them to giant engineering or Watcher-taught technology.
While mainstream dismisses, the biblical lens offers coherence: post-Flood Rephaim clans carried residual knowledge.
Og of Bashan’s massive iron bed, Goliath’s armor—real artifacts of a fading giant era.
Their defeat by faith-filled warriors like David underscores victory through God, not might.
As the sermon crescendos, Pastor Nolan issues a sobering challenge.
The church must wake up.
Deception thrives in ignorance.
If Nephilim lore stays confined to fringe circles, believers remain unprepared for end-times hybrids—whether literal returns, genetic recreations via CRISPR, or spiritual counterfeits.
UFO sightings surge globally.
Governments hint at “non-human intelligence.”
Pop culture normalizes alien saviors.
Yet scripture foretells a different narrative: the ancient serpent’s seed warring against the woman’s.
Revelation’s dragon, beasts, and false prophet fit the pattern of deceptive hybridization and control.
Hope pierces the darkness.
Christ’s victory on the cross disarmed principalities and powers.
The same authority given to believers casts out demons and stands against schemes.
Nolan emphasizes discernment, scriptural literacy, and Spirit-led boldness.
Don’t fear giants or shadows—fear God who judges angels.
The Nephilim story reminds us: evil escalates, but heaven intervenes decisively.
Noah preached 120 years while building the ark.
We too must warn while preparing hearts.
The message spreads like wildfire.
Clips from Nolan’s teachings rack up views as believers share across platforMs. Skeptics scoff, labeling it mythology or conspiracy.
Yet the text stands.
Genesis records it plainly.
Enoch amplifies.
Apostles allude.
History and prophecy converge.
Why hide it?
Because full knowledge dismantles lies propping up godless systeMs. It reveals humanity’s vulnerability to supernatural influence and our desperate need for redemption only Jesus provides.
In quiet Tahlequah, a faithful pastor continues teaching verse by verse.
No smoke, no theatrics—just relentless exposition.
Yet the implications thunder.
The Nephilim weren’t a one-off anomaly.
Their legacy warns of recurring deception.
As global events spiral—wars, moral decay, technological god-playing—we edge closer to “as in the days of Noah.”
Pastor Allen Nolan’s sermon isn’t entertainment.
It’s a battle cry: Know the truth.
It will set you free—and arm you for what comes next.
The earth once groaned under giant feet.
Heaven responded with floodwaters.
Today, the battle shifts to minds and spirits.
Will you remain deceived, or rise with eyes open to the ancient war still raging?
The choice, as Nolan powerfully reminds, determines where you stand when the Son of Man returns.