Anonymous ID: fc6b1e May 29, 2020, 11:47 p.m. No.9373982   🗄️.is đź”—kun

' “We’re not a cult. We’re not conspiracy theorists, we’re conspiracy analysts,” announces QAnon researcher Kevin Bushey in a YouTube video after discussing a recent “Q drop” about the mainstream media “expending ammo” writing about QAnon’s growth.

 

Specifically, Bushey tied the drop to the burgeoning popularity of a “QAnon church,” one that holds weekly services on YouTube that blend Q mythology with Biblical theology.

 

None of Bushey’s analysis of Q is out of the norm for Q researchers except one thing: Bushey is part of that same YouTube-based “QAnon church,” called Omega Kingdom Ministries. And his “interpretation” was being presented in one of their services.

 

Since its first 4chan posts in 2017, the QAnon conspiracy theory has become a movement encompassing everything from commerce to politics.

 

And increasingly, this includes religion, as QAnon believers infuse their complex mythos with elements of spiritual warfare and Biblical theology.

 

But some Christian QAnon followers are taking this merger even further, using the text of Q drops as scripture to form what seems like a hybrid Q/Christian denomination.

 

And it might be the future of QAnon.

 

Scriptural content isn’t new to the Q conspiracy theory. The mysterious Q “drops” posted on various message boards often quote various Bible verses and make frequent references to God “winning.” Q is especially fond of reposting Ephesians 6:10-18, including passages about the “Armor of God” and the “Sword of the Spirit.” They seem apt for a movement based around the violent removal of its enemies.

 

But until now, this mix of the spiritual and the conspiratorial has only been one aspect of Q belief, not the foundation for an actual religious movement.

 

Then came Omega Kingdom Ministries and its fusion of Protestantism and QAnon.

 

It has no official doctrine, ordained clergy, or a building in which to gather. It doesn’t even consider itself a church. But this model of public services broadcast on YouTube might serve as a more palatable and acceptable new direction for a movement that struggles to break out of its perception as a violent prophecy cult full of racists and lunatics.

…'

https://www.dailydot.com/debug/qanon-church-omega-kingdom-ministries/

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