Nazis in Hell

Bryan Melvin just gave me another reason to want to stay well clear of hell. First, I don’t like anyone he met.

In 1942, a man was killed in Prague; an assassination ordered by the exiled Czechoslovak government. If memory serves, he was killed in a car. However much they wanted to kill Hitler’s own “Man with the Iron Heart” because of his past deeds (he had ordered the bloody Kristallnacht, or the Broken Glass Night, [var.] Night of the Broken Glass in which Jews in Germany and Austria were dragged from their shops and houses and murdered. He was involved in the Wermacht and Kreigsmarine, the Nazi air force and navy, respectively; and a chief “architect” of the “final solution to the Jewish Problem.” Before his assassination, he had already killed over one million Jews.

Heydrich was so depraved and bereft of human nature of any kind that resistance fighters were tasked with his specific rub out.

After his death, the Nazis mistakenly targeted two towns as being responsible for staging the soldiers for the attack. The villages stand to this day as ruins, even if they were later rebuilt nearby. The razed villages stand as a memorial to every citizen, men, women, and children, whom the Nazis killed in revenge.

I don’t know if Wewelsburg, the castle where Heinrich Himmler was determined to raise Aryan knights from the dead, was ever visited by Heydrich, but I can tell you this: he would have been right at home. Dark cultist rituals were supposed to have been done there, but I didn’t find credible records to verify this, and I never have. With those two men, there died many horrible secrets.

Bryan Melvin contracted cholera. He flatlined and went to Hell, not Heaven. He saw terrifying creatures doing incredible things, and do you want to guess who he saw along the way?

Yup. The Man with the Iron Heart. He says he saw several Nazis but also saw Hittler being roasted in one of those ovens. Yeas, the Nazis burn in Hell. Recyclable charcoal.

And, like Bryan Melvin, I, too, see the world returning to antisemitism and persecution. It’s fine to want to condemn the war and to want all hostilities to stop at once. But it’s been completely out of my experience to hear this much antisemitism in my own country. This war will not stop just because you support terrorists or Nazis, both of which consist of fanatics who shouldn’t be allowed outside. It won’t stop because it’s never stopped. It never will.

But Bryan Melvin knows what he sees: Christian persecution along with terrorists dragging Jewish children across the border in dog cages.

Melvin learned a lot of things on his guided journey through hell. He was an atheist who returned a changed man. A man of deep feelings and convictions who feels he’s been called to share his experience with everyone who has an ear to listen: “Repent! Make way for the son of God!”

I never meant to persecute Christians. But in calling out what I consider false Christians for extremist conservative views and hate speech, I failed to look at myself. Committing the same sins over and over again, thinking if I asked for forgiveness, I would actually be forgiven, was telling myself a lie and choosing to believe it. I also lied to you because I wasn’t forgiven. If you don’t hate your sin and sincerely want to stop, you will not be absolved. I was as bad as they are, or worse: I knew better.

I’ve had to let go of many things in my quest for redemption. Addiction is the hardest of all. Everything has to go: sex addiction,porn, gambling, alcohol, drugs, voyeurism, and more. These things caused me to be separated from God until I could see the truth and truly repent and want to stop everything I was doing.

Am I telling you to be a monk or a nun? No, but those are honorable things to be. I’m saying there’s a difference between believing in Christ and courageously fighting temptation. You need both. They work in tandem. You need the Holy Spirit to surround and protect you, but you have to want its help.

And cherry picking from the Bible is not okay. What if you dismiss something that you need to keep believing in?

As far as I’m concerned, the evidence for a global flood told me not to scoff at accounts because others told me those were impossible. I’m also convinced that God has more than enough power to make anything happen. If you believe he created the universe, you should go from there.

I’ve heard and read about Christians who rule out the Old Testament because they don’t like the dark stories it contains. They may not like the Old Testament, but it isn’t safe to ignore it. Choices made with bias lead to the wide path that takes you to hell, while a bit of patience and prayer may save you from it. I can’t bear to think of people’s souls being lost to false teaching, changing the doctrine from peer pressure, and being inconvenient for the believer to live by.

Please watch the following video. I trust God to speak to your heart through it.

God bless you. Thanks for letting me be a small part of your day. And please follow Touching the Afterlife on YouTube. She’s a good Christian and excellent interviewer, so go show some love.