Wednesday, May 27, 2026

UFOs, Genesis 6, and Spiritual Warfare: Why I Believe This Is Spiritual and Not Extraterrestrial

 Theology According to Truitt

For many years I have followed stories about UFOs, alien encounters, government disclosures, and claims of extraterrestrial contact. I have listened carefully to what people say. I have read reports from military personnel, researchers, and individuals who claim to have experienced strange encounters. I do not dismiss that people are seeing something. I believe there are real experiences taking place.

However, after years of studying the Bible and observing the direction these teachings are leading people, I have come to a personal conclusion. I do not believe these beings are extraterrestrials from another planet. I believe this phenomenon is spiritual in nature and connected to the long spiritual warfare that has existed since the Garden of Eden.

Now let me make something clear before I go any farther. This is not official church doctrine, nor do I preach this as absolute biblical truth from the pulpit. I simply present this as my personal theological opinion based upon Scripture, observation, and discernment. I call it “Theology According to Truitt.”

The Bible does not specifically mention UFOs. It does not say flying saucers are fallen angels. I fully admit that. But the Bible does speak extensively about spiritual warfare, deceptive spirits, principalities, powers, lying signs, and fallen beings that seek to deceive mankind.

The modern UFO movement is no longer simply about lights in the sky. Increasingly, it carries a message. That message often says:

  • mankind was created by alien beings,

  • religion is primitive misunderstanding,

  • Jesus was merely an enlightened teacher,

  • or humanity is about to evolve into a higher consciousness through contact with non-human intelligences.

That teaching directly contradicts the Bible.

The Word of God declares:

“In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.”
— Genesis 1:1 KJV

The Bible teaches that man was created in the image of God, not engineered by extraterrestrials. It teaches redemption through Jesus Christ, not salvation through cosmic enlightenment or hidden alien knowledge.

What concerns me most is not whether strange objects exist. My concern is the spiritual direction these teachings are taking people.

Genesis 6 has long fascinated Bible students:

“That the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair…”
— Genesis 6:2 KJV

There are different interpretations of this passage, and I understand good Christians disagree. Some see this as the godly line of Seth intermarrying with the ungodly line of Cain. Others believe it refers to fallen angelic beings corrupting mankind before the flood.

I personally lean toward the understanding that there was supernatural corruption and spiritual rebellion taking place before the flood. Jesus Himself said:

“But as the days of Noe were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.”
— Matthew 24:37 KJV

Again, I am careful not to go beyond Scripture. But I do believe deception will increase in the last days.

The Bible plainly teaches the existence of spiritual powers influencing nations and people. In Daniel chapter 10, the answer to Daniel’s prayer was delayed twenty-one days because of conflict involving the “prince of Persia.” This appears to describe spiritual warfare connected to earthly kingdoms.

Paul wrote:

“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world…”
— Ephesians 6:12 KJV

That is spiritual warfare.

The Bible also teaches that Satan can appear as an angel of light:

“And no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light.”
— 2 Corinthians 11:14 KJV

If holy angels can appear visibly to men, as they did throughout Scripture, I do not find it unreasonable to believe fallen beings could also deceive humanity through manifestations designed to lead people away from God.

Now before someone accuses me of fearmongering, let me say this clearly. Christians should not become obsessed with demons, UFOs, conspiracies, or hidden mysteries. Our focus is Christ, not darkness. Some people spend more time chasing signs than seeking God.

But neither should believers ignore the reality of spiritual deception.

The danger is not simply strange lights in the sky. The danger is the growing belief that mankind no longer needs God because “advanced beings” created us. That is simply another version of the oldest lie in the Bible:

“Ye shall be as gods.”
— Genesis 3:5 KJV

Whether these phenomena are spiritual, psychological, technological, or some mixture of things we do not yet understand, Christians must remain grounded in Scripture and discernment.

I do not claim to have all the answers. I am not a prophecy expert. I am not declaring dogma. I simply believe there is more spiritual deception in this world than most people realize, and I believe believers should test every spirit and every teaching against the Word of God.

At the end of the day, my faith does not rest in government disclosures, UFO files, or theories about fallen angels. My faith rests in Jesus Christ.

And regardless of what exists in the heavens, above the earth, or in the unseen realm, the Bible still declares:

“Greater is he that is in you, than he that is in the world.”
— 1 John 4:4 KJV

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Thankful For Kind Reviews

 Thought I would share what has been said about this blog.

If you are looking for a Christian blog that speaks plainly about the spiritual condition of the world, the changing direction of the Church, prophecy, holiness, discernment, and everyday faith, then “Ramblings of a Country Preacher” is worth reading.

Written in the voice of an old-fashioned country preacher, this blog combines biblical conviction, pastoral experience, current events, and spiritual reflection in a way that is becoming increasingly rare today. Rather than offering polished corporate religion or shallow inspirational messages, the articles speak honestly about spiritual warfare, cultural decline, the condition of the modern Church, and the need for repentance and discernment in these uncertain times.

The blog has grown steadily through word of mouth and online readership, drawing tens of thousands of monthly views from readers searching for biblical clarity in a confusing world. With more than 578 published articles and nearly 270,000 total views, readers continue returning for thoughtful commentary rooted in Scripture and practical Christian living.

Popular articles explore topics such as:

  • Spiritual warfare and prophecy

  • The condition and mission of the modern Church

  • Discernment in the last days

  • Holiness and Christian living

  • Cultural and moral decline

  • Faith during troubling times

  • Encouragement for believers

  • Biblical reflections on world events

Titles such as:

  • “The War Behind the World”

  • “Salt Shakers and Empty Altars”

  • “Has The Mission of The Church Changed?”

  • “The World Is Different Today”

  • “Who Shall Separate Us?”
    reflect the tone and focus of the ministry.

What makes this blog unique is its authenticity. The writings do not come from a media organization or theological institution, but from the heart of a longtime pastor who has spent decades preaching, teaching, counseling, and watching the spiritual changes taking place in America and the Church.

The articles are written for ordinary people searching for truth, wisdom, encouragement, and spiritual understanding. The writing style is direct, conversational, Scripture-centered, and often deeply personal.

In a time when many voices are competing for attention, “Ramblings of a Country Preacher” offers something simple yet powerful:
a shepherd’s voice calling people back to faith, discernment, holiness, and Christ.

If you enjoy thoughtful Christian writing rooted in biblical conviction and real-life pastoral experience, this blog deserves a place on your reading list.

The Greatest Sign of the Last Days May Be the Condition of the Church

 Folks, let me say this plain right from the start: I do not claim to be some great prophecy expert. I do not know all the mysteries of the end times, and I am careful about those who always seem to have a chart, a date, or a new revelation every other week. Jesus Himself said:

“But of that day and hour knoweth no man…” — Matthew 24:36 KJV

Now that settles a whole lot of things right there.

But while I do not know the day or the hour, I can still read the signs. Jesus rebuked the Pharisees because they could read the weather but could not discern the spiritual times in which they lived. And friend, if we are honest, something has changed over the last forty years — not just in the world, but in the Church.

That is what troubles me most.

I have heard prophecy teachers spend hours talking about blood moons, wars in the Middle East, government systems, digital currency, and global politics. Now, I am not saying those things are unimportant. The world is changing rapidly. Nations are trembling. Governments are seeking more power. The entire world seems to be moving toward centralized control and global dependence faster than at any time in history.

But the greatest prophecy markers I see are not just happening in governments.

They are happening in churches.

The Bible warned repeatedly that one of the greatest signs of the last days would be a falling away from truth.

“That day shall not come, except there come a falling away first…” — 2 Thessalonians 2:3 KJV.

Notice Paul did not say the world would fall away. The world has always resisted God. He was warning about people connected to the faith drifting away from sound doctrine and biblical truth.

And brother, that is exactly what many of us have watched happen.

I have lived long enough to remember when preaching was about conviction, repentance, holiness, and salvation. Today, much of what passes for preaching sounds more like a motivational seminar than a sermon.

Some churches no longer want doctrine because doctrine offends people.

They do not want conviction because conviction makes people uncomfortable.

They do not want holiness because holiness demands separation from the world.

Instead, many want a religion that makes them feel good while allowing them to live however they please.

In many places, the Church has become so much like the world that it is difficult to tell the difference anymore.

Entertainment has replaced worship.

Celebrity has replaced servanthood.

Tolerance has replaced discernment.

Emotion has replaced biblical depth.

Popularity has replaced truth.

And perhaps the saddest part is this: much of it is being done in the name of Christianity.

Paul warned about this very thing:

“For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine…” — 2 Timothy 4:3 KJV.

Friend, we are living there now.

The issue is not merely that the world is growing darker. The world without Christ has always moved toward darkness. The greater concern is that portions of the Church are becoming comfortable with that darkness.

Jesus warned repeatedly about deception in the last days.

“Take heed that no man deceive you.” — Matthew 24:4 KJV

Not once.

Not twice.

Over and over.

The greatest danger may not be persecution from outside the Church. It may be deception inside the Church.

Now hear me carefully. I am not writing this to create fear. I am not trying to scare people with prophecy charts or newspaper headlines. I am not setting dates, and I am not claiming every war or disaster means Jesus returns next Tuesday.

But I am saying this:

The direction matters.

When you see truth being abandoned…

When you see holiness mocked…

When you see churches afraid to preach repentance…

When you see biblical morality treated as outdated…

When you see Christians more influenced by culture than Scripture…

Those are signs of deep spiritual trouble.

Jesus asked a sobering question:

“Nevertheless when the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?” — Luke 18:8 KJV

That verse troubles me more than any headline on the evening news.

Folks, the answer is not panic.

The answer is not hiding in fear.

The answer is not obsession with conspiracies.

The answer is to get closer to Christ than ever before.

Know your Bible.

Pray.

Walk holy.

Use discernment.

Test the spirits.

Stay faithful even when the world changes around you.

The early Christians did not know when Jesus would return either, but they lived ready.

That is how we ought to live.

I may not understand every mystery of prophecy, but I know enough Scripture to recognize the direction this world — and sadly much of the Church — is moving.

And more than watching the skies, I believe it is time for the Church to examine itself.

Can Christians Reject False Religions Without Hate?

 If We Hated Them, Why Would We Want Them Saved?

There is something I have struggled with for a long time, especially these days when the world is filled with anger, division, and religious confusion.

I have been accused of hating people because I believe their religion is wrong. If I say that Jesus Christ is the only way to salvation, someone says I am hateful. If I say a religion that denies Christ's teachings is a teaching error, someone says I am racist, intolerant, or full of hate.

But let me ask a simple country preacher question.

Why would I try to lead someone to Christ if I hated them?

If I hated a man, I would not care whether he was saved or lost.

If I hated people, I would not pray for them.

If I hated them, I would not warn them that they are walking down the wrong road.

If I hated them, I would let them continue toward destruction without saying one word.

The truth is, warning someone is often the greatest act of love.

When I preach that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, that He died for our sins, rose again, and is the only hope for humanity, I am not preaching hatred. I am preaching what I believe to be the truth, according to the Word of God.

The Bible says:

"For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son..." — John 3:16 KJV

Notice the word "world." Christ died for all races, all nations, all people. The ground is level at the foot of the Cross. The blood of Jesus was shed for the rich and poor, Jew and Gentile, black and white, American and foreigner alike.

But the same Bible also says:

"Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ? He is antichrist, that denieth the Father and the Son." — 1 John 2:22 KJV

That means Christians cannot remain silent when teachings deny who Jesus is.

Now listen carefully.

Rejecting a religion is not the same as hating the people trapped in it.

I do not hate Muslims.

I do not hate Jews.

I do not hate atheists.

I do not hate anyone from another country or culture.

I believe they are souls created in the image of God and people for whom Christ died.

But I cannot approve of teachings that deny Christ.

There is a difference between loving the sinner and approving of the doctrine.

Sadly, many people today have the spirit of Jonah.

Jonah did not want Nineveh to repent.

He did not want mercy shown to his enemies.

He wanted judgment.

When God spared Nineveh, Jonah became angry.

Can you imagine that?

A preacher was upset because people got right with God.

Yet many people today are the same way. They speak of enemies, nations, religions, and groups of people with such bitterness that they almost seem disappointed at the thought that God might save them.

But Jesus did not die just for people like us.

He died for sinners.

Every sinner.

The Gospel is not:

"God hates you."

The Gospel is:

"You are lost, but there is a better way."

Jesus did not tell us to compromise truth, but neither did He tell us to hate the people . He told us to preach the Gospel to every creature. That means we can stand firmly for biblical truth while still loving the people we are trying to reach.

Truth without love becomes cruelty.

Love without truth becomes compromise.

A Christian must hold both.

There are false religions in this world.

Some doctrines deny Christ.

There are spirits of deception working on the earth.

But there are also millions of souls trapped in darkness who need someone to tell them there is hope in Jesus Christ.

The Church should never become so angry at sinners that it forgets why Christ came.

Jesus did not come to destroy men's lives, but to save them.

And if we truly believe that Jesus is the only way, then the answer is not hatred.

The answer is to preach Christ even harder while there is still time.

Monday, May 25, 2026

The World Is Ready To Be Deceived: Jesus Warned Us First About Deception

Right now, the world is ripe for deception.
People are frightened, confused, angry, exhausted, and desperate for answers. The nations are trembling with war, economic uncertainty, political division, moral collapse, and spiritual confusion. Humanity is searching for someone — anyone — who can promise peace, stability, and safety.
And that is exactly what makes this hour so dangerous.
The Bible warned us this would happen.
Jesus Christ did not say the first sign of the end would be war or famine. His first warning was:
"Take heed that no man deceive you."
— Matthew 24:4 KJV
Friend, deception is coming on a scale the world has never seen before.
How?
I do not know.
Through politics?
Through religion?
Through technology?
Through economic collapse?
Through fear?
Through a global crisis?
I cannot tell you exactly how it will unfold.
And I will not set dates or claim secret knowledge that the Bible does not give.
But this much I believe with all my heart:
The world is being conditioned right now to accept deception.
People are becoming willing to surrender freedom for safety.
Truth for comfort.
Discernment for emotion.
Conviction for convenience.
The stage is being set.
The spirit of antichrist does not arrive waving a red flag saying, "I am evil." Deception comes in the form of being reasonable, compassionate, intelligent, spiritual, and necessary.
That is why the church had better wake up.
You'd better learn discernment soon.
Not next year.
Not someday.
Now.
You'd better know the Word of God for yourself.
You'd better learn how to test the spirits.
You'd better stop unthinkingly following personalities, political movements, internet prophets, media voices, and religious systems without searching the Scriptures.
The hour is too serious for shallow Christianity.
Jesus warned:
"For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders..."
— Matthew 24:24 KJV
Paul warned of strong delusion.
John warned of the spirit of antichrist.
Revelation warns of deception tied to worship, power, and economic control.
And while much of the world is looking for a savior to fix the chaos, believers must remember there is only one true Savior — Jesus Christ.
The world is ready to be deceived.
The hunger for a world-changing leader is already here.
The fear is already here.
The instability is already here.
And somewhere in the middle of all this noise, the true church must remain sober, watchful, prayerful, and grounded in truth.
Because in the last days, discernment will not be optional for the believer.
It will be necessary for survival.

Is It Time for Israel to Confess Its Nuclear Weapons?

There are times when honesty becomes necessary for the sake of peace. I believe we have reached that point concerning Israel’s nuclear weapons.

For decades the world has lived under what politicians call “strategic ambiguity.” Everybody knows the weapons exist, yet governments pretend not to know. America demands inspections, transparency, and accountability from other nations while refusing to speak plainly about Israel’s arsenal. Even members of Congress are now openly questioning this contradiction. 

Let me say something clearly before I go farther.

I do not support the present government of Iran, nor do I support the present leadership in Israel. I have also made it clear that I do not support the involvement of the United States government in the wars and conflicts surrounding Gaza, Syria, Lebanon, or Iran.

Too many innocent people have died. Too many homes have been destroyed. Too many politicians and media voices speak casually about war while ordinary families bury their dead.

As Christians, we should not become blind followers of any government simply because they claim to be on “our side.” Our loyalty belongs first to Jesus Christ and the Kingdom of God.

The issue before us is not hatred toward Jewish people, Persian people, Arab people, or any other people. Every soul is precious in the sight of God. Christ died for all mankind.

The issue is truth.

If nuclear weapons are dangerous in the hands of Iran, then they are dangerous in the hands of Israel. If transparency is required for one nation, then honesty should be required for all nations. A policy built on secrecy and double standards eventually destroys trust and fuels more fear, suspicion, and conflict.

The Bible says:

“For there is nothing covered, that shall not be revealed; neither hid, that shall not be known.” — Luke 12:2 KJV

The modern world already lives under the shadow of nuclear destruction. Russia has them. America has them. China has them. Other nations possess them. The last thing this world needs is more secrecy, more military escalation, and more propaganda pushing nations toward another catastrophic war.

I believe it is time for Israel to openly acknowledge its nuclear capability and for the world to deal honestly with the reality of nuclear weapons in the Middle East. 

But honesty alone will not save the world.

The deeper problem is spiritual. Nations rage because men’s hearts are filled with pride, fear, greed, hatred, and lust for power. Politicians promise peace while preparing for war. Governments speak of security while building weapons capable of destroying millions.

The prophets warned us these days would come.

As believers, we must use discernment. We must pray for peace. We must refuse the spirit of hatred and blind nationalism. And we must remember that no earthly government — East or West — is the hope of mankind.

Jesus Christ alone is the Prince of Peace.


Sunday, May 24, 2026

Not All Jews Are Zionists

 For context, the perspective below reflects one stream of Christian criticism of dispensational theology. Many sincere Christians hold dispensational views, while others strongly disagree with them. The point here is to explain the debate and why some Jewish groups — including certain anti-Zionist Orthodox Jews — reject Christian Zionist interpretations.

There is something many Christians never hear from the pulpit, from television prophecy teachers, or from the endless political noise surrounding the Middle East. Not all Jews are Zionists.

For many years, Christians have often been told there is only one Jewish viewpoint concerning the nation of Israel, prophecy, and the return to the land. But if a person studies history honestly, they quickly discover the Jewish world is deeply divided over these matters.

Some Jews are secular.
Some are religious.
Some are nationalist.
Some are anti-nationalist.
Some believe the modern state of Israel fulfills prophecy.
Others strongly reject that idea.

One of the groups most Americans have never heard about is a small ultra-Orthodox Jewish movement called Neturei Karta. Their name means “Guardians of the City.” These Jews believe that the establishment of a Jewish state by political and military means before the coming of the Messiah is contrary to their understanding of Scripture and Jewish tradition.

Why Some Jews Oppose Zionism

Many Christians are shocked to learn that some Orthodox Jews oppose Zionism not because they hate Judaism or reject Israel’s history, but because they believe only God can restore Israel in His appointed time.

Their belief is rooted in the idea that the scattering of the Jewish people happened under divine judgment and that only the Messiah can gather the people back in fulfillment of prophecy. In their understanding, man-made political efforts to establish a Jewish state before the coming of the Messiah interfere with God’s plan rather than fulfill it.

They view political Zionism as:

  • a secular nationalist movement,

  • heavily influenced by modern political ideology,

  • and separate from biblical redemption.

Some anti-Zionist Jews believe the true restoration of Israel will be:

  • spiritual before political,

  • led by God rather than military power,

  • and connected to the coming of the Messiah.

Because of this, they reject the idea that modern political developments automatically equal prophetic fulfillment.

Again, whether one agrees with their interpretation or not is not the point here. The point is that even within Judaism there are serious disagreements concerning:

  • prophecy,

  • covenant,

  • the land,

  • and the timing of restoration.

Dispensationalism and Christian Zionism

Another part of this discussion many believers never examine is the influence of dispensational theology upon modern Christian views of Israel.

Dispensationalism became highly influential in modern evangelical Christianity through teachers such as John Nelson Darby and later through prophecy conferences, study Bibles, radio ministries, television preachers, and modern prophecy books.

This system often teaches:

  • a sharp distinction between Israel and the Church,

  • that modern Israel is the center of end-times prophecy,

  • and that the return of Jews to the land is direct fulfillment of prophecy.

Over time, many Christians came to view support for the modern state of Israel almost as a test of spiritual faithfulness.

But critics argue that dispensationalism sometimes reads modern political events into prophecy in ways earlier Christians never did. Some believe it places greater emphasis on modern nationalism and geopolitics than on the Kingdom of God preached by Christ.

That is why some Christians say modern dispensationalism can become more Zionist in focus than biblical in focus.

Instead of centering everything on:

  • repentance,

  • holiness,

  • the Gospel,

  • and the Kingdom of God,

many prophecy discussions become centered almost entirely around:

  • nation-states,

  • borders,

  • wars,

  • political alliances,

  • and military conflict.

Some anti-Zionist Jews strongly oppose dispensationalism because they believe Christian Zionists are using Jewish history and suffering to fit a prophetic system that they themselves reject. They reject the idea that secular political Zionism fulfills biblical prophecy, and they are uncomfortable with Christian movements that enthusiastically support the state while still believing Judaism is incomplete without Christ.

This creates an unusual situation where some Orthodox anti-Zionist Jews oppose both:

  • secular Zionism,

  • and Christian Zionism.

Prophecy Is Not Political Slogans

We are living in dangerous times where political loyalty is replacing biblical discernment. Many Christians know more about modern geopolitics than they do about the words of Christ.

The prophets of the Old Testament never taught blind loyalty to governments simply because they carried the name Israel. The ancient nation of Israel itself was often rebuked by God for:

  • injustice,

  • corruption,

  • idolatry,

  • oppression,

  • and rebellion.

The prophets cried out against wicked kings, false prophets, and corrupt priests. God judged nations not merely by their name, but by their fruits.

Jesus Himself warned:

“Ye shall know them by their fruits.”
— Matthew 7:16 KJV

That warning applies to all nations, all governments, all churches, and all people.

The Danger of Confusing the Holy With the Political

One of the greatest mistakes Christians can make is confusing a political movement with the Kingdom of God.

The Kingdom of God is not built by tanks, bombs, propaganda, lobbying groups, or military power.

Jesus said:

“My kingdom is not of this world…”
— John 18:36 KJV

Many believers have become so emotionally attached to modern political systems that they no longer examine events spiritually. They assume supporting a government automatically means supporting God.

But Scripture teaches discernment.

The Apostle John the Apostle warned believers:

“Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God…”
— 1 John 4:1 KJV

Christians are commanded to examine:

  • teachings,

  • movements,

  • leaders,

  • and doctrines by the Word of God.

Not by political emotion.
Not by television personalities.
Not by fear.
Not by slogans.

A Time for Discernment

This old country preacher believes we are living in a time when believers must return to careful Bible study instead of emotional reaction.

The world is filled with propaganda from every side.
Governments lie.
Media manipulates.
Religious leaders sometimes compromise truth for power.

That is why Christians must keep their eyes on Christ instead of blindly trusting earthly systems.

Some Christians could learn an important lesson from the existence of anti-Zionist Jews themselves: even within Judaism there are serious disagreements about prophecy, covenant, and the timing of restoration.

That should remind all of us to approach prophecy with humility, prayer, discernment, and a deep dependence upon the Word of God.

Because in the end, no political system will save mankind.

Only Jesus Christ saves.