This purely subjective entry is not about Armageddon per se but about the many "worlds" that had ended and had been replaced by "new worlds" to which everyone, to a larger or lesser extent, adapts to eventually, with eagerness and reluctance, out of habit and out of need, and under the force of law. "New worlds" come into existence as a result of man sometimes using a rather perilous combination of his God-given talents and his Satan-driven desires, although not all newness in the changed worlds have origins rooted in evil.
For one world to die and another to be born used to take a generation or longer but the rate of replacement is increasing so much so that dramatic changes are taking place within a lifetime as medical and non-medical technology advances, the speed of communication quickens and as man's talents are more and more aligned with Satan's goal to destroy mankind.
It is apparent that the 18th century is very different from the current 21st. The 18th century has been chosen as the starting point because this was the century in which some of the most famous musicians were born [1] and some of the most enduring musical pieces were written. The classical composers of the 18th century were followed by impressionist painters of the 19th century whose renowned signature works are housed in the world's most notable museums. Musicians [3] and artists [4] of the 18th and 19th centuries, respectively, had used their talents to glorify God whereas some of the talented ones of the 20th and the 21st centuries used theirs to serve Satan.
With major advances in medicine [5] in the 19th century beginning with vaccines [6] and continuing into the 20th century with the discovery of antibiotics [7], the healthy man had used his time to invent [8]. The top 10 innovations in the 20th century, as Jeff Danelek pointed out in his article, influenced humanity both positively and negatively. [9] While Danelek's list of top 10 inventions was not in chronological order, each invention had changed the world previous to its existence, and all of them together had brought to an end all the known worlds.
The world at present is on-going, but it is also ending, with robotics leading the way. Robots will eventually be part of life, from performing household chores to providing transportation that benefits humanity to carrying out anonymous murders and unaccounted for computerized warfare that destroys it.
The end of the world means that a new one had replaced it. Like an infant, the new world has the potential to be good but it also has an equal potential to be evil. Based on the events that are unfolding at present, God's will is not being done on earth as it is in Heaven. In fact, Satan's plans are being executed, beginning with the rejection of the ideal woman exemplified by the Blessed Virgin Mary, the resultant disintegration of the family and the isolation of the individual fueled by technology to the replacement of love for neighbor with power over and control of neighbor, the elimination of true spiritual conscience in favor of imperfect secular rules of the totalitarian State and the coming disintegration of the Church (currently being rotted out from within by hypocrites and minions of Satan) and all other religious institutions to be reconstituted as puppets of tyrannical regimes [10].
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:18th-century_classical_composers
[2] http://www.historyofpainters.com/19th_century.htm
[3] Two of the greatest 18th century composers of classical music who glorified God were Ludwig van Beethoven and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Beethoven wrote the Missa Solemnis and Mozart the Mass in C Minor and others.
[4] Vincent van Gogh showed his love for Christ by painting the Pietà after Eugene Delacroix and the Raising of Lazarus. Even though Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Claude Monet and many other 19th century Impressionist painters had not painted anything religious, Renoir glorified God by some his paintings depicting a certain peaceful timelessness that could very well have been similar to a picture taken in the Garden of Eden had it continued. The same goes for the waterlilies that Claude Monet painted and his personal garden of Eden at Giverny that he tended (one needs to walk around his garden and pause to reflect to appreciate fully the beauty and tranquility contained within its proportions).
[5] http://www.localhistories.org/medicine.html
[6] "Louis Pasteur, the Father of Immunology?" by Kendall A. Smith
[7] "A Brief Biography of Alexander Fleming" by Tim Lambert
[8] "Top 10 Inventions of the 20th Century" by Jeff Danelek
[9] Ibid.
[10] ISIL is an example. ISIL is a criminal regime with its own flag that had hijacked Islam, making the religion its homicidal puppet.
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