
After relocating to Alberta Canada in the early 1990s to start a new church, I was introduced to the term, “multiculturalism.” It sounded non-threatening, even altruistic. But the fact that it was being pimped so forcefully by the Canadian government made me suspicious. I soon learned it meant flooding a First World nation with Third World migrants, not out of some humanitarian compassion for the less fortunate, but that this was designed to dilute and eventually erase the distinctive Canadian culture. And this is not just about Canada, but a world-wide scheme of the George Soros, global elite-types to cancel out Judeo-Christian, Western Civilization. Their long-dedicated endgame is to level the playing field of nations in the fantasy that if you blend all the cultures together, out will emerge a homogenized utopia, or at least one more easily controlled by the ideological gods.
Whether the Global Deep State employs the tool of multiculturalism, Marxism, race-baiting, climate change, transgenderism, DEI, or some other gaslighting gimmick, their totalitarian goal remains the same: Infiltrate a nation by taking over their educational system and mass media, and replace the public’s current reality with one that makes them more subservient to their new masters. Cultural Marxist Antonio Gramsci understood this tactic. He is often credited with coining the phrase, “capture the culture,” which is exactly the intent of this nefarious cabal.
God’s design for man is the opposite of multiculturalism, just as it was with its original attempt at Babel. It was God who put the various people groups into His preordained, geographic locations, their “allotted places,” because that was the way He planned to reveal Himself to them. This is what Paul was preaching to the Athenians on Mars Hill: “And he made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined allotted periods and the boundaries of their dwelling places, that they should seek God and perhaps feel their way toward him and find him. Yet he is not far from each one of us.”
It’s not that someone can’t find God if they immigrate to another country, but to make a global movement of mass-migration is nothing short of cultural suicide. As such, it would mean rather than excelling to new heights of Western Civilization with its biblical roots, it would reduce the population to its lowest common denominator, thus weakening the nation’s moral fiber to stand its ground.
I’ve often heard it asked, “What does God do with people in the Judgment who live in remote places of the world and have never heard the gospel?” For one, as Paul preached in Romans, the entire cosmos loudly declares the glory of God. But also, it has been discovered that in every culture throughout the world there is a strong belief in a one true God, though they may have referred to Him with different names until they get to know Him more accurately.
As Don Richardson writes in Eternity in Their Hearts, the Chinese called Him Shang Ti, which means “Lord on High” or “Supreme Deity.” In Korea He was known as Hananim, which means, “The Great One.” In Ethiopia He was called Magano, portrayed as loving father who created all of humanity. In the Central African Republic’s, the Fang people referred to Him as Mebege, meaning the “Supreme God and Creator.” For those we were reaching in South Africa, the Xhosa tribe. their ancient name for God was u Thixo, worshiped as “The Almighty Creator and the ultimate source of all existence.” It was men like John G. Lake and Robert Moffat, father-in-law of David Livingstone, who first planted those seeds that we were able to reap several generations later.
But there will come a day in the not-so-distant future when all tribes, peoples, and cultures will gather around the throne of God and worship together as one. Psalm 86:9, “All the nations you have made shall come and worship before you, O Lord, and glorify your name.” The Book of Revelations foretells a time when these things will take place. “After this I looked, and behold, a great multitude that no one could number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb clothed in white robes … and crying out with a loud voice, ‘Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb …’”
These are the loud praises of the Tribulation saints, the ones who came to Christ after the Rapture. They are a people who will forfeit their heads rather than lose their souls. Although they would never choose to find themselves in the horrors of the seven-year Tribulation Period, under the circumstances, they are in the best possible place for God to reach them, a last-ditch opportunity at redemption. With millions of martyrs that have gone before them, they will receive “The Crown of Life,” for “they loved not their lives unto death.” They will join all the peoples of the world from Adam to the Second Coming, every nation, every tribe, every language, every culture, all standing together as one before the throne of their Creator, Savior, and Lord.
And then God’s eternal plan for the nations will finally be complete.
