Matthew 24:4-5: "And Jesus answered and said unto them, Take heed that no man deceive you. For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ; and shall deceive many."

David Icke's New Age Spiritism

In his online autobiography, David Icke, a well known NWO advocate, writes that, in March 1990, while he was a national spokesperson for the Green Party, he received a message from the spirit world through a medium, [1] (video) identified by The Guardian as Betty Shine, a medium from Brighton. [2]   She told him he was a healer who had been chosen for his courage and sent to heal the earth, and that he had been directed into football to learn discipline. He was going to leave politics and would become famous, she said, writing five books in three years, and one day there would be a great earthquake, and the "sea will reclaim land," because human beings were abusing the earth.

When Icke told the Green Party leadership what he had experienced, he was banned from speaking at public meetings on their behalf. [3]   In 1991, after a trip to Peru, he wrote Truth Vibrations, an autobiographical work which summarized his life experiences up to that point, with an emphasis on his recent spiritual encounters. On March 27, 1991, Icke held a press conference to announce: "I am a channel for the Christ spirit. The title was given to me very recently by the Godhead." [4]

In an interview on the Terry Wogan show that year, he announced that he was "the son of God," [5] and that Britain would be devastated by tidal waves and earthquakes. His statements were met with laughter and ridicule from the studio audience, derision in the press, and suggestions that he was mentally ill. Icke later said that he had been misinterpreted by the media. According to Icke, he used the term "the son of God" "... in the sense of being an aspect, as I understood it at the time, of the Infinite consciousness that is everything. As I have written before, we are like droplets of water in an ocean of infinite consciousness." [6]


NOTES:

1.  Ronson, Jon. "David Icke, the Lizards, and the Jews" (video), Channel 4 Television, retrieved May 22, 2006.
2.  The 10 worst decisions in the history of sport, The Guardian, January 12, 2003.
3.  Greenslade, Nick. "The ten worst sportsmen in politics," The Observer, September 5, 2004
4.  Cohen 1991, cited in Laming, Donald. Understanding Human Motivation: What makes people tick, Blackwell, p. 185.
5.  Ronson, Jon. "David Icke, the Lizards, and the Jews" (video), Channel 4 Television, retrieved May 22, 2006.
6.  Icke, David. Tales From The Time Loop, 2003.


SOURCE:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Icke