The Three Classes of Believers

The Three Classes of Believers

One of the tools of manipulation used by leaders of destructive cults is to label people into “classes”, incite anger or ridicule against a particular “class” that they invented based on cult doctrine, and cause people to feel superior in the cult — which is also given a class. Even those who are undecided on what, exactly, they believe, are given a class. In the Latter Rain revivals, William Branham called this the “Three classes of believers: Believers, Unbelievers, and Make Believers.” br br Those who accepted the “Five Fold Ministry” rank and status of the Latter rain evangelists were called “Believers”. Those who rejected the Post WWII Healing Revival as a whole were “Unbelievers” — even if they were Christian. People who were on the fence, those coming to the revival to see a miracle while still attending a denominational church, were “Make Believers”. br br This strategy was one Branham adopted from a book in his library entitled Tarbell’s Teachers Guide to the International Sunday-School Lessons for 1912 by Martha Tarbell. “The world has been divided into four classes - unbelievers, make-believers, half-believers, and believers.” Branham simplified Tarbell’s doctrine by combining the “make believers” and “half-believers”, and trained his cult of personality to ridicule those in other classes.br br You can learn this and more on william-branham.


User: William Branham Historical Research

Views: 2

Uploaded: 2023-09-15

Duration: 01:53

Your Page Title