The Loch Ness Monster - William Branham’s Church Age Messengers

  • 2 years ago
When William Branham plagiarized Clarence Larkin’s book, Dispensational Truth, and introduced his “Seven Church Ages” doctrine based upon Larkin’s work, Branham assigned seven men who he claimed to have been “angels” for the age — indirectly referring to himself as the seventh.

One of the men Branham introduced as an “angel”, is closely tied to the creation of the myth of the Loch Ness Monster. Branham claimed that St. Columba was the “angel” for the Thyatirean Age, which Branham (from Larkin) claimed to have been from A.D. 606 to A.D. 1520. Interestingly, St. Columba died in A.D. 597 and was not alive during his “age”.

According to the legend of S. Columba, the monster was about to attack a monk swimming naked in the water, and St. Columba made the sign of a cross and commanded the beast, “You shall not pass,” like Gandalf in Lord of the Rings. The monster, who was no more than a spear’s throw from the monk, turned and fled.

The earliest written account yet identified of the Loch Ness Monster is found in St. Adamnan's "The Life of Saint Columba”. The book describes Columba’s sorcery, the Loch Ness Monster, and other tales about St. Columba’s life.

You can learn this and more on william-branham.org

St. Columba:
https://william-branham.org/site/research/people/columba

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