The Keys of This Blood
Books by Malachi Martin
THE SCRIBAL CHARACTER OF THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS
THE PILGRIM (under the pseudonym Michael Serafian)
THE ENCOUNTER
THREE POPES AND THE CARDINAL
JESUS NOW
THE NEW CASTLE
HOSTAGE TO THE DEVIL
THE FINAL CONCLAVE
KING OF KINGS (a novel)
THE DECLINE AND FALL OF THE ROMAN CHURCH
THERE IS STILL LOVE
RICH CHURCH, POOR CHURCH
VATICAN (a novel)
THE JESUITS
THE KEYS OF THIS BLOOD
The Keys of This Blood
Pope John Paul II Versus Russia and the West for Control of the New World Order
Malachi Martin
A TOUCHSTONE BOOK
New York London Toronto Sydney
Pope John Paul II Versus Russia and the West for Control of the New World Order
TOUCHSTONE
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Copyright 1990 by Malachi Martin
All rights reserved
including the right of reproduction
in whole or in part in any form.
First Touchstone Edition 1991
TOUCHSTONE and colophon are registered trademarks
of Simon & Schuster Inc.
Designed by Karolina Harris
Manufactured in the United States of America
17 18 19 20 Pbk.
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Martin, Malachi.
The Keys of This Blood: Pope John Paul II Versus Russia and the West for Control of the New World Order/Malachi Martin.
p. cm.
Includes index.
1. John Paul II, Pope, 1920- .
2. Gorbachev, Mikhail Sergeyevich, 1931- .
3. Catholic Church and World Politics.
4. World Politics1985-1995.
I. Title.
BX1368.5.M37 1990
909.828dc20 90-42369
CIP
ISBN: 0-671-69174-0
ISBN: 0-671-74723-1 Pbk.
ISBN: 978-0-671-74723-7
eISBN: 978-1-439-12764-3
For the Immaculate Heart
Contents
6. The Morality of Nations:
Whatever Happened to Sinful Structures?
7. The Morality of Nations:
Rich Man, Poor Man
8. The Morality of Nations:
Beggarman, Thief
14. with Interdependence and Development
for All
17. The Genuine Globalists: From Alabama to
Zambia, Lets Hear It for Cornflakes
18. Forces of the New Order:
Secularism
19. Forces of the New Order:
The Two Models of a Geopolitical House
The Servant of the
Grand Design
Willing or not, ready or not, we are all involved in an all-out, no-holds-barred, three-way global competition. Most of us are not competitors, however. We are the stakes. For the competition is about who will establish the first one-world system of government that has ever existed in the society of nations. It is about who will hold and wield the dual power of authority and control over each of us as individuals and over all of us together as a community; over the entire six billion people expected by demographers to inhabit the earth by early in the third millennium.
The competition is all-out because, now that it has started, there is no way it can be reversed or called off.
No holds are barred because, once the competition has been decided, the world and all thats in itour way of life as individuals and as citizens of the nations; our families and our jobs; our trade and commerce and money; our educational systems and our religions and our cultures; even the badges of our national identity, which most of us have always taken for grantedall will have been powerfully and radically altered forever. No one can be exempted from its effects. No sector of our lives will remain untouched.
The competition began and continues as a three-way affair because that is the number of rivals with sufficient resources to establish and maintain a new world order.
Nobody who is acquainted with the plans of these three rivals has any doubt but that only one of them can win. Each expects the other two to be overwhelmed and swallowed up in the coming maelstrom of change. That being the case, it would appear inescapable that their competition will end up as a confrontation.
As to the time factor involved, those of us who are under seventy will see at least the basic structures of the new world government installed. Those of us under forty will surely live under its legislative, executive and judiciary authority and control. Indeed, the three rivals themselvesand many more besides as time goes onspeak about this new world order not as something around a distant corner of time, but as something that is imminent. As a system that will be introduced and installed in our midst by the end of this final decade of the second millennium.
What these competitors are talking about, then, is the most profound and widespread modification of international, national and local life that the world has seen in a thousand years. And the competition they are engaged in can be described simply enough as the millennium endgame.
Ten years before this competition became manifest to the world at large, the man who was destined to become the first, the most unexpected and, for some at least, the most unwelcome competitor of all in this millennium endgame spoke openly about what he saw down the road even then.
Toward the end of an extended visit to America in 1976, an obscure Polish archbishop from Krakow by the name of Karol Wojtyla stood before an audience in New York City and made one of the most prophetic speeches ever given.
We are now standing in the face of the greatest historical confrontation humanity has gone through, he said, a test of two thousand years of culture and Christian civilization, with all of its consequences for human dignity, individual rights and the rights of nations. But, he chided his listeners on that September day, wide circles of American society and wide circles of the Christian community do not realize this fully.
Perhaps the world was still too immersed in the old system of nation-states, and in all the old international balance-of-power arrangements, to hear what Wojtyla was saying. Or perhaps Wojtyla himself was reckoned as no more than an isolated figure hailing from an isolated country that had long since been pointedly written out of the global power equation. Or perhaps, after the industrial slaughter of millions of human beings in two world wars and in 180 local wars, and after the endless terrors of nuclear brinksmanship that have marked the progress of the twentieth century, the feeling was simply that one confrontation more or less wasnt going to make much difference.
Whatever the reason, it would seem that no one who heard or later read what Karol Wojtyla said that day had any idea that he was pointing to a competition he already saw on the horizon: a competition between the worlds only three internationally based power structures for truly global hegemony.
An isolated figure Karol Wojtyla may have been in the fall of 1976at least for many Westerners. But two years later, in October of 1978, when he emerged from the Sistine Chapel in Rome as Pope John Paul II, the 263rd successor to Peter the Apostle, he was himself the head of the most extensive and deeply experienced of the three global powers that would, within a short time, set about ending the nation system of world politics that has defined human society for over a thousand years.
It is not too much to say, in fact, that the chosen purpose of John Pauls pontificatethe engine that drives his papal grand policy and that determines his day-to-day, year-by-year strategiesis to be the victor in that competition, now well under way. For the fact is that the stakes John Paul has placed in the arena of geopolitical contention include everythinghimself; his papal persona; the age-old Petrine Office he now embodies; and his entire Church Universal, both as an institutional organization unparalleled in the world and as a body of believers united by a bond of mystical communion.
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