Boletus Media

Boletus Media This page promotes books written or endorsed by Randy Pilz as well as blogs, ideas and background material from the author.

06/04/2026

Amazing history and the influence of one former President on a (unbeknownst to him) future President.

Who I will be voting for in the coming South Carolina Republican Primary. Adam is a former state representative and is h...
06/01/2026

Who I will be voting for in the coming South Carolina Republican Primary. Adam is a former state representative and is head of Majesty Music, producers of Patch the Pirate.

🚨Excited to announce former State Representative and founding chairman of the South Carolina Freedom Caucus, Adam Morgan, as my running mate!

This is the Freedom Caucus Ticket!

Adam has spent his career fighting the career politicians in Columbia, standing up for taxpayers, taking on special interests, and refusing to back down from the woke left or tax-and-spend RINOs. Together, we're building what may be the most conservative ticket this state has ever seen!!

A Jew found Jesus in the Old Testament.
05/29/2026

A Jew found Jesus in the Old Testament.

Jewish man finds out THIS about Jesus!!🙌🔥 ...

Have you ever read the Declaration of Independence? Maybe some journalists need to.
05/29/2026

Have you ever read the Declaration of Independence? Maybe some journalists need to.

Imagine having won the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Tele...

05/09/2026

This is the heart of the gospel: we are fully known and fully loved. Not loved because God doesn't see—loved because He does. He sees the doubt, the resentment, the secret struggle, the failure you can't forgive yourself for. And He doesn't flinch. He moves closer. There is no part of you so unwelcome that it could push Him away.

What does it mean to you that God fully knows you — and stays?

THOSE WHO SOW IN TEARS....In 1921 David and Svea Flood went with their two-year-old son from Sweden to the heart of Afri...
05/02/2026

THOSE WHO SOW IN TEARS....
In 1921 David and Svea Flood went with their two-year-old son from Sweden to the heart of Africa, to what was then called the Belgian Congo. This missionary couple met up with the Ericksons, another young Scandinavian couple, and the four of them sought God for direction. In those days of much devotion and sacrifice, they felt led of the Lord to set out from the main mission station to take the gospel to the village of N’dolera, a remote area.
This was a huge step of faith.
There, they were rebuffed by the chief, who would not let them enter his town for fear of alienating the local gods. The two couples opted to build their own mud huts half a mile up the slope.
They prayed for a spiritual breakthrough, but there was none. Their only contact with the villagers was a young boy, who was allowed to sell them chickens and eggs twice a week.
Svea Flood—a tiny woman only four feet, eight inches tall—decided that if this was the only African she could talk to, she would try to lead the boy to Jesus. And she succeeded!
Meanwhile, malaria struck one member of the little missionary band after another. In time, the Ericksons decided they had had enough suffering and left to return to the central mission station.
David and Svea Flood remained near N’dolera to carry on alone.
Then, Svea found herself pregnant in the middle of the primitive wilderness. When the time came for her to give birth, the village chief softened enough to allow a midwife to help her. A little girl was born, whom they named Aina. The delivery was exhausting. Svea Flood was already weak from bouts of malaria so the birthing process was a heavy blow to her stamina. She died only 17 days after Aina was born.
Something snapped Inside David Flood at that moment. He dug a crude grave, buried his 27-year-old wife, and then went back down the mountain with his children to the mission station.
Giving baby Aina to the Ericksons, he snarled, “I’m going back to Sweden. I’ve lost my wife, and I obviously can’t take care of this baby. God has ruined my life!”
With that, he headed for the port, rejecting not only his calling, but God Himself.
Within eight months, both the Ericksons were stricken with a mysterious malady and died within days of each other. Baby Aina was then turned over to another American missionary family who changed her Swedish name to “Aggie”. Eventually they took her back to the United States at age three.
This family loved Aggie. Afraid that if they tried to return to Africa some legal obstacle might separate her from them, they decided to stay in their home country and switch from missionary work to pastoral ministry. That is how Aggie grew up in South Dakota.
As a young woman, she attended North Central Bible College in Minneapolis. There she met and married Dewey Hurst.
Years passed. The Hursts enjoyed a fruitful ministry. Aggie gave birth first to a daughter, then a son. In time, her husband became president of a Christian college in the Seattle area, and Aggie was intrigued to find so much Scandinavian heritage there.
One day she found a Swedish religious magazine in their mailbox. She had no idea who had sent it, and of course she couldn’t read the words, but as she turned the pages, a photo suddenly stopped her cold.
There, in a primitive setting, was a grave with a white cross—and on the cross were the words SVEA FLOOD.
Aggie got in her car and drove straight to a college faculty member whom she knew could translate the article.
“What does this article say?”
The teacher shared a summary of the story.
"It is about missionaries who went to N’dolera, Africa, long ago. A baby was born. The young mother died. One little African boy was led to Jesus before that. After the whites had all left, the boy all grown up finally persuaded the chief to let him build a school in the village. He gradually won all his students to Christ and the children led their parents to Him. Even the chief became a follower of Jesus! Today there are six hundred believers in that village, all because of the sacrifice of David and Svea Flood."
Aggie was elated!
For the Hursts’ 25th wedding anniversary, the college presented them with the gift of a vacation to Sweden.
Aggie sought out her birth father.
David Flood was an old man now. He had remarried, fathered four more children, and generally dissipated his life with alcohol. He had recently suffered a stroke. Still bitter, he had one rule in his family: “Never mention the name of God! God took everything from me!”
After an emotional reunion with her half-brothers and half-sister, Aggie brought up the subject of her longing to see her father. They hesitated....
“You can talk to him, but he’s very ill now. You need to know that whenever he hears the name of God, he flies into a rage.”
Aggie walked into the squalid apartment, which had liquor bottles strewn everywhere, and slowly approached her 73-year-old father lying in a rumpled bed.
“Papa,” she said tentatively.
He turned and began to cry.
“Aina!"
"I never meant to give you away!”
“It’s all right, Papa,” she replied, taking him gently in her arms.
“God took good care of me.”
Her father instantly stiffened and his tears stopped.
“God forgot all of us. Our lives have been like this because of Him.”
He turned his face back to the wall.
Aggie stroked his face and then continued, undaunted.
“Papa, I’ve got a marvelous story to tell you!"
"You didn’t go to Africa in vain. Mama didn’t die in vain. The little boy you won to the Lord grew up to win that whole village to Jesus! The one seed you planted in his heart kept growing and growing! Today there are 600 people serving the Lord because you were faithful to the call of God in your life!"
"Papa, Jesus loves you. He has never hated you or abandoned us.”
The old father turned back to look into his daughter’s eyes. His body relaxed.
He slowly began to talk.
And by the end of the afternoon, he had come back to the God he had resented for so many years. Over the next few days, father and daughter enjoyed warm moments together. A few weeks after Aggie and her husband returned to America, David Flood died.
And a few years later....
Aggie and her husband were attending an evangelism conference in London, England, when a report was given from Zaire (the former Belgian Congo).
The superintendent of the national church, representing some 110,000 baptized believers, spoke eloquently of the Gospel’s spread in his nation.
Aggie could not help going to ask him afterward if he had ever heard of David and Svea Flood.
“Yes, madam,” the man replied in French, his words being translated into English.
“Svea Flood led me to Jesus Christ! I was the boy who brought food to your parents before you were born. In fact, to this day, your mother’s grave and her memory are honored by all of us.”
He embraced Aggie for a long time, sobbing.
“You must come to Zaire! Your mother is the most famous and honored person in our history.”
When Aggie and her husband went to N’dolera, they were welcomed by cheering throngs of villagers. Aggie even met the man who had been hired by her father to carry her down the mountain in a hammock-cradle.
Then the pastor escorted Aggie to see her mother’s tomb with a white cross bearing her name. She knelt in the soil to pray and give thanks to God.
Later that day, in the church, the boy turned pastor read....
“I tell you the truth, unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds.” John 12:24
“Those who sow in tears will reap with songs of joy.” Psalm 126:5
(Copied from a post by Alvy Ge**er Quispe on April 29, 2021)

05/01/2026

JOSHUA'S ALTAR DISCOVERED

The ground does not stay silent forever. For generations, critics have dismissed the early history of Israel as legend, claiming the biblical account of the conquest of Canaan was written long after the fact. But then the shovel hits stone, and history pushes back. On the slopes of Mount Ebal, a discovery has emerged that forces the conversation back to Scripture.

In Deuteronomy 27, Moses gave clear instructions. When Israel entered the land, they were to build an altar to the Lord on Mount Ebal, offer sacrifices, and publicly affirm God’s covenant. This was not vague. It was specific. The location. The construction. The purpose. And now, in that exact region, archaeologists have uncovered a structure that aligns in striking detail with that command.

The site reveals a large rectangular structure, roughly 25 by 30 feet, built from uncut stones just as the Law required. The walls rise high and are filled with layers of ash, soil, and stone. Inside, over 4,000 animal bones were discovered. Not random remains. They belong to the very kinds of animals prescribed for sacrifice in the Law of Moses. That is not coincidence. That is consistency. That is Scripture meeting the dirt and standing firm.

There is more. A ramp leading up to the structure has been identified, matching the instructions given in Exodus that altars were not to be approached by steps. Even small details line up. Among the findings was an Egyptian scarab, a reminder of Israel’s time in Egypt and the plunder they carried out during the Exodus. Piece by piece, the picture comes together, and it looks exactly like what the Bible described.

Skeptics often say the Bible is myth, that it floats disconnected from real history. But discoveries like this refuse to cooperate with that narrative. The altar on Mount Ebal is not a symbol or a story. It is a physical location, built in a real place, by real people, at a real moment in time. And it matches the biblical account with precision that cannot be easily dismissed.

Now hear this clearly. The authority of God’s Word does not depend on archaeology. Scripture stands because God has spoken. But when stones cry out in agreement, it strengthens what we already know to be true. The Bible is not a collection of spiritual ideas detached from reality. It is anchored in history, rooted in real events, and confirmed again and again as the evidence is uncovered.

Joshua 8:30 records it plainly. Joshua built an altar to the Lord on Mount Ebal. Not a legend. Not a late invention. A moment in history that left a mark on the earth itself. And today, that mark is still speaking.

04/23/2026
04/19/2026

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