Jacob McKelvy’s marriage timeline contradicts his conversion narrative

There is an aspect of the Jacob McKelvy story that has been brought to my attention, and it concerns his marriage record. This is important to go over because it seems as though it relates back to the conversion narrative that Jacob has been presenting ever since he first appeared at Spring Church. You may also expect a little more content on the subject, especially since a certain someone seems to be coming down hard on my contact Barthel.

In any case, here’s the full timeline based on what Barthel has shown me.

January 15th 2010: Jacob McKelvy married his first wife, Jessica Healey, in a Mormon wedding ceremony that took place in Spring, Texas, and was officiated by David J. Bertoch. Before this marriage, however, it seems the two already had two children together, who by the time of the wedding would have been aged 5 and 7 years old.

March 16th 2015: Jessica Healey filed for divorce against Jacob McKelvy.

July 4th 2015: Michelle Thomas, the woman who would become Jacob’s next wife (now known as Michelle McKelvy, a.k.a. Morana bat Nahash), takes part in a bizarre “self-illumination” ceremony with the Greater Church of Lucifer, later recounted by Michael W. Ford, in which Michelle is instructed by Jacob to “robe” him. Michelle was likely expecting her first child with Jacob, Damon, at this time. This was while Jacob was still legally married to Jessica and not yet married to Michelle.

July 15th 2015: The divorce of Jacob McKelvy and Jessica Healey is finalized. The two were thus officially no longer married.

October 30th 2015: Damon, Michelle’s first child with Jacob, is born.

February 19th 2016: Jacob McKelvy married Michelle Thomas, now Michelle McKelvy, in a Luciferian wedding ceremony officiated by Michael W. Ford.

So, how does this come back to the conversion narrative? Everything hinges on the first part. In 2010, Jacob was married to Jessica Healey as part of a Mormon wedding ceremony. According to the conversion narrative, this shouldn’t be.

Supposedly, after leaving Christianity, Jacob went on to be initiated in multiple occult organizations. According to Middle Path Ministries, which apparently was run by Jacob McKelvy/Yaakov Nahash, as well as his Kickstarter page, Jacob was recruited by an unspecified “underground” occult organization in 2007, and over the years climbed up the ranks to sit on “a high council”, became a studied occultist and demonologist and one of the top men in the world on this subject. They also say that in 2009 Jacob went to Rome, Italy, to get initiated to the higher ranks of some unnamed “shadow organization” and placed within “the order of the 12 apostates”, which supposedly an agenda to “bring forth the New Evolution of Mankind”, and that all of this culminated in the foundation of the Greater Church of Lucifer with Michael W. Ford and Jeremy Crow.

Now, you tell me: what was someone like that doing getting married in a Mormon wedding ceremony, if apparently he not only abandoned his Mormon Christian upbringing but also converted to some kind of Left Hand Path occult belief system before the marriage even happened?

It seems pretty obvious to me that at least this aspect of the conversion narrative was complete horseshit and Jacob was definitely a Mormon the entire time where he was supposed to be in all these occult organizations that don’t exist. And as a side-note, when I try and search for “the order of the 12 apostates”, I’m led to something called the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, which is one of the governing bodies of the hierarchy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (a.k.a. The Mormon Church), and it seems extremely unlikely that Jacob was ever a part of that body within the Church. I can’t find anything about the “order of the 12 apostates” anywhere so it seems like Jacob probably just got that name from the Quorum, but why he would want to throw his own church hierarchy under the bus just to dab on the Luciferians is beyond me. Then there’s just the fact that he had been a registered Mormon for the entire time in which he was leader of the Greater Church of Lucifer, which tells us that he probably only ever saw the GCOL as a grift to be played on whoever would fall for it. Incidentally, it seems that he may have intended to write a book about it, titled The Book of Jacob: The Story of an Occult Leader Saved by God, and started crowdfunding pages for it on Kicktraq and Kickstarter, both with the intent of raising $8,000 for the project. Why anyone needs $8,000 to write a tell-all book about being “saved” is beyond my understanding, but both pages never got any more than three backers, and never managed to raise any more than $162, and were both cancelled on March 18th 2017.

But anyways, there’s more reason if you needed it for why the conversion narrative peddled by Jacob, and the evangelical movement, of the Luciferian leader converting to Christianity was a lie.

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