#813 The Black Horse Rider ¬– The two famous riderless Black

#813 The Black Horse Rider – The two famous riderless Black Horses associated with
World War I, Black Jack and Sergeant York, with both pointing to Ronald Reagan as a
Revelation 6:5 Black Horse Rider
General John J. “Black
Jack” Pershing
commanded the American Expeditionary Forces (A.E.F.) during
World War I. Simply, what General Dwight D. Eisenhower (European
Theater) and General Douglas McArthur (Pacific Theater) were to
America in World War II, General John J. “Black Jack” Pershing was
to America in World War I. Pershing was called Black Jack because he
had once commanded an all-black troop.
General John J. “Black Jack” Pershing
John Joseph
“Black Jack” Pershing
The plan is to return later to discuss General John J. Pershing in more
depth, but for now let’s concentrate on the horse named after him,
Black Jack.
The most famous
riderless horse was
Black Jack, named for World War I General
John J. “Black Jack” Pershing. Black Jack, the
horse, was a part of the state funerals of Presidents
John F. Kennedy (1963), Herbert Hoover (1964),
and Lyndon Johnson (1973), and of General of the
Army Douglas MacArthur (1964).
Black Jack, the horse
Here is #813–Doc 1, about Black Jack, the horse.
Note from the article that Black Jack died on
February 6, 1976, the exact date of Ronald
Reagan’s 65th birthday.
Click here for #813–Doc 1
Black Jack
Click here for the Original Source of #813–Doc 1
Key Understanding: Riders on black horses. While President Woodrow Wilson is associated
prophetically with the White Horse Rider of Revelation 6:2, two World War I figures, (i)
the most famous American general of World War I, John J. “Black Jack” Pershing, and (ii)
the most famous American soldier of World War I, Sergeant Alvin York, had famous
riderless black horses named after them.
The main point is that the White Horse Rider (seen through World War I President
Woodrow Wilson) is once again entwined with the Black Horse Rider (seen through the
horses named after World War I General John J. “Black Jack” Pershing and World War I
soldier Sergeant York). However, the riderless black horses Black Jack and Sergeant York,
named after World War I men, have represented select post-World War I commander-in#813 The Black Horse Rider – The two famous riderless Black Horses associated with World War I,
Black Jack and Sergeant York, with both pointing to Ronald Reagan as a Revelation 6:5 Black Horse Rider
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chief U.S. Presidents, culminating to date in Ronald Reagan, who led the Pair of Balances
Black Horse Rider defeat of the Red Horse Rider Soviet Union.
Moreover, Black Jack died exactly on Ronald Reagan’s 65th birthday, February 6, 1976,
foretelling Reagan’s death on 6/5 in conjunction with his role as the Black Horse Rider of
Revelation 6:5. Sergeant York, the horse, would then assume Black Jack’s famous role at
Ronald Reagan’s funeral.
Sergeant York
Black Jack
Ronald Reagan
The Black Horse Rider (Ronald Wilson Reagan) and Black Jack, the horse, on Reagan’s
65th birthday, and Sergeant York, the horse, at Reagan’s 6/5 death
Revelation 6:5 (KJV) And when he had opened THE THIRD SEAL, I heard the third beast
say, Come and see. And I beheld, and lo A BLACK HORSE; and he [Ronald Reagan, who was
65 years of age the day Black Jack died on February 6, 1976, and who then died himself on
6/5/2004, symbolically dismounting for the last time Black Jack’s ‘replacement,’ Sergeant
York] that sat on him had A PAIR OF BALANCES IN HIS HAND. [December 10, 1991, was
Black Horse Day, meaning that the Black Horse Rider U.S. defeated the Red Horse Rider
USSR on that day, during the administration of George H. W. Bush. “Many were made
white.”]
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