Thursday, November 15, 2018

Robert the Bruce, Considerable Men, King James, and the Bible

Adult content.  Please enjoy, and please be guided accordingly.

In the film Outlaw King, Chris Pine plays Scottish King Robert the Bruce.  Pine shows his pubic hair in one scene and his non-erect penis in another scene.  Blink and you miss the dick.  The speed with which the dick disappears from the screen makes me wonder if Pine’s equipment is considerable like Justin Bieber’s or Rupert Evans’ or Harris Dickinson’s.  It looks considerable enough, I think.  I’d like to see more, of course, for a better assessment.

Rupert Evans plays a whitelighter a.k.a. angel in the 2018 remake of the TV series Charmed.  He can also be seen in the Amazon series The Man in the High Castle.  His full frontal videos are available in the Net.

Harris Dickinson stars in the teen sci-fi flick The Darkest Minds.  He shows his considerable equipment in the film Beach Rats.

Robert the Bruce’s legacy lives to this day.  Christians are familiar with his descendant King James I of England and Ireland a.k.a. King James VI of Scotland.  James is the son of Mary, Queen of Scots.

Why are Christians familiar with James I?  James sponsored the translation of the Holy Bible into English.  That is why there is the KJV or King James Version of the Bible.

Also, biographers of James believe James to have had dalliances with men.  In short, James I is gay, not totally though, since he had issues (children) and got married to a woman.

The man mostly linked to James I is George Villiers.  In one of James’ royal residences, a secret passage connected his room to Villiers’.

So, the next time you see or hold a KJV Bible, remember James I, remember “gay.”