Raymond McCullough

Biography

Raymond McCullough, from Co. Down, near Belfast, Northern Ireland, has been a professional writer for over twenty years, originally writing a regular series – plus other articles, reviews and reports – for several UK technical magazines.

From 1990-96 he edited and published the Irish magazine, 'Bread' – releasing his first book, ‘Ireland – now the good news!’ from this in 1995; co-edited by his wife, well-known fiction author Gerry McCullough. His articles have also been published in the Irish Times, Dublin, and the Presbyterian Herald, Belfast.

In 1993 he hosted a radio show, 'In tha Name a' Gawd!' on 96.7 BCR, in Belfast, which later developed into his current satellite radio show of music, news and faith-based interviews – broadcasting around the world on several satellite networks. From 1996, for seven years, he and Gerry led a cell-based Christian fellowship in the Belfast area.

Since then he’s been involved in media of all kinds – from web design to podcasting, satellite and internet radio, plus documentary TV production – producing an album of Celtic & Hebrew worship music, 'Into Jerusalem,' in 2005 and a Celtic pop-folk album, 'Different,' in 2008.

Raymond has researched the subjects in 'The Whore and her Mother' for about forty years, off and on, but the events of 9/11 brought a new focus to his research and a real sense of increasing urgency encouraged him to complete the book in just four months! He felt the subject was too interesting and dramatic to simply be confined to the fairly narrow, evangelical Christian world.  

Since 2008, Raymond has produced and hosted ‘Celtic Roots Radio’ – an iTunes podcast and web station (on Live365) – with around 14,000 downloads per month in well over 100 countries. He also produces and hosts the ‘In tha Name a’ Gawd!’ series and Fresh Bread – broadcasting each week on several satellite radio networks heard in most countries of the world. His 'Kingdom Come Trust' website has hundreds of enthusiastic emails from satellite radio listeners in US, Canada, Australia and the Caribbean.

Raymond is currently writing a follow-up to 'The Whore and her Mother' entitled, ‘What Kind of People’ – expanding the contents of his last chapter on how we should respond to these prophecies soon being fulfilled. He is recording a new Fresh Bread series based on the book is planning shortly to publish the 'craic' from his Celtic Roots Radio shows as, 'A Wee Bit a' Craic,' and is working on a TV documentary, filmed mainly in Canada, entitled, 'Broken Treaties.'

More info at:
http://raymondmccullough.com
http://kingdomcome.org.uk

Where to find Raymond McCullough online

Where to buy in print

Books

A Wee Taste a' Craic
Price: $2.99 USD. Words: 10,560. Language: English. Published: September 1, 2011 by Precious Oil Publications. Categories: Nonfiction » Travel » By region » Europe, Nonfiction » Entertainment » Humor & satire
All the Irish craic from the popular Celtic Roots Radio shows, 2-25. Host Raymond McCullough has compiled this collection of excerpts from his hugely popular 30-min radio show and podcast – downloaded 7,000 times per show, in more than 100 countries around the world.
The Whore and her Mother: 9/11, Babylon and the Return of the King
Price: $2.99 USD. Words: 68,460. Language: English (Irish dialect). Published: August 29, 2011 by Precious Oil Publications. Categories: Nonfiction » Religion & Spirituality » Christian Theology / Eschatology, Nonfiction » Religion & Spirituality » Body, mind, & spirit » Prophecy
The Hebrew prophets; Isaiah, Jeremiah, Habbakuk & apostle John in The Revelation; wrote extensively about a latter day city & empire which would dominate, exploit & corrupt all the nations of the world. They referred to it as Babylon the Great, or Mega-Babylon, & foretold that its fall, 'in one day', would devastate the economies of the whole world. Have these prophecies been fulfilled already?

Raymond McCullough's tag cloud

6hour war    accent    anecdote    antchrist    anti christ    armageddon    blether    catholic    christian    county counties    craic    culture    custom    eschatology    gadhlig    gaelige    globalisation    god    history    humor    humour    idiosyncracy    igbo    ireland    irish    israel    jew    judgement    kashmir    language    last days    legend    lemba    megababylon    menashe    messiah    middle east    northern ireland    nuclear war    pashtun    protestant    slang    talk    tradition    ulster    ulster scots    wee