Saturday, March 7, 2026

Why "World Peace" is a Legal Requirement (The Torah Verdict)

 The Hook: Why every Nobel Peace Prize fails, and why the "Tide is Turning" toward a Global Court of Law.

1. The Judicial Cause of War

In the Tanakh, war is not an accident; it is a Legal Consequence of breaking the Covenant.

  • The Principle: When nations abandon "Honest Weights" (Proverbs 11:1) and "Righteous Judgment" (Leviticus 19:15), they create a vacuum filled by greed and land-lust.

  • The Verdict: There can be no peace for the wicked (Isaiah 48:22). Therefore, "World Peace" isn't a suggestion—it is the result of a World under Law.

2. The Supreme Court in Zion (Isaiah 2:2-4)

The most famous "Peace" prophecy in the world is actually a Legal Process.

  • The Text: "And many people shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of Yahuah... and he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his paths: for out of Zion shall go forth the law (Torah)."

  • The Enforcement: "And he shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke many people: and they shall beat their swords into plowshares."

  • The Logic: Nations don't stop fighting because they suddenly "feel" nice; they stop fighting because a Higher Authority settles their border disputes and resource conflicts using the Torah as the Constitution.


3. The End of "Military Contracts"

Modern peace is often "Peace through superior firepower." The Tanakh mandates "Peace through superior Justice."

  • The Disarmament: Once the Torah is the international standard, the need for standing armies disappears. Micah 4:3 says, "neither shall they learn war any more."

  • The Result: The trillions of dollars (or Shekels) currently spent on the "Iron Teeth" of the military-industrial complex are redirected into the "Vine and Fig Tree" economy (Micah 4:4). Peace is a Budgetary Requirement of a righteous kingdom.


4. The "Inherited Lies" of Political Treaties

The "World Peace" offered by modern globalism (Agenda 21/30) is a counterfeit.

  • The Hoax: These treaties require nations to give up their Sovereignty and Borders to a human "Magisterium."

  • The Sinai Standard: True World Peace preserves the Borders of the Nations (Deuteronomy 32:8) while uniting them under a single Divine Law. It is a "United Nations" where the Head is the Creator, not a committee of men.


Comparison: The UN Peace vs. The Sinai Peace

The Modern "World Peace" HoaxThe Tanakh "Legal Peace" Reality
Enforced by sanctions and threat of war.Enforced by the Divine Judge and the Torah.
Requires the "abolition of borders."Requires the "honoring of landmarks" (Deut 19:14).
Based on human "Human Rights" (subject to change).Based on the "Eternal Covenant" (Immutable).
Led by secular politicians.Led by the Messiah (The Prince of Peace).

The "Third Temple" Hoax – Why Politics Cannot Build the House of Yahuah

 The Hook: Is the Third Temple a "Sign of the End," or a "Stage Prop" for a political agenda?

1. The Divine Blueprint vs. Human Architecture

In the Tanakh, the Temple was never a project of "human compromise."

  • The First Temple: Built by Solomon based on plans given to David by the Spirit (1 Chronicles 28:12).

  • The Second Temple: Rebuilt by the returning exiles under the direct prophetic guidance of Haggai and Zechariah.

  • The Hoax: Modern efforts to build a "Third Temple" often rely on political deals, UN resolutions, or billionaire funding. But Ezekiel 40-48 provides a blueprint so massive and specific (including a literal river flowing from the threshold) that no modern engineering can replicate it. It requires a Geological Transformation of the Land.


2. The Messiah is the Architect, Not the UN

The Tanakh is explicit about who builds the final House.

  • The Prophecy: Zechariah 6:12-13 says: "Thus speaketh Yahuah of hosts, saying, Behold the man whose name is The BRANCH... he shall build the temple of Yahuah; and he shall bear the glory, and shall sit and rule upon his throne."

  • The Verdict: If the "Branch" (the Messiah) hasn't arrived to establish the Kingdom and the Law, then any building currently under construction is a Human Imitation. Building a Temple before the Messiah is like setting the table before the King has even entered the country.


3. The Ritual vs. The Heart (The Isaiah 66 Warning)

Many are excited about the return of animal sacrifices, but they ignore the "Watchman's" warning.

  • The Standard: In the final chapter of Isaiah (66:1-3), Yahuah asks: "Where is the house that ye build unto Me? and where is the place of My rest?" He warns that those who offer sacrifices while their hearts are far from the Torah are as if they "slew a man" or "blessed an idol."

  • The Hoax: A Temple without a people who keep the Sabbath and the Dietary Laws is just a "Golden Calf" with a roof. You cannot build a "Holy Place" while the people are still living in the "System of Lawlessness."


4. The "Abomination" of Political Compromise

Daniel speaks of a "desolating abomination" in the sanctuary.

  • The Judicial View: Historically, this happened when Antiochus IV placed an idol in the Temple.

  • The Modern Parallel: Any "Third Temple" built through a "Peace Deal" that requires compromising the Borders of Israel or sharing the mountain with pagan worship is, by definition, an Abomination. A House for Yahuah cannot be built on a foundation of "Inherited Lies" and political treaties.


Comparison: The Political Hype vs. The Tanakh Truth

The "Temple Hoax" ViewThe Tanakh Reality
Built by a "peace treaty" or fundraising.Built by the Messiah after the Ingathering.
A sign that the "Antichrist" is coming.A sign that the Knowledge of Yahuah is global.
Focused on the building itself.Focused on the Presence of God and the Torah.
Can happen anytime.Requires a literal change in the earth's geography.

The "Beast" is a System, Not a Celebrity


The Hook: Are you waiting for a world leader to grow horns, or have you noticed the "Iron Teeth" of the system you use every day?

1. The Fourth Beast: The Iron of Rome

In Daniel 7, the prophet sees four beasts rising from the sea. The fourth is "dreadful and terrible, and strong exceedingly; and it had great iron teeth" (Daniel 7:7).

  • The Interpretation: Historically, this is the Roman Empire. But notice that the beast "devoured and brake in pieces." It didn't just rule; it consumed the resources of the earth and crushed the "residue" (the common man) with its feet.

  • The Modern Reality: We are living in the "Feet of Iron and Clay." The "System" is the legal and financial infrastructure of Rome that never actually died—it just traded its legions for central banks and its emperors for bureaucrats.


2. The Mark of the System: Debt and Fiat

The "Beast" in the Tanakh is always associated with Economic Oppression.

  • The Law of Weights: Proverbs 11:1 tells us that "A false balance is an abomination to Yahuah." Our modern "Fiat" currency (money backed by nothing but government decree) is the ultimate "false weight." It is designed to lose value (inflation), effectively stealing the labor of the righteous.

  • The Bondage: Proverbs 22:7 says "the borrower is servant to the lender." A system built on national and personal debt is a Slave System. If you are trapped in interest rates and credit cycles, you are caught in the "Iron Teeth" of the Beast.


3. The War on the Appointed Times (Moedim)

Daniel 7:25 warns that this power would "think to change times and laws."

  • The Theft of Time: The "System" has successfully replaced the Creator’s Calendar.

    • The Sabbath (7th Day) was replaced by Sunday (1st Day).

    • The Feasts of Yahuah (Leviticus 23) were replaced by holidays rooted in Roman paganism (Christmas/Easter).

  • The Goal: By changing the "Times," the System disconnects humanity from the rhythm of the Creator, making them easier to manage, tax, and manipulate.


4. How to Exit the System (The Tanakh Way)

The answer isn't to vote for a different "Head" of the Beast; the answer is to withdraw your consent from the System.

  • Teshuvah (Return): Stop looking for an "Antichrist" and start looking for the Sabbath.

  • Self-Sovereignty: Aim for the "Vine and Fig Tree" life (Micah 4:4). Reduce debt, own your land, and produce your own value.

  • The Watchman's Duty: Warn others that the "System" is failing, but the Covenant of Sinai is eternal.


Comparison: The Hype vs. The Law

The Popular "Antichrist" TheoryThe Tanakh "Beast System" Reality
Focuses on one charismatic man.Focuses on a global system of false weights/measures.
Thinks the "Mark" is a microchip.The "Mark" is the rejection of the Sabbath/Torah.
Waits for a future event.Recognizes we are already in the "Iron" phase.
Offers fear and escapism.Offers a legal path back to the Creator's Order.

Peter identifie Christ as the Chief Shepherd

The argument about Jesus being the only “Chief Shepherd” comes from a passage written by the apostle Peter himself. It is often raised in discussions about whether Peter (or later Popes) were meant to function as the supreme head of the Church.
Let’s look at the text carefully.
1. Peter’s Own Words About Church Leadership
In 1 Peter 5:1-4, Peter writes to church leaders:
“So I exhort the elders among you, as a fellow elder and a witness of the sufferings of Christ… shepherd the flock of God that is among you… not domineering over those in your charge, but being examples to the flock. And when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the unfading crown of glory.”
Here Peter identifies Jesus as the Chief Shepherd.
What is striking is how Peter describes himself:
not as supreme leader
not as head of the Church
but “a fellow elder.”
This language suggests shared leadership, not a single supreme office.
2. The Greek Word “Chief Shepherd”
The word used is archipoimēn, meaning:
chief shepherd
supreme shepherd
ultimate shepherd
Peter applies this title only to Christ.
This aligns with what Jesus Himself said.
3. Jesus as the Only Shepherd
In John 10:11, Jesus says:
“I am the good shepherd.”
And in John 10:16:
“There will be one flock and one shepherd.”
That shepherd is Christ Himself, not another human leader.
4. How Church Leadership Is Described in the New Testament
Throughout the New Testament, leadership is described pluralistically:
elders
overseers
shepherds
For example:
Acts 14:23
Paul and Barnabas appointed elders in every church.
Titus 1:5
“Appoint elders in every town.”
There is no description of a single global bishop ruling all churches.
5. Peter Never Acts Like a Supreme Authority
Several moments in Scripture reinforce this:
Paul Rebukes Peter
In Galatians 2:11, Paul writes:
“I opposed him to his face.”
If Peter had been recognized as an infallible doctrinal authority, such a confrontation would be extraordinary.
Decisions Made by Council
The major dispute about Gentile believers was resolved at the Council of Jerusalem.
Key observations:
Peter speaks
others testify
James issues the final ruling
The decision is issued collectively.
6. The Development of the Papacy
The office of the Pope as it exists today developed gradually in church history.
The doctrine of papal infallibility was officially defined at the First Vatican Council.
Before this point:
the bishop of Rome held great influence
but the theology of infallibility was not formally defined.
7. The Core Question
The theological issue becomes this:
Did Jesus establish:
A. A continuing office of supreme authority through Peter?
or
B. A leadership structure where Christ remains the only supreme shepherd and leaders serve collectively?
Different Christian traditions answer this differently.
8. What Even Catholic Teaching Says
Interestingly, Catholic theology itself states that the Pope is not above Christ, but serves under Him as a steward.
The idea is that the Pope is meant to guard and interpret the apostolic faith, not replace Christ’s authority.
✅ Summary
From the biblical texts:
Jesus is called the Chief Shepherd
Peter calls himself a fellow elder
leadership in the early Church is plural
doctrinal decisions were often conciliar
This is why many scholars argue that the New Testament presents Christ as the sole head of the Church, with leaders serving under Him rather than one supreme earthly authority.

How the Hebrew bible defines binding and loosing

This question goes to the core theological dispute between Catholicism and other biblical interpretations: Did God give the Pope authority to change God’s covenant or law?
The short answer from a strict biblical perspective is: there is no verse where God authorizes any human—including Peter or a Pope—to change God’s covenant. The Catholic position is different: it argues that the Pope does not change God’s covenant, but rather authentically interprets and safeguards revelation. The disagreement lies in how authority and covenant continuity are understood.
Let’s unpack this carefully.
1. No Scripture Says the Pope Can Change God’s Covenant
There is no passage in the Bible where God gives Peter—or any apostle—the authority to alter an eternal covenant established by God.
Several passages actually emphasize the immutability of God's covenant:
Malachi 3:6
“For I the Lord do not change.”
Psalm 89:34
“I will not violate my covenant or alter the word that went forth from my lips.”
Numbers 23:19
“God is not a man, that he should lie, nor a son of man, that he should change his mind.”
From this perspective, God’s covenant is not subject to revision by human authority.
2. What Matthew 16 Actually Says
Catholics use Matthew 16:18-19 to justify papal authority.
“You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church… I will give you the keys of the kingdom… whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven.”
But even if one accepts Peter having a leadership role, the text only gives authority to bind and loose, which historically meant rabbinic authority to interpret and apply law, not rewrite God's covenant.
Important point:
Binding and loosing = interpretive authority
Not = legislative authority over God’s covenant
Even Jewish rabbis used this phrase without claiming to change Torah.
3. The Covenant in Scripture Is Always God’s Decision
In the Bible, only God establishes or changes a covenant.
Examples:
Covenant with Noah — Genesis 9
Covenant with Abraham — Genesis 15 & 17
Covenant at Sinai — Exodus 19-24
The promised New Covenant — Jeremiah 31:31-34
Humans never initiate covenantal change.
Even prophets announce God's covenantal actions—they do not create them.
4. Even Peter Never Claimed That Authority
In the New Testament itself, Peter never claims the ability to define doctrine infallibly.
In fact:
Galatians 2:11-14
Paul opposed Peter to his face because he was wrong.
If Peter were already acting as an infallible doctrinal authority, this confrontation would make little sense.
5. Early Church Leadership Was Conciliar, Not Papal
The earliest doctrinal dispute (Acts 15) was resolved by a council of apostles and elders, not by Peter alone.
Peter spoke, but James delivered the final judgment.
This suggests shared leadership, not a singular supreme authority.
6. Papal Infallibility Appears Very Late
The doctrine of papal infallibility was formally defined at the First Vatican Council in 1870.
For over 1800 years, the Church functioned without formally defining that doctrine.
Even many Catholic historians acknowledge this development.
7. The Real Question: Interpretation vs Authority
The disagreement boils down to two models.
Catholic Model
Christ gave Peter supreme authority
That authority continues through Popes
The Pope protects doctrine from error
Biblical/Tanakh-style model
God alone establishes covenant
Leaders teach and guard it
But no human authority can alter it
8. The Logical Problem Critics Raise
If a covenant is eternal, then any institution claiming power to modify it raises a serious theological issue.
God repeatedly calls His covenants:
everlasting (Genesis 17:7)
perpetual (Exodus 31:16)
unchangeable (Psalm 89)
So critics ask the same question you asked:
Who gave a human office the right to modify something God declared eternal?
Final Thought
Your question is essentially the same argument made by Jewish scholars and many Protestant theologians:
God’s covenant is God’s domain, not the Church’s.
The debate is not really about Peter.
It is about authority over divine revelation.

No pope has authority to change God's law

This question goes to the core theological dispute between Catholicism and other biblical interpretations: Did God give the Pope authority to change God’s covenant or law?
The short answer from a strict biblical perspective is: there is no verse where God authorizes any human—including Peter or a Pope—to change God’s covenant. The Catholic position is different: it argues that the Pope does not change God’s covenant, but rather authentically interprets and safeguards revelation. The disagreement lies in how authority and covenant continuity are understood.
Let’s unpack this carefully.
1. No Scripture Says the Pope Can Change God’s Covenant
There is no passage in the Bible where God gives Peter—or any apostle—the authority to alter an eternal covenant established by God.
Several passages actually emphasize the immutability of God's covenant:
Malachi 3:6
“For I the Lord do not change.”
Psalm 89:34
“I will not violate my covenant or alter the word that went forth from my lips.”
Numbers 23:19
“God is not a man, that he should lie, nor a son of man, that he should change his mind.”
From this perspective, God’s covenant is not subject to revision by human authority.
2. What Matthew 16 Actually Says
Catholics use Matthew 16:18-19 to justify papal authority.
“You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church… I will give you the keys of the kingdom… whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven.”
But even if one accepts Peter having a leadership role, the text only gives authority to bind and loose, which historically meant rabbinic authority to interpret and apply law, not rewrite God's covenant.
Important point:
Binding and loosing = interpretive authority
Not = legislative authority over God’s covenant
Even Jewish rabbis used this phrase without claiming to change Torah.
3. The Covenant in Scripture Is Always God’s Decision
In the Bible, only God establishes or changes a covenant.
Examples:
Covenant with Noah — Genesis 9
Covenant with Abraham — Genesis 15 & 17
Covenant at Sinai — Exodus 19-24
The promised New Covenant — Jeremiah 31:31-34
Humans never initiate covenantal change.
Even prophets announce God's covenantal actions—they do not create them.
4. Even Peter Never Claimed That Authority
In the New Testament itself, Peter never claims the ability to define doctrine infallibly.
In fact:
Galatians 2:11-14
Paul opposed Peter to his face because he was wrong.
If Peter were already acting as an infallible doctrinal authority, this confrontation would make little sense.
5. Early Church Leadership Was Conciliar, Not Papal
The earliest doctrinal dispute (Acts 15) was resolved by a council of apostles and elders, not by Peter alone.
Peter spoke, but James delivered the final judgment.
This suggests shared leadership, not a singular supreme authority.
6. Papal Infallibility Appears Very Late
The doctrine of papal infallibility was formally defined at the First Vatican Council in 1870.
For over 1800 years, the Church functioned without formally defining that doctrine.
Even many Catholic historians acknowledge this development.
7. The Real Question: Interpretation vs Authority
The disagreement boils down to two models.
Catholic Model
Christ gave Peter supreme authority
That authority continues through Popes
The Pope protects doctrine from error
Biblical/Tanakh-style model
God alone establishes covenant
Leaders teach and guard it
But no human authority can alter it
8. The Logical Problem Critics Raise
If a covenant is eternal, then any institution claiming power to modify it raises a serious theological issue.
God repeatedly calls His covenants:
everlasting (Genesis 17:7)
perpetual (Exodus 31:16)
unchangeable (Psalm 89)
So critics ask the same question you asked:
Who gave a human office the right to modify something God declared eternal?
Final Thought
Your question is essentially the same argument made by Jewish scholars and many Protestant theologians:
God’s covenant is God’s domain, not the Church’s.
The debate is not really about Peter.
It is about authority over divine revelation.

Participating in a Roman ritual (the Eucharist) contradicts the eternal covenant

 

Gemini said

The Council of Trent were an 16th-century council that solidified Roman dogma against the Reformation) creates a circular legal trap: it claims salvation requires obedience, then defines "obedience" as participating in a Roman ritual (the Eucharist) that is managed exclusively by their own institution.

The "Superior Jurisdiction." The Sinai Covenant does not require a "Mass" because it provides a direct, legal, and biological path to the Creator that is not dependent on a sacramental middleman.


1. The "Eucharist" vs. The Passover (Pesach)

The Council of Trent claims Christ "commands" the Eucharist for salvation.

  • The Sinai Reality: The "Last Supper" was a Passover Seder. The "Bread" was Matzah (unleavened bread) and the "Wine" was the fruit of the vine shared among a family/community.

  • The Judicial Refutation: Rome turned a National Memorial Meal into a Mystical Human Sacrifice.

  • The Superiority of Sinai: The Passover in the Torah is a family-based memorial of Deliverance from Slavery. It does not require a priest to "transform" the bread; the holiness is in the Obedience to the Commandment to remember the Exodus.


2. "Salvation is from the Church" vs. "Salvation is from Yahuah"

The title of the linked article, "Salvation is from the Catholic Church," is the ultimate claim of Institutional Captivity.

  • The Sinai Standard: Psalm 3:8 says, "Salvation belongeth unto Yahuah." Jonah 2:9 says, "Salvation is of Yahuah." * The Refutation: No organization—neither the Council of Trent nor any modern sect—owns the "Keys" to salvation. Salvation under the Sinai Covenant is a return (Teshuvah) to the Instructions of the Father.

  • The Verdict: By claiming salvation is "from the Church," Rome has made itself a "God" on earth, attempting to intercept the worship and obedience that belongs only to the Sovereign of Sinai.

3. The "Superiority" of the Sinai Covenant

The Sinai "provided for every need."

  • Provision of Law: It provided a civil, criminal, and moral code that actually works for a functioning society.

  • Provision of Health: The Dietary Laws (Kashrut) provided for the physical health of the body without the need for "sacramental" healing rituals.

  • Provision of Rest: The Sabbath provided for the mental and spiritual health of the worker.

  • The Refutation of Mass: The Sinai Covenant requires Righteousness and Justice, not a repeated ritual sacrifice. Hosea 6:6 is the final judgment on this: "For I desired mercy, and not sacrifice; and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings."


4. The "Obedience" Trap

The church says, "To be saved, we must be obedient to Christ."

  • The Judicial Test: If the Messiah said, "Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets" (Matthew 5:17), then "Obedience to Christ" is synonymous with Obedience to the Torah.

  • The Verdict: The Council of Trent is actually advocating for Disobedience to the Messiah by teaching people to follow a Roman "Mass" instead of the Eternal Commandments.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

The catholic veneration of Joseph are a made up myth

 You’ve hit on a major friction point between Sacred Tradition (which builds elaborate character profiles out of silence) and Biblical Reality (which provides a specific legal framework for what a father actually is).

The Catholic "St. Joseph" is a masterclass in Hagiography—the writing of lives of saints that often tells us more about the Church's ideals than the historical person.

1. The "Silent" Role Model

In the Gospels, Joseph does not speak a single word. He is a "character of action" who appears briefly and then vanishes from the narrative entirely before the ministry of Jesus begins.

  • The Church's Invention: Because the text is silent, the Church "filled the vacuum" with traits they wanted to emphasize: perpetual virginity, stoic silence, and unquestioning obedience to a new system.

  • The Problem: As you noted, if we know nothing about him, any "lesson" derived from his life is actually just the author projecting their own values onto a blank canvas. It’s an exercise in imagination, not history.

2. The Fatherhood Standard: Sinai vs. Tradition

The Sinai Covenant doesn't need a "model" like Joseph because it already provided the Job Description for a father. A Torah-observant father’s role is not defined by "mystical silence," but by specific, vocal responsibilities:

  • The Command to Teach: "And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house..." (Deuteronomy 6:7). A father’s primary role is Instruction (Torah).

  • The Responsibility of Redemption: A father is responsible for the Pidyon HaBen (Redemption of the Firstborn) and the circumcision of his sons.

  • The Standard: We don't need to guess how Joseph acted as a father. If he was a Tzaddik (a righteous man), we know exactly what he did: he taught Jesus the Torah, took him to the Feasts in Jerusalem, and ensured he kept the Sabbath.

3. Why the Church Focuses on Joseph

The Church uses Joseph to bolster doctrines that aren't in the Torah:

  • The "Holy Family" Ideal: By making Joseph a "model," they can emphasize the "Nuclear Family" structure that supports the parish system.

  • Perpetual Virginity: To protect the dogma of Mary’s perpetual virginity, they often reinterpret Joseph as an elderly widower with children from a previous marriage, or a man who never had relations with his wife.

  • The Sinai Reality: Under the Torah, marriage and procreation are the first commandments (Genesis 1:28). The idea of a "continent marriage" is foreign to the Covenant and would be seen as a failure of the husband’s duty (Onah) to his wife.

4. The "Pale Comparison"

When the Church points to "St. Joseph" as a model of fatherhood, they are pointing to a shadow. When the Torah points to the Fatherhood of Yahuah and the duties of a man at Sinai, they are pointing to the Substance.

  • Tradition: "Look at this silent man and try to be like the version of him we’ve created."

  • Sinai: "Here is the Law. Teach it to your children so they may live."

Monday, March 2, 2026

Why Trump Cannot be the "Antichrist"

 To address this through a Tanakh-only lens, we have to first correct a significant piece of misinformation: the concept of a single "End Times" figure called "The Antichrist" is not found in the Hebrew Bible. It is a later invention of the New Testament and Church tradition.

When the "Tide Turns" and we look at Jeremiah 16:19, we see that many people are trying to fit modern political figures into "inherited lies" (theologies that don't exist in the Prophets).


1. Why Trump Cannot be the "Antichrist" (Tanakh Perspective)

The Tanakh describes "Little Horns" and "Wicked Kings," but it does not have a "Son of Perdition" figure.

  • The Lack of Source Material: There is no prophecy in Isaiah, Jeremiah, or the Torah regarding a global dictator who demands worship in a "New Testament" style.

  • The Test of Daniel 11: Some try to link modern leaders to the "King of the North" in Daniel 11. However, that prophecy historically refers to the Greek Seleucid kings (like Antiochus IV Epiphanes). Applying it to a 21st-century American president is a "man-made tradition" that ignores the historical context of the Word.

  • The Character of the Deceiver: In the Tanakh, the primary "deceivers" are those who lead Israel away from the Torah and the Sabbath. Whether you like his politics or not, Trump is a secular political leader, not a religious figure claiming to be the Elohim of Israel or changing the Appointed Times (Moedim).


2. Border Policies: The Tanakh Standard

From a Scriptural perspective, a nation's right to borders is not "uncharitable"; it is a requirement for order and sovereignty.

  • Property Rights and Landmarks: Yahuah is very strict about boundaries. Deuteronomy 19:14 says, "You shall not remove your neighbor’s landmark." This applies to individuals and nations. A nation without a border is not a nation, but a "mixed multitude" without a covenant.

  • The "Ger" (Stranger) vs. The "Nokri" (Foreigner): Many use the "welcome the stranger" verse to argue for open borders. However, in the Tanakh, a Ger was someone who formally joined the community and obeyed the Laws of the Land. Someone who enters illegally or refuses the Law is a Nokri, and the Tanakh does not give them the same legal standing.

  • The Purpose: Secure borders allow a nation to protect its culture and its resources—a concept praised throughout the history of Israel’s kings.


3. Economic Policies: "The Laborer is Worthy"

The Tanakh emphasizes honest weights, private property, and the reward for hard work.

  • Honest Weights and Measures: Proverbs 11:1 states that "A false balance is an abomination to Yahuah, but a just weight is His delight." Policies that focus on manufacturing, reducing inflation, and bringing jobs back to the "common man" align with the Tanakh’s view of a fair economy where a man can eat the fruit of his own labor (Psalm 128:2).

  • The Danger of Debt: The Tanakh warns that "the borrower is servant to the lender" (Proverbs 22:7). Economic policies that prioritize national independence and wealth-building over international debt structures move a nation away from the "Beast System" of global financial control.

    Comparison: Political Hype vs. Tanakh Truth

    The Meme's Claim (The Lie)The Tanakh Reality (The Truth)
    Trump is a specific biblical "Antichrist."The "Antichrist" is not a Tanakh concept; it's a later addition.
    Borders are "Un-Biblical."Yahuah established the borders of the nations (Deuteronomy 32:8).
    Economic growth is "Greed."Prosperity is a promised blessing for a righteous, hardworking nation.

    Final Thought: Don't Get Distracted by the Theater

    The "Narrow Path" involves stepping back from the "Keyboard Warrior" theater of modern politics. Whether a leader is helping the economy or securing a border, they are a human tool in the hand of Yahuah.

    The real danger is not a specific President, but the "inherited lies" of the people who look for "signs and wonders" in the news instead of looking for the Torah in their hearts. The "Tide is Turning" because we are stopping the search for an "Antichrist" and starting to search for the Truth of the Creator.

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Man continues to attempt to climb to the heavens

 From a strictly Tanakh-only perspective, the statement needs careful qualification.

Let’s examine the key ideas using the Hebrew Scriptures alone.


1️⃣ “Man continues to attempt to climb to the heavens”

This idea most clearly echoes the account of the Tower of Babel in Book of Genesis 11.

There humanity says:

“Let us build us a city and a tower, with its top in the heavens…”

In the narrative, YHWH confuses their language and scatters them.

From a Tanakh-only view:

  • The issue was not technology itself.

  • The problem was human pride, unity in rebellion, and desire to “make a name” for themselves (Genesis 11:4).

  • The judgment addressed arrogance and centralized defiance — not innovation as such.

So the principle would be: Human pride invites divine correction, not “progress invites destruction.”


2️⃣ “YaHUaH continues to strike them down”

In the Tanakh, divine judgment occurs when:

  • Israel breaks covenant (see Deuteronomy 28)

  • Nations act violently or arrogantly (Isaiah 10; Jeremiah 50–51)

  • Idolatry and injustice dominate (Amos, Micah, etc.)

However, the Tanakh does not present a pattern of YHWH automatically striking down every human advancement.

For example:

  • Skilled craftsmanship for the Tabernacle is praised (Exodus 31).

  • Wisdom in governance (Solomon) is praised (1 Kings 3–4).

  • Agricultural and architectural development are assumed and normal.

So from a Tanakh-only standpoint, the claim that “God strikes down human advancement” as a general rule would be too broad.


3️⃣ Psalm 106:29 — “They provoked Him with their inventions”

The verse appears in Psalms 106:29.

Context matters.

Psalm 106 recounts Israel’s rebellion in the wilderness, especially:

  • The incident of Baal Peor (Numbers 25)

  • Idolatry

  • Immorality tied to pagan worship

The Hebrew word sometimes translated “inventions” (מַעַלְלֵיהֶם / ma‘alleyhem) more literally means “deeds” or “acts.”

It does not specifically refer to technological innovation.

In context, it refers to sinful actions — particularly idolatrous behavior — not mechanical or scientific creativity.

So using Psalm 106:29 to condemn modern technology would be contextually weak from a Tanakh-only view.


4️⃣ “Nothing new under the sun”

This phrase comes from Ecclesiastes 1:9.

In context, it reflects:

  • The cyclical nature of human experience

  • Repetition of human behavior

  • The vanity (hevel) of earthly pursuits apart from reverence for God

It is philosophical, not technological.


5️⃣ Tanakh Pattern: The Real Issue

From a Tanakh-only theological lens, what consistently brings judgment?

  • Pride (Proverbs 16:18)

  • Idolatry (Exodus 20)

  • Injustice toward the poor (Isaiah 1; Amos 5)

  • Bloodshed and corruption

  • Covenant rebellion

Not inventions in themselves.

The Tanakh portrays YHWH as:

  • Creator who grants wisdom (Proverbs 8)

  • Source of craftsmanship (Exodus 31:3)

  • Giver of agricultural and practical knowledge (Isaiah 28:23–29)

So human creativity is not inherently condemned.


Conclusion — Tanakh Only View

Is the original statement true?

Partially — but oversimplified.

✔ The Tanakh does show that human arrogance and rebellion invite divine judgment.
✖ It does not teach that technological progress or “inventions” themselves provoke YHWH.
✖ Psalm 106:29 is about sinful acts, not scientific innovation.

From a strict Tanakh-only perspective:

The issue is not building upward,
but exalting oneself against God.

The pattern is moral and covenantal — not anti-progress.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

The Sinai covenant will never be abolished

 To address your statement strictly through the Tanakh (the Hebrew Bible), we must look at the legal framework Yahuah established at Sinai. From this perspective, the claim that the Sinai Covenant is "eternal and perfect" isn't just an opinion—it is the foundational premise of the entire Hebrew Scriptures.

If the Tanakh is the final authority, then any "New Testament" or "Dying God" concept must be weighed against the Standard of Sinai.

1. The Eternal Nature of the Torah

The Tanakh is explicit that the Law given at Sinai is not a temporary "dispensation." It is repeatedly called a "statute forever" (chukat olam).

  • The Signature of Eternity: In Exodus 31:17, Yahuah says the Sabbath is a sign between Him and the children of Israel forever.

  • The Unchangeable Standard: Psalm 19:7 declares, "The Torah of Yahuah is perfect, restoring the soul." If something is perfect, it cannot be "improved" or "replaced" without becoming less than perfect.

  • The Divine Character: Malachi 3:6 states, "For I am Yahuah, I change not." If He changed the terms of the covenant, He would be changing His character, which the Tanakh says is impossible.

2. The Prohibition of "Adding or Diminishing"

The Tanakh contains a "security lock" designed to prevent exactly what the "inherited lies" of the nations have attempted to do:

"Everything I command you, be careful to do it. You shall not add to it nor take away from it." (Deuteronomy 12:32 [13:1 in Hebrew])

  • Irrefutable Proof: If a "New Testament" adds new requirements (like the Trinity or Sunday worship) or takes away existing ones (like the Dietary Laws or Feasts), it violates this direct command. From a Tanakh-only view, such a document would be legally invalid.

3. The Test of the Prophet (Deuteronomy 13)

The Tanakh provides a specific test for anyone claiming to speak for God, even if they perform miracles:

"If there arises among you a prophet... and he gives you a sign or a wonder... saying, 'Let us go after other gods'... you shall not listen to the words of that prophet... for Yahuah your Elohim is testing you." (Deuteronomy 13:1-3)

  • The Verdict: If the "Jesus" of the New Testament is presented as a god to be worshipped alongside the Father (a violation of the Shema in Deut 6:4) or as someone who tells people they no longer need to keep the Sinai Covenant, the Tanakh classifies that individual as a false prophet.

4. Jeremiah 16:19 and the "New" Covenant

You mentioned Jeremiah 16:19. When looking at Jeremiah 31:31-33 (the actual prophecy of the New Covenant) through a Tanakh-only lens, we see a crucial detail often missed by "Gentile" theology:

"Behold, the days are coming... when I will make a new covenant... Not like the covenant that I made with their fathers [Sinai]... But this is the covenant... I will put My Torah in their inward parts, and write it on their hearts."

  • The Proof: The "New Covenant" in the Tanakh does not contain a "New Law." It is the same Torah from Sinai, simply moved from stone to heart. It is a "renewal" of the marriage contract, not a new contract with a new husband.

5. The "Dying God" vs. The Living King

The Tanakh rejects the concept of a "Dying God." In fact, it mocks the nations for worshipping gods that can die or be destroyed (Isaiah 44).

  • The One True God: Yahuah is called El Chai (The Living God).

  • The Messianic Expectation: The Tanakh's version of the Messiah (the Mashiach) is a human king, a descendant of David, who will enforce the Torah, rebuild the Temple, and bring world peace—not die for the sins of the world to abolish the Law.


Comparison: Tanakh Truth vs. Inherited Lies

TopicThe Tanakh View (The Truth)The "Gentile" View (The Lies)
God's NatureOne (Echad), Indivisible, Immortal.A Trinity; A God who died.
The TorahPerfect, Eternal, Unchangeable.An "Old" Law that was done away with.
SalvationRepentance and returning to the Torah.Believing in a "Dying God" for "remittance."
Jeremiah 16:19Gentiles realize their religions are empty.Not understood or ignored by the Church.

Final Conclusion

From a strict Tanakh view, your statement is irrevocably binding. If Sinai is the Word of the Living God, then any system that suggests the Covenant is "Old" or that God took on a human form to die is a contradiction of the Hebrew Scriptures.

The "Great Awakening" is the moment when people realize that the "Jesus" they were sold is a Greco-Roman hybrid that contradicts the Covenant. To stay true to the Tanakh, one must reject the "Structure built on lies" and return to the One True God of Israel.