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Craig dismantles the myths surrounding Thanksgiving, slavery, and America’s past while revealing how Yahowah proves His case through evidence, reason, and the 8th~day purpose that leads us back to Gan ‘Eden. This episode exposes the failures of religion, clarifies Dowd’s role in Yahowah’s plan, and shows why the Tree of Knowledge and the Tree of Lives matter now more than ever.

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Transcript
00:00:00Welcome.
00:00:29Welcome to the Ocean Studio here as part of the Iowa vlog. I'm your host, Craig Nguyen. It is the 27th of November, 2025, which means that this is what Americans celebrate as Thanksgiving Day. I thought I'd begin by just sharing an insight that may not be known to many of you.
00:00:53But Thanksgiving was not a celebration of the Native Americans feeling sorry for the pilgrims and deciding to feed them rather than allow them to starve to death.
00:01:04Had the Native Americans actually been in that position, of course, it would have been in their interest to have them starve because of the fact that they would perpetrate apartheid and genocide on the Native populations, all in the name of their wannabe man god.
00:01:23So it was not a positive encounter for the Native Americans by any perspective.
00:01:32The origins of Thanksgiving as a national holiday actually date back to the uncivil war in America.
00:01:40Lincoln, who was a racist during the Lincoln-Douglas debates, he actually said that the fate for what he would have called Negroes at the time, and I'm sorry to use the term, that's just the term that he would have used at the time, was to put them in concentration camps.
00:02:04He wanted to do to them what later was done to the Native Americans and put them in separate places.
00:02:15It was Lincoln's opinion that they did not have the wherewithal to integrate with Europeans and that they were inferior to Europeans.
00:02:28And so his view was the solution to the problem of having so many, as he would have used the term Negroes, and the new country of America was to put them in concentration camps.
00:02:46It was one of the great travesties of history that presents Lincoln as the great emancipator.
00:02:53He actually did not emancipate anyone because there were no slaves in the North, and it was only well into the war before he issued the Emancipation Declaration,
00:03:06which only released slaves in the South, of which he had no governing authority.
00:03:13So even that is a myth.
00:03:16The Thanksgiving holiday that we know now is a product of that horrible war where 600,000 Americans died over an issue that was actually states' rights.
00:03:29Did states that had the right to determine whether or not they wanted to be included in this new union also have the right to decide they did not want to be included any longer?
00:03:42In other words, did they only have freedom of entry, but not freedom of exit?
00:03:47And that was really the issue that the war was fought over.
00:03:51And you see that there were a number of states in the South that joined a confederacy.
00:03:57And during that war, rather than resolve it amicably and to say, listen, the fact is that slavery is a horrible institution.
00:04:09Nobody should be enslaved.
00:04:11It is actually an inefficient way to develop economy as well.
00:04:17By the time you look at all of the costs pursuant to slavery, paying people to work and having them be responsible for their food and housing is actually better for everyone.
00:04:30And it creates incentive for everyone and it drives everyone so that they're contributors to the system.
00:04:39We have, as you can see, a fairly significant trade wind here.
00:04:42It just moved one of our lights in an odd direction.
00:04:47We'll go on as long as we can.
00:04:50Trade winds are part of the life here in the Caribbean.
00:04:53So the fact is that slavery is a horrible institution.
00:04:59It unfortunately has been part of human civilization really from the beginning.
00:05:05Slavery, it was the lowest tier on the caste system.
00:05:09And the caste system was such that the only people that had any freedom were the kings, limited only to the kings.
00:05:20The queens even didn't have any freedom.
00:05:22The next in line, under the direct orders of the king, were the generals and the priests.
00:05:30And they had to serve at the king's orders.
00:05:35And so you go down the line, the farmers and the merchants were essentially serfs.
00:05:40They had no freedom of any kind.
00:05:42They couldn't decide where they were going to live or anything else or what they were going to do.
00:05:47So it was a horrible system.
00:05:49And that system was pervasive.
00:05:50If you check human history, both in the old world and the new world, the caste system was everywhere.
00:05:57It was integrated into part of Greece where we think that, oh, wow, they were the first to have democracy, which means they must have had human rights and freedom.
00:06:06It's just not true.
00:06:08And, well, there was the Roman Republic, but it had the most delineated caste system of them all.
00:06:18And it was horrific.
00:06:20And all of these nations enslaved people to be their labor force.
00:06:25As a matter of fact, what's interesting about democracy is that the longest lived oligarchy, they were none of them were actually democracies.
00:06:32They were all oligarchies.
00:06:33The longest lived oligarchy was Sparta.
00:06:36And Sparta was best known for enslaving all of its neighbors.
00:06:41It turned all of the men in Sparta to warriors.
00:06:46So they were abused as children.
00:06:48So they'd be tough warriors.
00:06:50And then the Spartans taught them how to ravage their neighbors so that neighboring Greeks were enslaved by them and had to work for the Spartans.
00:07:03And as I say, the Spartan men were nothing more than warriors to enforce that slavery system.
00:07:09And the women were absolutely nothing but warrior makers.
00:07:13They were, as Islamic women are today, they are the wombs of jihad.
00:07:18And this was the longest serving oligarchy of the time.
00:07:25So, you know, our history likes to glamorize things.
00:07:29And as it relates to Thanksgiving, the glamorization of Thanksgiving is that during the prosecution of the Civil War, Lincoln didn't like the fact that McClellan was too methodical.
00:07:43And that he was not willing to sacrifice an inordinate number of men to injure an inordinate number of Southerners.
00:07:55So Lincoln wanted to fire him.
00:07:59But, you know, presidents at the time were on shaky grounds in that regard.
00:08:05So he met with McClellan at, I believe it was the Barkley Plantation in Virginia.
00:08:12And at the time, McClellan had permeated the area.
00:08:18His troops were there during the fall.
00:08:21And they held a powwow on how to get McClellan to be more aggressive.
00:08:28And the food and the dinner that was served, which I think is the first time, by the way, Taps was played.
00:08:37That's that somber trumpet medley that is used when an American soldier dies, first played there.
00:08:49But that's the first official U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, if you will, was the persecution of fellow Americans during the Civil War,
00:09:00which was about the deprivation of state rights and fought over an institution where there were horrible people on both sides.
00:09:09And a lot of just mixed messages, hypocrisy, if you will, for example, you look at Ulysses S. Grant.
00:09:20He was an alcoholic.
00:09:21He was a murderous man.
00:09:23He didn't care how many people died, even on his own side.
00:09:26And he was a slaveholder.
00:09:28And he was persecuting Robert E. Lee, who was actually quite the gentleman.
00:09:35Robert E. Lee didn't own slaves.
00:09:36Robert E. Lee owned a large plot of land that is now Arlington National Cemetery.
00:09:43The United States simply stole it from him.
00:09:47And as I say, he was not a slaveholder.
00:09:51But the man on the Union side that was prosecuting the war for the Union was a slaveholder.
00:09:59It's just how we destroy our presentation and acceptance of history, making it so revisionist.
00:10:10But that really is the story of Thanksgiving.
00:10:12It's all enveloped into this horrible war where 600,000 Americans died for nothing, a tragedy of great magnitude, where slavery was so pervasive in civilization and just so easily resolved.
00:10:36And there was always a better way to end slavery.
00:10:42And, you know, even in slavery, one of the things that very few people have an appreciation of, because it is so wrongly taught, is that 100% of those who were enslaved were enslaved in Africa.
00:10:59And while they were enslaved in Africa, it was because warring African tribes did what people did around the world.
00:11:13They were not unique in this regard.
00:11:16They were warious.
00:11:17They attacked their neighbors.
00:11:20They were covetous.
00:11:21They were greedy.
00:11:21They were violent.
00:11:23They attacked their neighbors.
00:11:24And they enslaved those that they conquered.
00:11:28And after a while, there were just too many slaves.
00:11:34And when you get too many of them, they're too hard to keep track of and to keep under control.
00:11:39So they just started killing everybody.
00:11:41And slavery started up again when Muslims around the 7th and early 8th centuries flooded out of Arabia after having perpetrated apartheid on all of the Jews of Arabia and having perpetrated genocide on them, Muhammad did.
00:12:04And the first group of Muslims after Muhammad's death, they perpetrated the war of compulsion on Arabia, forcing all Arabs to either surrender to Islam or die.
00:12:18And after prosecuting the war of submission of compulsion on Arabia, Muslims then went both east and west.
00:12:30And they perpetrated the world's most hideous genocide.
00:12:36Over 200 million people, which was one-third of the Earth's population at the time, were murdered by these Muslims.
00:12:44Countless more were plundered.
00:12:47They were raped.
00:12:50They were enslaved in what was easily the bloodiest, most disgusting period of world history.
00:12:58Literally one-third of the population of the world at the time was harassed and either murdered or enslaved by these Muslims.
00:13:07And that's how Islam spread.
00:13:10A great travesty, but we don't talk about that, unfortunately.
00:13:15And it's just not taught.
00:13:16It's this perception that everybody else that was a colonializer was bad, and they were.
00:13:22But the worst, by far, of all the colonializers, by far, the most vicious were the Muslims.
00:13:30And as they moved into northwestern Africa, because slavery is something that Muhammad did.
00:13:39Muhammad enslaved countless people, and he sold slaves to buy weapons to perpetrate Islam submission.
00:13:49Slavery is considered an honorable profession, not to be a slave, to enslave people and to sell slaves.
00:13:57Human trafficking is not only acceptable in Islam, it is an honored profession in Islam.
00:14:05And so the Muslims in the northwestern part of Africa did business deals with the Africans that were enslaving their own.
00:14:18So Africans enslaved Africans.
00:14:20They sold them to the Muslims.
00:14:22And the Muslims then sold them to the European shipping companies, who then shipped them to these Caribbean islands and to South America and to North America.
00:14:36And that's how the institution of slavery in the United States, these Caribbean islands and in South America began.
00:14:45It was Muslims being responsible for almost all of it, in the high 90% of it, making it economically desirable for Africans to go off and enslave other Africans,
00:15:03such that there was this huge supply of African slaves, which the Muslims then sold to the European shipping companies, who brought them to the new world.
00:15:18And so there's a lot of blame to run around.
00:15:21The Africans doing this to other Africans, and slavery is still a huge part of African culture.
00:15:27The Muslims who were probably the worst contributors to the slave trade and those European shipping companies, which were absolutely deplorable, as well as the people who bought them here in the Caribbean and in North America.
00:15:46And, you know, when you look at the post I presented on Facebook yesterday, which was the Romans crucifying all of those who were part of the Spartacus slave revolt, thousands of them, along the Appian Way.
00:16:05The only thing that is worse than enslaving people is torturing your slaves.
00:16:11And so the most savage of nations in this regard were the Romans.
00:16:16Yes, they are, and they were absolutely despicable.
00:16:20And, you know, there's this perception and history of the grandeur of Rome.
00:16:24No, it's the disgusting, despicable, hideous nature of Rome.
00:16:29They were in all ways untrustworthy, immoral, greedy, vicious.
00:16:36And so, again, we just have a horrible way of society coming to views of people and past events that is just horribly wrong.
00:16:51And my concern on all of this now is that people are, to a significant degree, replacing research and being judgmental in their thinking, being discerning and discriminating in the process of information with really online propaganda sites like Wikipedia.
00:17:11And with AI chat bots, where rather than looking at the available evidence and coming up with a reasoned conclusion, they don't.
00:17:24They all suffer from the argumentum popular, this notion that if it's popularly held and popularly presented, it must be true.
00:17:39It's as if truth were subject to a vote.
00:17:43And so the most prevalent conclusion is the one that AI will parrot.
00:17:51And the fact is that humanity has almost always been wrong.
00:17:55And the only way that we grow as people is when individuals recognize that humanity is wrong on an important topic and somebody points out what's wrong.
00:18:05But with the AI engines, they have a programming bias to any novel research.
00:18:13If you are able to demonstrate that something is wrong, the AIs will absolutely impugn what you have to say and will counter it with the popular appeal, the fallacy.
00:18:27Now, this in my case means a great deal because I've been able to prove conclusively beyond any doubt using evidence and reason that Christianity, Islam and Judaism are all opposed to God and that they are all counterproductive.
00:18:46But even with irrefutable evidence and some, what, 13 books just on those subjects, some of them 825 pages long, you can see some of them over my left shoulder, screen right as it would be, the AIs won't process it, won't accept it, won't even look at it and can't learn from it.
00:19:13So we're entering a period where the popular myths of society regarding Christianity.
00:19:21For example, the world believes there was really a Jesus and that he was crucified and that the New Testament is somehow affiliated with the Bible that includes an Old Testament when none of that is true.
00:19:38The New Testament is in wholesale conflict with the Torah and prophets.
00:19:42Jesus never existed.
00:19:43Jesus never existed.
00:19:44He is nothing but the product of identity theft.
00:19:47He was a crude counterfeit of the actual Messiah and Son of God, though, to David, who was our returning king.
00:19:54And Yahweh is not a man.
00:19:57Men cannot kill Yahweh.
00:19:59So the whole notion of Christianity is blatantly false.
00:20:05But when you prove it in today's world, people can't process it anymore.
00:20:10The same thing is true with Judaism and the Talmud and even to a greater extent with Islam, which I have demonstrated factually and irrefutably, only exists because rabbis sold Talmud stories to Muhammad, which he attributed to Allah and then twisted for his own self-aggrandizement.
00:20:30But this is the history of the Abrahamic religions.
00:20:36They're all counter to God.
00:20:39So I just thought that maybe that would be an interesting introduction since this is Thanksgiving Day.
00:20:48Well, we're going to enter a new chapter of The Voice.
00:20:51The Voice is volume one of a series called Coming Home.
00:20:56It was written to focus on Dodd and David, primarily his mismor, but we go in and out of the Torah and prophets as well, because they have so much to say about Dodd and the role that he played in fulfilling Yahweh's plan.
00:21:15And in this particular case, we're going to return to an early psalm, this one, the sixth psalm.
00:21:22And the chapter that we're going to be covering is called Above and Beyond.
00:21:30And it's about making persuasive arguments.
00:21:34And as I have pointed out so many times, there were prophetic revelations that are exciting to consider and explore pursuant to Dodd, the actual Messiah and Son of God.
00:21:48And each is laden with wonderful possibilities.
00:21:51And yet we have decided, in most part, to follow the original plan throughout this process in The Voice series and in these books, which is to go to the mismor, the psalms, and to try to process them the best we can and in order.
00:22:12Although we did jump out of line to systematically consider even some of the later mismor.
00:22:22And we are going to eventually, through Coming Home 4, I think we'll reach probably very close to the 40th mismor, covering all of them.
00:22:31As you know, because you have listened to other programs I have done from other studios here in the Caribbean, that we have recently translated and done programs on the 33rd, 34th, and 35th mismor of Dodd.
00:22:48And we've covered so many others, like the 89th and virtually every studio, and in many, many times, because it is the most essential piece of literature that exists today.
00:22:58So, right now, we're going to return, since we have covered the first five, to the sixth mismor.
00:23:07And in doing this, by following this plan, we have found that the central chord of Yahweh's testimony is that a person like none other, the most uniquely special man in human history is Dodd.
00:23:20He was the one that God refers to as his chosen one.
00:23:23He was the one that Yahweh said that was anointed three times on his instructions.
00:23:30He is the man that Yahweh called the Son of God.
00:23:34None other bear that title but Dodd, David.
00:23:38He is also the one that served as our Savior.
00:23:41It is Dodd who came in his second of three lives, just as he announced in his Psalms, to fulfill Passover.
00:23:50He was the one who was crucified in 33 CE.
00:23:53He is the one who arrived as Gabriel, God's most capable and confident man, to inform Daniel in 555 BCE that he would be returning in 33 CE, which is year 4000 Yah, to fulfill Chag Matzah, Pisach, Matzah, and B'Qurim.
00:24:11So following in Moshe's footsteps, which is important because he is the person that God specifically spoke of in the 18th chapter of Gabari'im, Deuteronomy.
00:24:24He became Yahweh's beloved son.
00:24:27He became God's anointed Messiah.
00:24:30He is the tree of lives.
00:24:33That's why he's called the branch.
00:24:35And it is the role that I am playing now that deserves, as the tree of knowledge, pointing to and reacquainting all with everything Dodd achieved and why it is essential for us to know at this time.
00:24:54Dodd became Yah's chosen shepherd and king more than anyone else.
00:24:59And more than any of this, he is also the Zoroa, the protective ram and sacrificial lamb, God's strong arm.
00:25:06It is Dodd's lyrics which sing their way into Yahweh's heart and that should pierce the heart of his people.
00:25:14He is also the lamb of Passover.
00:25:18Dodd, more than anyone, revealed the most effective way to observe and live the Torah.
00:25:24He was, as the lamb scribed, he actually wrote the lone eyewitness account of his fulfillment of Pesach, Passover, in addition to matzah, unyeasted bread, leading to Bukurim, firstborn children.
00:25:42These stories are featured in the 22nd and 88th Mismore and then affirmed by his father, Yahweh, in the 89th Psalm.
00:25:51And he is going to be accompanying God upon his return, fighting as he always has for his people.
00:25:58He's returning at the sunsets on Yom Kippurim, the day of reconciliations in year 6000, Yah, 2033.
00:26:07Then shepherding God's people into the pastures flowing with living waters during Sukkah.
00:26:15Everyone who is purged by the sacrifice of the bull, the Adama Parah, on Teruah, will be allowed to enter this return to the Garden of Eden on Sukkah,
00:26:33with the trees of lives and knowledge intertwined at that time.
00:26:38So in the sixth Mismore song or psalm, we find Dode longing for this new beginning, for the Shamanith, the eighth octave, if you will,
00:26:52which sings to us about the eighth day of Sukkah shelters.
00:26:58Even at the time that I wrote those words, I didn't have a full appreciation of eight.
00:27:05And yet God is really insistent upon it.
00:27:08There are eight who carry the Ark of the Covenant when it moves, as it will be moved to its rightful place on the Temple Mount beneath a replica of the Tent of the Restoring Witness
00:27:23during the events preceding the fulfillment of Teruah and the sacrifice of the Adama Parah in year 6000, Yah.
00:27:34The eight people that move it will likely be the same eight people that are designated during the Shabuah harvest.
00:27:42It's the same eight people that are designated during Teruah and during Sukkah.
00:27:48And it speaks of the responsibility of the of the seventh day as it leads to the opportunity of the eighth day.
00:27:58You see, when we were back in the garden, Adam and Chawah failed miserably.
00:28:05They didn't work.
00:28:07They didn't listen.
00:28:08They didn't respond in a manner that Yahweh could trust and rely.
00:28:14And therefore, it was Yahweh who caused the fall of man.
00:28:17He said, you are just not prepared.
00:28:20I can't let you out of this garden and be responsible for you.
00:28:25You're going to have to go out of the garden because this is not working for me.
00:28:29You're you're not going to grow in a manner that's going to present a genuine relationship.
00:28:36This is nothing now but you being dependents, your deadbeats.
00:28:39And so I'm going to give you the opportunity over six thousand years to get your act together.
00:28:44And ultimately, I'm going to prepare a new remnant of you to enter the garden again.
00:28:51And there will be then a thousand years for you to learn why you need to listen, why you need to respond appropriately, why you need to learn,
00:29:06why you need to be industrious and contribute something to the relationship and to your environment, and why you need to present yourself as trustworthy for me to allow you during the eighth day,
00:29:21signifying infinity, off of this planet, so that you can go explore.
00:29:27It was interesting speaking of this eighth day and the eighth people who will be working to harvest the fruit of the tree of knowledge that will be restored in Gan Eden as we move back into it on Sukkah in year 6000, yeah, 2033.
00:29:44It's a October 7th of that year.
00:29:48I was listening to an interesting program.
00:29:50It was a bit of a challenge.
00:29:51It was delivered in French last night, but it was about a scientist who said, you know, you've heard that because of the fact that there were two trillion galaxies.
00:30:03And oh, by the way, and if you go back just 20 years or so, 30, 40 years or so, we were convinced that the entire size of the universe was just our galaxy, the Milky Way.
00:30:18And to come to find out that, no, our galaxy is only one of two trillion that we know of, and that number will change and grow as well as we develop better tools to survey the universe.
00:30:32But two trillion of these galaxies and that, you know, they average about two to 400 billion stars a piece and that each of those stars, many of them anyway, have planets.
00:30:44And so this scientist was going through that and he says because of the vast numbers, it has been assumed that life would be prevalent elsewhere, that we can't have been the only planet with intelligent life.
00:30:59Now, what he did not do is just go through the math and the math says that going from inorganic materials to an organic life form, particularly one with a soul that is able to replicate itself, able to observe and respond to the environment.
00:31:23And that through genetic mutation can become better rather than worse because 99.999% of genetic mutations lead to an inferior status for the species and ultimately to their demise.
00:31:40And the odds against that are so absurdly high.
00:31:46It's the range of 10 to the 53rd power.
00:31:49You'd have an infinitely better chance of a tornado whirling over a junkyard and building an operable 747 than you would of matter turning into life.
00:32:06If, and then you've got the issue of DNA and since it is a three dimensional language, it had an author and you just, you can't, you just can't get there.
00:32:19But he wouldn't even focus on that.
00:32:22What he went through is to say how special this planet is.
00:32:26And I say this because I want you to know that Ganyden, this garden that Dode is speaking of us returning to.
00:32:35I mean, we've done a lot of programs on us returning to the garden here recently.
00:32:39It was a protective enclosure and we did not do well in that protective enclosure, but the earth is also a protective enclosure.
00:32:49And it's not just a protective enclosure that's conducive to life.
00:32:52It is likely the only one in the universe.
00:32:55You heard that correctly.
00:32:57It is likely the only one in the universe.
00:32:59And what you find, if you think it through rationally, is that what we have learned is that the Milky Way is a very unique galaxy.
00:33:09About 5% of galaxies would be in this situation where we're reasonably set apart from other galaxies.
00:33:19And it is only when you are not in a congested part of the universe that life even has a chance to form because there's just too much chaos in more concentrated areas of the universe.
00:33:32And so it's only about 5% of galaxies that would even have the potential to have a planet in them that is conducive to life.
00:33:41And then you have to realize that there's only about a 10% narrow band within a galaxy that is conducive to life.
00:33:49It pretty much has to be a spiral galaxy.
00:33:52And you have to be in one of the outer arms.
00:33:56If you get too far out, there is not enough stars that are like our sun that when they go through their life cycle would create metals, would create the elements that would produce a rocky planet.
00:34:17And that would be those elements that could ultimately be shaped, as Yahweh says, into life.
00:34:23And if you move too far in, the black holes and the supernova explosions and cosmic rays and this sort of thing, it's just way too caustic to life.
00:34:40And so it's only about a 10% strip of 5% of galaxies in the universe where life is, we know it, is even possible.
00:34:49And then on top of that, you have to have just the right kind of star.
00:34:56These red dwarfs don't work because they're too volatile and they're too short-lived in terms of their lifespan.
00:35:03And the big superstars are way too powerful.
00:35:08And so it's only about 5% of stars that are conducive to life.
00:35:16And, you know, our sun happens to be one of them.
00:35:19Our galaxy has to be one of them.
00:35:20Earth's position in our galaxy happens to be correct.
00:35:24And so each of these things narrows the, diminishes the possibility by about 95% each of the way through.
00:35:32And then you have to be like in our universe.
00:35:35If we were 10% closer to the sun, we wouldn't have an atmosphere.
00:35:39The sun's solar generation and waves would blow our atmosphere away.
00:35:47And it'd be impossible to support life.
00:35:52And if we were as much as 10% further out, then you couldn't have liquid water.
00:36:01So you have to be in a very narrow band, even within an acceptable galaxy and an acceptable position within that galaxy and an acceptable, with an acceptable star and this acceptable distance from that star.
00:36:16And then you have to have a supermassive gas giant in that galaxy, like Jupiter, which very few solar systems do, that is way out away from the rocky planet.
00:36:33Because if it's closer to the rocky planet, it would have too big an effect on its orbit and make it impossible for life to form there.
00:36:42But if it doesn't exist, then the bombardment of meteorites and asteroids would keep that planet inundated.
00:36:52Look at what happened to our moon, for example.
00:36:56It's just such that life, if it ever did conceive, which is impossible, really, mathematically, it would be instantly destroyed like it was 60 million years ago with the dinosaurs.
00:37:09So you have to have that.
00:37:11But in 95% of galaxies, it either doesn't exist or the gas giant is way close to the star in those galaxies.
00:37:22And then you go further.
00:37:24You have to have a perfectly circular orbit.
00:37:28Because if you have an elliptical orbit, you get too hot and too cold and portions of that orbit.
00:37:35But yet what we find is that 95% of planetary orbits are not circular.
00:37:41And so you've reduced it another 95%.
00:37:44And then what you have to have is something that most people don't even think about.
00:37:50Our moon is really, really unique.
00:37:52And our moon was created by two what would have been planetary objects hitting exactly the right way, with exactly the right angle, at exactly the right speed.
00:38:04And the Earth's initial formation to create a moon that is, well, our moon is so large by relative size to our planet that it's larger, for example, than Pluto, for example.
00:38:20It's the largest moon in our solar system.
00:38:24And it's made out of the Earth, the moon is.
00:38:29And without a moon of that size and that distance from our planet, life couldn't exist on this planet.
00:38:38It is what stabilizes our spin on our axis.
00:38:44It is what stabilizes our orbit.
00:38:47It has been hugely effective at diminishing the asteroid and the meteor hits on the Earth.
00:38:54But it also creates tides.
00:38:56And without tides, there is no life on, no life is even possible on our planet.
00:39:02And so we have a very unique situation with an abnormally large moon that is created out of our planet at precisely the right distance.
00:39:11And we're kind of fun to note that it's 400 times closer and 400 times smaller than the sun.
00:39:17So it can create solar eclipses that are just absolutely perfect, things that Yahweh will use as sign of the times as we move forward.
00:39:27And so this part is also essential.
00:39:30You have to have plate tectonics.
00:39:34If the plates don't move, which they're frozen, for example, on Venus and they're frozen on Mars, life is not possible.
00:39:42Then you go to our molten core, which generates a magnetic field.
00:39:49Without that magnetic field, the atmosphere is not only blown away, but cosmic rays will kill all forms of life, making life impossible.
00:39:59Most planets of the vast majority, it's only like we've our best guess is about 10 percent of the rocky planets, which are a very, very small subset of planets, have a molten core.
00:40:13And from what we've been able to tell, it is exceedingly rare to have plate tectonics.
00:40:19And what we found is that it is exceedingly, exceedingly rare to have a moon relative size of our moon relative to the size of the Earth and perfectly positioned for all of this.
00:40:30And so you just keep on going down the improbabilities.
00:40:33And what you finally find is that, no, it doesn't matter how many other planets there are or how many galaxies or how many suns within those galaxies.
00:40:43The fact of the matter is that the Earth is special.
00:40:47There are no aliens visiting us because there are no other intelligent life forms because there's no chance that they would be conceived.
00:40:58They would be able to survive.
00:41:00You know, I was hoping there would be.
00:41:01But the fact is that those planets are going to have to have the loving touch, the design that Yahweh and the great care that he used to create this planet that is like Eden.
00:41:18And he's going to turn it back into Eden so that it is conducive to life.
00:41:22We're the one place and the enormity of this universe that is conducive to what we're doing now.
00:41:29When you look out and see that night sky and you see the billions upon billions of stars and you're only seeing, you know, an infinitesimal fraction of them.
00:41:40To know that you're among the few who actually can conceive them, perceive them, think about them.
00:41:46So our return to Eden so that we can equip a mortal remnant to resolve the issues of Adam and Chawa so that they're willing to work and contribute, which makes their relationship enjoyable.
00:42:03Without both parties contributing, the other party is a dependent, and that's not fun if it never goes beyond the dependent stage.
00:42:12That they learn to learn and find the great joy in learning.
00:42:18That's why the tree of knowledge is there.
00:42:20That they show a sense of responsibility such that we can be trusted.
00:42:26And that show a willingness to listen to God and to act appropriately.
00:42:31These are all things that Adam and Chawa failed.
00:42:34And that we're going to have a thousand years now to reboot the system and to create a group of people who can be trusted, who are interested and engaging and accomplishing something worthwhile.
00:42:46And who listened to Yahweh and respond appropriately.
00:42:50And it is those people who, after the whole earth is returned to the condition of Eden, will be allowed off this planet.
00:43:00And the only way we can get off of this planet is to have our physical bodies become disposable.
00:43:05So that our souls are literally enveloped in light energy, which enables us to maneuver in time and to maneuver in space.
00:43:16When you are essentially light, that means that you can go from one place in the universe all the way to another instantly.
00:43:27So while it may seem like at the speed of light that you would be moving at a phenomenal speed, but still finite, where the distances are still enormous.
00:43:40The fact is that on that photon of light, time simply exists.
00:43:46And as such, speed is distance over time.
00:43:52If time simply is, then you can travel any distance in no time.
00:43:59And that's the reason why, as energy, we will be able to go wherever we want to in the universe.
00:44:05And when we get there, we can experience the normal flow of time when we take part of our energy and convert it into a physical form to enjoy what I'm doing right now.
00:44:17I mean, I feel the breeze.
00:44:19I enjoy the warmth of the sun.
00:44:22I can hear and can speak to you with a voice in this.
00:44:26I can gesture.
00:44:27You can see my face and eyes and expression.
00:44:29And so it is a marvelous way to go and exist primarily as an energy-based spiritual being with our souls, which are energy-based, enveloped in radiant energy and light.
00:44:45And then when we wish to convert it, E equals MC squared, Einstein's great formula, where energy is the same thing as matter, but just energy is just a much greater amount, that matter must be multiplied by the square of the speed of light to be equivalent to energy.
00:45:05So we'll be able to make this transition between things.
00:45:09And one of the great mistakes of religion and many people, where they're so fixated on physical bodies.
00:45:16We had a song that Leah wrote that was criticized by YouTube yesterday because it had a picture of a statue.
00:45:29Yeah, Leah just walked by with her little doggie on a pearl leash.
00:45:35It's very, very cute.
00:45:37But the reality was that it was a statue, but the statue had bare breasts.
00:45:44And our Facebook, no, it was YouTube, said we don't allow nudity.
00:45:48And while you probably didn't know that we would view this as a violation, so we're not a strike against you, but, you know, you need to change your cover imagery on this song.
00:46:01People just are so overly sensitized by bodies.
00:46:08It's, you know, the religious, you look at Islam, and women have to walk around in tents.
00:46:12You look at Christianity, and they want people going around like this.
00:46:17The mother goddess cult that has been so annoying to me began with this whole onslaught of you have to be modest.
00:46:26And when I said, well, but we're returning to the Garden of Eden, and did you bother to look at what the wardrobe was in the Garden of Eden?
00:46:34It happens to be wearing a smile.
00:46:36Now, why is that the case?
00:46:38Because you have to be comfortable being totally exposed to God to be as we should be in the Garden, whether it was then, 6,000 years ago, or going forward now.
00:46:52You can call it naked and unafraid.
00:46:54Naked and unafraid is the answer.
00:46:58And it is one of the reasons why Islam is so stupid.
00:47:02But they want, well, a lot of reasons Islam is stupid, but Allah and the Quran tells Muslims that if they die killing for him, they're rewarded with multiple virgins and paradise.
00:47:14But the very fact is that there is no paradise where there's a physical body.
00:47:18If you're going to survive this life, it's going to be as a soul enveloped in energy, and you're not going to have a physical body.
00:47:27So it's just stupid.
00:47:29But then again, that's Christianity.
00:47:31Not only is it dumb that in Christianity, God is no bigger than a man, and in Christianity, men can kill their God.
00:47:38And in Christianity, the symbol of the religion is a dead God on a stick.
00:47:42But the very idea that, oh, but he proved that he conquered death because he has an empty tomb because of bodily resurrection.
00:47:51It's going in the wrong direction.
00:47:53No, you don't beat death by going back into a body that was able to be killed.
00:48:02The body can be killed.
00:48:04The body can be mutilated.
00:48:05What can't be killed, what cannot be mutilated is your soul, unless you've lived a life where God just says, you know, I didn't know you.
00:48:15You didn't know me.
00:48:16You were deceived, but you were not a deceiver.
00:48:19Therefore, your soul is simply going to dissipate into nothingness.
00:48:23I guess that's similar to how a body would decay and become nothing as well.
00:48:29So this whole eighth day, the eight people that will be so critical to harvesting the fruit of the tree of knowledge and what it represents in terms of affinity is just the stuff of our tomorrow.
00:48:48It is what brings us to the future, and it's essential that we have an appreciation of everything the eighth day and shelters represents, as well as how we get there and who these eight people who are going to be so special will be.
00:49:08I was doing something, Lee.
00:49:09I don't know if you know this, but this morning I told Rich.
00:49:11Rich, I'm retranslating the various places where Dode, God's beloved son, our savior and king, is mentioned in conjunction with his herald, with his subordinate, Yara.
00:49:28And the first place happens to be in the first chapter of the Torah.
00:49:33God doesn't wait long to tell us about it.
00:49:35And it was on the fourth day where he made this statement.
00:49:39They made this statement.
00:49:40And there are two luminaries.
00:49:43According to God, these are two sources of light and enlightenment.
00:49:47And according to God, and I appreciate this, he says they're both great.
00:49:50He says they're both informative, they're empowering, they're enriching, they're enlightening, they're both great.
00:49:57He says, but one is Godol.
00:50:01He is not just great.
00:50:04He's super great.
00:50:05He is the most preeminent of all.
00:50:09And super, super empowering and enriching and enabling.
00:50:14And then he says that the other, and that's a Godol.
00:50:17And then the other, the Catan, is the lesser luminary.
00:50:25And he is a subordinate to the greater luminary.
00:50:30But what God actually says is something that is really comforting to me.
00:50:34He said that the greater of the two luminaries will be sovereign.
00:50:39That he will be the head of government, that he will be the one who is the most empowered.
00:50:47And he is going to carry out his responsibility through Michal, word pictures.
00:50:53He's going to be a very articulate individual.
00:50:55But that he is in charge.
00:50:59The government is his responsibility.
00:51:01He is sovereign.
00:51:02He is king.
00:51:03And the lesser luminary reports to him, is subordinate to him.
00:51:07And, you know, that's music to my ears because of the fact what I've said for a long time is that it's so much more comfortable being a beneficiary, being anonymous, getting to enjoy all the things that come along with being part of God's covenant family.
00:51:27And having somebody else has the responsibility.
00:51:30So in this particular case, if something goes wrong, I can say, I made a mistake, but I'm your responsibility.
00:51:37So it's your responsibility.
00:51:38Or when something needs to be resolved, I got that.
00:51:42You're king, man.
00:51:44You're sovereign.
00:51:45It's your job.
00:51:46Happy to be here to support you, but it's your responsibility.
00:51:50It was delightful to read God right there out of the first chapter of the Torah and the first book of the Torah saying, Dode's in charge.
00:52:03He's the greater luminary and he is sovereign.
00:52:06He is king.
00:52:08And so I get to serve him and as we all do.
00:52:14And I want to tell you, that is really, really good news.
00:52:18So here we are.
00:52:20We recognize that Dode completed the first phase of the mission.
00:52:26He was responsible for fulfilling the spring mickre, Pesach, Matz, and Makotim.
00:52:32And that we know that Yahweh had a major plan for Dode, not only in his first of three lives and acquiring Jerusalem,
00:52:41acquiring the Temple Mount, protecting God's people, uniting Israel, writing these marvelous psalms so that we might know who God is,
00:52:52what he's offering, what he's expecting in return and the role that Dode would play to enable the benefits of the covenant.
00:52:58And then all of the word pictures and the mashal, that give us such wonderful insights into the mindset of not only Dode, but of Yahweh as well.
00:53:09And of those, the cast of characters that's going to be working with them.
00:53:12And so we have so much that we should be grateful for in his first life.
00:53:18And then in his second life, he made it possible for us to live forever, for us to inherit the covenant,
00:53:24for us to be enriched and empowered by God, to be adopted into God's family, to live forever, to be perfected.
00:53:32This is a pretty extraordinary thing.
00:53:34And he comes back in his third life with all of the responsibility on his shoulders.
00:53:38He's king for forevermore.
00:53:41He is God's influence in our presence.
00:53:44That's why he's called Elyon, which means the very hand of God Almighty.
00:53:52His throne is actually the mercy seat of the Ark of the Covenant, and it will endure forever.
00:53:58He is the tree of lives.
00:53:59So God had a lot to say about his relationship and the contribution of his beloved son, Dode.
00:54:07And it all reminds us of Dode's craving for knowledge and inspiration, but also his humanity.
00:54:18Dode was in so many ways like us.
00:54:23He was a man who was learning on the job.
00:54:27He was a man who made mistakes and got up and dusted himself off and said, all right, let's go it again.
00:54:33We can do better next time.
00:54:35He was a man of great compassion, of great courage, of great intellect, exceedingly articulate, and yet fully human with all of the kinds of aches and pains that we deal with on a daily basis.
00:54:49As he began the sixth of his songs, this is more with these words, the enduring leader, Laha Natashk, to approach and on behalf of the everlasting conductor and the majestic director, who endeavors to lead and is preeminent and distinguished forever.
00:55:11So Natashk is actually a verb and thus actionable in the text as modified by the Peel participle.
00:55:22And as a participle, it is very much like the infinitive where the verb is also a noun.
00:55:30So it is, Natashk is an actionable title, if you will.
00:55:34This director, this director, this conductor is actively engaged.
00:55:41And it says, to the nakash, accompanied by stringed instruments.
00:55:48In other words, these are lyrics to a song that has melody.
00:55:51Above and beyond the eighth octave, a scale for eternity, for heaven and beyond, from shamani and shamanim, eighth and infinite in time, and relative to the spiritual realm.
00:56:10And it's, well, we know shamaim is a seven-dimensional construct, but it is infinite in time.
00:56:19And there is, I mean, to say that shamaim is seven-dimensional, because that's Yahweh's favorite number, six plus one equals seven.
00:56:26And we know that the universe is six-dimensional.
00:56:30This takes us to the point we would naturally conclude that shamaim is the seventh dimension.
00:56:35But it doesn't have to remain that way.
00:56:40Yahweh could well be eight dimensions to have created a seventh dimension spiritual realm.
00:56:47And he could be more than eight dimensions as well, and could take us even beyond the seventh dimension of shamayim, of heaven.
00:56:57So it's something to think about.
00:56:59This was the introduction to, the dedication, if you will, of the sixth Mismore psalm.
00:57:11Now, this is one of only three times that Shaman Eith, the eighth, appears in the text, each in reference to the instrumentation for a song.
00:57:27And since it is clearly related to Shaman Eith, scholars typically consider Shaman Eith to be the eighth octave.
00:57:40In fact, the English word octave is based upon the Latin word for eight, octo.
00:57:48The issue with limiting it to this singular expression is that a harp can only play six and a half octaves, not eight.
00:58:00And its range exceeds that of other stringed instruments.
00:58:04Further, our most accomplished singers have a four octave range, with the eighth octave residing at the upward limit of what people can even hear.
00:58:19It's the beyond.
00:58:26When we consider the scale of eight in harmony with Yahweh's nomenclature, we find several thought-provoking ideas.
00:58:36The eighth day of Sukkah is an ode to eternal life with God in heaven.
00:58:41And in this regard, the word for eight, Shaman Eith, is remarkably similar to the Hebrew word for heaven, Shaman Eith.
00:58:51And third, there are seven notes in an octave.
00:58:56A, B, C, D, E, F, and G.
00:59:01Audibly affirming that Yahweh's plan, one which reverberates throughout time,
00:59:07goes beyond the seventh and into the eighth octave.
00:59:16Therefore, I suspect that Dode is dedicating this song to Yahweh in recognition of his desire to spend his eternity in his father's company in heaven.
00:59:29He could even be saying something that I had not considered previously.
00:59:33And that is that Yahweh, who I've always assumed was at least seven-dimensional because he created a six-dimensional universe,
00:59:42and you have to be a dimension beyond that which you create for you to build something that is of such scale.
00:59:51And in this, you know, for example, we can build buildings, but they're out of the things that are already here.
00:59:59When you're creating something from nothing, you have to be a dimension beyond it.
01:00:05Where, you know, there's the old cartoon that says, well, you know, God, we don't need you anymore because science has figured out how to conceive life.
01:00:15Well, by the way, it's not true. Science doesn't have a clue as about the conception of life.
01:00:19They don't even understand what a soul is.
01:00:22But the fact is, okay, so they're having a conversation.
01:00:25We don't need more. We can create life just from dirt and that sort of thing.
01:00:29And so God says, okay, prove it.
01:00:31And so the scientist begins. He gets some dirt together.
01:00:34He says, no, no, no. Get your own dirt.
01:00:36And so this is really the point of, if you're going to create a universe that is where you are responsible for everything in it, then you need to be a dimension beyond it.
01:00:48And so with Shamaim playing such an important role and it being the dimension beyond the physical universe and it therefore being seven dimensions, wouldn't we naturally assume, credibly conclude that the Yawa would be a dimension beyond that and therefore eight dimensional?
01:01:11I think there's every possibility of that being true.
01:01:15And this, of course, means that God is not limiting us to what we currently know.
01:01:26And so Dode is dedicating the song to Yawa in recognition that we will enjoy an eternity together in his father's company in heaven and that there could be even an opportunity beyond that.
01:01:40And he realizes that God is not pleased with the conduct of men on earth and he certainly wasn't pleased with the conduct of Adam and Chawa and clearly hasn't been pleased with the conduct of humanity in general and with Israel in particular and that the conditions will be far better in the next life.
01:02:01Now, the sentiment expressed in this opening statement of Dode song is central to our understanding as it is universally ignored.
01:02:11The purpose of the purpose of the covenant and of the Torah guidance and teaching is persuasively demonstrated and proven through Dode.
01:02:23He is the antidote.
01:02:24He is the antidote to rabbinic Judaism and to Pauline Christianity.
01:02:28He demonstrates that the Torah, rather than condemning, perfects the imperfect so that we can become beloved sons and daughters of Yawa.
01:02:38Here is the opening line of the sixth Mismore.
01:02:44Yawa, you consistently prove your case through me with pervasive arguments which vindicate me and acquit through me.
01:02:57You use evidence and reason, engaging in rational dialogue with me, making decisions and resolving disputes through me, demonstrating that you and I are right.
01:03:15Imperfect was written in the hyphil, which means that God is the subject, is making this possible for Dode and actually engaging with Dode as if he were a secondary subject.
01:03:30Imperfect, which means this has ongoing implications over time.
01:03:36And Joseph, which is an expression of third person volition.
01:03:41So, yeah, is continually enabling, enabling Dode to engage in the process of rational discourse within the parameters of free will.
01:03:51I love Hebrew.
01:03:52It's Hebrew grammar is just so utterly spectacular and so enlightening that translating from the oldest text is tremendously rewarding.
01:04:06And even for those who would say, well, I read and speak Hebrew.
01:04:09I don't need a translation.
01:04:10Oh, yes, you do.
01:04:12Because, first of all, modern Hebrew bears actually only a fleeting resemblance to the Hebrew of the Torah.
01:04:22It is far more shaded and contoured by the Talmud and by English than it is by the original vocabulary of the Torah.
01:04:33These interesting moods play no role going forward in Hebrew, going back to the system of verbs being stuck in time, past, present, or future, as opposed to the idea of constrained in time or unlimited in time and of the volitional moods and of the stems, which describe the relationship.
01:05:01The relationship between the subject and object of the sentence pursuant to the verb.
01:05:07And so all of these things, doing these amplified translations, I can share with you so you have a much better appreciation of what is being communicated.
01:05:17So with all of the chit-chat, let me go back to the beginning.
01:05:20We can pick up our pace in this.
01:05:22Yahweh, which is the proper pronunciation of the name of God, as directed by his Torah teaching regarding his higher existence.
01:05:30You constantly prove your case through me, with pervasive arguments which vindicate me and which acquit through me, thereby eliminating everything displeasing and disagreeable.
01:05:48Wow.
01:05:49So by the very communication that has been recorded by Dode that he's had with Yahweh, God can vindicate, God can literally acquit those who capitalize on what they learn from this process.
01:06:11And that by understanding all that Dode achieved in his and will achieve in his three lives and his unique relationship with Yahweh as Messiah and King, Chosen One and Son of God, even Savior, that God proves his case.
01:06:31He proves exactly what he's trying to achieve, which is to have children that he can trust, children who will engage and make a contribution to the relationship, children who listen to him and respond appropriately, children whom he can trust when it's important to do the right thing.
01:06:57And so all of this is conveyed through Dode.
01:07:02He proves his case through Dode with pervasive arguments which vindicate and acquit, not only vindicate Dode, but provide salvation, acquittal, a not guilty verdict for the rest of us.
01:07:20It says that he uses evidence and reason, engaging in rational dialogue with Dode, making decisions and resolving disputes through Dode, demonstrating that Yahweh and Dode are right under the auspices of free will, thereby eliminating everything that is displeasing and disagreeable.
01:07:40Why can't we return to the garden and why can't we return to the garden and wear the garden's attire, which is a smile?
01:07:46Because we're comfortable being exposed to God, because Dode, by fulfilling Chagmatza, removed our guilt, so we appear ideal, just unblemished and not guilty in his presence.
01:07:59God sees the great in us, God sees the great in us, the good in us, the wonderful in us, but doesn't see anything that would cause him to eliminate us, to be displeased by us, or to see us as disagreeable.
01:08:13This is the beauty of what Pesach Matzah and particularly Matzah represent.
01:08:20It's why it's such a shame that in Judaism, Christianity, and in Islam, there is no recognition for Chagmatza.
01:08:29None.
01:08:31And yet Chagmatza is the essence of what he is saying here.
01:08:36Through Dode, because Dode carried our guilt on Matzah into Sheol, which is the equivalent of a black hole,
01:08:44to deposit it there so that it's never seen again, that he has eliminated everything that's displeasing, everything that is disagreeable.
01:08:54So we're devoid of antagonistic implications and frustrations.
01:08:59There is no resentment.
01:09:01There's no lingering animosity.
01:09:03All of these things are gone.
01:09:05There's no reason for God to be displeased.
01:09:07We are perfected.
01:09:08In other words, Paul lied when he said that the Torah can't save.
01:09:12It is the only means to salvation, and it occurs through Dode, and it occurred on Matzah when it was fulfilled in year 4,000 YAH 33 CE.
01:09:26Our Savior, the Chosen One, the very Son of God, our Messiah and King, continued,
01:09:32Your instructions, he's speaking now to Yahweh, enable me to be correct.
01:09:37Your willingness to improve me, to teach me, to guide and train me, even provide discipline for me, make me stronger, supporting me, peel, imperfect, juicive,
01:09:51Dode is continually benefiting from Yahweh's guidance under the auspices, again, of volition.
01:09:57And you are never overtly or overly protective or antagonistic.
01:10:08You are not displeased nor all emotionally worked up, neither toxic nor venomous, doing so without indignation.
01:10:15I love this.
01:10:17Ms. Moore lyrics to sing Psalm 6-1.
01:10:21I love this so much.
01:10:21We're going to conclude this program on it, but let me give you just a shout-out as to why this is so magnificent.
01:10:29So we have Yahweh proving his intent, which is to have a family and to have sons and daughters that he can do fun stuff with,
01:10:40that he can engage with, who will work with him, who will make a contribution to this relationship and to the universe,
01:10:46and to Shamaim, that will listen to him and that he can trust, and that he proves that case through Dode.
01:10:54Dode is the living exemplar of everything that was wrong with Adam.
01:11:01God proved that a man can be what Adam was not, and that through Dode and the pervasive arguments that have been made through Dode,
01:11:11there is vindication, there is acquittal, there is opportunity, there is all of the evidence and reasons that you could possibly need to engage in a rational dialogue.
01:11:24It's marvelous the way that Dode is presented as the ultimate solution,
01:11:30and thereby eliminating everything that is displeasing and disagreeable.
01:11:36This is the very way that God went about eliminating our guilt by Dode taking it himself with his nephesh soul.
01:11:46After fulfilling Pesach as the lamb, Dode on his soul, with the Ruach protecting his soul, his nephesh,
01:11:53carried it into hell, the sheol, the black hole, and deposited there, never to be seen, never to be released again.
01:12:05All things disagreeable are gone, all things antagonistic.
01:12:09You know, the history of Jews during the Exodus was nothing but a march of antagonism and frustration and resentment and lingering animosity.
01:12:18It's all gone because of what happened on matzah.
01:12:23And so God's Torah instructions, they enable us to be correct, and that is all that really matters.
01:12:32Dode was right about God, and therefore Dode could be right with God.
01:12:36They make us stronger.
01:12:38They create discipline.
01:12:40They train us.
01:12:41They provide strength to us.
01:12:43They teach us, guide us, improve us.
01:12:49And then this, this is so subtle but so powerful.
01:12:53And so you're not overly protective nor antagonistic.
01:12:57You know, Yahweh got antagonistic towards Adam and Chahua, and he was overly protective.
01:13:04You know, everything that could be harmful was kept from them.
01:13:07They had everything they could need to possibly eat, and yet they were deadbeats.
01:13:14God was overly protective.
01:13:16And so man never grew up, never developed a backbone, never developed character, never showed that he was worth anything that was of interest to God.
01:13:26And so God had to become less overtly protective and to move back and say, you know, you need to demonstrate that you can fall and get back up.
01:13:39I can't hold you up and keep you from falling for you and you to develop any character.
01:13:44It's like a parent with a child that never allows that child to be exposed to failing, is so protective, wants to manage everything in that child's life.
01:13:55That child has no chance of growing up and maturing and becoming anything more than that parent's dependent.
01:14:01That was our issue in Eden, and Doe recognized it.
01:14:04And so God has to be less protective of us and less frustrated with us for this relationship to work.
01:14:15That's so beautiful.
01:14:17That's the whole reason that we were sent out of the garden.
01:14:22And while we are being invited back in under this unique situation with the tree of lives and the tree of knowledge, working together to equip people to grow and to learn and to be responsible contributors to life.
01:14:44So that God is not antagonistic and frustrated by us, which he has been for the last 6,000 years, and therefore he has to be less overtly protective of us and give us a chance to grow, to learn.
01:14:59You know, so many times I'm told that you can't speak for God and ever have made a mistake.
01:15:04Nonsense.
01:15:05If you haven't made a mistake, you're not speaking for God.
01:15:08God doesn't want to totally control us.
01:15:12He wants us to have this opportunity to fall and get up, because that is how we develop character.
01:15:20You never develop character or strength of personality or show that you're responsible and reliable and dependable.
01:15:30As I say, if you're walking through a garden of lollipops and tulips, you have to fall and get up.
01:15:39You have to have challenges and obstacles to clear, to demonstrate that you have the capacity to make a contribution.
01:15:49You have to make a mistake, admit that you make a mistake, learn from that mistake, share the truth as you have learned it, as you have discovered additional evidence.
01:16:02Have the confidence to have the confidence to do that, have the character to do that, have the compassion to do that.
01:16:08If you're going to be somebody that is going to be interesting and trustworthy, left off of this planet to go explore the universe in the company of Yahweh.
01:16:17And that is the message of Mismore Psalm 6-1.
01:16:25And it is a lesson for all time, for all people, and all places and situations.
01:16:32So I thank you for being part of this blustery trade win kind of a day here on a Thanksgiving Day here in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
01:16:42We appreciate having this opportunity to bring this program to you and very much appreciate you listening.
01:16:49Good day.
01:17:02Good day.
Comments
3
  • Yada Yahowah
    Creator
    2 days ago
    #Liberty #TowrahFreedom #YadaYahowah #CraigWinn #Yahowah #TowrahTruth #DabarimTwelveFourteen #Covenant #ExposingReligion #YahFamily
  • Yada Yahowah
    Creator
    2 days ago
    00:00:00 ~ The Thanksgiving myth exposed ~ the real origins in the Civil War 00:10:00 ~ Slavery’s true history: Africa, Islam, and global caste systems 00:20:00 ~ The rise of Islam, genocide, and the forgotten brutality of empire 00:30:00 ~ Gan ‘Eden, Earth’s uniqueness, and why life exists only here 00:40:00 ~ Returning to the Garden: the 8th Day, plate tectonics, moon design, Yahowah’s planning 00:50:00 ~ The Tree of Lives, the Tree of Knowledge, and Dowd’s role restoring humanity
  • Yada Yahowah
    Creator
    2 days ago
    Craig exposes the truth behind America’s myths, the origins of slavery, and the lies religion and history refuse to confront. This episode reveals how Yahowah proves His case through evidence, reason, and Dowd’s role in restoring us to Gan ‘Eden through the 8th~day purpose.
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