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The Shocking Origin Of Black People in The Bible Hidden Facts
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00:00Have you ever wondered, where do black people truly come from?
00:03Not from history books written by men, not from colonial narratives, not from politics
00:09or culture, but from the Bible itself.
00:12The story is far deeper, far older, and far more shocking than most of us have ever been
00:18told.
00:19Imagine this, the very first man, molded by the hand of God himself, shaped from the
00:24dust of the earth, the same soil that holds the richness of dark, fertile ground.
00:29The soil that gives life.
00:31From that soil came Adam.
00:33Could it be that humanity's very beginning was not pale, but dark?
00:39And what about Noah's sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth?
00:44Did one of them hold the key to the African nations we know today?
00:48What does it mean when the Bible speaks of Ethiopia, a land mentioned more times than almost any
00:54other nation in scripture?
00:55And here's the shocking part.
00:57What if the truth about black people in the Bible has been hidden in plain sight, waiting
01:02for us to uncover it?
01:03Stay with me, because in this journey, we are about to explore the forgotten origin of black
01:08people according to the word of God.
01:10And trust me, once you hear this, you'll never look at the Bible the same way again.
01:16Let's go back, not just thousands of years, but to the very dawn of time itself.
01:21The earth was formless, empty.
01:24No cities, no kings, no nations, no borders.
01:27Only silence.
01:28Only creation waiting to be spoken into being.
01:31And in that silence, the Bible says God did something extraordinary.
01:45Now pause with me, and let's think about this.
01:49God didn't speak Adam into existence the way he did with light, or with the stars, or even
01:54with the animals.
01:55With Adam, he got personal.
01:57He stooped down.
01:59He touched the soil.
02:00He shaped it with his hands.
02:02And from that earth, he crafted the first man.
02:05But here's the shocking question nobody asks.
02:07What was the color of the dust?
02:09You see, when we say dust, we imagine something gray, or maybe pale like chalk.
02:15But that's not the word used here.
02:17The Hebrew word is afar, meaning soil, clay, rich earth.
02:23Not lifeless dust, but the fertile ground from which crops grow, the deep soil of the
02:29ancient Near East.
02:30And that soil, it wasn't white, it wasn't pale, it was dark.
02:35Dark, fertile, rich, the color of life itself.
02:40Now here's something even more incredible.
02:42Adam's very name ties him back to this earth.
02:45Adam comes from Adama.
02:47Meaning ground, earth, or red-brown soil.
02:50Many scholars say it points to the clay-like earth.
02:53Dark and full of iron.
02:55The type found in Mesopotamia and Africa.
02:57So think about this.
02:59The very first human being, the father of us all, was sculpted from the kind of soil that
03:05carries richness and depth.
03:07Not light, shallow dust, but dark, life-giving earth.
03:11Let me ask you something.
03:13Does it surprise you?
03:15When you close your eyes and picture Adam, what color do you imagine his skin to be?
03:20Is it possible that the first image of humanity was not pale, but deeply connected to the dark
03:26richness of the soil?
03:27Even science, thousands of years later, has confirmed something striking.
03:32The oldest human remains, the cradle of humanity, were found in Africa.
03:38Geneticists trace the earliest human DNA back to the African continent.
03:42And the Bible?
03:43It's been saying this all along.
03:46When God breathed his spirit into that form, humanity's story began.
03:50And it began from the soil of Africa.
03:52Isn't that powerful?
03:53It means that blackness is not an afterthought, not something secondary, not something foreign
04:00to the story of God.
04:01But it is right there, at the beginning of everything.
04:05And maybe that's why the enemy has fought so hard against black identity, against heritage,
04:11against self-worth.
04:12Because the truth is, the origin of man, the beauty of humanity, the very first image of
04:19God's creation, is inseparably tied to the richness of blackness.
04:23Think about that for a second.
04:25Every nation, every people, every tribe, no matter what shade we are today, traces back
04:32to the same soil, the same earth, the same dark richness.
04:36And here's the question that should stir your soul.
04:40If God began with this, if he chose to mold the first man from the deep, dark ground, what
04:46does that say about how God sees blackness?
04:49What does it say about the divine value placed on the African identity?
04:53This is not just about skin color.
04:55This is about the truth that has been buried for centuries.
04:59The truth that humanity's beginning was rooted in the soil of Africa, tied directly to the
05:05very thing many have tried to erase or distort.
05:08Adam was not just the first man.
05:10He was the beginning of a story that would spread into every nation, every people.
05:14But if you follow that story carefully, you'll see something profound.
05:18The Bible never shies away from Africa.
05:21It doesn't ignore it.
05:23In fact, Africa and its people show up again and again, as if God was leaving us breadcrumbs,
05:28reminders of where we truly come from.
05:30And this, my friend, is just the foundation.
05:33Because the story doesn't stop with Adam, it flows into Noah, into his sons, into the
05:39division of nations.
05:40And that's where we begin to trace the specific bloodline that reveals the shocking, hidden
05:46origin of black people, according to the Bible.
05:48But before we move forward, ask yourself this.
05:51If Adam, the very first human, was formed from the dark soil of the earth, then what
05:57does that make the truest origin of mankind?
06:00Now that we've opened our hearts in chapter 1 to the reality that the Bible does not exclude
06:05black people, but in fact carries their story, let's step deeper into the actual biblical
06:10roots of Africa.
06:12Because if you truly want to understand the shocking origin of black people in the Bible,
06:17you must begin where all humanity began.
06:20The land of Eden.
06:21The land of the first rivers.
06:23The land that ties Africa directly to God's creation plan.
06:27Let me ask you this.
06:29Have you ever wondered why the Bible, in its very first book, Genesis, mentions Africa
06:35before it even mentions Israel?
06:37Why does God, in laying out the foundation of humanity, take time to carefully point us
06:42toward lands like Cush and Ethiopia?
06:45This is no accident.
06:46It's a clue, a breadcrumb left for those who dare to dig deeper.
06:51In Genesis 2.10-13, when God describes Eden, he talks about a river that divides into four,
07:01the Pishon, flowing through Havilah, the Gihon, flowing around the land of Cush, which is ancient
07:08Ethiopia, the Tigris and the Euphrates, flowing near Assyria.
07:13Out of all the rivers in Eden, God points specifically to Cush, a land universally tied to Africa.
07:21Cushites are the descendants of Ham, the son of Noah, and their land became what we know today
07:27as Sudan, Ethiopia, and parts of Egypt.
07:31This means from the very beginning, Africa is part of the Eden story.
07:35The Garden of God was not some faraway fantasy land.
07:38It was tied directly to African soil, African rivers, and African descendants.
07:44Let's dig into Noah's story for a moment.
07:47After the flood, Noah had three sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth.
07:52These three became the fathers of the nations.
07:55Shem gave rise to the Semitic peoples, the Israelites, Arabs, and others.
08:01Japheth became the father of the Indo-European peoples.
08:04But Ham, and this is where things get deeply overlooked,
08:07Ham became the father of Cush, Mizraim, Egypt, Put, Libya, and Canaan.
08:15Think about this.
08:16Every time you hear Cush, you are hearing about Ethiopia.
08:20Every time you hear Mizraim, you are hearing about Egypt.
08:24These are not hidden lands.
08:26These are African civilizations that stood tall, powerful,
08:29and advanced long before most nations even existed.
08:33So when you ask, where are black people in the Bible?
08:36The answer is, they are right at the root of civilization itself.
08:40History, even outside the Bible, tells us Africa is the cradle of humanity.
08:45Archaeologists confirm the earliest human remains trace back to African soil.
08:50And the Bible does not contradict this.
08:52It supports it.
08:53When Abraham traveled, when Joseph was sold,
08:56when Israel cried out under slavery,
08:58where were they in Africa?
09:00When God protected his son, Jesus, from the murderous wrath of Herod,
09:05where did he tell Joseph and Mary to take him?
09:08To Egypt.
09:09Africa has always been a place of refuge,
09:12a land of beginnings, and a home of destiny.
09:15But here's where it gets powerful.
09:18Africa was not just in the background of the story.
09:20It was the stage itself.
09:23Let's slow down and think deeply.
09:25Why do you think Satan has fought so hard to distort the image of Africa and black people in history?
09:32Why has the narrative so often been painted as if Africa is a place of darkness, poverty, and despair?
09:39When the Bible itself shows Africa as a place of gold, rivers, knowledge, and power?
09:44Because if you strip a people of their history, you weaken their identity.
09:49And if you weaken their identity, you blind them to their destiny.
09:53This is why it's so important we uncover the shocking truth.
09:57Black people are not outsiders in the Bible.
10:00They are insiders, part of the root, part of the chosen narrative, and deeply loved by God.
10:06Imagine for a moment, the very land you walk on today,
10:09the very rivers that run through Africa, could be carrying echoes of Eden itself.
10:14The same soil that carried Kush, Mizraim, and Pud, could be carrying your footsteps.
10:20Doesn't that change how you see yourself?
10:23Doesn't that shift your understanding of who you are in the story of God?
10:27And this is just the beginning.
10:29We're only scratching the surface of the Bible's connection to Africa and black people.
10:34There's far more hidden in plain sight,
10:36stories of powerful black figures who shape the destiny of nations.
10:42When we look deeper into the Bible, beyond the surface readings and beyond the stories we've
10:46been told in Sunday school, we begin to uncover a powerful truth.
10:51Black people were not just side characters in the grand biblical story.
10:55They were leaders, warriors, prophets, queens, and even protectors of God's chosen people.
11:01And what is most shocking is that so many of their names are written plainly in scripture,
11:07yet their identities have been hidden or ignored for centuries.
11:10Think about this for a moment.
11:12How many times have you read or heard stories from the Bible and never once asked yourself,
11:17what did these people look like?
11:20We often assume a Western image of the biblical world.
11:23White robes, pale skin, blue eyes, neat beards.
11:26But the geography of the Bible is centered around Africa and the Middle East.
11:31The climate, the land, the lineage.
11:34It tells us something different.
11:36These were people of color, and among them, many were black.
11:40Take for example, Zipporah, the wife of Moses.
11:44She was a Midianite woman, the daughter of Jethro, a priest of Midian.
11:49Midian itself is connected to the descendants of Abraham through Keturah.
11:53But when you trace the lands and people, you find them connected closely with Cush.
11:58The ancient historians, along with the biblical record, tell us that Midianites were dark-skinned people.
12:04This means Moses, the great lawgiver, the man who stood on Sinai and received the Ten Commandments,
12:10was married to a black woman.
12:12And in the book of Numbers, when Miriam and Aaron criticized Moses for his Cushite wife,
12:17God himself defended her.
12:19Isn't that shocking, that God stepped in to silence their complaint,
12:23making it clear that race and skin color were no barrier to his plan?
12:28That alone should make us pause and realize how deeply rooted black people are in the biblical narrative.
12:34But Zipporah was not alone.
12:36Consider the Queen of Sheba, who traveled from her African kingdom to meet Solomon.
12:41Her land, Sheba, is connected to the regions of Ethiopia and Yemen.
12:45But most historians agree she was an Ethiopian queen.
12:48She brought gold, spices, and wealth to Solomon.
12:52And her wisdom and questions were so profound that Scripture says Solomon himself was impressed.
12:58Now picture this.
12:59A black African queen standing before the great King Solomon,
13:04engaging him in one of the most famous royal exchanges in history.
13:07And she is remembered not as an enemy, not as a stranger,
13:11but as a woman of power, wisdom, and dignity.
13:15And then there is Ebed-Melech, the Ethiopian servant in the court of King Zedekiah.
13:21When the prophet Jeremiah was thrown into a cistern and left to die,
13:25it was Ebed-Melech, a black man, a Cushite,
13:28who went to the king and begged for Jeremiah's life.
13:31He was the one who pulled Jeremiah out of the pit and saved him from certain death.
13:35And for this act of courage, God gave Ebed-Melech a personal promise.
13:40When destruction came upon Jerusalem,
13:42he would be spared because he trusted in the Lord.
13:46Imagine that.
13:47God recorded the faith of a black man in his eternal word,
13:50giving him a promise of protection and salvation.
13:54That is not a footnote in history.
13:56That is a declaration of dignity.
13:58We cannot forget Simon of Siren either.
14:01When Jesus stumbled under the weight of the cross on his way to Golgotha,
14:05it was Simon, a man from Siren in North Africa, who was forced to carry the cross.
14:11The Bible names him, even noting that he was the father of Rufus and Alexander.
14:16Now ask yourself, why would the gospel writers preserve his name and his family's names
14:21if they weren't significant to the early church?
14:24The answer is simple.
14:26Because Simon and his household became important believers,
14:29a testimony of how Africa itself was tied to the crucifixion story of Jesus.
14:34Think about it.
14:35On the road to Calvary, a black man helped carry the cross of Christ.
14:39How powerful is that?
14:41And there's more.
14:42Ethiopia is mentioned again in Acts 8,
14:45where an Ethiopian eunuch,
14:47a high official under Candace the Queen,
14:49was traveling back from Jerusalem when Philip the Evangelist met him.
14:53This Ethiopian was reading the book of Isaiah,
14:56but did not understand it.
14:57And Philip explained the prophecy of Jesus to him.
15:01Right there, on the side of the road,
15:03the eunuch saw water and said,
15:05Here is water.
15:06What prevents me from being baptized?
15:09And Philip baptized him on the spot.
15:11This Ethiopian became the first recorded African Christian convert,
15:15carrying the gospel back into his homeland.
15:19Imagine how many souls were touched
15:21because one Ethiopian man encountered the truth of Jesus.
15:24So let's pause and reflect.
15:26These are not minor characters.
15:28And these are not background stories.
15:30These are leaders, queens, saviors, converts,
15:34and family builders whose names are recorded in scripture.
15:37Yet for centuries,
15:38their black identity has been downplayed,
15:41hidden, or ignored.
15:43Why?
15:43Could it be that acknowledging their presence
15:46and their importance changes the narrative of history?
15:48Could it be that by uncovering these truths,
15:51we awaken millions of people to the fact
15:53that they have always been part of God's story,
15:56not outsiders to it?
15:58This is the shocking truth.
16:00Black people were there from the beginning,
16:02in Eden,
16:03in Egypt,
16:04in the kingdom of Israel,
16:06at the foot of the cross,
16:08in the first Christian conversions.
16:10The Bible is not a foreign book to Africa.
16:12It is intertwined with it.
16:14And the people of Africa were not just present.
16:17They were chosen,
16:18appointed,
16:19and honored by God in his eternal word.
16:22And maybe the question you need to ask yourself right now is this.
16:25If black people have always been part of the biblical story,
16:29then what does that mean about your own worth?
16:32What does it mean about the lies you've been told about your identity,
16:35your history,
16:36your value?
16:38Could it be that the truth is far brighter,
16:40far deeper,
16:41and far more empowering than you've ever been led to believe?
16:44And as we sit with these stories,
16:46we begin to realize something even more profound.
16:49Africa is not only the root of civilization,
16:51not only the home of key biblical figures,
16:54but also the stage for some of the greatest prophecies
16:56about God's plan for the world.
16:58That is where we must go next.
17:01As we trace the threat of black people through the pages of the Bible,
17:04we reach a breathtaking discovery.
17:07Africa is not only present in the past,
17:10it is woven into the very future that God himself has spoken.
17:14The prophets,
17:15inspired by the spirit of God,
17:17left us glimpses of what role Africa would play in the unfolding of history
17:21and what destiny awaits her in the plan of salvation.
17:25And when we look closely,
17:27we find something shocking.
17:28Africa is not forgotten.
17:31She is remembered,
17:32chosen,
17:32and prophesied about with honor.
17:35One of the clearest examples comes from the book of Psalm 68 31.
17:39It says,
17:40Princes shall come out of Egypt.
17:41Ethiopia shall soon stretch out her hands unto God.
17:45Let that sink in for a moment.
17:47The psalmist,
17:48writing centuries before Christ,
17:49declared that
17:50from Egypt,
17:51Africa's heartland,
17:53leaders and rulers would rise,
17:55and that Ethiopia,
17:56a great African nation,
17:57would one day lift her hands in worship to the Almighty.
18:01This is not a prophecy of judgment.
18:03This is not a prophecy of destruction.
18:06This is a prophecy of redemption,
18:08of worship,
18:09of glory.
18:10Could it be that the future of the gospel
18:12was always tied to the outstretched hands of Africa?
18:15The prophet Isaiah also points us to this truth.
18:19In Isaiah 11,
18:20he speaks of a time when God will gather his scattered people from the nations.
18:24And among those places,
18:26he specifically mentions Cush,
18:28ancient Ethiopia.
18:30He paints a picture of restoration where those who were scattered,
18:34those who were overlooked,
18:35will be called back to God's presence.
18:38Doesn't that sound like something meant for today?
18:40Doesn't that sound like a promise to a people who have been carried into slavery,
18:45colonized and forgotten by men,
18:47but never forgotten by God?
18:49And then in Zephaniah 3.10,
18:51we hear the voice of prophecy cry out,
18:53From beyond the rivers of Ethiopia,
18:56my worshipers,
18:57the daughter of my dispersed ones,
18:58shall bring my offering.
19:00Beyond the rivers of Ethiopia,
19:03do you see what that means?
19:05It's a picture of the African diaspora,
19:07of black people scattered across nations,
19:10across continents,
19:11across oceans.
19:12And yet God says they will return to him,
19:15bringing offerings of worship.
19:17What a powerful prophecy,
19:19that no matter what chains tried to bind Africa,
19:22no matter what history tried to erase,
19:24God already declared that her children would come back to him in glory.
19:28Even the story of Jesus' birth is connected to this.
19:31When Herod sought to kill the infant Christ,
19:34where did Joseph and Mary flee with the baby?
19:37They fled to Egypt,
19:39into the arms of Africa.
19:40It was Africa that sheltered the Son of God.
19:43It was Africa that provided refuge for the Savior of the world.
19:47Now think about that.
19:48If God chose Africa as the hiding place for his Son,
19:51then what does that say about the continent's significance in his plan?
19:55It says Africa is not on the margins of the story.
19:58It is right at the center.
20:00And here is something even more staggering.
20:03When we step into the book of Revelation,
20:05John's vision of the redeemed multitude shows us
20:08a great crowd that no one could number,
20:10from every nation, tribe, people, and language,
20:14standing before the throne of God, Africa is there.
20:17Black people are there.
20:19They are not erased.
20:20They are not forgotten.
20:22They are not excluded.
20:23They are part of the uncountable family of God
20:26that will stand in eternal victory before the Lamb.
20:29So when you hear people say that the Bible is not for Africa
20:33or that Christianity is a foreign religion to black people,
20:36you can answer with the truth.
20:38Africa was there at the beginning.
20:40Africa sheltered Christ.
20:42Africa sent missionaries into the world.
20:44And Africa is named in prophecy as a people who would stretch out their hands to God.
20:49And maybe the question that rises in your heart is this.
20:52If God has always had a plan for Africa,
20:55if his word proclaims redemption and honor for her,
20:59then why has the world tried so hard to erase that truth?
21:02Why have the stories of black presence in the Bible been covered in silence?
21:07Could it be because the enemy knows the power of identity?
21:10Could it be because once a people realize who they truly are in God's story,
21:14they can no longer be enslaved by lies?
21:17This is the shocking reality.
21:19Africa is not forgotten.
21:21Black people are not erased.
21:23They are written into the past.
21:25They are spoken of in prophecy.
21:27And they are destined for glory in the future.
21:29And the Bible, far from excluding them,
21:32reveals their place with honor.
21:33But our journey does not end here.
21:35Because the deeper we go,
21:37the more questions begin to rise.
21:39If Africa is central to the biblical story,
21:42then why has history distorted this truth?
21:45Why have so many images of the Bible been painted white,
21:48washed clean of their African roots?
21:51To answer that,
21:52we need to face the uncomfortable history of manipulation,
21:56colonization,
21:56and the rewriting of biblical identity.
21:59And that will take us into the next chapter.
22:02If Africa's presence in the Bible is so clear,
22:05if Ethiopia,
22:07Egypt,
22:08Cush,
22:09and black figures are named and honored,
22:12then why is it that for centuries,
22:14people have believed that the Bible is a European book?
22:18Why is it that when most people imagine Moses,
22:21or David,
22:22or even Jesus,
22:23they see pale faces,
22:25light hair,
22:26and European features?
22:27How did the true image of God's story,
22:30rooted in Africa and the Middle East,
22:33become so distorted?
22:34The answer is uncomfortable,
22:37but it must be faced.
22:38History was rewritten,
22:40and the presence of black people in the Bible
22:42was deliberately minimized,
22:44ignored,
22:44and in some cases erased.
22:47Think about this.
22:48For over a thousand years,
22:50Europe dominated how Christianity was presented to the world.
22:54Paintings,
22:55sculptures,
22:56stained glass windows.
22:57These were not neutral images.
23:00They shaped the way entire generations saw the Bible.
23:03And when Renaissance artists painted biblical figures,
23:06they painted them in their own image.
23:08Jesus was suddenly pale skinned,
23:11with flowing blonde or brown hair.
23:12Mary looked like a European queen.
23:15The apostles looked like noblemen from Italy or France.
23:19And in that moment,
23:20the truth of the Bible's cultural roots was washed away,
23:23replaced by an image that fit the ruling powers of the time.
23:26But it didn't stop there.
23:28When colonization began,
23:30and European empires spread across Africa, Asia, and the Americas,
23:34they carried those images with them.
23:36The pale Christ,
23:37the European apostles,
23:39the whitewashed Bible.
23:40And these images weren't just innocent.
23:43They were tools of control.
23:46Colonizers told African slaves,
23:48this is your God.
23:49This is the Bible.
23:51This is what holiness looks like.
23:53And in doing so,
23:54they planted the lie that black people were outsiders to the story of God.
23:59That their identity was lesser.
24:01That their history was irrelevant.
24:02But here's the truth they didn't want known.
24:06The Bible itself never said these things.
24:08The Bible never gave Jesus blue eyes and pale skin.
24:12The Bible never erased Ethiopia,
24:14or Cush,
24:15or Egypt.
24:16In fact,
24:17it elevated them.
24:18Yet for generations,
24:20the manipulation of imagery
24:21made people believe otherwise.
24:23And that's why today,
24:25uncovering the presence of black people in the Bible feels so shocking.
24:29It isn't that the information wasn't there.
24:32It's that it was hidden under centuries of deliberate misrepresentation.
24:36Ask yourself this.
24:38What happens when a people forget their place in history?
24:41What happens when children grow up
24:43never seeing themselves in the pages of the greatest story ever told?
24:47They begin to believe they are outsiders.
24:49They begin to believe the lies that others tell them.
24:52And that is exactly what happened.
24:54For centuries,
24:56black identity was stripped away from the biblical narrative,
24:59leaving generations to wonder where they belonged.
25:01But God does not forget.
25:03He does not erase.
25:05His word still carries the truth,
25:07and that truth cannot be silenced forever.
25:10Even in the days of slavery,
25:12enslaved Africans in America would gather in secret
25:15and read the scriptures for themselves.
25:17And when they came across the story of the Israelites in bondage,
25:21when they read about Moses leading his people to freedom,
25:24they saw themselves.
25:26They recognized that the God of the Bible
25:28was not the God of their oppressors.
25:29He was their deliverer too.
25:32That is why spirituals were sung in the cotton fields.
25:34Why names like Moses and Ezekiel and Mary carried power in those times.
25:40Because despite the lies of colonizers,
25:42the Spirit of God still whispered the truth.
25:45You belong to this story.
25:47And now today,
25:48in this generation,
25:50the veil is being lifted.
25:52People are beginning to ask the questions
25:54that were once silence.
25:55Who were the Cushites?
25:57Who was Simon of Cyrene?
25:59Why does the Bible speak of Egypt,
26:01Ethiopia,
26:02and Sheba with such honor?
26:04Why did God allow his son to be sheltered in Africa?
26:08These questions are not just academic.
26:10They are spiritual,
26:12cultural,
26:12and deeply personal.
26:14Because once you rediscover the presence of black people in the Bible,
26:17you rediscover your worth.
26:19But here is the challenge.
26:21Facing this truth also means facing the pain.
26:24It means acknowledging how centuries of lies and erasure
26:28have wounded identities,
26:29cultures,
26:30and faith.
26:31It means admitting that the very image of Jesus himself
26:34was reshaped for political power.
26:37That is not an easy truth to swallow.
26:39But it is necessary.
26:41Because until we name the lies,
26:43we cannot heal from them.
26:44Until we uncover what was hidden,
26:46we cannot walk fully in the light.
26:47And maybe right now you are asking yourself,
26:49if this was hidden for so long,
26:52what else is hidden?
26:53What other truths about identity,
26:56history,
26:56and faith have been silenced?
26:58That is the power of this journey.
27:00Once your eyes are opened,
27:01you cannot go back to sleep.
27:03You begin to hunger for the truth in its fullness.
27:05You begin to search the scriptures with fresh eyes,
27:08and suddenly,
27:09the story of the Bible looks different.
27:11It looks bigger,
27:12it looks richer,
27:13and it looks more connected to your own story
27:16than you ever imagined.
27:22You begin to search the scriptures with fresh eyes,
27:23and you begin to search the scriptures with fresh eyes,
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