All posts by adongabriel

Chapter Six: Urim and Thummim – Our Codes Speak, Yours Don’t

Modern Urim

I sank deeper into the hot tub, the water’s heat seeping into my bones as the steam rose like incense from an ancient altar. My mind wandered back to the Temple days, when the high priest didn’t guess at God’s will—he consulted it directly. The breastplate, the hoshen, with its twelve stones glowing mysteriously.

Exodus 28:30: “And you shall put in the breastplate of judgment the Urim and the Thummim, and they shall be over Aaron’s heart when he goes in before the Lord.” Urim—lights. Thummim—perfections. Divine oracle, letters illuminating answers to kings and commanders. Questions of war, peace, succession—all revealed through the ephod’s gleam. No ambiguity. No interpretation needed. God spoke through the stones. Fast-forward to today: no Temple, no breastplate.

But Rabbi Matityahu Glazerson sees the codes as our modern Urim and Thummim—hidden matrices in the Torah text, glowing with prophecies for our generation. And they’re speaking loudly: October 7, the comet, Gog’s wars, Damascus’s fall. All clustered in the letters, waiting to be uncovered.

The End of The Darkness

Glazerson’s work isn’t fringe; it’s rooted in tradition. The Vilna Gaon himself delved into codes, seeing them as layers of divine wisdom. In videos like “The Seventh of October in Gematria & Bible Code” (March 2025) and “For the Anniversary of the 7th of October in Bible Code” (October 2025), Glazerson lays out matrices from Deuteronomy or Ezekiel where phrases jump out: “Seventh of October,” “Simchat Torah attack,” “Hamas invasion,” “Gog Magog begins.”

Exact matches, skipping letters in precise intervals. He ties it to the holiday’s haftara—Ezekiel 38-39 read during Sukkot—showing codes for “Iran orchestration” and “multi-front war.” Russia (Magog) arms links, Yemen drones, Lebanon rockets—all encoded. And the comet? Matrices with “Star of Jacob Elul 25,” “seventy days visible,” clustering near “Nasrallah fall” and “Damascus heap.” It’s not random; it’s revelation. Like the high priest’s stones lighting up for Saul or David, these codes illuminate for us—an end-times roadmap straight from Torah.

The Zohar (III 212b) amplifies this: the Star of Jacob signals Ishmael’s decline, wars stirring, a fiery leader rising. But how do we know the details? Codes fill the gaps, functioning as the evolved oracle. Palvanov, in his lectures, nods to this mysticism: the Zohar’s prophecies align with Glazerson’s findings, the comet peaking on September 27, 2024, kicking off seventy days to Assad’s December 8 fall.

Codes even predict the “political earthquake”—matrices with “Assad flees,” “palace looted,” near Isaiah 17:1 phrases. We saw it: rebels storming Damascus, furniture flying, selfies in the throne room. Amos 1:4’s fire on Ben-Hadad? Codes cluster “bunker-busters Nasrallah,” “three buildings collapse.” Visuals encoded millennia ago. The Vilna Gaon warned: Gog starts Tishrei, around Hoshana Rabbah. Codes confirm: “October 7 Gog spark,” tied to Sukkot vulnerability.

Where Is Christianity?

Christians? No equivalent. They pray for signs, interpret dreams, and claim Holy Spirit whispers. But no systematic oracle like the breastplate. Revelation’s symbols—seals, trumpets—are poetic, not precise. No matrices spelling “October 7 attack” or “comet Elul.” Perry Stone or Charisma speculate coalitions, but miss the codes’ pinpoint accuracy.

Messianics add Hebrew roots, but retrofit: October 7 as “birth pang” (Matthew 24), without the holiday flag. You celebrate Tabernacles, but ignore the haftara’s Gog tie. Why no living text oracle? Torah’s letters are infinite; yours static. We consult elders (Deuteronomy 4:9, 13:1-5); they showed me codes as Urim’s heir—lights revealing truth.

This chapter sealed my return. Christian prophecies felt vague; Jewish ones were visual, verifiable. Codes predicted the sequence: October 7 spark, comet ignition, Nasrallah rubble, Damascus heap, Ishmael waning. By 2026, Iran’s nukes degraded, protests boiling, Trump-Netanyahu pushing deals or strikes. The oracle speaks: redemption nears.

My Christian friend, my Messianic brother: Codes glow with October 7, Damascus—where’s your oracle? Why no matrix warning the holiday spark? Ours did. This is the call—see the album we didn’t lend.

Next chapter: Where’s Your Cyrus? Isaiah 45 calls.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

How Christianity Transforms the Tanach’s Messages of Life into Doctrines of Death:

In the heart of Jewish scripture, the Tanach pulses with themes of life, renewal, and divine healing. From the Tree of Life in Genesis to the protective Cherubim in Exodus, themes of life and renewal appear throughout. In addition, the wisdom extolled in Proverbs reinforces these messages. Our sacred texts affirm existence as a gift from Hashem.

Yet, Christianity often reframes these narratives, twisting symbols of vitality into harbingers of doom and death. A striking example lies in the four horses of Zechariah—vehicles of blessing and emotional restoration. This is contrasted against the destructive horsemen in Revelation.

Insights from Zechariah’s Horses and Revelation’s Horsemen

In this post, we’ll unpack how Christianity, the Tanach, Zechariah, horses, and the Revelation horsemen are deeply interconnected. This is a fascinating theological debate. Drawing from Rabbi Efraim Palvanov’s insightful lecture on the Year of the Horse, this post explores how Christianity appropriates Tanach stories to point toward Jesus. Ultimately, Christianity converts a book of life into one of death.

To Messianics and Christians: How would you feel if someone took your book of life and made it a cult of death?

The Tanach’s Core Message: Life and Renewal

The Tanach begins with life itself. In Genesis 2 and 3, the Tree of Life (Etz HaChaim) symbolizes eternal sustenance and divine connection. It represents Hashem’s desire for humanity to thrive, not perish. After the expulsion from Eden, the narrative doesn’t end in despair but evolves toward redemption.

This theme resurfaces in Exodus, where the Cherubim appear without their flaming swords from Genesis. Placed atop the Ark of the Covenant (Exodus 25:18-22), they guard the holy space as symbols of divine presence and protection. Unlike later interpretations that arm them with judgment, here they embody accessibility to Hashem’s mercy. They represent life unbarred.

Solomon reinforces this in Proverbs 3:18: “She [Wisdom] is a tree of life to those who take hold of her.” Wisdom, or Torah, becomes the path to grasping life’s essence. Our sages teach that holding fast to these teachings brings healing and balance, not condemnation. The Tanach isn’t a prelude to apocalypse; it’s a guide to living fully under Hashem’s spirit.

Zechariah’s Horses: Agents of Blessing and Healing

In Zechariah 6, the prophet sees four chariots with horses—red, black, white, and speckled (or dappled)—emerging from between bronze mountains. These are no ordinary steeds. Instead, they represent the four winds or spirits of heaven, sent by Hashem to patrol the earth (Zechariah 6:5-7).

Jewish commentary, from sources like Rashi and the Radak, views these horses as positive forces. They correspond to ancient understandings of the four humors—blood (red), black bile (black), phlegm (white), and yellow bile (speckled). These are all essential for emotional and physical balance. As Rabbi Palvanov explains in his video, our sages teach that these horses spread Hashem’s spirit to heal the world emotionally. The black horses head north to quiet God’s spirit in Babylon/Persia, symbolizing the resolution of oppression. The white follow, the speckled south, and the red seek to roam. All restore equilibrium.

Whedon’s Commentary notes the colors distinguish without deep symbolism, emphasizing divine agents executing judgment for redemption, not destruction. Unlike fearsome warriors, these horses bring tikun (rectification), aligning with Tanach’s life-affirming prophecies. They tie into messianic hopes: after healing, the temple is rebuilt, and peace reigns (Zechariah 6:12-13).

Revelation’s Horsemen: Symbols of Doom and Death

Contrast this with Christianity’s Book of Revelation 6, where four horsemen emerge as the seals are broken. The horses are white (conquest), red (war), black (famine), and pale (death). These riders unleash chaos—sword, scarcity, plague. They kill a quarter of the earth.

Christian interpretations, from GotQuestions.org to David Jeremiah, often see the white rider as the Antichrist mimicking Jesus (who rides white in Revelation 19). The red brings bloodshed, black economic ruin, and pale Hades itself. As Don Carson preaches, these are God’s judgments. Yet, they are framed as apocalyptic terror leading to eternal damnation for non-believers.

Matthew Henry and others link them to Roman persecutions or end-times tribulations, always emphasizing destruction. Unlike Zechariah’s healing patrol, Revelation’s horsemen herald a “cult of death.” In this narrative, life’s symbols invert to justify suffering as a prelude to Christian salvation.

Rabbi Palvanov’s Insights: Christianity’s Alterations Exposed

In “Trump, Iran & the Year of the Horse,” Rabbi Palvanov masterfully critiques Christianity’s approach to the Tanach. He notes Revelation “plagiarizes” Zechariah and Ezekiel, fusing horses with judgments (sword, famine, beasts, plague) but inverting positivity. Zechariah’s horses heal via humors; Revelation’s destroy.

Palvanov highlights “apocalypse” means “unveiling” (removing klipa, the husk covering light), not doom—a Jewish concept twisted into negativity. Christianity covers Tanach’s life messages with death, associating apocalypse with destruction for the wicked. Meanwhile, Tanach sees judgment as redemptive. He ties this to broader distortions: Tanach’s horses defeat oppressors (like Pharaoh’s in Exodus), symbolizing life over tyranny. However, Christianity shifts focus to Jesus as endpoint.

Building the Case: Christian Appropriation of Tanach Stories

Christianity’s New Testament claims nearly every Tanach story “points to Jesus,” but this isn’t Hashem’s word—it’s an reinterpretation. Take the Tree of Life: Tanach sees it as eternal wisdom. In contrast, Christians link it to the cross, a tool of death, as “tree” in Acts 5:30.

Cherubim without swords in Exodus become armed guardians in Christian art, echoing Revelation’s judgmental angels. Proverbs’ “tree of life” morphs into Jesus as the “vine” (John 15), redirecting Jewish wisdom toward a messianic figure.

Major stories follow suit: Isaiah’s suffering servant (Israel in Jewish view) becomes Jesus. Jonah’s three days in the fish foreshadow resurrection. Even Abraham’s sacrifice of Isaac prefigures the crucifixion. These aren’t fulfillments; they’re appropriations, stripping Tanach’s communal, life-oriented messages to center a single figure and eternal judgment.

As Palvanov argues, this turns Tanach—a book of life, redemption, and healing—into a precursor for death cults. In this vision, salvation demands accepting Jesus or facing the apocalypse.

The Switch: How Christianity Inverted the Four Horses

The horses’ transformation exemplifies this. Zechariah’s red, black, white, speckled horses bring Hashem’s spirit for global healing—north, west, south, east. They restore humoral balance for emotional tikun. Sages like Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai link them to messianic signs: Persian oppression ends, and Mashiach comes.

Revelation switches: white conquers falsely (Antichrist), red slaughters, black starves, pale kills. Colors retain, but meanings flip—from blessing to curse. Jewish sources (Beth Melekh) note Zechariah’s horses judge the pagans to restore Israel. However, Revelation’s punishment is for all who resist “Him” (Jesus).

This inversion isn’t a coincidence; it’s deliberate. Christianity adapts Tanach to fit a narrative of sin, death, and exclusive salvation through Jesus. This narrative ignores Judaism’s emphasis on life through Torah.

A Call to Reflection

The Tanach invites us to grasp life’s tree, heal through divine spirits, and live in balance. Christianity’s lens darkens this, making death the gateway to life. To Messianics and Christians: Imagine your scriptures reframed as ours have been—vitality sapped, turned to doom. Return to Tanach’s pure light; let it speak of life unfiltered.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

The Global Plague of Judicial Injustice – Why The World Is Looking For Integerty

In an era where the rule of law is touted as the bedrock of civilization, a closer look at headlines from 2025 and early 2026 reveals a stark reality: judges around the world are mired in corruption, bias, and misconduct.

From the highest courts in powerful nations to obscure benches in developing countries, the judiciary is riddled with figures who prioritize power, politics, and personal gain over righteousness and fairness.

This isn’t hyperbole—it’s substantiated by a litany of scandals that span continents, proving that no judge, regardless of location or reputation, can truly be deemed just or righteous. They all falter, often spectacularly, under the weight of systemic flaws and human frailty.

Europe: There Is No Free Speech

Let’s start in Europe, where Romania’s judiciary has been exposed as a hotbed of systemic abuses. Over 500 judges and prosecutors denounced entrenched corruption, including politically appointed chief judges exploiting loopholes to secure unethical acquittals and punish whistleblowers.

This comes after the EU lifted monitoring in 2023, only for anti-graft efforts to stall—highlighting how even under international scrutiny, judges enable corruption to thrive. In Spain, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez accused judges of “doing politics” amid corruption probes targeting his family and allies, while progressive judicial groups admitted to partisan misuse of the judicial process. These aren’t isolated; they’re symptomatic of a continent where judicial independence is a facade.

America, Washington DC What Judge Has Ingerity

Shifting to the Americas, the United States—often self-proclaimed as a beacon of justice—saw its judiciary weaponized in political battles. President Trump repeatedly called for impeaching “corrupt judges” who blocked his policies, with allies like Elon Musk amplifying these attacks.

Judges faced threats and harassment, while the administration dropped corruption cases, like that against New York Mayor Eric Adams, in what a federal judge called a “bargain” for political cooperation. In Argentina, a federal judge barred media from publishing leaked audio recordings linked to President Javier Milei’s sister amid bribery allegations, shielding the powerful from scrutiny.

Mexico: The Cartel Runs the Judges

Mexico’s judicial elections included candidates with cartel ties and criminal records, including an ex-convict jailed for meth smuggling—fueling fears of organized crime infiltrating the bench. South of the border, El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele urged cracking down on “corrupt judges,” a stance echoed by U.S. MAGA figures, blurring the lines between reform and authoritarianism.

Africa’s judiciary fares no better, with scandals eroding public trust. In Australia—often grouped with global trends but highlighting Pacific influences—former inquiry head Walter Sofronoff lost his bid to overturn a finding of “serious corrupt conduct” for leaking reports.

But in true African contexts, Transparency International’s 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index showed entrenched issues in the Middle East and North Africa, with weak institutions and shrinking civic space enabling judicial corruption.

South Africa, It Is Dangerous To Be White

South Africa’s 2025 was marked by unprecedented misconduct cases against judges like Mbenenge (sexual harassment) and others for delays and gross misconduct, prompting calls for reform. Indonesia, in Asia, plummeted 10 places in corruption rankings due to weakened oversight, allowing judicial bribery to flourish.

Even international bodies aren’t immune. The U.S. sanctioned ICC judges and staff with “terrorist-grade” measures for investigating war crimes, labeling human rights work as threats. The ICC itself faced turmoil, losing its prosecutor amid misconduct allegations and member states over perceived bias.

These examples from 2025-2026—spanning Romania’s systemic rot, U.S. political purges, Mexican cartel infiltration, and global declines in anti-corruption efforts—illustrate a universal truth: judges are products of flawed systems, susceptible to corruption, bias, and external pressures. None escapes unscathed; righteousness remains an ideal, not a reality. Until radical reforms dismantle these structures, trust in any judge is misplaced.

An Outline of Mishpatim

I. Introduction to Justice and the Parsha of Mishpatim

  • Justice is often seen as an external societal mechanism (e.g., courts), but it profoundly shapes individual character and daily life.
  • Parsha Mishpatim shifts from the inspirational revelation at Sinai to practical civil laws, covering topics such as contracts, damages, property rights, and monetary disputes.
  • This transition highlights how justice governs the “messy” aspects of human interactions, preventing chaos.

II. The Transition from Revelation to Civil Law and Its Significance

  • The move from spiritual highs to legal details might feel anticlimactic, but Midrash teaches that the entire Torah hinges on Mishpatim, as these laws infuse justice into the world.
  • Sub-outline:
    • Society’s survival depends on justice: Reference to Pirkei Avot, Chapter 1, Mishna 18 – Raban Shimon ben Gamliel states the world endures through justice, truth, and peace.
    • Rambam’s code (Hoshen Mishpat) underscores this, noting judges who deliver true justice partner with God in creation.
    • Without justice, anarchy reigns: Reference to Pirkei Avot, Chapter 3, Mishna 2 – Pray for government welfare, lest “one man swallow his fellow alive.”

III. Justice Beyond Order: Morality and Righteousness in Law

  • A legal system alone isn’t enough; it must incorporate morality, ethics, and decency to avoid becoming a tool for injustice (e.g., Nazi Nuremberg laws or South African apartheid).
  • Sub-outline:
    • Perversion or delay of justice leads to societal downfall: Reference to Pirkei Avot, Chapter 5, Mishna 11 – War arises from distorted or delayed justice.
    • Judges must administer law with truth and ethics: Multiple references in Pirkei Avot, including Chapter 1, Mishna 8 (careful judgment); Chapter 1, Mishna 9 (avoiding favoritism); and various in Chapter 4 emphasizing humility and patience.
    • Ramban explains Pirkei Avot’s placement in the Nezikin (damages) order after Sanhedrin: Righteous laws require righteous people with strong character (midot).

IV. The Structure of Torah: Righteous Judges, Laws, and Character

  • The Torah appoints righteous judges, provides righteous laws, and bridges them with ethical teachings.
  • Sub-outline:
    • Midrash: Torah is flanked by justice on both sides.
    • Justice opposes “might makes right” and protects the vulnerable.
    • Personal halakha (Jewish law) applies ethics to business and relationships: The Heavenly court’s first question concerns honest dealings (see Pirkei Avot; general emphasis in Chapters 3 and 4 on good deeds as mitzvot).

V. Emulating God: Self-Restraint and Integrity

  • God, though all-powerful, binds Himself to justice, modeling self-restraint.
  • Sub-outline:
    • Mitzvah to emulate God: Reference to Pirkei Avot, Chapter 3, Mishna 21 – Without decency, Torah lacks value.
    • Link to Ten Commandments: Mishpatim counters coveting by setting boundaries.
    • Attitudes toward property: Reference to Pirkei Avot, Chapter 5, Mishna 13 – Selfish mindset (“mine is mine, yours is yours”) vs. saintly generosity (“mine is yours”).
    • Additional ethics: Pirkei Avot, Chapter 2, Mishna 15 (honor others’ dignity); Chapter 2, Mishna 17 (value friends’ property as your own); Chapter 3, Mishna 8 (generosity, as all belongs to God).

VI. Integrity as the Core of Justice

  • True integrity means ethical behavior even when unobserved, recognizing God’s constant oversight.
  • Sub-outline:
    • Heavenly accountability starts with business honesty and extends to all areas of life.
    • Justice as fulfilling one’s divine purpose: Live transparently for judgment (din v’cheshbon).
    • Judgment references: Pirkei Avot, Chapter 4, Mishna 29 (all face judgment before God, incorruptible); Chapter 1, Mishna 1 and Chapter 2, Mishna 1 (awareness of divine scrutiny); Chapter 3, Mishna 1 (accountability).

The lecture concludes that justice fosters personal growth, replaces jealousy with generosity, and demands unwavering integrity in both public and private spheres, mirroring God’s ethical self-restraint. It urges living with pride in one’s accountability.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

Unveiling the Family Roots of the Ten Commandments: Mishpatim and Genesis Connections – Part 1

Introduction: The Torah as a Living Guide for Humanity’s Shared Family

In a world rife with division, conflict, and unresolved pain, the Torah emerges not as a rigid set of rules or harsh decrees, but as a profound, living guidebook addressing the deepest problems of human existence. Parashat Mishpatim (Exodus 21:1–24:18) follows immediately after the dramatic revelation of the Ten Commandments at Mount Sinai, diving into a detailed array of civil, ethical, and ritual laws—traditionally counted as 53 mitzvot, though some interpretations expand this to include over 100 specific rulings and applications. These laws, often referred to as mishpatim (judgments), aren’t arbitrary; they expand upon the foundational principles of the Ten Commandments, showing how divine ideals translate into everyday justice and harmony.

But what if these laws aren’t just legal codes? What if they stem from the raw, traumatic stories of our biblical ancestors, offering healing for the familial wounds that echo through generations? Drawing from Rabbi David Fohrman’s insightful lectures on Aleph Beta, this blog series explores how the Ten Commandments—and the mishpatim that elaborate them—are deeply rooted in the family drama of Isaac, Rebecca, Jacob, and Esau in Genesis 27. We’ll see the Torah as a blueprint for mending broken relationships, fostering unity in a fractured world.

Biologist DNA Test Proves The Torah

Adding a modern scientific layer, recent genetic research underscores our shared humanity. In his book Traced: Human DNA’s Big Surprise, Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson, a Harvard-trained biologist with Answers in Genesis, uses Y-chromosome DNA analysis to trace global male lineages back to a recent common ancestor—suggesting all men alive today share roots so close that “your father could be my uncle.” This aligns with biblical narratives of common descent from figures like Noah, emphasizing that humanity’s problems—jealousy, deception, favoritism—are family issues at their core. The Torah, then, isn’t exclusive; it’s a universal guide for our interconnected family.

In this first installment (of a planned series covering all Ten Commandments), we’ll focus on the first three, linking them to Genesis 27, Exodus 19–20, and the laws of Mishpatim. As a bonus, we’ll include a small Hebrew lesson to deepen your appreciation of the text.

A Quick Hebrew Lesson: The Power of “Anochi”

Before diving in, let’s wet our lips with a bite-sized Hebrew insight. The first commandment begins with “Anochi Hashem Elokecha”—”I am the LORD your God” (Exodus 20:2). “Anochi” is an unusual first-person pronoun in biblical Hebrew; more common is “ani.” Why “anochi”? Commentators like Rashi note that it’s an emphatic, intimate form that evokes a personal encounter.

It derives from roots suggesting “descent” or “revelation,” implying God is “coming down” to meet us on our level. This isn’t a distant decree but an imperative call to relationship: “Know Me as the One you’ve experienced.” In Genesis 27, similar language appears when Rebecca urges Jacob, “Shema b’koli” (“Hear my voice”)—a maternal command blending authority and intimacy. This wordplay hints at how divine laws echo human family dynamics, urging us to “hear” and respond personally. Fun fact: Practice saying “Anochi” aloud—it’s your gateway to feeling the Torah’s relational pulse!

The First Commandment: “I Am the LORD Your God” – Redeeming Identity and Deception

The first of the Ten Commandments isn’t a “command” in the typical sense but a declarative introduction: “I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage” (Exodus 20:2). Rabbi Fohrman highlights how this echoes the vulnerability in Genesis 27, where Jacob deceives his blind father Isaac by claiming, “Anochi Esav b’chorecha” (“I am Esau your firstborn”)—a false identity to steal the blessing (Genesis 27:19). In that moment, Jacob invokes God falsely, saying the LORD aided his hunt, tying deception to divine name-dropping.

This family incident is laced with trauma: Rebecca favors Jacob, orchestrating the lie to counter Isaac’s preference for Esau, the “manly” hunter. The result? Isaac trembles in shock (Genesis 27:33), Esau weeps bitterly (27:34), and Jacob flees, fearing murder—fracturing the family for decades. Exodus 19–20 redeems this: At Sinai, God declares His true identity amid thunder and trembling (19:16–18), paralleling Isaac’s quake. But unlike Jacob’s lie, God’s “Anochi” is truthful: “I’m the One you know from experience—the Redeemer from slavery.” It’s personal, in an imperative tone, calling Israel to recognize their liberating Parent.

Practical Healing

How do Mishpatim’s laws connect? They expand this into practical healing. For instance, laws on Hebrew slaves (Exodus 21:2–11) echo the “house of bondage,” mandating freedom after six years—preventing generational entrapment like the Egypt trauma. If a slave chooses to stay out of love (21:5–6), his ear is pierced at the doorpost, symbolizing willing servitude to God and family, not deception. Other mishpatim, such as kidnapping penalties (21:16), address the theft of identities or freedoms, mirroring Jacob’s “theft” of Esau’s birthright.

In Rabbi Fohrman’s view, this commandment counters the zero-sum favoritism in Genesis: God’s choice of Israel isn’t to exclude others (as Isaac’s blessing seemed to pit brothers against each other), but to bless all nations (echoing Abraham’s universal promise in Genesis 12). Mishpatim’s stranger laws—”Do not oppress a stranger, for you know the soul of the stranger” (23:9)—heal exclusion, reminding us of our shared DNA family tree. Thus, the Torah guides us through modern problems like identity crises and refugee mistreatment by grounding justice in empathy rooted in our “family history.”

The Second Commandment: No Other Gods or Idols – Overcoming Sensory Deception and Favoritism

The second commandment expands: “You shall have no other gods before Me. You shall not make for yourself a graven image… You shall not bow down to them or serve them, for I the LORD your God am a jealous God…” (Exodus 20:3–5). This prohibits idolatry, but Rabbi Fohrman ties it to Genesis 27’s sensory tricks: Isaac relies on touch (feeling hairy arms), smell (Esau’s clothes), and taste (venison), missing Jacob’s true voice. Idolatry, then, is false perception—worshiping tangible “parts” (like fertility gods) over the intangible whole of God.

Family trauma here: Isaac’s blindness symbolizes bias; he favors Esau’s physical prowess, idolizing “strength” over Jacob’s spiritual voice. This leads to deception and pain—Esau’s cry (27:34) mirrors the shofar at Sinai (19:16), a vulnerable sound calling for authentic recognition. God’s cloud at Sinai (19:9) obscures sight, forcing hearing—redeeming the story by prioritizing voice over senses.

Idolatrous Society

Mishpatim elaborates: Laws against sorcery (22:17) and bestiality (22:18) combat idol-like distortions of reality. Property damages (22:4–5) and honest safekeeping (22:6–8) prevent “stealing” through deception, echoing Jacob’s ruse. Broader mishpatim on justice (23:1–8)—no false reports, no bribes—ensure courts aren’t “idols” of corruption. These heal favoritism: The widows and orphans laws (22:21–23) mandate care for the vulnerable, countering parental bias that emotionally orphaned Esau.

In our DNA-linked world, this addresses global issues like idolizing power (e.g., nationalism) over unity. Jeanson’s research shows diverse lineages from common roots, urging us to reject “othering” as idolatry. The Torah guides by teaching wholeness: Love God fully to love His creations equally.

The Third Commandment: Do Not Take God’s Name in Vain – Truth in Invocation and Oaths

“You shall not take the name of the LORD your God in vain, for the LORD will not hold him guiltless who takes His name in vain” (Exodus 20:7). This warns against false oaths or empty invocations. In Genesis 27, Jacob swears falsely: “Because the LORD your God granted me success” (27:20), using God’s name to bolster his lie. This escalates the trauma—deception now profanes the sacred, deepening the rift.

At Sinai, God’s name is proclaimed truthfully amid awe (20:1), in contrast to Jacob’s misuse. Rabbi Fohrman notes God’s “jealousy” here echoes Esau’s hatred, but channels it toward generational healing: Visiting iniquity to the third/fourth generation, yet showing mercy to thousands (20:5–6).

False Witnesses Today

Mishpatim applies: Laws on false witnesses (23:1–2) and oaths in disputes (22:9–10) prevent the vain use of names in court. Cursing authorities (22:27) extends this—don’t invoke God lightly against leaders or parents (linking to honoring parents later). These address family lies: Just as Jacob’s oath fractured trust, mishpatim’s restitution laws (22:3) demand repayment, fostering accountability.

For today’s problems—like fake news or broken vows—the Torah offers repair: Truth heals trauma, as our shared ancestry demands honest dialogue. In Jeanson’s framework, vain claims divide our family; truth unites.

Conclusion: Mishpatim as a Bridge from Trauma to Unity

Through the first three commandments, we see Mishpatim not as harsh rules but as extensions of healing Genesis 27’s traumas: Deception yields to true identity, sensory bias to holistic worship, vain oaths to sacred truth. Exodus 19–20 redeems the story—trembling mountain, parental voice, chosen yet universal mission. All 123-ish laws in Mishpatim (counting sub-rulings) connect back, guiding interpersonal justice from familial roots.

As DNA reveals our common father, the Torah speaks to all: A living guide transforming the world’s pains into peace. Stay tuned for Part 2 on commandments four through six.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

Chapter Five: The Wild Donkey Falls – Ishmael, Not Your Messiah

I leaned back in the hot tub, bubbles churning like the thoughts in my head, staring at the stars that had started this whole chain. The comet was gone now, but its echo lingered—the wild ride it kicked off. That’s when I revisited Zechariah 9:9-10, verses I’d heard twisted a hundred times in my Christian days.

Rejoice, Jerusalem, The End Of Days

“Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! Shout, O daughter of Jerusalem! Behold, your King is coming to you; He is just and having salvation, Lowly and riding on a donkey, A colt, the foal of a donkey. He shall cut off the chariot from Ephraim, and the horse from Jerusalem; The battle bow shall be cut off. He shall speak peace to the nations; His dominion shall be ‘from sea to sea, And from the River to the ends of the earth.'”

A king on a donkey? Humble, yes. But then the punch: no more chariots, no more war horses, no more bows. Peace to the nations. Global rule. Christians pointed to Jesus’ Palm Sunday entry—branches waving, donkey plodding into Jerusalem. “Fulfilled!” they’d say.

But where’s the rest? Rome’s chariots kept rolling. Wars raged on. No sea-to-sea dominion. They split it: verse 9 first coming, verse 10 second. Convenient, but the text doesn’t break that way. It’s one event, one king, one unbroken flow. And it’s end-times, not ancient history.

His Hand Will Be Against His Neighbor

Jewish tradition sees it clearly: this is Messiah ben David, arriving after the upheavals, conquering not with might but with humility. The donkey symbolizes meekness and submission to God—contrasting sharply with Ishmael’s “wild donkey of a man” in Genesis 16:12. Hagar’s son, promised to be untamed —”his hand against everyone, and everyone’s hand against him.” In the midrash and the Zohar, Ishmael represents the Arab/Muslim nations, their wild strength dominating until the end.

But the Zohar (III 212b) marks the Star of Jacob as the turning point: the comet blazes for seventy days, Ishmael’s power wanes, nations fall, blood flows. “After the star vanishes,” it says, “the Holy Land trembles,” leading to kings fighting and structures crumbling. Rabbi Palvanov, in his Damascus video, ties it directly to Ishmael’s grip slipping after the comet, paving the way for the humble king’s arrival. No wild rampage anymore—just tamed peace.

Look at the fulfillment unfolding now. Hezbollah—once Ishmael’s wild arm in Lebanon—was injured since Nasrallah’s death on September 27, 2024, the comet’s peak. Over 3,000 fighters gone, leadership decapitated, tunnels blown. By early 2026, Israel’s ops had degraded 70% of their missile arsenal, per IDF reports.

Iran In Prophecy

Iran, the Persian backer, reeling: direct attacks on Israel in April 2024, then Israeli strikes in June 2025, hitting nuclear sites and degrading 40% of their centrifuges. Protests rage in Tehran, economy tanking under Trump’s renewed tariffs and deadlines—January 2025 inauguration, immediate pressure: “Deal or face war.” Netanyahu’s February 2026 White House meeting?

Hammering Iran negotiations, with Israel pushing for preemptive strikes. Ishmael’s “hand against everyone”? Weakening daily. Yemen’s Houthis were silenced after Red Sea ops, Syria’s remnants flipped with Assad’s fall. The wild donkey’s legs buckle—chariots (missiles) cut off, war horses (armies) grounded.

The Vilna Gaon adds depth: Gog and Magog’s war, sparked around Sukkot (as we saw on October 7), culminates in Ishmael’s defeat. He draws on Kabbalah, seeing the northern coalition (Iran-Russia ties) invading during a time of security, only to be shattered by divine intervention.

The Donkey is The Ishmalim

Zechariah 9 fits: the king rides in after the battles, ending the cycle. No more Ephraim’s chariots (northern threats like Syria/Lebanon), no Jerusalem war horses (defenses dismantled in peace). The Zohar echoes: post-star, “twelve days of chaos,” then broader turmoil, Ishmael fading as Edom (the West/Christianity) watches.

Palvanov speculates that Trump will be the fiery leader during the comet window—reelected in November 2024, stirring global tensions with Iran threats, tariff wars, and Israel backing. Like Cyrus in Isaiah 45:1-3, called “My anointed” (mashiach) despite being Persian—a tool, not the king. God uses non-Jews to shake nations for Israel’s sake. Cyrus freed the exiles; Trump pressures Ishmael. But the humble donkey? That’s the final reveal, after the wild one falls.

The Wrong Donkey and The Wrong Time

Christians claim Palm Sunday nails Zechariah 9:9. Matthew 21: Jesus enters on a donkey, crowds shouting “Hosanna!” Fulfilled, they say. But verse 10? Crickets. There are no chariots cut off—Rome crushed Judea in 70 CE. No peace to nations—centuries of war followed. No dominion from sea to sea. They defer it to the second coming, but why split the prophecy?

The text flows seamlessly: donkey entry, then immediate disarmament and rule. Messianics add a twist: Yeshua first as the suffering servant, then as the warrior king. But where’s the Zohar’s comet warning? The seventy-day timeline? The Ishmael contrast? In Genesis 16:12, the wild donkey isn’t tamed in their framework; it’s ignored or allegorized. Perry Stone or Charisma pieces talk about Zechariah as tribulation signs but miss the Jewish layers—the donkey as meekness conquering wildness, tied to the end-times shaking we see now.

The Return

On my return to Judaism, this prophecy unlocked everything. Deuteronomy 4:9 and 13:1-5 commanded: ask your elders, your family. Don’t follow signs that lead away from Torah. I did. They opened Zechariah, showed the context: chapter 9 starts with judgments on Syria (Damascus, verse 1), Tyre (Lebanon, verse 3), Philistia (Gaza, verse 5). All fall before the king arrives. We saw it—Damascus heap, Lebanon cedars broken (Isaiah 10:34), Gaza ops ongoing. No resurrection typology here. Just sequence: enemies down, humble king up. The elders reminded me of Ezekiel 16:3—our Hittite/Amorite origins. Chosen by grace, not merit. Humility is like the donkey.

My Christian friend, my Messianic brother: The wild donkey falls before your eyes—Iran on edge, proxies shattered—just as Genesis said. But how do you square Zechariah 9:10’s peace without the Zohar’s Ishmael fade first? Where’s the prophecy flagging comet to comet’s end, wild power crumbling? Yours splits verses; ours connects the dots. Real-time video: strikes on Iran, Trump-Netanyahu talks. This is the exact history. This is the call—come see the album we didn’t lend.

Next chapter: Urim and Thummim—our codes speak, yours don’t. Exodus 28 glows.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

Hashem’s Recreations Unveiled

Parallels from Creation, Flood, and Exodus in Jewish Thought

Hashem’s Recreations Unveiled: Parallels from Creation, Flood, and Exodus in Jewish Thought

In the intricate weave of Torah narratives, Rabbi David Fohrman’s insights into Parashat Noach illuminate a profound pattern. The Flood story acts as a deliberate echo of Creation, signifying not mere destruction but a divine recreation of the world. This perspective, drawn from close textual analysis, reshapes our view of Noah’s era from punitive cataclysm to purposeful renewal.

Building on this, Jewish sources reveal similar motifs in the Exodus, portraying it as another cosmic reboot. From Midrash to Kabbalah, these recreations—Creation, Noah, and Egypt—demonstrate Hashem’s ongoing cycle of dismantling chaos to foster order. Notably, this theme extends to mystical cycles of 49,000 years. This blog explores these interconnections, enriched by Fohrman’s lens and additional rabbinic wisdom.

Fohrman’s Lens: Creation Echoed in the Flood

Rabbi Fohrman’s transcript highlights striking parallels between Genesis 1-2 and the post-Flood recovery in Genesis 8-9. The primordial world begins as “tohu va’vohu” (formless and void), with darkness over the deep and a “ruach Elohim” (wind/spirit of God) hovering over chaotic waters—a scene evoking crashing waves in a water-dominated realm.

In Noach, the Flood mirrors this: waters inundate the earth, creating a similar watery chaos. Therefore, recovery begins with Hashem sending a “ruach” (wind) over the waters (Genesis 8:1), paralleling Creation’s day one. On day one, light emerges from darkness.

Day two of Creation sees Hashem forming the firmament to separate waters above and below (Genesis 1:6-8). Fohrman notes the Flood’s dual water sources—fountains of the deep (below) and windows of heaven (above)—merged to flood the world. Then, those waters are separated to end it (Genesis 8:2). This recreates the sky as a divider, restoring cosmic order.

Day Three

On day three, the waters receded, dry land appeared, and vegetation sprouted (Genesis 1:9-13). Similarly, post-Flood waters subside, revealing mountains (dry land). Additionally, Noah’s dove returns with an olive leaf, signaling the regrowth of trees (Genesis 8:8-11).

Fohrman skips day four’s heavenly lights, explaining they weren’t destroyed—only the terrestrial world was affected. Day five introduces birds (Genesis 1:20-23), a theme echoed when the dove doesn’t return, implying that avian life thrives (Genesis 8:12). Finally, day six brings animals and humans (Genesis 1:24-31). In Noach, Hashem commands that the ark be exited, and that the earth be repopulated (Genesis 8:15-19).

This sequence underscores the Flood as recreation: not annihilation for punishment, but renovation of a corrupted world. As Fohrman emphasizes, the Torah emphasizes the corruption of the earth (Genesis 6:11-13), making humanity’s demise incidental to the renewal of the earth. Post-Flood changes—like permitting meat-eating—signal a new human role as stewards, not mere co-tenants.

Extending the Pattern: Exodus as Recreation

Jewish sources extend this recreation motif to the Exodus, viewing it as a third divine renewal mirroring Creation and the Flood. Midrashim and commentators like Ramban (Nahmanides) draw explicit parallels, portraying the liberation from Egypt as a new genesis for Israel and the world. The plagues deconstruct Egypt—turning the Nile to blood (reversing life’s waters), darkness (undoing day one’s light)—echoing the Flood’s judgment on corruption. Then, redemption rebuilds.

Echoing Creation’s chaotic waters and ruach, the pillar of cloud by day and fire by night guides Israel (Exodus 13:21-22), separating light from darkness amid wilderness uncertainty. At the Red Sea, a strong east wind (ruach) divides waters (Exodus 14:21), standing as walls—mirroring day two’s separation and the Flood’s receding floods. In addition, dry land appears in the sea’s midst (Exodus 14:22), akin to day three. The Midrash states that the Israelites ate from the third-day trees during the passage (Shemot Rabbah).

Manna From Heaven

Vegetation follows: manna from heaven provides daily sustenance (Exodus 16), like Creation’s sprouting plants or the Flood’s olive branch. Quail arrive as birds (Exodus 16:13), paralleling day five and the dove’s freedom. At Sinai, the Revelation establishes a new covenant (Exodus 19-20), evoking humanity on the sixth day under divine mandate. The tabernacle’s construction explicitly mirrors Creation’s seven phrases (Exodus 25-31), with “vayechal” (completed) linking to Shabbat rest. As in the Flood, heavenly elements (day four) persist unchanged, focusing renewal on earthly bonds.

Kabbalistic views deepen this: the Exodus allegorizes spiritual birth, escaping “Mitzrayim” (narrowness) into expanded consciousness. Zohar sees plagues and the splitting of the sea as rectifying cosmic imbalances stemming from Creation’s tzimtzum. For example, Rabbi Fohrman’s works, like “The Exodus You Almost Passed Over,” explore alternate paths—e.g., Pharaoh’s potential cooperation mirroring Jacob’s burial procession. These stories highlight choice in recreation. Finally, Midrash Tehillim ties Exodus to universal redemption, a “down payment” on Creation’s promise.

Unifying Threads: From Biblical Events to Cosmic Cycles

These recreations aren’t isolated; they form a divine pattern. Creation establishes order; Noah purifies a tainted world; Exodus liberates and covenants a nation. Shabbat commemorates both Creation and Exodus, blending universal genesis with particular redemption (Exodus 20:11, Deuteronomy 5:15). In addition, Fohrman’s insight—that recreation targets the environment, with humanity as partners—applies across these stories. Adam tends Eden, Noah rebuilds after the Flood, and Israel constructs the Mishkan.

Kabbalah expands this to vast scales. Sefer HaTemunah describes seven 7,000-year Shemitot cycles (49,000 years), each under a Sefirah, culminating in Jubilee renewal. Midrash speaks of 974 generations (or worlds) created and destroyed before ours, symbolizing iterative refinements. Our era, under Gevurah (severity), is marked by trials like Egypt’s bondage. The Exodus stands as a microcosm of cosmic tikkun. This aligns with Fohrman’s “new world” post-Flood, where humanity gains agency—echoed in Exodus’s shift from slaves to priests.

Conclusion: Participating in Eternal Renewal

Incorporating Rabbi Fohrman’s parallels enriches our grasp of Hashem’s recreations as progressive: physical in Creation, moral in Noah, spiritual in Exodus. These stories invite us into the divine process, urging tikkun olam amid cycles of 49,000 years. In other words, as Kabbalah teaches, each personal “exodus” from constriction mirrors these events, fostering growth. By studying Torah anew, we join Hashem’s ongoing creation, awaiting the ultimate Jubilee.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

October Seventh – The Holiday That Broke the Calendar

October 7 Attack Prophesied on Simchat Torah – Torah Codes Warned Us

Chapter Four: October Seventh – The Holiday That Broke the Calendar

I was in the middle of a celebration once—music blasting, people dancing, Torah scrolls held high like trophies. That’s Simchat Torah. The end of Sukkot. The day we wrap the year’s reading and start over, rejoicing like kids at a party. No guards. No walls. Just joy. The air was thick with laughter, the circle unbroken as families passed the scrolls from hand to hand, stomping their feet to the rhythm of ancient songs.

High Holidays

It’s the climax of the High Holidays, the moment when vulnerability meets divine protection—the sukkah’s fragile walls symbolizing our reliance on God alone. But on October 7, 2023, that joy shattered like glass under boots. Hamas poured over the border in a coordinated onslaught. Kibbutzim like Be’er Sheva and Kfar Aza burned, homes turned into infernos.

The Nova music festival, a haven of peace and beats, became a slaughter pen—young people gunned down mid-dance, bodies strewn across the desert sand. Over 1,200 dead in a single day. Hundreds were dragged away as hostages, their screams echoing into the void. The world froze, headlines screaming horror. But Jewish tradition? It didn’t freeze. It had been whispering about this for centuries, embedded in our festivals, our readings, our codes.

Holy Days

Ezekiel 38-39. That’s the haftara—the prophetic reading—for Shabbat Chol HaMoed Sukkot, the intermediate Sabbath during the festival. It’s no coincidence. The passage details Gog and Magog’s invasion: a vast coalition from the north—Magog, Meshech, Tubal—backed by Persia (that’s ancient Iran), descending on Israel like a storm cloud. They come when the people dwell securely, “without walls, having neither bars nor gates” (Ezekiel 38:11).

No defenses up, just peace and prosperity. And God intervenes with fury: fire from heaven, earthquakes, plagues, hailstones, turning the invaders against each other. The Vilna Gaon, that 18th-century sage whose insights pierce like laser beams, pinned it precisely: the war of Gog and Magog starts around Hoshana Rabbah, the seventh day of Sukkot, when we circle the bimah seven times, pleading for salvation.

Other sages, drawing from midrashim and Talmudic hints, suggested it could erupt during the festival itself, when Israel’s guard is spiritually down but divinely up. Zechariah 14 ties it even tighter—after the war, the surviving nations must pilgrimage to Jerusalem for Sukkot every year, or face drought and plague.

And It Shall Come To Pass

“And it shall come to pass that everyone who is left of all the nations which came against Jerusalem shall go up from year to year to worship the King, the Lord of hosts, and to keep the Feast of Tabernacles” (Zechariah 14:16). The holiday isn’t random. It’s the vulnerability point. The sukkah’s flimsy roof reminds us: God’s our real shelter. But on October 7—Simchat Torah in Israel—that shelter got tested to its limits.

I watched the videos later, safe in my hot tub, steam blurring the screen like tears I couldn’t shed. Families at breakfast tables in Nir Oz, interrupted by sirens and then gunfire. Festival-goers at Nova running through choking dust, gunfire popping like fireworks gone horribly wrong—pop, pop, pop, each one a life extinguished.

Mothers shielding children in safe rooms that weren’t safe. Fathers rushing to defend with whatever they had—kitchen knives, bare hands. Hamas called it Operation Al-Aqsa Flood, framing it as a holy war over Jerusalem’s sacred sites. But it landed on the day we celebrate the Torah—the same Torah that warned us of such invasions. The irony cuts deep: while Jews danced with the scrolls, embracing the law that promises protection, the enemy struck, fulfilling the very prophecies we read aloud weeks earlier during Sukkot.

Israel. The blessing of the Cohanim. Jews praying at the Western Wall wrapped in a festive white Tallit. The ceremony at the Western slope of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. The concept of religious and photo tourism

The Torah Codes

Rabbi Matityahu Glazerson’s Torah codes sealed it for me. His matrices, drawn from Deuteronomy or Ezekiel, cluster words with eerie precision: “Seventh of October,” “Simchat Torah attack,” “Gog Magog begins,” “Hamas invasion.” Exact date. Exact holiday. He posted videos like “The Seventh of October in Gematria & Bible Code” in March 2025, breaking down the gematria where numbers align like stars—October 7 equaling key phrases in Ezekiel.

Another for the anniversary in October 2025, showing expanded tables with “Iran orchestration” and “multi-front war.” The codes aren’t guesses or parlor tricks. They’re hidden in the text, like the Urim and Thummim glowing for our time, divine letters rearranging to reveal truths for the generation that needs them. Glazerson views them as the modern oracles, straight from the high priest’s breastplate (Exodus 28:30), illuminating end-time events just as the ancients consulted them for war and peace.

This attack wove seamlessly into the broader Zohar sequence we explored in earlier chapters. The Star of Jacob comet in 2024 signaled the shaking, but October 7 was the spark—the opening volley in the Gog wars. The Zohar (III 212b) speaks of Ishmael’s decline after the star, with wars erupting and blood flowing. Palvanov connects it: the comet’s seventy days build on the multi-front chaos ignited on Simchat Torah. Iran, as Persia, is pulling strings behind Hamas.

Russia (often seen as Magog in rabbinic thought) is providing arms and alliances: Yemen’s Houthis, Lebanon’s Hezbollah, Syria’s remnants—all firing in unison. And look where it led: Nasrallah down under collapsing buildings (Amos 1:4); Assad fled into exile; Damascus a heap of political ruins (Isaiah 17:1). The sequence our sages mapped out centuries ago, from Vilna Gaon to the Zohar, unfolding as a scroll unrolled. Christian and Messianic interpretations? They often point to Matthew 24’s wars and rumors of wars, or Revelation’s beasts rising. But those are broad brushes, not pinpoint prophecies.

They Retrofit The Whole Bible

Christians and Messianics? They retrofitted it after the fact. Psalm 83 for a conspiracy of enemies. Joel 3 for armies gathering in the Valley of Jehoshaphat. Revelation’s seals are cracking open, perhaps the fourth horse of death. But no one flagged the holiday. No one said Sukkot. No one said Simchat Torah—the day of rejoicing over the law—turns into the spark of Gog. You celebrate Tabernacles too, waving branches, building booths, calling it a feast of ingathering. But why?

You never connected it to Gog’s start in the haftara, read every year during the festival. We knew the tie-in; our liturgy embeds it. You guessed it, overlaying New Testament lenses that blur the original context. Some even claim October 7 as a “birth pang” leading to the rapture, but without the Jewish calendar’s precision, it’s just speculation. Perry Stone or other prophecy teachers might link it to end-time coalitions, but they miss the Tishrei timing, the sukkah symbolism, and the codes that spell “seventh of October” hidden in Torah letters.

This Was Not Random

This wasn’t random terror. It was the opening shot in a prophesied war. Iran orchestrated—Paras in Ezekiel, funding Hamas with millions, coordinating with Hezbollah’s rocket barrages. Russia ties noted in analyses: arms shipments, diplomatic cover, and even Wagner Group mercenaries rumored to be in the mix. Multi-front: Lebanon firing north, Yemen’s drones south, Syria’s borders porous.

The attack killed the illusion of security, just as Ezekiel described. And the fallout? Over 250 hostages taken, many still languishing in Gaza tunnels by 2026. Israel’s response—Operation Iron Swords—razed Hamas strongholds, but the war dragged on, claiming thousands more lives. Yet Jewish sources saw the redemptive arc: the Zohar promises the Messiah’s revelation after such upheavals, with Ishmael’s wild donkey (Genesis 16:12) tamed. Palvanov, in his Gog and Magog lectures, frames October 7 as the prelude, leading to Assad’s fall and Iran’s weakening—exactly as we’re witnessing.

On MyJourney Home

On my journey, this chapter resonated deeply. Raised Christian, I pored over their prophecies, seeing Jesus in every shadow—Isaac’s binding as resurrection foreshadowing, Passover lamb as crucifixion. But Deuteronomy commanded otherwise: “If there arises among you a prophet… you shall not listen to him” (Deuteronomy 13:2-6). Ask your elders, your family (Deuteronomy 4:9). I did. They opened the scroll, showed me the haftara for Sukkot, the codes in Glazerson’s videos, the tie to Tishrei—the month of creation, judgment, and redemption.

No resurrection story shoehorned in. No second coming delay to explain unfulfilled peace. Just the war beginning on the day we dance, vulnerability turning to victory. The elders reminded me: we’re no better than the nations—Ezekiel 16:3 calls our origins Amorite and Hittite, chosen by grace alone. Humility, not hubris.

My Christian friend, my Messianic brother: October 7 happened on your watch too. But where was the warning? Why was there no comet countdown before? No buildings falling on cue? Ours had it all. Step by step. Visuals included—codes clustering dates, haftarahs reading invasions during festivals. This is the call—come see the album we didn’t lend. The one with the real tracks, playing out in blood and fire, leading to the peace Zechariah promises.

Next chapter: The wild donkey falls. Zechariah 9 waits, humble king on the horizon.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

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Damascus Turns to Rubble – Isaiah 17 Wasn’t Waiting for a Second Coming

Damascus Fell December 2024 – Isaiah 17 Prophecy on Live Feed

Damascus Syria

I was eating breakfast—cold cereal, too much sugar—when the alert pinged on my phone. Damascus is in rebel hands. I clicked, half-expecting another false alarm in the endless scroll of Middle East chaos. But there it was: grainy phone video from the streets, tanks rumbling past the ancient Umayyad Mosque without a single shot fired.

Palace gates swung wide open like they’d been waiting for this. Guards vanished into thin air. Assad’s convoy? Already wheels up for Russia, tail between legs, leaving fifty years of iron-fisted rule in the dust. Eleven days. That’s all it took for the regime to crumble. From Aleppo’s fall to the capital’s surrender, it was a blitz that no one saw coming—except, perhaps, those who’d been reading the right books.

Isaiah 17:1 stared back at me from my Bible app as I scrolled through the footage: “Behold, Damascus will cease to be a city, and become a heap of ruins.” Not “might” or “could.” Will. Definitive. Prophetic. And there it was, unfolding in real time on December 8, 2024. Rebels danced in the central square, old ladies handed out tea to fighters who’d just toppled a dynasty. A kid, no older than twelve, spray-painted “Free Syria” on a tank that still reeked of diesel and gunpowder.

The Palace Sacked

The presidential palace? Sacked like a yard sale gone wrong. Furniture hurled out windows, gold-framed portraits of Assad shredded on the marble floors, secret documents scattered like confetti. People rummaged through drawers, pocketing whatever wasn’t nailed down—books, paintings, even the dictator’s personal effects.

It wasn’t total annihilation, not yet, but the “heap of ruins” felt literal enough. The heart of Damascus, the oldest continuously inhabited city on earth, had ceased to function as the seat of power. By early 2026, the new regime teetered on the edge, with ongoing clashes and a fragile transition that left the city a shadow of its former self.

Christians have been preaching this verse for decades. Perry Stone did a whole video series on it, speculating about nukes raining down from Iran or Israel, turning the place into a radioactive wasteland. Charisma Magazine articles hyped it as the ultimate end-times signpost, tying it to Revelation’s bowls of wrath or the rapture’s prelude. “Damascus gets wiped off the map,” they’d say, eyes wide with apocalyptic fervor. But where was the mushroom cloud? Where was the divine firestorm?

Human Revelation

Instead, we got a human revolution—swift, messy, and profoundly ordinary in its execution. No supernatural intervention on camera, just rebels with grudges and guns. Some call it partial fulfillment, hedging that the “full ruinous heap” is still coming, perhaps in a bigger war with Iran. Fair enough. But here’s the rub: why didn’t your prophecies have the exact timeline? Why no mention of the comet countdown, the seventy days of visibility, or the political earthquake that the Zohar described centuries ago?

That’s where the Jewish sources shine through—the ones I turned to on my journey back from Christianity. The Zohar, that mystical masterpiece of Kabbalah (Zohar III 212b), doesn’t just predict a star rising from Jacob; it lays out the sequence like a roadmap. The Star of Jacob—a fiery comet—appears on the 25th of Elul, blazing for seventy days. During that window, a hot-spirited leader rises, stirring wars and upheavals.

The Star Vanishes

Then, as the star vanishes, a great earthquake shakes the Holy Land. But Rabbi Efraim Palvanov, in his Damascus lecture, reinterprets that quake not as literal ground-shaking, but as a massive political tremor rippling through the region. And where does it start? With Damascus. The Zohar ties it directly to the fall of Ishmael’s dominion—the wild strength of nations like Syria, Iran, and their proxies—leading to blood flowing and structures collapsing.

“After the star disappears,” the Zohar says, “the Holy Land will tremble for forty-five days… kings will fight kings, and the world will be in turmoil.” Palvanov connects the dots: the comet peaked on September 27, 2024 (exactly the 25th of Elul), hung visible until around December 6, and poof—Assad flees within hours. The “earthquake” wasn’t seismic; it was seismic in politics. Hezbollah cripple, Iran exposed, Syria flipped. Damascus, the ancient stronghold, was reduced to a “ruinous heap,” as Isaiah had prophesied.

Isaiah 17 Damascus

Let’s unpack Isaiah 17 a bit more, because it’s not just verse one. The chapter paints a vivid picture: “The cities of Aroer are forsaken; they will be for flocks which lie down, and no one will make them afraid” (verse 2). Aroer—linked to Damascus’s outskirts—now echoes with the silence of abandoned outposts. Verses 4-6 describe Jacob’s glory fading like a harvested field, but then the turnaround: nations that once oppressed Israel will be beaten down like olive branches shaken in the wind.

By verse 9, “In that day his strong cities will be as a forsaken bough and an uppermost branch, which they left because of the children of Israel.” Damascus’s fall isn’t isolated; it’s part of Israel’s resurgence. And verse 14? “At evening time, behold, terror! Before morning, they are no more.” Assad’s regime? Evening terror on December 7, gone by morning light. We saw it—live feeds from Reuters, BBC, AP. No need for interpretation; the visuals matched the text.

But the Zohar’s genius is in the layering. It doesn’t stop at the star; it forecasts the aftermath as a chain reaction. The comet’s seventy days align perfectly with the buildup: Nasrallah’s elimination on day one, Trump’s reelection stirring the pot mid-window, and Damascus’s collapse at the end. Palvanov speculates this “political quake” extends to Jerusalem itself—not destruction, but a shaking of old powers, paving the way for messianic times.

Iran Weakened

Iran weakened, proxies scattered—it’s all there. Jewish sages like the Vilna Gaon echoed this, seeing Gog and Magog’s wars tied to these northern threats. Syria, as the gateway, had to fall first. Christians often lump Isaiah 17 with Psalm 83 or Ezekiel 38, but they miss the mystical precision. No Zohar in their toolkit. No comet as the starter pistol.

On my own path, this hit hard. Raised Christian, I studied every prophecy they threw at me—Jesus as the fulfillment of Isaiah’s suffering servant, the donkey ride in Zechariah as Palm Sunday. But when I returned to my Jewish roots, following Deuteronomy’s command to ask my elders (Deuteronomy 4:9, 13:1-5), they opened the Zohar and showed me the timeline.

This Is A Sequence

“This isn’t allegory,” they’d say. “It’s a sequence.” No waiting for a second coming to tie up loose ends. The events unfold now, step by step, as foretold. Damascus isn’t a standalone nuke event; it’s the Zohar’s quake manifesting in geopolitics. And we watched it happen—palace looted, regime toppled, the “heap” forming before our eyes.

My Christian friend, my Messianic brother: Damascus crumbled before your very eyes, just like Isaiah said. But if this is the setup for the end times, how do you square it with the Zohar’s comet and quake? Where’s the warning that Ishmael’s wild power falls first, aligned with a seventy-day celestial sign? Your signs are silent on the details unfolding now—why? This isn’t a metaphor. This is footage. This is history. This is ours, rooted in Torah and Zohar. The album we didn’t lend plays on, track after track.

Next chapter: October Seventh—the holiday that broke the calendar. Ezekiel’s haftara waits.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

Three Buildings Fell – Amos Called It

Nasrallah Killed by Falling Buildings – Amos 1:4 Prophecy Live

I watched it sideways—phone propped on the hot-tub edge, water still bubbling behind me. The video started like any other strike clip: a flash, a whoosh, then silence. But then the buildings didn’t just explode. They folded. One, two, three—steel skeletons pancaking down on the bunker like God hit fast-forward on gravity.

Under them: Hassan Nasrallah. Gone. September 27, 2024. The same day, the Star of Jacob comet peaked in the sky. Amos 1:4. Plain Hebrew. “I will send fire upon the house of Hazael, and it will devour the palaces of Ben-Hadad.” Hazael—Syrian king, ancient Damascus line. Ben-Hadad—title for every ruler who sat in that chair. Gematria adds up: Ben-Hadad equals 65. Assad equals 65. Same throne. Same prophecy. Same dust.

The footage rolled on. Debris cloud clears. Israeli drones hover. No victory lap—just rubble. And me, sitting there, towel dripping, realizing I’d just seen scripture play in HD. Not a metaphor. Not a parable. A literal palace devoured by fire. Now rewind. Christians told me fire meant hell. Or tongues at Pentecost. Or maybe a nuke someday. They never said fire meant bunker-busters.

Never said Ben-Hadad meant a guy named Bashar. Never said the palace would get looted on camera—people dragging sofas out the front door, selfies in the throne room, gold frames shattered like cheap glass. December 8, 2024. Rebels hit Damascus. Same palace. Same prophecy. Furniture flies. Portraits shred. One kid in a rebel bandolier sits in Assad’s chair, kicks his feet up, and laughs. Hadad’s house? Devoured. Amos saw the kid’s grin.

The Prophet Amos

Let’s dive deeper into Amos 1:3-5, because this isn’t a one-verse wonder. “Thus says the Lord: For three transgressions of Damascus, and for four, I will not revoke the punishment, because they threshed Gilead with threshing sledges of iron.” Iron sledges—ripping open women carrying children, the text implies. Rabbi Palvanov ties it to Operation Iron Swords, Israel’s response to the October 7 attacks.

The sins pile up: violence, cruelty, conquest. Then the hammer: “So I will send a fire upon the house of Hazael, and it shall devour the strongholds of Ben-Hadad. I will break the gate-bar of Damascus, and cut off the inhabitant from the Valley of Aven.” Gate-bar broken—rebels waltzed right in. Inhabitant cut off—Assad fled. Valley of Aven? A nod to idolatry, the false gods of Syria are crumbling.

We saw it all: NPR reports, BBC footage, Reuters photos capturing the looting in real time. People walking freely into Assad’s private residence, scattering documents, hauling belongings. Exactly as Jeremiah 49 echoes: the palace of Ben-Hadad was plundered by enemies.

The Zohar: The Star Of Yaacov

This ties straight back to the Zohar’s Star of Jacob prophecy from Chapter One. The comet ignites on Elul 25—September 27—, and that’s when the shaking starts. Palvanov calls Nasrallah’s death the ignition: eighty bunker-busters from Israeli F-35s, collapsing three to six apartment blocks over Hezbollah’s underground HQ in Beirut’s Dahiyeh. Reports from the IDF and international media confirm it—buildings caved in, trapping Nasrallah and his commanders in the rubble.

The “fire” of Amos? Those precision strikes lit up the night sky. And the Zohar? It describes a fiery leader rising during the comet’s seventy days, stirring wars, followed by a political earthquake. Nasrallah’s fall was the first tremor, directly linked to Damascus’s heap.

The sages saw it: Ishmael’s wild dominion (Genesis 16:12) weakening, nations falling like dominoes. Hezbollah, Iran’s proxy, was ripped apart in weeks. Over 3,000 fighters killed, leadership decimated, tunnels exposed. By early 2026, Israel had expanded ops into Lebanon, uncovering billions in hidden assets—gold, cash, weapons stashed like pirate treasure.

What Do Christians And Messianic Jews Say?

Christians and Messianics often spiritualize Amos ‘ judgment on sin, maybe a future Armageddon. But where’s the specificity? No one in your prophecy circles flagged September 27 as the day buildings would fall on a modern Ben-Hadad. Perry Stone talks fire and brimstone, but not bunker-busters. Charisma articles speculate on end-times wars, but miss the gematria, the exact visuals.

You retrofit: “Oh, this could be it.” We predicted: the Zohar gave the comet, Amos gave the fire, and Isaiah 17 gave the aftermath. And we watched it unfold—drone feeds from the strike, satellite images of the crater, eyewitness accounts from Beirut residents describing the ground shaking like an earthquake.

On my journey back to Judaism, this chapter hit like those collapsing towers. Raised on Christian prophecies, I studied every “fulfillment” they claimed: Jesus as the lamb, Isaac as a type of resurrection. But when I followed Deuteronomy 13 and asked my elders, they opened Amos and showed me the real deal. “This isn’t typology,” they’d say. “It’s timeline.” No waiting for a second coming to make sense of the loose ends.

The events are happening now, and they are visual and verifiable. Nasrallah under rubble? Check. Palace looted? Check. Damascus trembling? Check. The Zohar weaves it all: the star signals the end of Ishmael’s era, with blood flowing and kings fighting. Trump’s reelection in November 2024—right in the comet window—stirs the pot further, pushing Iran deadlines and backing Israel strikes. By February 2026, tensions were boiling over after Netanyahu’s meeting with Trump on Iran negotiations. The fiery leader? Fits like a glove.

Another Layer

Amos 3:10-11 adds another layer: “They do not know how to do right… who store up violence and robbery in their strongholds. Therefore, thus says the Lord God: An adversary shall surround the land and bring down your defenses from you, and your strongholds shall be plundered.” Plundered—exactly what we saw in Assad’s palace. Videos everywhere: Syrians storming the residence, breaking vases, rifling through closets. It’s not just destruction; it’s humiliation.

The Zohar interprets this as part of the broader shaking—not literal quakes, but the fall of oppressive structures. Hezbollah’s “strongholds”? Underground bunkers under hospitals, schools, homes—exposed and destroyed. IDF ops in late 2024 uncovered over $500 million in cash and gold in a single Beirut vault, linked to Nasrallah. Treasures of darkness (Isaiah 45:3) surfacing as the palaces devour themselves.

My Christian friend, my Messianic brother: Three buildings fell before your eyes, fire devouring the house of Hazael just like Amos said. But how do you handle it without the Zohar’s comet tying it to Damascus’s fall? Where’s the prophecy that flagged the exact day, the visuals of collapse, the looting that followed? Yours are broad strokes; ours are blueprints. This is footage. This is history. This is the album we didn’t lend—playing out in real time.

Next chapter: Damascus turns to rubble. Isaiah 17 calls the heap.

Hazan Gavriel ben David

Biblical Synthesis: Toldot Consequences – The Divine Author Weaving History Today – Chapter 4

Dear Reader,

Welcome to the culminating chapter of Toldot Consequences, where we achieve a comprehensive biblical synthesis of the narratives we’ve explored: Reuben and Simeon, Judah and Tamar, Joseph and Jacob. This biblical synthesis reveals Hashem as the eternal author, scripting not only ancient tales but the unfolding history we witness today.

Israel remains His living proof—His witnesses in the midst of contemporary chaos. As the Zohar and Chazal prophesied, the echoes of Gog and Magog from Iran persist, and our global plea intensifies. Why have these profound biblical syntheses evaded sermons or podcasts from your Messianic Rabbi, Pastor, Scientologist, Jehovah’s Witness, Mormon, or the 33,000 Christian sects? This series has guided you toward knowing Hashem authentically, as proclaimed in Aleinu: “And you shall know today and take it to heart” (Deuteronomy 4:39).

From Genesis Until Today

From our starting point in Genesis 4:3, we’ve traced the toldot (generations) through individual and paired stories. Now, in this biblical synthesis, we see them as a singular, indivisible whole—interdependencies so intricate that no human could conceive them.

This final chapter departs slightly from the pattern: instead of separate “books,” we’ll present a unified retelling that weaves all threads together. Then, we’ll unveil the grand interconnections, proving the impossibility of isolation. Hebrew word dives continue, showing linguistic chemistry at its apex.

Inspired by Rabbi David Fohrman’s podcast “The Unity of Biblical Text: Refuting the Theory of Multiple Authorship”, from “go on offense” to 38:58, this biblical synthesis highlights the overarching chiastics binding these figures.

The Unified Biblical Synthesis: An Interwoven Tapestry

In the vast canvas of Genesis, the stories of Reuben, Simeon, Judah, Tamar, Joseph, and Jacob form not disparate vignettes but a seamless biblical synthesis—a divine narrative where each thread reinforces the others, culminating in redemption and legacy. This retelling merges them into one flowing account, highlighting how choices ripple across generations, bound by Hashem’s hand.

Jacob, the heel-holder turned Israel, wrestled with men and God, his life a bridge from deception to blessing. His favoritism toward Joseph, Rachel’s son—the dreamer named “may He add”—ignited familial flames. Joseph’s multicolored coat symbolized elevation, but his dreams of sheaves and stars bowing provoked envy. Sent to Shechem, then Dothan, Joseph met his brothers’ plot.

Reuben, the seer who faltered, saw the murderer’s horror and urged: “Throw him into the pit, but shed no blood” (Genesis 37:22), planning a secret rescue. Simeon, the hearer in shadows, with Levi’s violent zeal from Shechem’s vengeance, led the aggression. But the Midianites drew Joseph from the pit, selling him to the Ishmaelites; the brothers, unaware of his fate, dipped the coat in blood: “Haker na.” Jacob mourned: “To Sheol I go mourning.”

Judah The Lawgiver

Judah, the acknowledger, suggested the sale for profit, then “went down” from kin, marrying a Canaanite. Sons Er, Onan, Shelah; Er wed Tamar, the upright palm, but died for wickedness. Onan refused yibum, spilling seed, and perished. Judah delayed Shelah and sent Tamar home. Widowed, Tamar veiled at Enaim, negotiating with Judah: pledge of seal, cord, staff for a kid. Conceiving twins, accused of harlotry, she sent: “Haker na.” Judah confessed: “She is more righteous,” birthing Perez and Zerah—messianic forebears.

Joseph, sold to Potiphar, rose with Hashem’s favor, resisting seduction: “Sin against God?” Framed, imprisoned, he interpreted dreams: butler’s restoration, baker’s doom. Pharaoh’s visions of fat and lean yielded Joseph’s viceroyalty: Zaphenath-paneah, fathering Manasseh and Ephraim.

Egypt: A Narrow Place

Famine drew brothers to Egypt. Joseph, hidden, accused spying, bound Simeon—the aggressive hearer—recalling overheard pleas (Reuben’s defense vs. Simeon’s push). Demanded Benjamin; Reuben pledged sons, but Judah guaranteed: “I am surety.” Jacob relented.

Second visit: cup in Benjamin’s sack. Judah pleaded self-sacrifice, echoing Tamar’s justice. Joseph revealed, “I am Joseph,” and forgave, “God meant good.”

Jacob descended to Egypt, reunited: “Now I die, having seen you.” Wrestling’s rename “Israel” echoed in blessings: crossed hands on Ephraim (fruitful) over Manasseh, prioritizing the younger as in his life. To sons: Reuben unstable, Simeon/Levi scattered for violence (Shechem, Joseph), Judah’s scepter, Joseph’s fruitful bough.

See and Hear and Be Thankful

Deep dives culminate here. “Ra’ah” (see): Reuben’s sight fails in the pit, bonds with Jacob’s “haker na” deceptions, Joseph’s dream visions. “Shama” (hear): Simeon’s unheard cries in prison, Joseph’s overhearing guilt, Jacob’s ladder promises heard. “Hoda’ah” (acknowledge): Judah’s confession to Tamar, Joseph’s revelation. “Tzedakah” (righteousness): Tamar’s justice forces legacy, contrasts brothers’ sins, enables Joseph’s line. “Chalom” (dream): Joseph’s prophecies plot, echoes Jacob’s. “Barach” (bless): Jacob’s capstone, fusing all toldot.

This biblical synthesis arcs from rivalry to reconciliation: Reuben/Simeon’s impulses enable Joseph’s descent, Judah/Tamar’s righteousness seeds kingship, Joseph/Jacob’s dreams/blessings birth nations. In Hashem’s economy, failures fuel fulfillment—no thread pulls without the weave.

Hazan Gavriel ben David